DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT TERM INCOME FUND INC
485BPOS, 1996-12-24
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<PAGE>
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON DECEMBER 24, 1996
    
 
                                                            FILE NOS.:  33-36217
                                                                       811-06148
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
 
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                              -------------------
 
                                   FORM N-1A
            REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933          /X/
   
                         POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 7                      /X/
    
 
                                     AND/OR
 
        REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940      /X/
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 9                              /X/
    
                              -------------------
 
                 DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
                            (A MARYLAND CORPORATION)
               (EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN CHARTER)
 
                             TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
                    (ADDRESS OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICE)
 
       REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: (212) 392-1600
 
                              SHELDON CURTIS, ESQ.
                             TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
                    (NAME AND ADDRESS OF AGENT FOR SERVICE)
 
                                    COPY TO:
                            DAVID M. BUTOWSKY, ESQ.
                             GORDON ALTMAN BUTOWSKY
                             WEITZEN SHALOV & WEIN
                              114 WEST 47TH STREET
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10036
                              -------------------
 
APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED PUBLIC OFFERING: As soon as practicable after this
                                 Post-Effective
                          Amendment becomes effective.
 
 IT IS PROPOSED THAT THIS FILING WILL BECOME EFFECTIVE (CHECK APPROPRIATE BOX)
   
        _X_ immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
    
   
        ___ on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
    
        ___ 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)
        ___ on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) of rule 485.
 
   
    THE  REGISTRANT HAS REGISTERED AN INDEFINITE  NUMBER OF ITS SHARES UNDER THE
SECURITIES ACT  OF 1933  PURSUANT TO  SECTION  (A)(1) OF  RULE 24F-2  UNDER  THE
INVESTMENT  COMPANY ACT OF 1940. THE REGISTRANT  FILED THE RULE 24F-2 NOTICE FOR
ITS FISCAL  YEAR  ENDED OCTOBER  31,  1996,  WITH THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE
COMMISSION ON DECEMBER 12, 1996.
    
 
           AMENDING THE PROSPECTUS AND UPDATING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
            -------------------------------------------------------
            -------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                 DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
 
                             CROSS-REFERENCE SHEET
 
                                   FORM N-1A
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
ITEM                                                                             CAPTION
- -----------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------
PART A                                                                         PROSPECTUS
 1.  ..........................................  Cover Page
 2.  ..........................................  Prospectus Summary
 3.  ..........................................  Financial Highlights
 4.  ..........................................  Investment Objective and Policies; The Fund and its Management, Cover
                                                  Page; Investment Restrictions; Prospectus Summary; Financial
                                                  Highlights
 5.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Back Cover; Investment Objective and
                                                  Policies
 6.  ..........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes; Additional Information
 7.  ..........................................  Purchase of Fund Shares; Shareholder Services; Prospectus Summary
 8.  ..........................................  Redemptions and Repurchases; Shareholder Services
 9.  ..........................................  Not Applicable
 
PART B                                                             STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
10.  ..........................................  Cover Page
11.  ..........................................  Table of Contents
12.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management
13.  ..........................................  Investment Practices and Policies; Investment Restrictions; Portfolio
                                                  Transactions and Brokerage
14.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Directors and Officers
15.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Directors and Officers
16.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; The Distributor; Shareholder Services;
                                                  Custodian and Transfer Agent; Independent Accountants
17.  ..........................................  Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage
18.  ..........................................  Description of Shares of the Fund
19.  ..........................................  The Distributor; Redemptions and Repurchases; Financial Statements;
                                                  Shareholder Services
20.  ..........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes
21.  ..........................................  Not applicable
22.  ..........................................  Performance Information
23.  ..........................................  Experts; Financial Statements
</TABLE>
 
PART C
 
    Information  required  to be  included  in Part  C  is set  forth  under the
appropriate item, so numbered, in Part C of this Registration Statement.
<PAGE>
              PROSPECTUS
   
              DECEMBER 24, 1996
    
 
              Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc. (the "Fund") is an
open-end, non-diversified management investment company whose investment
objective is to achieve as high a level of current income as is consistent with
prudent investment risk. The Fund seeks to achieve this objective by investing
in high quality fixed-income securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government, its agencies and instrumentalities, issued or guaranteed by foreign
governments, or issued by foreign or U.S. companies (including bank instruments
and commercial paper), which have remaining maturities at the time of purchase
of not more than three years. The Fund is designed for the investor who seeks a
higher yield than a money market fund and less fluctuation in net asset value
than a longer-term bond fund.
 
               Shares of the Fund are continuously offered at net asset value.
However, redemptions and/or repurchases are subject in most cases to a
contingent deferred sales charge, scaled down from 3% to 1% of the amount
redeemed, if made within three years of purchase, which charge will be paid to
the Fund's Distributor, Dean Witter Distributors Inc. See "Redemptions and
Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge." In addition, the Fund pays the
Distributor a distribution fee pursuant to a Plan of Distribution at the annual
rate of 0.75% of the lesser of the (i) average daily aggregate net sales or (ii)
average daily net assets of the Fund. See "Purchase of Fund Shares--Plan of
Distribution."
 
   
               This Prospectus sets forth concisely the information you should
know before investing in the Fund. It should be read and retained for future
reference. Additional information about the Fund is contained in the Statement
of Additional Information, dated December 24, 1996, which has been filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, and which is available at no charge upon
request of the Fund at the address or telephone number listed on this page. The
Statement of Additional Information is incorporated herein by reference.
    
 
     DEAN WITTER DISTRIBUTORS INC.
      DISTRIBUTOR
 
      TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
Prospectus Summary/2
Summary of Fund Expenses/3
Financial Highlights/4
The Fund and its Management/5
Investment Objective and Policies/5
   Risk Considerations/9
Investment Restrictions/16
Purchase of Fund Shares/16
Shareholder Services/19
Redemptions and Repurchases/22
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes/24
Performance Information/26
Additional Information/26
    
 
SHARES OF THE FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED
BY, ANY BANK, AND THE SHARES ARE NOT FEDERALLY INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
   
    Dean Witter Global
    Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
    Two World Trade Center
    New York, New York 10048
    (212) 392-2550 or
    (800) 869-NEWS (toll-free)
    
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                 <C>
The                 The Fund is an open-end, non-diversified management investment company investing in high quality fixed-income
Fund                securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies and instrumentalities, issued or guaranteed
                    by foreign governments, or issued by foreign or U.S. companies, which have remaining maturities at the time of
                    purchase of not more than three years.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares              Shares of common stock of $0.01 par value (see page 26).
Offered
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offering            At net asset value without sales charge (see page 16). Shares redeemed within three years of purchase are
Price               subject to a contingent deferred sales charge under most circumstances (see page 22).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum             Minimum initial investment, $1,000 ($100 if account is opened through EasyInvest-SM-); minimum subsequent
Purchase            investment, $100 (see page 16).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment          The investment objective of the Fund is to achieve as high a level of current income as is consistent with
Objective           prudent investment risk (see page 5).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment          Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital"), the Investment Manager of the Fund and its wholly-owned
Manager             subsidiary, Dean Witter Services Company Inc., serve in various investment management, advisory, management and
                    administrative capacities to 100 investment companies and other portfolios with assets under management of
                    approximately $91 billion at November 30, 1996 (see page 5).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management          The Investment Manager receives a monthly fee at the annual rate of 0.55% of the Fund's daily net assets not
Fee                 exceeding $500 million and 0.50% of the Fund's daily net assets on the amount exceeding $500 million (see page
                    5).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and       Dividends from net investment income are declared daily and paid monthly. Distributions from net short-term and
Distributions       long-term capital gains are paid at least once per year (may be retained for reinvestment). Dividends and
                    capital gains distributions are automatically reinvested in additional shares at net asset value unless the
                    shareholder elects to receive cash (see page 24).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distributor         Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"). For its services as Distributor, which include payment of
                    sales commissions to account executives and various other promotional and sales related expenses, the
                    Distributor receives from the Fund a distribution fee accrued daily and payable monthly at the rate of 0.75% per
                    annum of the lesser of (i) the Fund's average daily aggregate net sales or (ii) the Fund's average daily net
                    assets. This fee compensates the Distributor for the services it provides in distributing shares of the Fund and
                    for its sales related expenses. The Distributor also receives the proceeds of any contingent deferred sales
                    charges (see page 16).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Redemption--        At net asset value; redeemable involuntarily if total value of the account is less than $100 or, if the account
Contingent          was opened through EasyInvest, if after twelve months the shareholder has invested less than $1,000 in the
Deferred            account. Although no commission or sales load is imposed upon the purchase of shares, a contingent deferred
Sales               sales charge (scaled down from 3% to 1%) is imposed on any redemption of shares if, after such redemption, the
Charge              aggregate current value of an account with the Fund falls below the aggregate amount of the investor's purchase
                    payments made during the three years preceding the redemption. However, there is no charge imposed on redemption
                    of shares purchased through reinvestment of dividends or distributions (see page 22).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special             The net asset value of the Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes in the market value of its portfolio
Risk                securities. It should be noted, for example, that, generally, when the level of prevailing interest rates rises,
Considerations      the values of the outstanding fixed-income securities fall and when such rates fall their values rise. The Fund
                    is a non-diversified investment company and, as such, is not subject to the diversification requirements of the
                    Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act") (see page 9). The Fund will concentrate its investments
                    in securities issued by companies engaged in the banking industry. This concentration will increase the Fund's
                    exposure to certain risks associated with the banking industry such as adverse changes in economic and
                    regulatory developments affecting the banking industry, sustained interest rate increases and concentration of a
                    bank's loan portfolios in particular businesses undergoing economic hardship (see page 7). It should be
                    recognized that the foreign securities and markets in which the Fund will invest pose different and greater
                    risks than those customarily associated with domestic securities and their markets. Furthermore, investors
                    should consider other risks associated with a portfolio of international securities, including fluctuations in
                    foreign currency exchange rates (i.e., if a substantial portion of the Fund's assets are denominated in foreign
                    currencies which decrease in value with respect to the U.S. dollar, the value of the investor's shares and the
                    distributions made on those shares will, likewise, decrease in value), foreign securities exchange controls and
                    foreign tax rates, as well as investments in forward foreign currency contracts, options and futures contracts
                    (see pages 9-15). The Fund may also invest in fixed-income securities which may be denominated in a currency of
                    a nation other than the nation in which the issuer of such fixed-income securities is domiciled.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    
 
  THE ABOVE IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING
                          ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS
                AND IN THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
the Fund will incur. The  expenses and fees set forth  in the table are for  the
fiscal year ended October 31, 1996.
    
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases..............................................  None
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Reinvested Dividends...................................  None
Deferred Sales Charge
  (as a percentage of the lesser of original purchase price or redemption proceeds)....  3.0%
</TABLE>
 
      A  contingent deferred sales charge is  imposed at the following declining
rates:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE
PAYMENT MADE                                                                                    PERCENTAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                                                           <C>
First.......................................................................................          3.0%
Second......................................................................................          2.0%
Third.......................................................................................          1.0%
Fourth and thereafter.......................................................................       None
</TABLE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                     <C>
Redemption Fees.......................................................................       None
Exchange Fee..........................................................................       None
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fees.......................................................................      0.55%
12b-1 Fees*...........................................................................      0.75%
Other Expenses........................................................................      0.36%
Total Fund Operating Expenses.........................................................      1.66%
<FN>
- ------------
* A PORTION  OF THE 12B-1  FEE EQUAL TO  0.25% OF THE  FUND'S AVERAGE DAILY  NET
  ASSETS  IS  CHARACTERIZED AS  A  SERVICE FEE  WITHIN  THE MEANING  OF NATIONAL
  ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS ("NASD")  GUIDELINES (SEE "PURCHASE OF  FUND
  SHARES").
</TABLE>
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXAMPLE                                                                 1 year       3 years      5 years     10 years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                   <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
You  would  pay  the  following  expenses  on  a  $1,000 investment,
 assuming (1) 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of each
 time period:.......................................................   $      47    $      62    $      90    $     197
You would  pay  the  following  expenses  on  the  same  investment,
 assuming no redemption:............................................   $      17    $      52    $      90    $     197
</TABLE>
    
 
    THE  ABOVE  EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE  CONSIDERED A  REPRESENTATION OF  PAST OR
FUTURE EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE.  ACTUAL EXPENSES OF THE  FUND MAY BE GREATER  OR
LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
 
    The  purpose of this  table is to  assist the investor  in understanding the
various costs and expenses that  an investor in the  Fund will bear directly  or
indirectly.  For a  more complete description  of these costs  and expenses, see
"The Fund  and Its  Management,"  "Plan of  Distribution" and  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases."
 
   
    Long-term  shareholders  of  the Fund  may  pay  more in  sales  charges and
distribution fees than the  economic equivalent of  the maximum front-end  sales
charges permitted by the NASD.
    
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    The  following  per share  data  and ratios  for  a share  of  capital stock
outstanding throughout each period  have been audited  by Price Waterhouse  LLP,
independent  accountants.  The  per share  data  and  ratios should  be  read in
conjunction with  the  financial  statements  and  the  notes  thereto  and  the
unqualified  report  of  independent  accountants  which  are  contained  in the
Statement of Additional Information.  Further information about the  performance
of  the Fund is contained in the Fund's Annual Report to Shareholders, which may
be obtained without charge upon request to the Fund.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         FOR THE YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31
                                     ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       1996        1995        1994        1993        1992        1991
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
<S>                                  <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
  Net asset value, beginning of
   period..........................     $8.89       $8.73       $9.23       $9.41       $9.77      $10.00
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Net investment income............      0.61        0.54        0.72        0.70        0.82        0.95
  Net realized and unrealized gain
   (loss)..........................      0.48        0.16       (0.66)      (0.27)      (0.46)      (0.23)
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Total from investment
   operations......................      1.09        0.70        0.06        0.43        0.36        0.72
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Less dividends and distributions
   from:
    Net investment income..........     (0.54)      (0.44)      (0.13)      (0.61)      (0.72)      (0.95)
    Paid-in-capital................     --          (0.10)      (0.43)      --          --          --
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Total dividends and
   distributions...................     (0.54)      (0.54)      (0.56)      (0.61)      (0.72)      (0.95)
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Net asset value, end of period...  $   9.44    $   8.89    $   8.73    $   9.23    $   9.41    $   9.77
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+...........     12.66%       8.27%       0.65%       4.72%       3.76%       7.49%
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS:
  Expenses.........................      1.66%       1.68%       1.63%       1.55%       1.55%       1.61%
  Net investment income............      6.57%       6.17%       6.35%       6.97%       8.43%       9.49%
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
  Net assets, end of period, in
   thousands.......................    $80,625    $106,939    $170,117    $305,278    $441,191    $462,263
  Portfolio turnover rate..........       138%        188%        123%        221%        149%          8%
<FN>
- ---------------
+ DOES NOT REFLECT THE  DEDUCTION OF SALES CHARGE.  CALCULATED BASED ON THE  NET
  ASSET VALUE OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY OF THE PERIOD.
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Dean  Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end,
non-diversified management  investment  company  incorporated in  the  state  of
Maryland on August 2, 1990.
 
    Dean  Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital" or the "Investment Manager"),
whose address is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048, is the Fund's
Investment Manager.  The Investment  Manager, which  was incorporated  in  July,
1992,  is a wholly-owned subsidiary  of Dean Witter, Discover  & Co. ("DWDC"), a
balanced financial services organization providing  a broad range of  nationally
marketed credit and investment products.
 
   
    InterCapital  and its wholly-owned subsidiary,  Dean Witter Services Company
Inc.,  serve  in  various   investment  management,  advisory,  management   and
administrative capacities to 100 investment companies, 30 of which are listed on
the New York Stock Exchange, with combined assets of approximately $87.9 billion
at November 30, 1996. The Investment Manager also manages and advises portfolios
of   pension  plans,   other  institutions  and   individuals  which  aggregated
approximately $3.1 billion at such date.
    
 
    The Fund  has  retained the  Investment  Manager to  provide  administrative
services,  manage its business  affairs and manage the  investment of the Fund's
assets, including the placing of orders  for the purchase and sale of  portfolio
securities.  InterCapital  has retained  Dean  Witter Services  Company  Inc. to
perform the aforementioned administrative services for the Fund.
 
   
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  for expenses of the  Fund assumed by the  Investment Manager, the Fund pays
the Investment Manager  monthly compensation  calculated daily  by applying  the
annual  rate of 0.55%  to the Fund's  net assets not  exceeding $500 million and
0.50% to the Fund's net assets exceeding $500 million. For the fiscal year ended
October 31, 1996, the Fund accrued total compensation to the Investment  Manager
amounting  to 0.55% of the Fund's average  daily net assets and the Fund's total
expenses amounted to 1.66% of the Fund's average daily net assets.
    
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The investment  objective of  the Fund  is to  achieve as  high a  level  of
current  income  as is  consistent  with prudent  investment  risk. There  is no
assurance that the  objective will be  achieved. The investment  objective is  a
fundamental policy of the Fund and cannot be changed without the approval of the
shareholders  of the Fund. The following policies may be changed by the Board of
Directors without shareholder approval.
 
    The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing at least 65%
of its total assets in high quality fixed-income securities issued or guaranteed
by foreign  governments, issued  by  foreign or  U.S.  companies, or  issued  or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies and instrumentalities which have
remaining maturities at the time of purchase of not more than three years (i.e.,
the  average  weighted maturity  of  the Fund's  portfolio  will be  under three
years). In addition to  securities issued by the  U.S. Government, its  agencies
and  instrumentalities, the Fund may invest  in obligations issued or guaranteed
by a  foreign government  or  any of  its political  subdivisions,  authorities,
agencies   or   instrumentalities,   or  by   supranational   organizations,  or
fixed-income securities issued by a corporation,  all of which are rated AAA  or
AA  by Standard & Poor's  Corporation ("S&P") or Aaa  or Aa by Moody's Investors
Services, Inc.  ("Moody's") or,  if unrated,  are determined  by the  Investment
Manager  to be  of equivalent quality;  in certificates of  deposit and bankers'
acceptances issued or guaranteed by,
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
or time deposits maintained at, banks (including foreign branches of U.S.  banks
or  U.S. or foreign branches of foreign  banks) having total assets of more than
$500  million   and  deemed   by  the   Investment  Manager   to  be   of   high
creditworthiness;  and  commercial paper  rated A-1  or A-2  by S&P,  Prime-1 or
Prime-2 by Moody's or  Duff 1 or Duff  2 by Duff &  Phelps Inc. or, if  unrated,
issued  by U.S. or foreign companies  having outstanding debt securities rated A
or higher  by  S&P or  Moody's  and in  loan  participation interests  having  a
remaining  term  not exceeding  one  year in  loans  extended by  banks  to such
companies. The Fund  will have  at least  65% of  its total  assets invested  in
fixed-income  securities, as  described above,  of issuers  located in  at least
three different countries.
 
    Certain foreign  securities purchased  by the  Fund will  not have  received
ratings by a recognized U.S. rating agency. In such cases the Investment Manager
will  review the issuers of such securities with respect to the quality of their
management, balance  sheet and  financial  ratios, cash  flows and  earnings  to
establish  that the securities purchased by the Fund are of a comparable quality
to issuers receiving high quality ratings by a recognized U.S. rating agency.
 
    In attempting to  achieve its investment  objective, the Investment  Manager
will  actively  manage the  Fund's  assets in  accordance  with a  global market
strategy which seeks to exploit spreads among short-term instruments  worldwide.
As  such, the Fund may experience  high portfolio turnover rates (see "Portfolio
Management," page 15). Consistent with  such a strategy, the Investment  Manager
intends  to allocate the Fund's investments  among securities denominated in the
currencies of a number of foreign countries and, within each such country, among
different types  of debt  securities.  The Investment  Manager will  adjust  the
Fund's  exposure to  different currencies  based on  its perception  of the most
favorable markets and  issuers. In  allocating the Fund's  assets among  various
markets,  the Investment Manager will assess  the relative yield and anticipated
direction of  interest rates  in  particular markets,  the level  of  inflation,
liquidity  and financial  soundness of each  market, and the  general market and
economic conditions  existing in  each market  as well  as the  relationship  of
currencies  of various countries  to the U.S.  dollar and to  each other. In its
evaluations,  the  Investment  Manager  will  utilize  its  internal  financial,
economic  and credit  analysis resources  as well  as information  obtained from
other sources.
 
    Under  normal  conditions,  a  significant  percentage  of  the   short-term
investments in the Fund's portfolio may be money market securities. Money market
securities  include  short-term obligations  issued  or guaranteed  by  the U.S.
Government  or  foreign  governments  issued  by  such  governments'  respective
agencies   and  instrumentalities,  bank   money  market  instruments  including
certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances,  time deposits and deposit  notes
and  certain other short-term  obligations such as  short-term commercial paper.
With respect to bank money instruments, the obligations may be issued by U.S. or
foreign depository  institutions,  foreign  branches  or  subsidiaries  of  U.S.
depository   institutions   ("Eurodollar"   obligations),   U.S.   branches   or
subsidiaries of foreign depository institutions ("Yankeedollar" obligations)  or
foreign  branches or subsidiaries of foreign depository institutions. Eurodollar
and Yankeedollar  obligations and  obligations of  branches or  subsidiaries  of
foreign depository institutions may be general obligations of the parent bank or
may  be limited to the issuing branch or subsidiary by the terms of the specific
obligations or by government regulation.
 
    The Fund will  invest at least  25% of  its assets in  securities issued  by
issuers  located in the U.S. As such, the Fund will have a greater exposure than
other "global" mutual funds  to economic and political  events occurring in  the
U.S.  Changes in prevailing U.S. interest  rates, federal tax rate increases, or
adverse changes in federal or state regulations or exchange rules may all have a
disproportionate impact upon the Fund as  a result of its concentration  policy.
Moreover,  the Fund's concentration in securities of U.S. issuers will mean that
the Fund's
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
investments are more likely to be responsive, both positively and negatively, to
declines or advances in the U.S. dollar with respect to foreign currencies.
 
    A substantial  portion  of the  Fund's  investments in  securities  of  U.S.
issuers  are likely  to be  in commercial  paper, bankers  acceptances and other
short-term debt  instruments  issued by  U.S.  corporations. However,  at  times
during  which there  exists large-scale  political or  economic uncertainty, the
Fund is likely  to increase its  investments in U.S.  government securities.  In
such  cases, the securities which  the Fund is most  likely to purchase are U.S.
Treasury bills and U.S. Treasury notes with remaining maturities of under  three
years, both of which are direct obligations of the U.S. Government. The Fund may
also purchase securities issued by various agencies and instrumentalities of the
U.S.  Government. These  will include obligations  backed by the  full faith and
credit of the  United States (such  as those issued  by the Government  National
Mortgage  Association); obligations whose issuing  agency or instrumentality has
the right to borrow, to  meet its obligations, from  an existing line of  credit
with  the U.S. Treasury (such  as those issued by  the Federal National Mortgage
Association); and obligations  backed by  the credit  of the  issuing agency  or
instrumentality (such as those issued by the Federal Farm Credit System).
 
    The securities in which the Fund will be investing may be denominated in any
currency  or multinational currency.  Under normal circumstances,  the Fund will
invest its  assets  in  securities  denominated  in  at  least  three  different
currencies,  including the  U.S. dollar.  In addition  to the  U.S. dollar, such
currencies will include,  among others:  the Australian  dollar; Deutsche  mark;
Japanese yen; French franc; British pound; Canadian dollar; Swiss franc; Italian
Lira;  Dutch guilder; Austrian schilling; Spanish Peseta; Swedish Krona; Mexican
peso; Thai bhat; and  European Currency Unit ("ECU").  The Fund will not  invest
more than 25% of its total assets in securities denominated in a single currency
or currency unit with the exception of the U.S. dollar.
 
    The  Fund may invest  without limitation in notes  and commercial paper, the
principal amount  of  which is  indexed  to certain  specific  foreign  currency
exchange  rates. Indexed notes and commercial paper typically provide that their
principal amount  is adjusted  upwards  or downwards  (but  not below  zero)  at
maturity  to reflect  fluctuations in the  exchange rate  between two currencies
during the period the obligation is  outstanding, depending on the terms of  the
specific  security. In selecting the two currencies, the Investment Manager will
consider the correlation  and relative  yields of various  currencies. The  Fund
will  purchase  an  indexed  obligation  using  the  currency  in  which  it  is
denominated and,  at  maturity, will  receive  interest and  principal  payments
thereon  in that  currency. The  amount of  principal payable  by the  issuer at
maturity, however, will  vary (i.e., increase  or decrease) in  response to  the
change  (if  any) in  the exchange  rates between  the two  specified currencies
during the period from the date the  instrument is issued to its maturity  date.
The  potential for realizing  gains as a  result of changes  in foreign currency
exchange rates may enable the Fund to hedge the currency in which the obligation
is denominated (or to  effect cross-hedges against  other currencies) against  a
decline  in  the  U.S.  dollar  value  of  investments  denominated  in  foreign
currencies, while providing an attractive money market rate of return. The  Fund
will purchase such indexed obligations to generate current income or for hedging
purposes and will not speculate in such obligations.
 
    Under  normal circumstances, the Fund will invest  at least 25% of its total
assets in debt instruments issued by  U.S. and foreign companies engaged in  the
banking industry, including bank holding companies. Such investments may include
certificates  of deposit,  time deposits, bankers'  acceptances, and obligations
issued by bank holding companies, as well as repurchase agreements entered  into
with  banks. For temporary defensive purposes,  however, the Fund may reduce its
investments in the banking industry  to less than 25%  of its total assets.  The
Fund's  policy as  to concentrating its  investments in the  banking industry is
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
fundamental and may not  be changed without  the approval of  a majority of  the
Fund's voting securities.
 
    The  Fund's policy of concentrating its  investments in the banking industry
will cause the Fund  to have greater exposure  to certain risks associated  with
the  banking industry. In particular, economic  or regulatory developments in or
related to the banking industry will  affect the value of and investment  return
on the Fund's shares. Sustained increases in interest rates may adversely affect
the   availability  and  cost   of  funds  for   a  bank's  lending  activities;
deterioration in general economic conditions  may increase a bank's exposure  to
credit  losses.  The banking  industry also  is  subject to  the effects  of the
concentration of loan portfolios in particular businesses that may be  adversely
affected  by economic  conditions, such as  real estate,  energy, agriculture or
high technology-related companies. In addition, the banking industry is  subject
to  national and local  regulation and competition  among banks as  well as with
other  types  of  financial  institutions.  Also,  the  Fund's  investments   in
commercial  banks located in several foreign countries are subject to additional
risks due to the combination in such banks of commercial banking and diversified
securities activities.  As  discussed above,  however,  the Fund  will  seek  to
minimize  its exposure to such risks by  investing only in debt securities which
are determined by the Investment  Manager, acting under the general  supervision
of the Board of Directors, to be high quality.
 
    As  indicated  above, the  Fund may  invest in  securities denominated  in a
multi-national currency unit. An illustration of a multi-national currency  unit
is  the  ECU,  which  is  a "basket"  consisting  of  specified  amounts  of the
currencies of the member  states of the European  Community, a Western  European
economic cooperative organization that includes France, Germany, The Netherlands
and  the United Kingdom.  The specific amounts of  currencies comprising the ECU
may be adjusted by the Council of Ministers of the European Community to reflect
changes in relative values of the underlying currencies. The Investment  Manager
does  not  believe  that  such  adjustments  will  adversely  affect  holders of
ECU-denominated obligations or  the marketability of  such securities.  European
supranational  entities, in  particular, issue  ECU-denominated obligations. The
Fund may invest in securities denominated in the currency of one nation although
issued by a governmental entity, corporation or financial institution of another
nation. For  example,  the  Fund  may  invest  in  a  British  pound-denominated
obligation  issued  by a  United  States corporation.  Such  investments involve
credit risks associated with the issuer  and currency risks associated with  the
currency in which the obligation is denominated.
 
    The  Fund also may  invest in bonds  and notes backed  by pools of mortgage,
credit card, automobile or other types of receivables with remaining  maturities
of  three  years  or less.  These  structured  financings will  be  supported by
sufficient collateral,  and  other  credit enhancements,  including  letters  of
credit, insurance, reserve funds and guarantees by third parties, to enable such
instruments  to  obtain  a  high  quality  rating  by  a  nationally  recognized
statistical rating  agency or  be of  comparable quality  as determined  by  the
Investment  Manager. Generally,  the issuers of  mortgage-backed and receivable-
backed bonds, notes  or pass-through certificates  are special purpose  entities
and  do not  have any  significant assets  other than  the assets  securing such
obligations.  Such  special-purpose  entities  are  typically  created  by   the
underwriters  of  such securities  or the  entity to  which the  receivables are
payable.
 
    Instruments backed by pools of mortgages  and receivables may be subject  to
unscheduled prepayments of principal prior to maturity. When the obligations are
prepaid,  the Fund must reinvest the prepaid amounts in securities the yields of
which reflect  interest rates  prevailing  at the  time. Therefore,  the  Fund's
ability  to  maintain  a  portfolio  which  includes  high-yielding asset-backed
securities will  be  adversely  affected  to the  extent  that  pre-payments  of
principal  must be  reinvested in  securities which  have lower  yields than the
prepaid obligations.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
Moreover, prepayments of  securities purchased at  a premium could  result in  a
realized   loss.  In   addition,  certain   asset-backed  and  receivable-backed
securities may be illiquid. As such, the  Fund may be limited in its ability  to
invest in such securities (see Investment Restriction Number 3 on page 16).
 
RISK CONSIDERATIONS
 
   
    The  net asset value of the Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes in the
market value  of  its portfolio  securities.  The  market value  of  the  Fund's
portfolio  securities will  increase or decrease  due to a  variety of economic,
market or political  factors which cannot  be predicted. The  Fund's yield  will
also vary based on the yield of the Fund's portfolio securities.
    
 
    All  fixed-income securities are  subject to two types  of risks: the credit
risk and the interest rate risk. The  credit risk relates to the ability of  the
issuer  to meet  interest or principal  payments or  both as they  come due. The
interest rate risk  refers to the  fluctuations in  the net asset  value of  any
portfolio  of fixed-income  securities resulting  from the  inverse relationship
between price and yield  of fixed-income securities; that  is, when the  general
level of interest rates rises, the prices of outstanding fixed-income securities
decline, and when interest rates fall, prices rise.
 
    NON-DIVERSIFIED  STATUS.  The  Fund is a  non-diversified investment company
and, as such, is not subject to the diversification requirements of the Act.  As
a  non-diversified investment company, the Fund  may invest a greater portion of
its assets in the securities of a  single issuer and thus is subject to  greater
exposure  to  risks such  as  a decline  in the  credit  rating of  that issuer.
However, the Fund has in the past qualified and anticipates that it will qualify
in the future  as a regulated  investment company under  the federal income  tax
laws   and,  to  the   extent  so  qualified,  is   subject  to  the  applicable
diversification requirements  of  the Internal  Revenue  Code, as  amended  (the
"Code").  As a regulated investment company under the Code, the Fund may not, as
of the end of  any of its fiscal  quarters, have invested more  than 25% of  its
total  assets  in  the  securities  of  any  one  issuer  (including  a  foreign
government), or as to 50% of its total assets, have invested more than 5% of its
total assets in the securities of a single issuer.
 
    FOREIGN SECURITIES.    Investors  should carefully  consider  the  risks  of
investing  in  securities  of  foreign  issuers  and  securities  denominated in
non-U.S. currencies. Fluctuations in the relative rates of exchange between  the
currencies of different nations will affect the value of the Fund's investments.
Changes  in foreign  currency exchange  rates relative  to the  U.S. dollar will
affect the U.S. dollar value of  the Fund's assets denominated in that  currency
and  thereby impact upon the Fund's yield on such assets and the net asset value
of a share of the  Fund as well as the  amount of the Fund's distributions.  For
example,  if  a  substantial portion  of  the  Fund's assets  is  denominated in
Japanese yen and the relative exchange rate of the yen falls with respect to the
U.S. dollar (i.e., a  yen is worth a  smaller fraction of a  dollar than it  had
been)  then  the Fund  will  be receiving  a lesser  amount  of interest  on its
fixed-income securities denominated  in yen (when  converted into U.S.  dollars)
and  when the Fund's assets are valued for purposes of determining the net asset
value per  share of  the Fund,  the  net assets  of the  Fund reflected  by  the
yen-denominated  securities will have declined in  U.S. dollar value and the net
asset value of the Fund (always stated in U.S. dollars) may have also declined.
 
    Foreign currency  exchange rates  are  determined by  forces of  supply  and
demand  on the foreign exchange markets. These forces are themselves affected by
the  international  balance  of  payments  and  other  economic  and   financial
conditions,  government intervention,  speculation and  other factors. Moreover,
foreign currency exchange rates may be affected by the regulatory control of the
exchanges on which the  currencies trade. The  foreign currency transactions  of
the  Fund will  be conducted  on a  spot basis  or through  forward contracts or
futures contracts (see below).  The Fund may incur  certain costs in  connection
with these currency transactions.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    Investments  in  foreign securities  will  also occasion  risks  relating to
political  and  economic  developments  abroad,  including  the  possibility  of
expropriations  or confiscatory taxation, limitations on  the use or transfer of
Fund  assets  and  any  effects   of  foreign  social,  economic  or   political
instability. Foreign companies are not subject to the regulatory requirements of
U.S.  companies and, as  such, there may be  less publicly available information
about such companies.  Moreover, foreign  companies are not  subject to  uniform
accounting,  auditing  and financial  standards  and requirements  comparable to
those applicable to U.S. companies.
 
    Securities of foreign issuers may be less liquid than comparable  securities
of  U.S.  issuers  and, as  such,  their  price changes  may  be  more volatile.
Furthermore, foreign exchanges and broker-dealers are generally subject to  less
government   and   exchange  scrutiny   and   regulation  than   their  American
counterparts. Brokerage commissions,  dealer concessions  and other  transaction
costs may be higher on foreign markets than in the U.S. In addition, differences
in clearance and settlement procedures on foreign markets may occasion delays in
settlements  of Fund  trades effected in  such markets. Inability  to dispose of
portfolio securities due to settlement delays could result in losses to the Fund
due to subsequent declines in value of such securities and the inability of  the
Fund to make intended security purchases due to settlement problems could result
in a failure of the Fund to make potentially advantageous investments.
                                  ------------
 
    To  hedge  against adverse  price movements  in the  securities held  in its
portfolio and the currencies in  which they are denominated  (as well as in  the
securities  it might wish to purchase and their denominated currencies) the Fund
may engage in  transactions in  forward foreign currency  contracts, options  on
securities  and  currencies,  and  futures  contracts  and  options  on  futures
contracts on  securities, currencies  and indexes.  The Fund  may also  purchase
options   on  securities  to  facilitate  its  participation  in  the  potential
appreciation of the value  of the underlying securities.  A discussion of  these
transactions  follows and is supplemented by further disclosure in the Statement
of Additional Information.
 
    FORWARD FOREIGN  CURRENCY EXCHANGE  CONTRACTS.  A forward  foreign  currency
exchange  contract ("forward  contract") involves  an obligation  to purchase or
sell a currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from the
date of the contract agreed upon by the  parties, at a price set at the time  of
the  contract. The  Fund may  enter into  forward contracts  as a  hedge against
fluctuations in future foreign exchange rates.
 
    The Fund will enter into forward contracts under various circumstances. When
the Fund  enters  into  a contract  for  the  purchase or  sale  of  a  security
denominated  in a foreign currency, it may, for example, desire to "lock in" the
price of the security in U.S. dollars  or some other foreign currency which  the
Fund  is  temporarily  holding in  its  portfolio.  By entering  into  a forward
contract for  the purchase  or sale,  for a  fixed amount  of dollars  or  other
currency,  of the amount of foreign currency involved in the underlying security
transactions, the Fund will  be able to protect  itself against a possible  loss
resulting  from an adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar or
other currency which  is being used  for the security  purchase and the  foreign
currency in which the security is denominated during the period between the date
on which the security is purchased or sold and the date on which payment is made
or received.
 
    At  other times, when,  for example, the  Fund's Investment Manager believes
that the  currency of  a particular  foreign country  may suffer  a  substantial
decline  against the U.S.  dollar or some  other foreign currency,  the Fund may
enter into a forward contract  to sell, for a fixed  amount of dollars or  other
currency,  the amount of foreign currency approximating the value of some or all
of the Fund's portfolio securities (or  securities which the Fund has  purchased
for  its  portfolio)  denominated  in  such  foreign  currency.  Under identical
circumstances, the Fund may enter into a  forward contract to sell, for a  fixed
amount of
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
U.S.  dollars or other  currency, an amount  of foreign currency  other than the
currency in which the securities to be hedged are denominated approximating  the
value  of some or all  of the portfolio securities to  be hedged. This method of
hedging, called "cross-hedging," will be selected by the Investment Manager when
it is determined that the foreign currency in which the portfolio securities are
denominated has insufficient liquidity or is  trading at a discount as  compared
with some other foreign currency with which it tends to move in tandem.
 
    In  addition,  when  the Fund's  Investment  Manager  anticipates purchasing
securities at  some time  in  the future,  and wishes  to  lock in  the  current
exchange  rate of the currency in which those securities are denominated against
the U.S.  dollar or  some other  foreign currency,  the Fund  may enter  into  a
forward  contract to purchase an amount of currency  equal to some or all of the
value of the anticipated purchase, for a  fixed amount of U.S. dollars or  other
currency.  The  Fund  may,  however,  close  out  the  forward  contract without
purchasing the security which was the subject of the "anticipatory" hedge.
 
    Lastly, the Fund is permitted to  enter into forward contracts with  respect
to  currencies in which certain of  its portfolio securities are denominated and
on which options have been written (see "Options and Futures Transactions").
 
    In all  of the  above circumstances,  if the  currency in  which the  Fund's
portfolio securities (or anticipated portfolio securities) are denominated rises
in  value with respect to the currency  which is being purchased (or sold), then
the Fund will have realized fewer gains  than had the Fund not entered into  the
forward  contracts.  Moreover,  the  precise matching  of  the  forward contract
amounts and the value of the securities involved will not generally be possible,
since the future value of such securities in foreign currencies will change as a
consequence of market  movements in the  value of those  securities between  the
date  the forward contract is entered into and  the date it matures. The Fund is
not required  to  enter  into  such transactions  with  regard  to  its  foreign
currency-denominated  securities and will not do so unless deemed appropriate by
the Investment Manager.
 
    The Fund generally will  not enter into  a forward contract  with a term  of
greater  than one year, although it may enter into forward contracts for periods
of up to five  years. To the  extent that the Fund  enters into forward  foreign
currency contracts to hedge against a decline in the value of portfolio holdings
denominated   in  a   particular  foreign   currency  resulting   from  currency
fluctuations, there is a risk that the  Fund may nevertheless realize a gain  or
loss as a result of currency fluctuations after such portfolio holdings are sold
if  the Fund is  unable to enter  into an "offsetting"  forward foreign currency
contract with the same party  or another party. The Fund  may be limited in  its
ability  to enter into  hedging transactions involving  forward contracts by the
Code requirements relating to qualifications  as a regulated investment  company
(see "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes").
 
    OPTIONS  AND FUTURES  TRANSACTIONS. The Fund  may purchase  and sell (write)
call and put  options on U.S.  Treasury notes,  bonds and bills  and on  various
foreign  currencies  which are  listed on  several  U.S. and  foreign securities
exchanges or  are  written  in over-the-counter  transactions  ("OTC  Options").
Listed  options are issued or guaranteed by  the exchange on which they trade or
by a  clearing corporation  such as  the Options  Clearing Corporation  ("OCC").
Ownership  of a listed call option gives the  Fund the right to buy from the OCC
(in the U.S.) or other clearing corporation or exchange, the underlying security
or currency covered by the  option at the stated  exercise price (the price  per
unit  of the underlying security or currency) by filing an exercise notice prior
to the expiration date  of the option.  Ownership of a  listed put option  would
give  the Fund the right to sell the  underlying security or currency to the OCC
(in the U.S.) or other clearing  corporation or exchange at the stated  exercise
price.  OTC options are purchased from or sold (written) to dealers or financial
institutions which have entered into direct  agreements with the Fund. With  OTC
options, such
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
variables  as expiration  date, exercise price  and premium will  be agreed upon
between the Fund  and the transacting  dealer, without the  intermediation of  a
third party such as the OCC.
 
    COVERED  CALL WRITING.  The Fund is  permitted to write covered call options
on portfolio securities which are denominated in either U.S. dollars or  foreign
currencies  and on  the U.S.  dollar and  foreign currencies,  without limit, in
order to hedge against  the decline in  the value of a  security or currency  in
which  such security is denominated and to close out long call option positions.
As a  writer of  a call  option, the  Fund has  the obligation,  upon notice  of
exercise of the option, to deliver the security or amount of currency underlying
the  option (certain  listed and OTC  call options  written by the  Fund will be
exercisable by the purchaser only on a specific date).
 
    COVERED PUT WRITING.  As a writer of covered put options, the Fund incurs an
obligation to buy  the security  (or currency)  underlying the  option from  the
purchaser  of the  put at  the option's  exercise price  at any  time during the
option period, at the purchaser's election  (certain listed and OTC put  options
written  by the Fund  will be excercisable  by the purchaser  only on a specific
date). The Fund will write  put options for three  purposes: (1) to receive  the
premiums  paid by purchasers; (2) when the Investment Manager wishes to purchase
the security underlying the  option (or a security  denominated in the  currency
underlying  the option) at a price lower than its current market price, in which
case it will write  the covered put  at an exercise  price reflecting the  lower
purchase  price sought;  and (3) to  close out  a long put  option position. The
aggregate value of the obligations underlying the puts determined as of the date
the options are sold will not exceed 50% of the Fund's net assets.
 
    PURCHASING CALL AND PUT OPTIONS.  The Fund may purchase listed and OTC  call
and  put options in amounts equalling up to 5% of its total assets. The Fund may
purchase call options to  close out a written  call position (see "Covered  Call
Writing"  above) or to protect against an increase in the price of a security it
anticipates purchasing or, in the case of call options on a foreign currency, to
hedge against  an adverse  exchange rate  change of  the currency  in which  the
security  it  anticipates purchasing  is denominated  vis-a-vis the  currency in
which the exercise price  is denominated. The Fund  may purchase put options  on
securities  which it  holds in  its portfolio only  to protect  itself against a
decline in the value of the security. The Fund may also purchase put options  to
close  out written  put positions  in a  manner similar  to call  option closing
purchase transactions.  There are  no  other limits  on  the Fund's  ability  to
purchase call and put options.
 
    FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  The  Fund may purchase and  sell futures contracts that
are currently  traded, or  may in  the future  be traded,  on U.S.  and  foreign
commodity exchanges on common stocks, such underlying fixed-income securities as
U.S. Treasury bonds, notes, and bills and/or any foreign government fixed-income
security  ("interest rate" futures), on  various currencies ("currency" futures)
and on such indexes of U.S. or  foreign fixed-income securities as may exist  or
come  into  being, such  as the  Moody's Investment  Grade Corporate  Bond Index
("index"  futures).  As  a  futures  contract  purchaser,  the  Fund  incurs  an
obligation  to take delivery of a  specified amount of the obligation underlying
the contract at  a specified  time in  the future for  a specified  price. As  a
seller  of a  futures contract,  the Fund  incurs an  obligation to  deliver the
specified amount of the underlying obligation at a specified time in return  for
an agreed upon price.
 
    The  Fund  will purchase  or sell  interest rate  futures contracts  for the
purpose of hedging  some or all  of the  value of its  portfolio securities  (or
anticipated  portfolio securities) against changes in prevailing interest rates.
The Fund  will purchase  or sell  index  futures contracts  for the  purpose  of
hedging  some  or all  of its  portfolio  (or anticipated  portfolio) securities
against changes in their prices.
 
    OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Fund may purchase and write call and  put
options  on futures  contracts which  are traded on  an exchange  and enter into
closing transactions with respect to such
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
options to terminate an existing position. An option on a futures contract gives
the purchaser the right (in return for the premium paid) to assume a position in
a futures contract (a long position if the option is a call and a short position
if the option is  a put) at a  specified exercise price at  any time during  the
term  of  the  option. The  Fund  will  purchase and  write  options  on futures
contracts for identical purposes to those set forth above for the purchase of  a
futures  contract (purchase of  a call option or  sale of a  put option) and the
sale of a futures contract (purchase of a put option or sale of a call  option),
or to close out a long or short position in futures contracts.
 
    RISKS  OF  OPTIONS AND  FUTURES  TRANSACTIONS. The  Fund  may close  out its
position as writer of an option, or as a buyer or seller of a futures  contract,
only  if a liquid  secondary market exists  for options or  futures contracts of
that series. There is no assurance  that such a market will exist,  particularly
in the case of OTC options, as such options will generally only be closed out by
entering into a closing purchase transaction with the purchasing dealer.
 
    Exchanges  may limit the amount by which the price of many futures contracts
may move on  any day. If  the price moves  equal the daily  limit on  successive
days,  then it may  prove impossible to  liquidate a futures  position until the
daily limit moves have ceased.
 
    While the futures contracts and options transactions to be engaged in by the
Fund for  the  purpose  of  hedging the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  are  not
speculative  in nature, there are risks inherent in the use of such instruments.
One such risk is that  the Fund's Investment Manager  could be incorrect in  its
expectations  as to the  direction or extent  of various interest  rate or price
movements or the time span within  which the movements take place. For  example,
if the Fund sold futures contracts for the sale of securities in anticipation of
an  increase  in interest  rates,  and then  interest  rates went  down instead,
causing bond prices to rise, the Fund would lose money on the sale.
 
    Another risk  which may  arise  in employing  futures contracts  to  protect
against  the  price volatility  of portfolio  securities is  that the  prices of
securities, currencies and indexes subject to futures contracts (and thereby the
futures contract prices) may correlate imperfectly with the behavior of the U.S.
dollar cash  prices of  the Fund's  portfolio securities  and their  denominated
currencies.  Another such risk is that prices of interest rate futures contracts
may not move  in tandem with  the changes in  prevailing interest rates  against
which  the Fund seeks a  hedge. A correlation may also  be distorted by the fact
that the futures  market is dominated  by short-term traders  seeking to  profit
from  the difference  between a contract  or security price  objective and their
cost of borrowed funds. Such distortions are generally minor and would  diminish
as the contract approached maturity.
 
    The  Fund,  by entering  into transactions  in  foreign futures  and options
markets, will  also incur  risks  similar to  those  discussed above  under  the
section entitled "Foreign Securities."
 
    REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements, which
may  be viewed  as a type  of secured lending  by the Fund,  and which typically
involve the acquisition by the Fund of debt securities from a selling  financial
institution  such as a bank, savings  and loan association or broker-dealer. The
agreement provides that the Fund will sell back to the institution, and that the
institution will repurchase, the underlying security at a specified price and at
a fixed time in the  future, usually not more than  seven days from the date  of
purchase.  While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with
direct investments  in  debt  securities,  including the  risks  of  default  or
bankruptcy  of the selling financial institution, the Fund follows procedures to
minimize such risks. These procedures include effecting repurchase  transactions
only  with large,  well-capitalized and  well-established financial institutions
and maintaining adequate collateralization.
 
    REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.   The  Fund may also  use reverse  repurchase
agreements  as part  of its  investment strategy.  Reverse repurchase agreements
involve sales by the Fund of portfolio assets concurrently with an agreement  by
the Fund
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
to  repurchase  the  same assets  at  a later  date  at a  fixed  price. Reverse
repurchase agreements involve the risk that  the market value of the  securities
the  Fund is obligated to  repurchase under the agreement  may decline below the
repurchase price.  In  the  event  the  buyer  of  securities  under  a  reverse
repurchase  agreement files for bankruptcy or  becomes insolvent, the Fund's use
of proceeds of the  agreement may be restricted  pending a determination by  the
other  party,  or  its  trustee  or  receiver,  whether  to  enforce  the Fund's
obligation to repurchase the securities.
 
    ZERO COUPON SECURITIES.  A portion of the fixed-income securities  purchased
by  the Fund may be  zero coupon securities. Such  securities are purchased at a
discount from their face amount, giving the purchaser the right to receive their
full value at maturity. The interest  earned on such securities is,  implicitly,
automatically  compounded and paid out at  maturity. While such compounding at a
constant rate eliminates the risk of receiving lower yields upon reinvestment of
interest if  prevailing interest  rates  decline, the  owner  of a  zero  coupon
security  will be  unable to participate  in higher yields  upon reinvestment of
interest received  on interest-paying  securities if  prevailing interest  rates
rise.
 
    A  zero coupon  security pays  no interest  to its  holder during  its life.
Therefore, to the extent the Fund invests in zero coupon securities, it will not
receive current cash  available for distribution  to shareholders. In  addition,
zero  coupon securities are subject  to substantially greater price fluctuations
during periods  of  changing  prevailing  interest  rates  than  are  comparable
securities  which  pay interest  on  a current  basis.  Current federal  tax law
requires that a holder  (such as the  Fund) of a zero  coupon security accrue  a
portion  of the discount at which the security was purchased as income each year
even though  the Fund  receives no  interest payments  in cash  on the  security
during the year.
 
    WHEN-ISSUED  AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES  AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS.  From
time to  time,  in  the ordinary  course  of  business, the  Fund  may  purchase
securities  on a when-issued or  delayed delivery basis or  may purchase or sell
securities on a forward commitment basis. When such transactions are negotiated,
the price is fixed at the time  of the commitment, but delivery and payment  can
take place a month or more after the date of the commitment. There is no overall
limit  on the  percentage of  the Fund's  assets which  may be  committed to the
purchase of securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward  commitment
basis.  An increase  in the  percentage of  the Fund's  assets committed  to the
purchase of securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward  commitment
basis may increase the volatility of the Fund's net asset value.
 
    WHEN,  AS AND IF ISSUED  SECURITIES.  The Fund  may purchase securities on a
"when, as and if issued" basis under which the issuance of the security  depends
upon  the  occurrence of  a  subsequent event,  such  as approval  of  a merger,
corporate  reorganization,  leveraged  buyout  or  debt  restructuring.  If  the
anticipated  event does not  occur and the  securities are not  issued, the Fund
will have  lost an  investment opportunity.  There is  no overall  limit on  the
percentage  of  the Fund's  assets which  may  be committed  to the  purchase of
securities on a "when, as and if issued" basis. An increase in the percentage of
the Fund's assets committed to the purchase of securities on a "when, as and  if
issued" basis may increase the volatility of its net asset value.
 
    LENDING  OF  PORTFOLIO SECURITIES.    Consistent with  applicable regulatory
requirements, the Fund may lend its portfolio securities to brokers, dealers and
other financial institutions, provided that such loans are callable at any  time
by  the Fund (subject to certain notice provisions described in the Statement of
Additional  Information),  and  are  at  all  times  secured  by  cash  or  cash
equivalents, which are maintained in a segregated account pursuant to applicable
regulations  and that are at least equal  to the market value, determined daily,
of the loaned securities.
 
    PRIVATE PLACEMENTS.  The Fund  may invest up to 10%  of its total assets  in
securities  which  are  subject  to restrictions  on  resale  because  they have
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
not  been  registered  under  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended  (the
"Securities  Act"), or which  are otherwise not  readily marketable. (Securities
eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A of the Securities Act, and  determined
to  be liquid pursuant  to the procedures discussed  in the following paragraph,
are not subject to  the foregoing restriction.)  These securities are  generally
referred  to as private placements or  restricted securities. Limitations on the
resale of such securities may have an adverse effect on their marketability, and
may prevent the Fund from disposing  of them promptly at reasonable prices.  The
Fund  may have to bear the expense of registering such securities for resale and
the risk of substantial delays in effecting such registration.
 
   
    The Securities  and Exchange  Commission  has adopted  Rule 144A  under  the
Securities  Act,  which  permits  the  Fund  to  sell  restricted  securities to
qualified institutional  buyers  without  limitation.  The  Investment  Manager,
pursuant  to  procedures adopted  by  the Directors  of  the Fund,  will  make a
determination as to the liquidity of  each restricted security purchased by  the
Fund.  If a restricted security is determined to be "liquid", such security will
not be included within the category  "illiquid securities", which is limited  by
the  Fund's investment restrictions to 10% of the Fund's total assets. Investing
in Rule 144A securities could  have the effect of  increasing the level of  Fund
illiquidity  to the extent the Fund, at a particular time, may be unable to find
qualified institutional buyers interested in purchasing such securities.
    
 
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
 
   
    The Fund's portfolio is  actively managed by its  Investment Manager with  a
view  to achieving the  Fund's investment objective. The  Fund is managed within
InterCapital's Taxable Fixed-Income Group,  which manages twenty-five funds  and
fund  portfolios, with  approximately $13.2  billion in  assets at  November 30,
1996. Vinh Q. Tran, Vice President of InterCapital and Anne Pickrell,  Assistant
Vice  President of InterCapital, each a  member of InterCapital's Corporate Bond
Group, have been the Fund's primary  portfolio managers since its inception  and
December, 1994, respectively. Mr. Tran has been managing portfolios comprised of
global  fixed-income  securities  at  InterCapital  since  February,  1989.  Ms.
Pickrell has  been a  portfolio manager  at InterCapital  since July,  1991.  In
determining  which securities  to purchase  for the Fund  or hold  in the Fund's
portfolio, the Investment Manager will rely on information from various sources,
including research, analysis and appraisals of brokers and dealers, the views of
Directors of the Fund  and others regarding  economic developments and  interest
rate  trends,  and the  Investment Manager's  own analysis  of factors  it deems
relevant.
    
 
    Personnel of the Investment Manager  have substantial experience in the  use
of  the investment  techniques described  above under  the heading  "Options and
Futures Transactions,"  which techniques  require  skills different  from  those
needed to select the portfolio securities underlying various options and futures
contracts.
 
    Securities  purchased by  the Fund are  generally sold by  dealers acting as
principal for their  own accounts.  Orders for transactions  in other  portfolio
securities  and commodities are placed for the Fund with a number of brokers and
dealers, including Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR"), a broker-dealer  affiliate
of InterCapital. Pursuant to an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission,
the  Fund may effect principal transactions  in certain money market instruments
with DWR. In addition, the Fund may incur brokerage commissions on  transactions
conducted through DWR.
 
    The  Fund may sell portfolio securities without regard to the length of time
that they  have  been  held,  in  order to  take  advantage  of  new  investment
opportunities  or yield differentials,  or because the  Fund desires to preserve
gains or limit losses due to changing economic conditions, interest rate trends,
or the financial condition of the issuer. It is not anticipated that the  Fund's
portfolio  turnover rate will exceed  200% in any one  year. The Fund will incur
underwriting discount  costs (on  underwritten securities)  and brokerage  costs
commensurate with its
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
portfolio  turnover  rate. Short  term  gains and  losses  may result  from such
portfolio  transactions.  See  "Dividends,   Distributions  and  Taxes"  for   a
discussion of the tax implications of the Fund's transactions.
 
    The  expenses of the Fund relating to its portfolio management are likely to
be greater than those incurred by other investment companies investing primarily
in  securities  issued  by  domestic  issuers,  as  custodial  costs,  brokerage
commissions  and  other  transaction  charges related  to  investing  in foreign
markets are generally higher than in the United States.
 
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The investment restrictions  listed below are  among the restrictions  which
have  been  adopted  by the  Fund  as  fundamental policies.  Under  the  Act, a
fundamental policy may  not be changed  without the  vote of a  majority of  the
outstanding  voting securities of the Fund, as  defined in the Act. For purposes
of the following limitations: (i)  all percentage limitations apply  immediately
after  a purchase or initial  investment, and (ii) any  subsequent change in any
applicable percentage resulting  from market  fluctuations or  other changes  in
total  or  net assets  does not  require  elimination of  any security  from the
portfolio.
 
    The Fund may not:
 
   1. Invest 25%  or more  of the  value of its  total assets  in securities  of
issuers  in  any one  industry, except  that  the Fund  will concentrate  in the
banking industry.
 
   2. Invest more  than 5% of  the value of  its total assets  in securities  of
issuers having a record, together with predecessors, of less than three years of
continuous  operation. This restriction shall not apply to any obligation issued
or   guaranteed   by   the   United   States   Government,   its   agencies   or
instrumentalities.
 
   3.  Invest  more  than  10%  of its  total  assets  in  "illiquid securities"
(securities for which  no active  and substantial secondary  market exists)  and
repurchase agreements which have a maturity of longer than seven days.
 
    Generally,  OTC  options and  the  assets used  as  "cover" for  written OTC
options  are  "illiquid  securities"  (securities   for  which  no  active   and
substantial  secondary market exists).  However, the Fund  is permitted to treat
the securities it uses as  cover for written OTC  options as liquid provided  it
follows  a procedure whereby it will sell  OTC options only to qualified dealers
who agree that the  Fund may repurchase  such options at a  maximum price to  be
calculated  pursuant  to  a  predetermined  formula  set  forth  in  the  option
agreement. The formula may  vary from agreement to  agreement, but is  generally
based  on a multiple of the premium received  by the Fund for writing the option
plus the amount,  if any,  of the  option's intrinsic  value. An  OTC option  is
considered  an illiquid  asset only  to the  extent that  the maximum repurchase
price under the formula exceeds the intrinsic value of the option.
 
PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The Fund offers its  shares for sale  to the public  on a continuous  basis.
Pursuant   to  a  Distribution  Agreement  between  the  Fund  and  Dean  Witter
Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"), an  affiliate of the Investment  Manager,
shares  of the Fund  are distributed by  the Distributor and  offered by DWR and
other dealers  which  have entered  into  selected dealer  agreements  with  the
Distributor  ("Selected Broker-Dealers"). The principal  executive office of the
Distributor is located at Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.
 
    The minimum initial purchase is $1,000. Subsequent purchases of $100 or more
may be made by sending a check, payable to Dean Witter Global Short-Term  Income
Fund  Inc., directly to Dean Witter Trust Company (the "Transfer Agent") at P.O.
Box 1040, Jersey City, NJ 07303 or by contacting an
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
account executive of DWR  or other Selected  Broker-Dealer. The minimum  initial
purchase,  in the case of investments  through EasyInvest, an automatic purchase
plan (see  "Shareholder  Services"), is  $100,  provided that  the  schedule  of
automatic  investments  will result  in  investments totalling  at  least $1,000
within the  first  twelve  months.  In  the  case  of  investments  pursuant  to
Systematic  Payroll Deduction Plans (including Individual Retirement Plans), the
Fund, in its discretion,  may accept investments without  regard to any  minimum
amounts  which would otherwise  be required, if  the Fund has  reason to believe
that additional investments will increase  the investment in all accounts  under
such  Plans to at  least $1,000. Certificates  for shares purchased  will not be
issued unless a request is  made by the shareholder  in writing to the  Transfer
Agent.
 
    Shares  of  the Fund  are sold  through  the Distributor  on a  normal three
business day settlement basis;  that is, payment generally  is due on or  before
the  third business  day (settlement  date) after the  order is  placed with the
Distributor. Shares purchased through the Distributor are entitled to  dividends
beginning  on the  next business  day following  settlement date.  Since DWR and
other Selected Broker-Dealers forward investors' funds on settlement date,  they
will  benefit  from the  temporary use  of the  funds if  payment is  made prior
thereto. Shares purchased through the  Transfer Agent are entitled to  dividends
beginning  on the  next business  day following  receipt of  an order.  As noted
above, orders placed  directly with the  Transfer Agent must  be accompanied  by
payment.  Investors will be  entitled to receive  capital gains distributions if
their order is received by the close of business on the day prior to the  record
date  for such distributions. The offering price will be the net asset value per
share next determined following receipt of  an order (see "Determination of  Net
Asset Value" below).
 
    While  no  sales charge  is  imposed at  the  time shares  are  purchased, a
contingent deferred sales charge may be  imposed at the time of redemption  (see
"Redemptions  and  Repurchases"). Sales  personnel  are compensated  for selling
shares of the Fund at the  time of their sale by  the Distributor or any of  its
affiliates  and/or the Selected Broker-Dealer. In addition, some sales personnel
of  the  Selected   Broker-Dealer  will  receive   various  types  of   non-cash
compensation  as special  sales incentives, including  trips, educational and/or
business seminars  and merchandise.  The Fund  and the  Distributor reserve  the
right to reject any purchase orders.
 
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
    The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
Act  (the "Plan"),  under which the  Fund pays  the Distributor a  fee, which is
accrued daily and payable monthly, at an annual rate of 0.75% of the lesser  of:
(a)  the average  daily aggregate  gross sales  of the  Fund's shares  since the
inception of the Fund (not including reinvestments of dividends or capital gains
distributions), less the average daily aggregate  net asset value of the  Fund's
shares  redeemed since  the Fund's  inception upon  which a  contingent deferred
sales charge has been  imposed or waived;  or (b) the  Fund's average daily  net
assets. This fee is treated by the Fund as an expense in the year it is accrued.
A  portion of the fee payable pursuant to the Plan, equal to 0.25% of the Fund's
average daily net assets, is characterized  as a service fee within the  meaning
of  NASD guidelines.  The service  fee is  a payment  made for  personal service
and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts.
 
    Amounts paid under the Plan are paid to the Distributor to compensate it for
the services provided and  the expenses borne by  the Distributor and others  in
the  distribution of the Fund's shares, including the payment of commissions for
sales of the  Fund's shares and  incentive compensation to  and expenses of  DWR
account executives and others who engage in or support distribution of shares or
who  service shareholder  accounts, including  overhead and  telephone expenses;
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
printing  and distribution of  prospectuses and reports  used in connection with
the offering  of the  Fund's  shares to  other  than current  shareholders;  and
preparation,  printing  and  distribution of  sales  literature  and advertising
materials. In addition, the  Distributor may utilize fees  paid pursuant to  the
Plan  to compensate DWR and other  Selected Broker-Dealers for their opportunity
costs in advancing such amounts,  which compensation would be  in the form of  a
carrying charge on any unreimbursed distribution expenses.
 
   
    For  the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996, the Fund accrued payments under
the Plan amounting to  $688,258, which amount  is equal to  0.75% of the  Fund's
average  daily net assets  for the fiscal  year. The payments  accrued under the
Plan were calculated pursuant  to clause (b) of  the compensation formula  under
the Plan.
    
 
   
    At any given time, the Distributor may incur expenses in distributing shares
of  the Fund which may be in excess of the total of (i) the payments made by the
Fund pursuant to the  Plan, and (ii) the  proceeds of contingent deferred  sales
charges  paid by investors  upon the redemption of  shares (see "Redemptions and
Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge"). For example, if the Distributor
incurred $1 million in expenses in distributing shares of the Fund and  $750,000
had  been received by  the Distributor as  described in (i)  and (ii) above, the
excess expense would amount  to $250,000. The Distributor  has advised the  Fund
that  such  excess  amounts,  including  the  carrying  charge  described above,
totalled $6,987,294 at October 31, 1996, which equalled 8.67% of the Fund's  net
assets at such date.
    
 
    Because  there  is no  requirement under  the Plan  that the  Distributor be
reimbursed for all  distribution expenses or  any requirement that  the Plan  be
continued  from year to year, such excess amount does not constitute a liability
of the Fund. Although there is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay  expenses
incurred  by the Distributor in excess of payments made to the Distributor under
the Plan and the proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors
upon redemption  of  shares, if  for  any reason  the  Plan is  terminated,  the
Directors will consider at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses.
Any cumulative expenses incurred but not yet recovered through distribution fees
or contingent deferred sales charges, may or may not be recovered through future
distribution fees or contingent deferred sales charges.
 
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
 
    The  net asset value per share of the  Fund is determined once daily at 4:00
p.m., New York time (or, on days  when the New York Stock Exchange closes  prior
to  4:00  p.m., at  such earlier  time), on  each  day that  the New  York Stock
Exchange is open by taking the value of all assets of the Fund, subtracting  all
its  liabilities, dividing by the number  of shares outstanding and adjusting to
the nearest cent. The net asset value  per share will not be determined on  Good
Friday and on such other federal and non-federal holidays as are observed by the
New York Stock Exchange.
 
   
    In  the calculation of the  Fund's net asset value:  (1) an equity portfolio
security listed or traded on  the New York or  American Stock Exchange or  other
domestic  or foreign stock exchange  is valued at its  latest sale price on that
exchange prior to the time when assets  are valued; if there were no sales  that
day,  the security is valued at the  latest bid price (in cases where securities
are traded on more than one exchange, the securities are valued on the  exchange
designated  as  the  primary  market  pursuant  to  procedures  adopted  by  the
Directors); and (2)  all other portfolio  securities for which  over-the-counter
market  quotations are readily available are  valued at the latest available bid
price prior to  the time of  valuation. When market  quotations are not  readily
available,   including  circumstances  under  which  it  is  determined  by  the
Investment Manager that sale and bid  prices are not reflective of a  security's
market  value, portfolio securities are valued at their fair value as determined
in  good  faith  under   procedures  established  by   and  under  the   general
    
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
supervision  of  the Fund's  Directors.  For valuation  purposes,  quotations of
foreign portfolio securities, other assets and liabilities and forward contracts
stated in foreign currency  are translated into U.S.  dollar equivalents at  the
prevailing  market rates  prior to  the close  of the  New York  Stock Exchange.
Dividends receivable are accrued as  of the ex-dividend date  or as of the  time
that the relevant ex-dividend date and amounts become known.
 
    Short-term  debt securities with remaining maturities  of 60 days or less at
the time  of  purchase  are  valued at  amortized  cost,  unless  the  Directors
determine  such does  not reflect  the securities'  market value,  in which case
these securities  will  be valued  at  their fair  value  as determined  by  the
Directors.
 
   
    Certain  securities  in the  Fund's portfolio  may be  valued by  an outside
pricing service  approved  by the  Fund's  Directors. The  pricing  service  may
utilize  a matrix system incorporating security  quality, maturity and coupon as
the evaluation  model  parameters, and/or  research  evaluations by  its  staff,
including  review of broker-dealer market  price quotations, in determining what
it believes is the fair valuation of the portfolio securities.
    
 
    Generally, trading in foreign securities, as well as corporate bonds, United
States government  securities and  money  market instruments,  is  substantially
completed  each day  at various  times prior  to 4:00  p.m., New  York time. The
values of such securities used  in computing the net  asset value of the  Fund's
shares are determined as of such times. Foreign currency exchange rates are also
generally  determined prior  to 4:00 p.m.,  New York  time. Occasionally, events
which affect the  values of such  securities and such  exchange rates may  occur
between  the times at which they are determined and 4:00 p.m., New York time and
will therefore  not be  reflected in  the computation  of the  Fund's net  asset
value.  If events materially affecting the value of such securities occur during
such period,  then  these securities  will  be valued  at  their fair  value  as
determined  in  good  faith  under  procedures  established  by  and  under  the
supervision of the Directors.
 
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.  All income  dividends
and  capital gains distributions  are automatically paid  in full and fractional
shares of the  Fund (or,  if specified by  the shareholder,  any other  open-end
investment   company  for  which  InterCapital   serves  as  investment  manager
(collectively, with the Fund, the "Dean Witter Funds")), unless the  shareholder
requests  that they be paid  in cash. Shares so acquired  are not subject to the
imposition of  a contingent  deferred sales  charge upon  their redemption  (see
"Redemptions  and Repurchases"). Such dividends  and distributions will be paid,
at the net  asset value per  share, in  shares of the  Fund (or in  cash if  the
shareholder  so requests) on  the monthly payment  date, which will  be no later
than the last business day of the  month for which the dividend or  distribution
is  payable.  Processing of  dividend  checks begins  immediately  following the
monthly payment date. Shareholders  who have requested  to receive dividends  in
cash  will normally  receive their monthly  dividend check during  the first ten
days of the following month.
    
 
    EASYINVEST-SM-.   Shareholders may  subscribe  to EasyInvest,  an  automatic
purchase  plan  which  provides  for  any  amount  from  $100  to  $5,000  to be
transferred automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis,  to the Transfer Agent  for investment in shares  of
the    Fund   (see   "Purchase   of    Fund   Shares"   and   "Redemptions   and
Repurchases--Involuntary Redemption").
 
    INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS OR DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  Any  shareholder
who   receives  a  cash  payment  representing   a  dividend  or  capital  gains
distribution may invest such dividend or distribution at the net asset value per
share next
deter-
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
mined after  receipt  by the  Transfer  Agent, by  returning  the check  or  the
proceeds to the Transfer Agent within thirty days after the payment date. Shares
so  acquired are not  subject to the  imposition of a  contingent deferred sales
charge upon their redemption (see "Redemptions and Repurchases").
 
    SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN.  A  systematic withdrawal plan (the  "Withdrawal
Plan")  is available  for shareholders  who own or  purchase shares  of the Fund
having a minimum value of $10,000 based  upon the then current net asset  value.
The  Withdrawal Plan provides for monthly  or quarterly (March, June, September,
and December) checks in any  dollar amount, not less than  $25, or in any  whole
percentage  of  the  account balance,  on  an annualized  basis.  Any applicable
contingent deferred sales charge  will be imposed on  shares redeemed under  the
Withdrawal  Plan  (See "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred Sales
Charge"). Therefore, any shareholder participating  in the Withdrawal Plan  will
have  sufficient shares redeemed  from his or  her account so  that the proceeds
(net of any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) to the shareholder will
be the designated monthly or quarterly amount.
 
    Shareholders should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected  Broker-Dealer
account executive or the Transfer Agent for further information about any of the
above services.
 
    TAX-SHELTERED  RETIREMENT PLANS.  Retirement plans  are available for use by
corporations, the self-employed,  Individual Retirement  Accounts and  Custodial
Accounts  under Section 403(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code. Adoption of such
plans should be on advice of legal counsel or tax adviser.
 
    For further information  regarding plan administration,  custodial fees  and
other  details, investors should contact their account executive or the Transfer
Agent.
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    The Fund  makes  available  to  its  shareholders  an  "Exchange  Privilege"
allowing  the exchange  of shares of  the Fund  for shares of  other Dean Witter
Funds sold with a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC funds"), for shares of
Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury  Trust, Dean Witter Limited Term  Municipal
Trust,  Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund, Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund, Dean
Witter Balanced Income Fund, Dean  Witter Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury  Trust
and  five Dean Witter Funds  which are money market  funds (the foregoing eleven
non-CDSC funds are hereinafter referred  to as the "Exchange Funds").  Exchanges
may  be made after the shares of the  Fund acquired by purchase (not by exchange
or dividend reinvestment) have  been held for thirty  days. There is no  waiting
period for exchanges of shares acquired by exchange or dividend reinvestment.
 
    An  exchange to another CDSC  fund or any Exchange Fund  that is not a money
market fund is on the basis of the next calculated net asset value per share  of
each  fund after the  exchange order is  received. When exchanging  into a money
market fund from the Fund,  shares of the Fund are  redeemed out of the Fund  at
their  next calculated net  asset value and  the proceeds of  the redemption are
used to  purchase shares  of the  money market  fund at  their net  asset  value
determined  the following business day. Subsequent  exchanges between any of the
money market funds and any of the CDSC funds can be effected on the same  basis.
No  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC") is  imposed at  the time  of any
exchange, although any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon ultimate redemption.
Shares of the Fund which are exchanged for shares of another CDSC fund having  a
higher  CDSC schedule than the Fund will be  subject to the CDSC schedule of the
other CDSC fund, even if shares are subsequently re-exchanged for shares of  the
Fund prior to redemption. Concomitantly, shares of the Fund acquired in exchange
for  shares of another CDSC fund having a  lower CDSC schedule than that of this
Fund will be subject to the
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
CDSC schedule of this  Fund, even if such  shares are subsequently  re-exchanged
for  shares of the CDSC fund originally purchased. During the period of time the
shareholder remains invested in the Exchange Fund (calculated from the last  day
of  the month  in which  the Exchange  Fund shares  were acquired),  the holding
period (for the purpose of determining the rate of the CDSC) is frozen. If those
shares are subsequently  re-exchanged for  shares of  a CDSC  fund, the  holding
period  previously frozen when the  first exchange was made  resumes on the last
day of the month in which shares of  a CDSC fund are reacquired. Thus, the  CDSC
is  based  upon the  time (calculated  as described  above) the  shareholder was
invested in shares of a CDSC fund (see "Redemptions and  Repurchases--Contingent
Deferred  Sales Charge"). However, in  the case of shares  of the Fund exchanged
into an Exchange Fund upon a redemption of shares which results in a CDSC  being
imposed,  a credit (not  to exceed the amount  of the CDSC) will  be given in an
amount equal to the Exchange Fund  12b-1 distribution fees incurred on or  after
that  date  which  are  attributable  to  those  shares.  (Exchange  Fund  12b-1
distribution fees are described in the prospectuses for those funds.)
 
    In addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares  of
Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales charge
funds"), but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged  for
shares  of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired in
exchange for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for  shares
of  other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    Purchases and  exchanges should  be  made for  investment purposes  only.  A
pattern  of frequent  exchanges may  be deemed by  the Investment  Manager to be
abusive and contrary to the best interests of the Fund's other shareholders and,
at the Investment Manager's discretion, may be limited by the Fund's refusal  to
accept  additional purchases and/  or exchanges from  the investor. Although the
Fund does not  have any  specific definition of  what constitutes  a pattern  of
frequent  exchanges,  and  will  consider all  relevant  factors  in determining
whether a particular situation is abusive and contrary to the best interests  of
the Fund and its other shareholders, investors should be aware that the Fund and
each  of the other Dean Witter Funds  may in their discretion limit or otherwise
restrict the number  of times this  Exchange Privilege may  be exercised by  any
investor.  Any such restriction will be made  by the Fund on a prospective basis
only, upon notice  to the  shareholder not later  than ten  days following  such
shareholder's most recent exchange.
 
    The  Exchange Privilege may be terminated or revised at any time by the Fund
and/or any of  such Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of the  Fund have  been
exchanged,  upon  such  notice  as  may  be  required  by  applicable regulatory
agencies.
 
    Shareholders maintaining  margin  accounts  with  DWR  or  another  Selected
Broker-Dealer  are referred to their account executive regarding restrictions on
exchange of shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.
 
    The current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment  objective(s)
and  policies, and  shareholders should obtain  a copy and  examine it carefully
before investing. Exchanges  are subject to  the minimum investment  requirement
and  any other conditions imposed  by each fund. In  the case of any shareholder
holding a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be made until  all
applicable  share  certificates have  been received  by  the Transfer  Agent and
deposited in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated for  federal
income  tax purposes the same as a  repurchase or redemption of shares, on which
the shareholder may  realize a  capital gain or  loss. However,  the ability  to
deduct capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is
an  exchange of shares  within ninety days  after the shares  are purchased. The
Exchange Privilege is only available in states where an exchange may legally  be
made.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
   
    If DWR or another Selected Broker-Dealer is the current dealer of record and
its  account  numbers  are part  of  the account  information,  shareholders may
initiate an exchange of shares of the Fund for shares of any of the Dean  Witter
Funds  (for which the Exchange Privilege is available) pursuant to this Exchange
Privilege  by  contacting  their   account  executive  (no  Exchange   Privilege
Authorization  Form is required). Other shareholders (and those shareholders who
are clients  of DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer but  who wish  to  make
exchanges  directly by writing or telephoning  the Transfer Agent) must complete
and forward  to the  Transfer Agent  an Exchange  Privilege Authorization  Form,
copies  of  which  may be  obtained  from  the Transfer  Agent,  to  initiate an
exchange. If the Authorization Form is used, exchanges may be made in writing or
by contacting the Transfer Agent at (800) 869-NEWS (toll-free).
    
 
    The  Fund  will  employ  reasonable  procedures  to  confirm  that  exchange
instructions  communicated over the  telephone are genuine.  Such procedures may
include requiring various forms of personal identification such as name, mailing
address, social security  or other tax  identification number and  DWR or  other
Selected  Broker-Dealer account number (if any). Telephone instructions may also
be recorded. If such procedures are not employed, the Fund may be liable for any
losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions.
 
    Telephone exchange instructions will be accepted if received by the Transfer
Agent between 9:00 a.m.  and 4:00 p.m. New  York time, on any  day the New  York
Stock  Exchange is  open. Any  shareholder wishing to  make an  exchange who has
previously filed an Exchange Privilege Authorization  Form and who is unable  to
reach  the Fund  by telephone should  contact his  or her DWR  or other Selected
Broker-Dealer account  executive, if  appropriate, or  make a  written  exchange
request.  Shareholders are  advised that during  periods of  drastic economic or
market changes, it  is possible that  the telephone exchange  procedures may  be
difficult to implement, although this has not been the case with the Dean Witter
Funds in the past.
 
    Shareholders  should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected Broker-Dealer
account executive  or  the Transfer  Agent  for further  information  about  the
Exchange Privilege.
 
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    REDEMPTION.   Shares of the Fund can be redeemed for cash at any time at the
net asset value per share next determined; however, such redemption proceeds may
be reduced by  the amount of  any applicable contingent  deferred sales  charges
(see  below). If  shares are  held in  a shareholder's  account without  a share
certificate, a written request for redemption sent to the Fund's Transfer  Agent
at  P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ 07303 is required. If certificates are held by
the shareholder, the  shares may  be redeemed by  surrendering the  certificates
with  a written  request for  redemption along  with any  additional information
required by the Transfer Agent.
 
    CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.  Shares  of the Fund which are held  three
years or more after purchase (calculated from the last day of the month in which
the  shares were purchased) will  not be subject to  any charge upon redemption.
Shares redeemed sooner than three years after purchase may, however, be  subject
to  a charge upon redemption. This charge is called a "contingent deferred sales
charge" ("CDSC"), which  will be  a percentage of  the dollar  amount of  shares
redeemed  and will be assessed  on an amount equal to  the lesser of the current
market value  or  the cost  of  the shares  being  redeemed. The  size  of  this
percentage will
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
depend upon how long the shares have been held, as set forth in the table below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       CONTINGENT DEFERRED
            YEAR SINCE                    SALES CHARGE
             PURCHASE                  AS A PERCENTAGE OF
           PAYMENT MADE                  AMOUNT REDEEMED
                                     -----------------------
<S>                                  <C>
First..............................              3.0%
Second.............................              2.0%
Third..............................              1.0%
Fourth and thereafter..............           None
</TABLE>
 
    A  CDSC will not be imposed on:  (i) any amount which represents an increase
in value of shares  purchased within the three  years preceding the  redemption;
(ii) the current net asset value of shares purchased more than three years prior
to  the redemption; and  (iii) the current  net asset value  of shares purchased
through reinvestment of  dividends or  distributions and/or  shares acquired  in
exchange  for shares of Dean Witter Funds  sold with a front-end sales charge or
of other Dean Witter  Funds acquired in exchange  for such shares. Moreover,  in
determining  whether  a  CDSC is  applicable  it  will be  assumed  that amounts
described in (i), (ii) and (iii) above (in that order) are redeemed first.
 
    In addition, the CDSC, if otherwise  applicable, will be waived in the  case
of:
 
    (1)  redemptions of shares  held at the  time a shareholder  dies or becomes
disabled, only  if the  shares are:  (A) registered  either in  the name  of  an
individual  shareholder (not a trust),  or in the names  of such shareholder and
his or her spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship; or (B) held in  a
qualified  corporate  or  self-employed retirement  plan,  Individual Retirement
Account ("IRA") or  Custodial Account  under Section 403(b)(7)  of the  Internal
Revenue  Code ("403(b)  Custodial Account"),  provided in  either case  that the
redemption is requested within one year of the death or initial determination of
disability;
 
    (2)  redemptions   in  connection   with  the   following  retirement   plan
distributions: (A) lump-sum or other distributions from a qualified corporate or
self-employed  retirement plan following  retirement (or, in the  case of a "key
employee" of  a "top  heavy" plan,  following  attainment of  age 59  1/2);  (B)
distributions  from an IRA  or 403(b) Custodial  Account following attainment of
age 59 1/2; or (C) a tax-free return of an excess contribution to an IRA; and
 
   
    (3) all redemptions of  shares held for  the benefit of  a participant in  a
corporate or self-employed retirement plan qualified under Section 401(k) of the
Internal   Revenue  Code  which  offers  investment  companies  managed  by  the
Investment Manager  or its  subsidiary, Dean  Witter Services  Company Inc.,  as
self-directed investment alternatives and for which Dean Witter Trust Company or
Dean  Witter Trust FSB, each of which is an affiliate of the Investment Manager,
serves as Trustee ("Eligible 401(k) Plan"),  provided that either: (A) the  plan
continues  to  be an  Eligible  401(k) Plan  after  the redemption;  or  (B) the
redemption is in connection with the complete termination of the plan  involving
the distribution of all plan assets to participants.
    
 
    With  reference to (1) above, for the purpose of determining disability, the
Distributor utilizes the definition of disability contained in Section  72(m)(7)
of  the  Internal Revenue  Code, which  relates  to the  inability to  engage in
gainful employment. With reference  to (2) above,  the term "distribution"  does
not  encompass a direct transfer of  IRA, 403(b) Custodial Account or retirement
plan assets to  a successor custodian  or trustee. All  waivers will be  granted
only  following receipt by the Distributor  of confirmation of the shareholder's
entitlement.
 
    REPURCHASE.   DWR  and  other  Selected  Broker-Dealers  are  authorized  to
repurchase  shares, as  agent for the  Fund, represented by  a share certificate
which is  delivered to  any of  their offices.  Shares held  in a  shareholder's
account  without a share  certificate may also  be repurchased by  DWR and other
Selected Broker-Dealers  upon the  telephonic request  of the  shareholder.  The
repurchase  price is the  net asset value  next computed (see  "Purchase of Fund
Shares") after  such repurchase  order  is received  by  DWR or  other  Selected
Broker-Dealers, reduced by any applicable CDSC.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
    The  CDSC, if any, will be the only fee imposed upon repurchase by the Fund,
the Distributor or DWR or other  Selected Broker-Dealers. The offers by DWR  and
other  Selected  Broker-Dealers to  repurchase shares  may be  suspended without
notice by them at any time. In that event, shareholders may redeem their  shares
through the Fund's Transfer Agent as set forth above under "Redemption."
 
    PAYMENT  FOR SHARES REDEEMED  OR REPURCHASED.   Payment for shares presented
for repurchase  or redemption  will be  made by  check within  seven days  after
receipt  by the Transfer Agent of the certificate and/or written request in good
order. Such payment may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended  under
unusual  circumstances, e.g., when normal trading is not taking place on the New
York Stock Exchange. If the shares  to be redeemed have recently been  purchased
by check (including a government, certified or bank cashier's check), payment of
the  redemption proceeds may  be delayed for  the minimum time  needed to verify
that the check used for investment has been honored (not more than fifteen  days
from  the time  of receipt  of the  check by  the Transfer  Agent). Shareholders
maintaining margin  accounts  with DWR  or  another Selected  Broker-Dealer  are
referred  to  their account  executive regarding  restrictions on  redemption of
shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.
 
    REINSTATEMENT PRIVILEGE.   A  shareholder  who has  had  his or  her  shares
redeemed  or  repurchased and  has not  previously exercised  this reinstatement
privilege  may,  within  thirty  days  after  the  date  of  the  redemption  or
repurchase,  reinstate any portion or all of  the proceeds of such redemption or
repurchase in shares  of the Fund  at net  asset value next  determined after  a
reinstatement  request, together with the proceeds,  is received by the Transfer
Agent and receive a pro-rata  credit for any CDSC  paid in connection with  such
redemption or repurchase.
 
   
    INVOLUNTARY  REDEMPTION.   The Fund reserves  the right to  redeem, on sixty
days' notice and at net asset value,  the shares of any shareholder (other  than
shares  held  in an  Individual Retirement  Account  or Custodial  Account under
Section  403(b)(7)  of  the  Code)  whose  shares  due  to  redemptions  by  the
shareholder have a value of less than $100 or such lesser amount as may be fixed
by  the Directors or,  in the case  of an account  opened through EasyInvest, if
after twelve  months  the shareholder  has  invested  less than  $1,000  in  the
account.  However, before the Fund redeems such shares and sends the proceeds to
the shareholder, it will notify the shareholder that the value of the shares  is
less  than the applicable amount and allow the shareholder sixty days to make an
additional investment in an amount which will  increase the value of his or  her
account to at least the applicable amount before the redemption is processed. No
CDSC will be imposed on any involuntary redemption.
    
 
DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS.  The Fund intends to declare dividends from net
investment  income on each day the New  York Stock Exchange is open for business
(see "Purchase  of  Fund Shares").  The  amount  of the  dividend  declared  may
fluctuate  from day  to day.  Dividends are declared  daily and  paid monthly in
additional shares of the Fund. The Fund will distribute, at least annually,  net
realized short-term and long-term capital gains, if any.
 
   
    All dividends and any capital gains distributions will be paid in additional
Fund  shares  and automatically  credited to  the shareholder's  account without
issuance of a share certificate unless the shareholder requests in writing  that
all   dividends  and/or  distributions  be   paid  in  cash.  (See  "Shareholder
Services--Automatic Investment of Dividends and Distributions".)
    
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
    TAXES.  Because  the Fund intends  to distribute all  of its net  investment
income and net short-term capital gains to shareholders and otherwise qualify as
a  regulated  investment company  under  Subchapter M  of  the Code,  it  is not
expected that the Fund will  be required to pay any  federal income tax on  such
income and capital gains.
 
    Gains  or losses  on the  Fund's transactions  in certain  listed options on
securities and  on futures  and  options on  futures  traded on  U.S.  exchanges
generally  are treated as 60% long-term gain  or loss and 40% short-term gain or
loss. When the  Fund engages in  options and futures  transactions, various  tax
regulations  applicable to the Fund  may have the effect  of causing the Fund to
recognize a gain or loss for tax purposes before that gain or loss is  realized,
or  to defer recognition of  a realized loss for  tax purposes. Recognition, for
tax purposes, of an unrealized loss may result in a lesser amount of the  Fund's
realized net gains being available for distribution.
 
    As  a regulated investment  company, the Fund is  subject to the requirement
that less than  30% of  its gross  income be derived  from the  sale of  certain
investments  held for  less than  three months.  This requirement  may limit the
Fund's ability to engage in options and futures transactions and to engage in  a
large number of short-term transactions.
 
    Shareholders  will  normally  have  to pay  federal  income  taxes,  and any
applicable state and/or local income  taxes, on the dividends and  distributions
they receive from the Fund. Such dividends and distributions, to the extent that
they  are derived from  net investment income and  net short-term capital gains,
are taxable to the shareholder as ordinary dividend income regardless of whether
the shareholder receives such distributions in additional shares or in cash. Any
dividends declared in the last  quarter of any calendar  year which are paid  in
the  following year prior  to February 1,  will be deemed,  for tax purposes, to
have been received by the shareholder in the prior year.
 
    Distributions of  net  long-term  capital  gains, if  any,  are  taxable  to
shareholders as long-term capital gains regardless of how long a shareholder has
held the Fund's shares and regardless of whether the distribution is received in
additional  shares or  in cash. It  is not  anticipated that any  portion of the
Fund's distributions will be  eligible for the  dividends received deduction  to
corporate shareholders.
 
   
    The  Fund may at times  make payments from sources  other than income or net
capital gains. Payments from such sources will, in effect, represent a return of
a portion of each shareholder's investment. All, or a portion, of such  payments
will not be taxable to shareholders.
    
 
    After  the end  of the year,  shareholders will receive  full information on
their dividends  and capital  gains distributions  for tax  purposes,  including
information as to the portion taxable as ordinary income and the portion taxable
as long-term capital gains.
 
    To  avoid being subject to  a 31% federal backup  withholding tax on taxable
dividends, capital  gains  distributions and  the  proceeds of  redemptions  and
repurchases, shareholders' taxpayer identification numbers must be furnished and
certified  as to their accuracy. Shareholders  who are not citizens or residents
of, or entities organized  in, the United States  may be subject to  withholding
taxes of up to 30% on certain payments received from the Fund.
 
    Dividends,  interest  and  gains  received  by the  Fund  may  give  rise to
withholding and other taxes  imposed by foreign countries.  If it qualifies  for
and  has made  the appropriate election  with the Internal  Revenue Service, the
Fund will  report annually  to its  shareholders the  amount per  share of  such
taxes,  to enable  shareholders to  claim United  States foreign  tax credits or
deductions with respect to such taxes. In  the absence of such an election,  the
Fund  would  deduct foreign  tax in  computing the  amount of  its distributable
income.
 
    The  foregoing  discussion  relates  solely   to  the  federal  income   tax
consequences  of an investment in the Fund. Distributions may also be subject to
state and local taxes; therefore, each shareholder is advised to consult his  or
her own tax adviser.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    From  time to time the Fund may  quote its "yield" and/or its "total return"
in advertisements and sales literature. Both  the yield and the total return  of
the  Fund are  based on  historical earnings  and are  not intended  to indicate
future performance. The yield of the Fund is computed by dividing the Fund's net
investment income over a  30-day period by an  average value (using the  average
number of shares entitled to receive dividends and the net asset value per share
at  the  end  of  the  period), all  in  accordance  with  applicable regulatory
requirements. Such amount is compounded for six months and then annualized for a
twelve-month period to derive the Fund's yield.
 
    The "average annual total return" of the Fund refers to a figure  reflecting
the  average annualized  percentage increase  (or decrease)  in the  value of an
initial investment in  the Fund of  $1,000 over a  period of one  year and  five
years, as well as the life of the Fund. Average annual total return reflects all
income  earned  by the  Fund,  any appreciation  or  depreciation of  the Fund's
assets, all expenses incurred by the Fund  and all sales charges which would  be
incurred  by redeeming  shareholders, for  the stated  periods. It  also assumes
reinvestment of all dividends and distributions paid by the Fund.
 
    In addition to the foregoing, the  Fund may advertise its total return  over
different  periods of time  by means of aggregate,  average, and year-by-year or
other types of total  return figures. Such calculations  may or may not  reflect
the deduction of the contingent deferred sales charge which, if reflected, would
reduce  the  performance  quoted. The  Fund  may  also advertise  the  growth of
hypothetical investments of $10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in shares of the Fund.
The Fund  from time  to time  may  also advertise  its performance  relative  to
certain  performance rankings and indexes  compiled by independent organizations
(such as mutual fund performance rankings of Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.).
 
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    VOTING RIGHTS.   All shares of  the Fund are  of common stock  of $0.01  par
value  and are equal as to earnings,  assets and voting privileges. There are no
conversion,  pre-emptive  or  other  subscription   rights.  In  the  event   of
liquidation,  each share of common stock of  the Fund is entitled to its portion
of all of the  Fund's assets after  all debts and expenses  have been paid.  The
shares do not have cumulative voting rights.
 
    The  Fund is not  required to hold  Annual Meetings of  Shareholders, and in
ordinary circumstances  the Fund  does not  intend to  hold such  meetings.  The
Directors  may call Special  Meetings of Shareholders  for action by shareholder
vote as may be required by the Act or the Fund's By-Laws.
 
    CODE OF ETHICS.   Directors,  officers and employees  of InterCapital,  Dean
Witter Services Company Inc. and the Distributor are subject to a strict Code of
Ethics adopted by those companies. The Code of Ethics is intended to ensure that
the interests of shareholders and other clients are placed ahead of any personal
interest,  that no undue personal benefit is obtained from a person's employment
activities and that actual and potential  conflicts of interest are avoided.  To
achieve  these goals and comply with regulatory requirements, the Code of Ethics
requires, among other things, that personal securities transactions by employees
of the companies be subject to an  advance clearance process to monitor that  no
Dean  Witter Fund is engaged at the same time  in a purchase or sale of the same
security. The  Code of  Ethics bans  the purchase  of securities  in an  initial
public offering, and also prohibits engaging in futures and options transactions
and  profiting on short-term trading (that is, a purchase within sixty days of a
sale  or  a  sale  within  sixty  days   of  a  purchase)  of  a  security.   In
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
addition,  investment personnel  may not purchase  or sell a  security for their
personal account within thirty days before or after any transaction in any  Dean
Witter Fund managed by them. Any violations of the Code of Ethics are subject to
sanctions,  including  reprimand,  demotion  or  suspension  or  termination  of
employment. The Code  of Ethics  comports with regulatory  requirements and  the
recommendations  in the 1994 report by the Investment Company Institute Advisory
Group on Personal Investing.
 
    SHAREHOLDER INQUIRIES.  All inquiries regarding the Fund should be  directed
to  the Fund at the telephone numbers or address set forth on the front cover of
this Prospectus.
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
 
   
Dean Witter
Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
                                    Dean Witter
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
DIRECTORS                           Global Short-Term
Michael Bozic                       Income Fund
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Edwin J. Garn
John R. Haire
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson
Michael E. Nugent
Philip J. Purcell
John L. Schroeder
OFFICERS
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer
Sheldon Curtis
Vice President, Secretary and
General Counsel
Vinh Q. Tran
Vice President
Anne Pickrell
Vice President
Thomas F. Caloia
Treasurer
CUSTODIAN
The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
One Chase Plaza
New York, NY 10005
TRANSFER AGENT AND DIVIDEND
DISBURSING AGENT
Dean Witter Trust Company
Harborside Financial Center
Plaza Two
Jersey City, New Jersey 07311
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
Price Waterhouse LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.
                                        PROSPECTUS -- DECEMBER 24, 1996
 
    
<PAGE>
   
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
DECEMBER 24, 1996
    
 
DEAN WITTER
GLOBAL SHORT-TERM
INCOME FUND INC.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Dean  Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end,
non-diversified management investment company, whose investment objective is  to
achieve  as  high  a level  of  current  income as  is  consistent  with prudent
investment risk. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing
in  high  quality  fixed-income  securities  issued  or  guaranteed  by  foreign
governments, issued by foreign or U.S. companies, or issued or guaranteed by the
U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  and  instrumentalities  which  have  remaining
maturities at the time  of purchase of  not more than three  years. The Fund  is
designed  for the investor who seeks a higher yield than a money market fund and
less fluctuation in net asset value than a longer-term bond fund.
 
   
    A Prospectus for the Fund dated December 24, 1996, which provides the  basic
information  you  should know  before  investing in  the  Fund, may  be obtained
without charge from the Fund at the address or telephone numbers listed below or
from the Fund's Distributor, Dean Witter  Distributors Inc. or from Dean  Witter
Reynolds  Inc.,  at any  of  its branch  offices.  This Statement  of Additional
Information is not a Prospectus. It contains information in addition to and more
detailed than  that set  forth in  the  Prospectus. It  is intended  to  provide
additional  information regarding the activities and operations of the Fund, and
should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus.
    
 
Dean Witter
Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
(212) 392-2550 or
   
(800) 869-NEWS (toll-free)
    
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
The Fund and its Management............................................................          3
 
Directors and Officers.................................................................          6
 
Investment Practices and Policies......................................................         12
 
Investment Restrictions................................................................         25
 
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage...................................................         27
 
The Distributor........................................................................         28
 
Determination of Net Asset Value.......................................................         31
 
Shareholder Services...................................................................         32
 
Redemptions and Repurchases............................................................         37
 
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes.....................................................         39
 
Performance Information................................................................         40
 
Description of Common Stock............................................................         41
 
Custodian and Transfer Agent...........................................................         42
 
Independent Accountants................................................................         42
 
Reports to Shareholders................................................................         42
 
Legal Counsel..........................................................................         42
 
Experts................................................................................         43
 
Registration Statement.................................................................         43
 
Financial Statements--October 31, 1996.................................................         44
 
Report of Independent Accountants......................................................         57
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
THE FUND
    The  Fund was incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland on August
2, 1990.
THE INVESTMENT MANAGER
   
    Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. (the "Investment Manager" or  "InterCapital"),
a  Delaware corporation, whose address is Two  World Trade Center, New York, New
York 10048, is  the Fund's  Investment Manager. InterCapital  is a  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of Dean Witter, Discover &  Co. ("DWDC"), a Delaware corporation. In
an internal  reorganization  which took  place  in January,  1993,  InterCapital
assumed  the  investment  advisory,  administrative  and  management  activities
previously performed by the InterCapital  Division of Dean Witter Reynolds  Inc.
("DWR"), a broker-dealer affiliate of InterCapital. (As hereinafter used in this
Statement  of Additional  Information, the terms  "InterCapital" and "Investment
Manager"  refer  to   DWR's  InterCapital   Division  prior   to  the   internal
reorganization   and  Dean  Witter  InterCapital  Inc.  thereafter.)  The  daily
management of the Fund is conducted by or under the direction of officers of the
Fund and of the  Investment Manager, subject  to review by  the Fund's Board  of
Directors. Information as to these Directors and Officers is contained under the
caption "Directors and Officers".
    
 
   
    InterCapital  is also  the investment manager  or investment  adviser of the
following investment companies: Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc., InterCapital
Income Securities  Inc., Dean  Witter High  Yield Securities  Inc., Dean  Witter
Tax-Free  Daily Income  Trust, Dean  Witter Developing  Growth Securities Trust,
Dean Witter American Value  Fund, Dean Witter  Dividend Growth Securities  Inc.,
Dean  Witter  Natural Resource  Development  Securities Inc.,  Dean  Witter U.S.
Government Money Market Trust, Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund, Dean
Witter Variable Investment Series, Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust, Dean
Witter  Select  Municipal  Reinvestment   Fund,  Dean  Witter  U.S.   Government
Securities  Trust,  Dean  Witter  New York  Tax-Free  Income  Fund,  Dean Witter
Convertible Securities Trust, Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust, Dean  Witter
Value-Added  Market Series, High  Income Advantage Trust,  High Income Advantage
Trust II, High Income Advantage Trust III, Dean Witter Government Income  Trust,
Dean  Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust, Dean Witter Utilities Fund,
Dean Witter Strategist Fund,  Dean Witter World Wide  Income Trust, Dean  Witter
Intermediate  Income  Securities, Dean  Witter  Capital Growth  Securities, Dean
Witter European Growth  Fund Inc., Dean  Witter Pacific Growth  Fund Inc.,  Dean
Witter  Precious Metals and Minerals Trust, Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income
Fund Inc., Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust, Dean Witter New  York
Municipal  Money Market Trust, InterCapital  Quality Municipal Investment Trust,
Dean Witter Premier Income  Trust, Dean Witter  Short-Term U.S. Treasury  Trust,
InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust, InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust,
InterCapital  Quality  Municipal Income  Trust,  Dean Witter  Diversified Income
Trust, Dean  Witter  Health  Sciences  Trust,  Dean  Witter  Retirement  Series,
InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  California  Quality
Municipal Securities, InterCapital New  York Quality Municipal Securities,  Dean
Witter  Global Dividend  Growth Securities,  Dean Witter  Global Utilities Fund,
Dean Witter High Income  Securities, Dean Witter  Limited Term Municipal  Trust,
Dean  Witter Short-Term Bond Fund, Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund, Dean
Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund,  Dean Witter Select  Dimensions Series, Dean  Witter
Balanced  Growth  Fund, Dean  Witter Balanced  Income  Fund, Dean  Witter Hawaii
Municipal Trust, Dean Witter Japan Fund,  Dean Witter Income Builder Fund,  Dean
Witter  Special Value Fund,  Dean Witter Capital  Appreciation Fund, Dean Witter
Intermediate  Term   U.S.  Treasury   Trust,  Dean   Witter  Information   Fund,
InterCapital  Insured  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  Insured  California
Municipal Securities, InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust,  InterCapital
California  Insured Municipal  Income Trust,  Active Assets  Money Trust, Active
Assets California Tax-Free  Trust, Active Assets  Tax-Free Trust, Active  Assets
Government  Securities Trust, Municipal Income Trust, Municipal Income Trust II,
Municipal Income  Trust III,  Municipal  Income Opportunities  Trust,  Municipal
Income  Opportunities  Trust  II,  Municipal  Income  Opportunities  Trust  III,
Municipal Premium Income Trust and Prime Income Trust. The foregoing  investment
companies,  together with  the Fund,  are collectively  referred to  as the Dean
Witter Funds.
    
 
    In addition,  Dean Witter  Services Company  Inc. ("DWSC"),  a  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of  InterCapital, serves  as  manager for  the  following investment
companies for which TCW Funds Management, Inc. is the investment adviser: TCW/DW
Core Equity Trust, TCW/DW North American Government
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
   
Income Trust, TCW/DW Latin American Growth Fund, TCW/DW Income and Growth  Fund,
TCW/DW  Small Cap Growth Fund, TCW/DW  Balanced Fund, TCW/DW Total Return Trust,
TCW/DW Emerging Markets Opportunities Trust, TCW/DW Mid-Cap Equity Trust, TCW/DW
Global Telecom Trust,  TCW/DW Strategic  Income Trust, TCW/DW  Term Trust  2000,
TCW/DW  Term  Trust  2002  and  TCW/DW Term  Trust  2003  (the  "TCW/DW Funds").
InterCapital also serves as: (i)  sub-adviser to Templeton Global  Opportunities
Trust,  an  open-end investment  company;  (ii) administrator  of  The BlackRock
Strategic  Term  Trust  Inc.,  a   closed-end  investment  company;  and   (iii)
sub-administrator  of  MassMutual Participation  Investors and  Templeton Global
Governments Income Trust, closed-end investment companies.
    
 
    Pursuant to an  Investment Management Agreement  (the "Agreement") with  the
Investment  Manager, the Fund has retained  the Investment Manager to manage the
investment of  the  Fund's assets,  including  the  placing of  orders  for  the
purchase  and sale of  portfolio securities. The  Investment Manager obtains and
evaluates such  information  and  advice relating  to  the  economy,  securities
markets,  and  specific  securities  as  it  considers  necessary  or  useful to
continuously manage  the assets  of the  Fund in  a manner  consistent with  its
investment objective.
 
    Under  the  terms  of the  Agreement,  in  addition to  managing  the Fund's
investments, the Investment Manager  maintains certain of  the Fund's books  and
records  and  furnishes,  at its  own  expense, such  office  space, facilities,
equipment, clerical help and bookkeeping and certain legal services as the  Fund
may reasonably require in the conduct of its business, including the preparation
of  prospectuses,  statements of  additional  information, proxy  statements and
reports required  to be  filed  with federal  and state  securities  commissions
(except  insofar as the  participation or assistance  of independent accountants
and attorneys  is,  in the  opinion  of  the Investment  Manager,  necessary  or
desirable).  In  addition,  the  Investment Manager  pays  the  salaries  of all
personnel, including officers of the Fund,  who are employees of the  Investment
Manager.  The Investment Manager also bears the cost of telephone service, heat,
light, power and other utilities provided to the Fund.
 
   
    Effective December  31,  1993,  pursuant to  a  Services  Agreement  between
InterCapital  and DWSC, DWSC began to provide the administrative services to the
Fund which  were previously  performed directly  by InterCapital.  On April  17,
1995,  DWSC was  reorganized in the  State of Delaware,  necessitating the entry
into a  new Services  Agreement  by InterCapital  on  that date.  The  foregoing
internal  reorganizations did not result in any change in the nature or scope of
the administrative services being provided to the Fund or any of the fees  being
paid by the Fund for the overall services being performed under the terms of the
existing Agreement.
    
 
    Expenses not expressly assumed by the Investment Manager under the Agreement
or  by the Distributor of the Fund's shares (see "The Distributor") will be paid
by the Fund. The  expenses borne by  the Fund include, but  are not limited  to:
expenses  of  the  Plan  of  Distribution  pursuant  to  Rule  12b-1  (see  "The
Distributor"), charges and expenses of any registrar, custodian, stock  transfer
and  dividend  disbursing  agent; brokerage  commissions;  taxes;  engraving and
printing of stock certificates;  registration costs of the  Fund and its  shares
under  federal  and state  securities laws;  the cost  and expense  of printing,
including  typesetting,  and   distributing  Prospectuses   and  Statements   of
Additional  Information  of  the  Fund and  supplements  thereto  to  the Fund's
shareholders; all  expenses  of shareholders'  and  Directors' meetings  and  of
preparing, printing and mailing of proxy statements and reports to shareholders;
fees  and  travel expenses  of Directors  or  members of  any advisory  board or
committee who  are not  employees of  the Investment  Manager or  any  corporate
affiliate  of the  Investment Manager;  all expenses  incident to  any dividend,
withdrawal or redemption options;  charges and expenses  of any outside  service
used  for pricing  of the  Fund's shares;  fees and  expenses of  legal counsel,
including counsel to the Directors who are not interested persons of the Fund or
of the Investment Manager (not  including compensation or expenses of  attorneys
who  are  employees  of  the Investment  Manager)  and  independent accountants;
membership dues of industry associations; interest on Fund borrowings;  postage;
insurance premiums on property or personnel (including officers and trustees) of
the  Fund which inure to its benefit; extraordinary expenses (including, but not
limited  to,  legal  claims  and  liabilities  and  litigation  costs  and   any
indemnification relating thereto); and all other costs of the Fund's operation.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
   
    As  full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the Fund
and expenses of the Fund  assumed by the Investment  Manager, the Fund pays  the
Investment  Manager monthly compensation calculated daily by applying the annual
rate of 0.55%  to the Fund's  daily net  assets not exceeding  $500 million  and
0.50%  to the  Fund's daily  net assets exceeding  $500 million.  For the fiscal
years ended  October 31,  1994,  1995 and  1996,  the Fund  accrued  $1,282,418,
$716,948  and $504,723, respectively, to the  Investment Manager pursuant to the
Agreement.
    
 
    The Agreement  provides that  in  the absence  of willful  misfeasance,  bad
faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its obligations thereunder, the
Investment Manager is not liable to the Fund or any of its investors for any act
or omission by the Investment Manager or for any losses sustained by the Fund or
its  investors. The  Agreement in no  way restricts the  Investment Manager from
acting as investment manager or adviser to others.
 
    The Investment Manager paid the organizational expenses of the Fund, in  the
amount  of approximately $150,000, incurred prior  to the offering of the Fund's
shares. The Fund  has reimbursed the  Investment Manager for  such expenses,  in
accordance  with the  terms of the  Underwriting Agreement between  the Fund and
DWR. The Fund  has deferred  and is amortizing  the reimbursed  expenses on  the
straight  line method over  a period not to  exceed five years  from the date of
commencement of the Fund's operations.
 
    The Agreement was initially  approved by the Board  of Directors on  October
30,  1992  and  by  the  shareholders  of  the  Fund  at  a  Special  Meeting of
Shareholders held on January 12, 1993. The Agreement is substantially  identical
to  a prior investment management agreement  which was initially approved by the
Directors on August 16, 1990, by DWR  as the then sole shareholder on  September
5,  1990,  and  by  the  shareholders  of  the  Fund  at  a  Special  Meeting of
Shareholders held on June 24, 1992. The  Agreement took effect on June 30,  1993
upon the spin-off by Sears, Roebuck and Co. of its remaining shares of DWDC. The
Agreement may be terminated at any time, without penalty, on thirty days' notice
by  the Board of Directors of the Fund, by the holders of a majority, as defined
in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "Act"), of the outstanding shares  of
the  Fund,  or  by  the Investment  Manager.  The  Agreement  will automatically
terminate in the event of its assignment (as defined in the Act).
 
   
    Under its terms, the  Agreement had an initial  term ending April 30,  1994,
and  provides that  it will  continue in  effect from  year to  year thereafter,
provided continuance of the Agreement is approved at least annually by the  vote
of  the holders of a majority, as defined  in the Act, of the outstanding shares
of the Fund, or by the Directors of the Fund; provided that in either event such
continuance is approved annually by the vote  of a majority of the Directors  of
the  Fund  who are  not parties  to  the Agreement  or "interested  persons" (as
defined in the Act) of any such party (the "Independent Directors"), which  vote
must  be cast in  person at a meeting  called for the purpose  of voting on such
approval. At  their  meeting  held  on  April 17,  1996,  the  Fund's  Board  of
Directors,  including a majority of the Independent Directors, approved the most
recent continuation of the Agreement until April 30, 1997.
    
 
    The Fund has acknowledged that the name "Dean Witter" is a property right of
DWR. The Fund has agreed that DWR or its parent company may use, or at any  time
permit  others to use, the name "Dean Witter".  The Fund has also agreed that in
the event the investment management contract between the Investment Manager  and
the Fund is terminated, or if the affiliation between the Investment Manager and
its parent company is terminated, the Fund will eliminate the name "Dean Witter"
from its name if DWR or its parent company shall so request.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    The  Directors and Executive Officers of  the Fund, their principal business
occupations during the  last five  years and  their affiliations,  if any,  with
InterCapital and with the 82 Dean Witter Funds and the 14 TCW/DW Funds are shown
below.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------------------
 
<S>                                                     <C>
Michael Bozic (55)                                      Chairman  and Chief Executive  Officer of Levitz Furniture
Director                                                Corporation (since November, 1995); Director or Trustee of
c/o Levitz Furniture Corporation                        the  Dean  Witter  Funds;  formerly  President  and  Chief
6111 Broken Sound Parkway, N.W.                         Executive   Officer  of  Hills   Department  Stores  (May,
Boca Raton, Florida                                     1991-July,  1995);  formerly  variously  Chairman,   Chief
                                                        Executive  Officer, President and  Chief Operating Officer
                                                        (1987-1991) of  the  Sears  Merchandise  Group  of  Sears,
                                                        Roebuck and Co.; Director of Eaglemark Financial Services,
                                                        Inc., the United Negro College Fund and Weirton Steel Cor-
                                                        poration.
 
Charles A. Fiumefreddo* (63)                            Chairman,   Chief  Executive   Officer  and   Director  of
Chairman of the Board, President                        InterCapital, Dean  Witter Distributors  Inc.  ("Distribu-
Chief Executive Officer and Director                    tors")  and DWSC; Executive Vice President and Director of
Two World Trade Center                                  DWR; Chairman, Director  or Trustee,  President and  Chief
New York, New York                                      Executive  Officer  of  the Dean  Witter  Funds; Chairman,
                                                        Chief Executive Officer and  Trustee of the TCW/DW  Funds;
                                                        Chairman   and  Director  of  Dean  Witter  Trust  Company
                                                        ("DWTC");  Director   and/or  officer   of  various   DWDC
                                                        subsidiaries;   formerly  Executive   Vice  President  and
                                                        Director of DWDC (until February, 1993).
 
Edwin J. Garn (64)                                      Director or  Trustee of  the Dean  Witter Funds;  formerly
Director                                                United  States Senator (R-Utah)  (1974-1992) and Chairman,
c/o Huntsman Chemical Corporation                       Senate Banking  Committee (1980-1986);  formerly Mayor  of
500 Huntsman Way                                        Salt  Lake  City,  Utah  (1972-1974);  formerly Astronaut,
Salt Lake City, Utah                                    Space  Shuttle   Discovery  (April   12-19,  1985);   Vice
                                                        Chairman,  Huntsman  Chemical Corporation  (since January,
                                                        1993); Director of  Franklin Quest  (time management  sys-
                                                        tems)  and John Alden Financial Corp.; member of the board
                                                        of various civic and charitable organizations.
 
John R. Haire (71)                                      Chairman of  the  Audit  Committee  and  Chairman  of  the
Director                                                Committee  of  the Independent  Directors or  Trustees and
Two World Trade Center                                  Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds; Chairman  of
New York, New York                                      the  Audit Committee and Chairman  of the Committee of the
                                                        Independent Trustees  and  Trustee of  the  TCW/DW  Funds;
                                                        formerly   President,   Council  for   Aid   to  Education
                                                        (1978-1989) and Chairman  and Chief  Executive Officer  of
                                                        Anchor  Corporation,  an  Investment  Adviser (1964-1978);
                                                        Director of Washington National Cor-poration (insurance).
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson (47)                              Senior  Partner,  Johnson  Smick  International,  Inc.,  a
Director                                                consulting  firm;  Koch  Professor  of  International Eco-
c/o Johnson Smick International, Inc.                   nomics and  Director  of  the  Center  for  Global  Market
1133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.                           Studies  at  George  Mason University;  Co-Chairman  and a
Washington, DC                                          founder  of  the   Group  of  Seven   Council  (G7C),   an
                                                        international  economic commission; Director or Trustee of
                                                        the Dean  Witter  Funds;  Trustee  of  the  TCW/DW  Funds;
                                                        Director   of  NASDAQ  (since  June,  1995);  Director  of
                                                        Greenwich Capital Markets, Inc. (broker-dealer);  formerly
                                                        Vice  Chairman of  the Board  of Governors  of the Federal
                                                        Reserve System (1986-1990) and Assistant Secretary of  the
                                                        U.S. Treasury (1982-1986).
<S>                                                     <C>
 
Michael E. Nugent (60)                                  General   Partner,  Triumph   Capital,  L.P.,   a  private
Director                                                investment partnership; Director  or Trustee  of the  Dean
c/o Triumph Capital, L.P.                               Witter  Funds; Trustee of the  TCW/DW Funds; formerly Vice
237 Park Avenue                                         President,  Bankers   Trust   Company   and   BT   Capital
New York, New York                                      Corporation  (1984-1988);  director  of  various  business
                                                        organizations.
 
Philip J. Purcell* (53)                                 Chairman of  the Board  of Directors  and Chief  Executive
Director                                                Officer  of  DWDC,  DWR and  Novus  Credit  Services Inc.;
Two World Trade Center                                  Director of InterCapital, DWSC and Distributors;  Director
New York, New York                                      or  Trustee  of  the Dean  Witter  Funds;  Director and/or
                                                        officer of various DWDC subsidiaries.
 
John L. Schroeder (66)                                  Retired; Director  or Trustee  of the  Dean Witter  Funds;
Director                                                Trustee   of  the  TCW/DW   Funds;  Director  of  Citizens
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky                              Utilities Company; formerly  Executive Vice President  and
  Weitzen Shalov & Wein                                 Chief  Investment  Officer of  the Home  Insurance Company
Counsel to the Independent Directors                    (August, 1991-September,  1995)  and  Chairman  and  Chief
114 West 47th Street                                    Investment  Officer  of  Axe-Houghton  Management  and the
New York, New York                                      Axe-Houghton Funds (1983-1991).
 
Sheldon Curtis (64)                                     Senior Vice President,  Secretary and  General Counsel  of
Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel           InterCapital and DWSC; Senior Vice President and Secretary
Two World Trade Center                                  of  DWTC; Senior  Vice President,  Assistant Secretary and
New York, New York                                      Assistant  General  Counsel  of  Distributors;   Assistant
                                                        Secretary  of  DWR;  and  Vice  President,  Secretary  and
                                                        General Counsel of
                                                        the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW Funds.
 
Vinh Q. Tran (50)                                       Vice  President  of  InterCapital;  formerly  Director  of
Vice President                                          International Investments, Aetna Life and Casualty Co.
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------------------
Anne Pickrell (42)                                      Assistant  Vice  President (since  1992)  of InterCapital;
Vice President                                          formerly portfolio manager, Harvard Management Co. Inc.
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York
<S>                                                     <C>
 
Thomas F. Caloia (50)                                   First  Vice   President   and   Assistant   Treasurer   of
Treasurer                                               InterCapital  and DWSC; Treasurer of the Dean Witter Funds
Two World Trade Center                                  and the TCW/DW Funds.
New York, New York
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
 *Denotes Directors who are "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in  the
  Act.
 
   
    In  addition, Robert  M. Scanlan, President  and Chief  Operating Officer of
InterCapital and DWSC,  Executive Vice  President of Distributors  and DWTC  and
Director  of DWTC  Robert S. Giambrone,  Senior Vice  President of InterCapital,
DWSC, Distributors  and DWTC  and Director  of DWTC,  and Joseph  J.  McAlinden,
Executive  Vice  President  and  Chief Investment  Officer  of  InterCapital and
Director of DWTC, are  Vice Presidents of  the Fund. Barry  Fink and Marilyn  K.
Cranney,  First Vice Presidents  and Assistant General  Counsels of InterCapital
and DWSC, Lou Anne McInnis and Ruth Rossi, Vice Presidents and Assistant General
Counsels of InterCapital and  DWSC, Carsten Otto,  and Frank Bruttomesso,  Staff
Attorneys with InterCapital, are Assistant Secretaries of the Fund.
    
 
   
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS, AND THE COMMITTEES
    
 
   
    The  Board  of  Directors  consists  of  eight  (8)  directors.  These  same
individuals also  serve as  directors or  trustees for  all of  the Dean  Witter
Funds,  and are referred to in this section as Directors. As of the date of this
Statement of Additional Information, there are a total of 82 Dean Witter  Funds,
comprised  of 122 portfolios. As of November 30, 1996, the Dean Witter Funds had
total net  assets of  approximately $82.2  billion and  more than  five  million
shareholders.
    
 
   
    Six  Directors (75%  of the  total number)  have no  affiliation or business
connection with InterCapital or any of its affiliated persons and do not own any
stock or other securities issued  by InterCapital's parent company, DWDC.  These
are the "disinterested" or "independent" Directors. The other two Directors (the
"management  Directors")  are  affiliated  with InterCapital.  Four  of  the six
independent Directors are also Independent Trustees of the TCW/DW Funds.
    
 
   
    Law and regulation establish both general guidelines and specific duties for
the Independent Directors. The Dean  Witter Funds seek as Independent  Directors
individuals  of distinction and  experience in business  and finance, government
service or academia; these are people whose advice and counsel are in demand  by
others  and for  whom there is  often competition.  To accept a  position on the
Funds' Boards, such individuals may reject other attractive assignments  because
the  Funds make  substantial demands  on their time.  Indeed, by  serving on the
Funds' Boards, certain Directors who would otherwise be qualified and in  demand
to serve on bank boards would be prohibited by law from doing so.
    
 
   
    All of the Independent Directors serve as members of the Audit Committee and
the  Committee of the Independent Directors. Three of them also serve as members
of the Derivatives Committee. During the calendar year ended December 31,  1995,
the  three Committees held a combined  total of fifteen meetings. The Committees
hold some  meetings at  InterCapital's offices  and some  outside  InterCapital.
Management  Directors or officers  do not attend these  meetings unless they are
invited for purposes of furnishing information or making a report.
    
 
   
    The Committee of the Independent  Directors is charged with recommending  to
the  full Board approval  of management, advisory  and administration contracts,
Rule 12b-1  plans  and  distribution and  underwriting  agreements;  continually
reviewing  Fund performance;  checking on  the pricing  of portfolio securities,
brokerage commissions, transfer agent costs  and performance, and trading  among
Funds  in the  same complex; and  approving fidelity bond  and related insurance
coverage and allocations, as well
    
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
   
as other matters  that arise from  time to time.  The Independent Directors  are
required  to select  and nominate individuals  to fill  any Independent Director
vacancy on the Board  of any Fund  that has a Rule  12b-1 plan of  distribution.
Most of the Dean Witter Funds have such a plan.
    
 
   
    The  Audit  Committee is  charged with  recommending to  the full  Board the
engagement  or  discharge  of  the  Fund's  independent  accountants;  directing
investigations  into matters  within the  scope of  the independent accountants'
duties, including the power  to retain outside  specialists; reviewing with  the
independent  accountants the audit plan and  results of the auditing engagement;
approving professional  services provided  by  the independent  accountants  and
other  accounting firms prior to the performance of such services; reviewing the
independence of the independent accountants; considering the range of audit  and
non-audit  fees;  reviewing  the  adequacy  of  the  Fund's  system  of internal
controls; and preparing  and submitting  Committee meeting minutes  to the  full
Board.
    
 
   
    Finally,  the  Board of  each  Fund has  formed  a Derivatives  Committee to
establish parameters for and oversee the activities of the Fund with respect  to
derivative investments, if any, made by the Fund.
    
 
   
DUTIES OF CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEE OF THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS AND AUDIT COMMITTEE
    
 
   
    The  Chairman of  the Committee of  the Independent Directors  and the Audit
Committee maintains an  office at  the Funds' headquarters  in New  York. He  is
responsible  for keeping abreast of regulatory and industry developments and the
Funds' operations and management. He  screens and/or prepares written  materials
and  identifies  critical  issues  for the  Independent  Directors  to consider,
develops agendas  for Committee  meetings,  determines the  type and  amount  of
information  that the Committees will need to form a judgment on various issues,
and arranges to have  that information furnished to  Committee members. He  also
arranges  for  the services  of independent  experts and  consults with  them in
advance of meetings  to help  refine reports and  to focus  on critical  issues.
Members of the Committees believe that the person who serves as Chairman of both
Committees  and guides their efforts is  pivotal to the effective functioning of
the Committees.
    
 
   
    The Chairman of the  Committees also maintains  continuous contact with  the
Funds'  management, with  independent counsel  to the  Independent Directors and
with the  Funds' independent  auditors.  He arranges  for  a series  of  special
meetings  involving  the annual  review of  investment advisory,  management and
other operating  contracts  of the  Funds  and,  on behalf  of  the  Committees,
conducts  negotiations with the Investment  Manager and other service providers.
In effect,  the Chairman  of the  Committees serves  as a  combination of  chief
executive and support staff of the Independent Directors.
    
 
   
    The  Chairman of  the Committee of  the Independent Directors  and the Audit
Committee is  not  employed by  any  other  organization and  devotes  his  time
primarily  to the  services he  performs as  Committee Chairman  and Independent
Director of the Dean Witter Funds and as an Independent Director and, since July
1, 1996, as Chairman of the Committee of the Independent Trustees and the  Audit
Committee  of the TCW/DW Funds. The current Committee Chairman has had more than
35 years experience as a senior executive in the investment company industry.
    
 
   
ADVANTAGES OF HAVING SAME INDIVIDUALS AS INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS FOR ALL DEAN
WITTER FUNDS
    
 
   
    The Independent Directors and the Funds' management believe that having  the
same  Independent  Directors  for  each  of the  Dean  Witter  Funds  avoids the
duplication  of  effort  that  would  arise  from  having  different  groups  of
individuals  serving as Independent Directors  for each of the  Funds or even of
sub-groups of Funds.  They believe  that having  the same  individuals serve  as
Independent  Directors of  all the Funds  tends to increase  their knowledge and
expertise regarding matters which affect the Fund complex generally and enhances
their ability  to negotiate  on behalf  of  each Fund  with the  Fund's  service
providers. This arrangement also precludes the possibility of separate groups of
Independent Directors arriving at conflicting decisions regarding operations and
management  of the  Funds and  avoids the cost  and confusion  that would likely
ensue. Finally, having the same Independent  Directors serve on all Fund  Boards
enhances  the ability of  each Fund to  obtain, at modest  cost to each separate
Fund, the services of Independent Directors, and a Chairman of their Committees,
of the caliber, experience and business  acumen of the individuals who serve  as
Independent Directors of the Dean Witter Funds.
    
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
   
COMPENSATION OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS
    
 
   
    The  Fund pays each Independent Director an  annual fee of $1,000 plus a per
meeting fee of $50 for meetings of  the Board of Directors or committees of  the
Board  of Directors attended by the Director  (the Fund pays the Chairman of the
Audit Committee an annual fee of $750 and pays the Chairman of the Committee  of
the  Independent Directors  an additional annual  fee of $1,200).  The Fund also
reimburses such Directors for travel  and other out-of-pocket expenses  incurred
by  them in connection  with attending such meetings.  Directors and officers of
the Fund  who  are  or have  been  employed  by the  Investment  Manager  or  an
affiliated  company receive  no compensation  or expense  reimbursement from the
Fund.
    
 
   
    The  following  table  illustrates  the  compensation  paid  to  the  Fund's
Independent Directors by the Fund for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996.
    
 
   
                               FUND COMPENSATION
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   AGGREGATE
                                                                 COMPENSATION
NAME OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR                                     FROM THE FUND
- --------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                             <C>
Michael Bozic.................................................      $1,750
Edwin J. Garn.................................................       1,850
John R. Haire.................................................       3,900
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson.........................................       1,800
Michael E. Nugent.............................................       1,750
John L. Schroeder.............................................       1,800
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The  following  table  illustrates  the  compensation  paid  to  the  Fund's
Independent Directors for the calendar year ended December 31, 1995 for services
to the 79 Dean Witter Funds and,  in the case of Messrs. Haire, Johnson,  Nugent
and  Schroeder, the 11 TCW/DW Funds that were in operation at December 31, 1995.
With respect to Messrs. Haire, Johnson,  Nugent and Schroeder, the TCW/DW  Funds
are  included solely because of a limited exchange privilege between those Funds
and five Dean Witter Money Market Funds. Mr. Schroeder was elected as a  Trustee
of the TCW/DW Funds on April 20, 1995.
    
 
   
              COMPENSATION FROM DEAN WITTER FUNDS AND TCW/DW FUNDS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        TOTAL
                                                                   FOR SERVICE AS   COMPENSATION
                               FOR SERVICE                          CHAIRMAN OF         PAID
                              AS DIRECTOR OR                       COMMITTEES OF    FOR SERVICES
                               TRUSTEE AND       FOR SERVICE AS     INDEPENDENT          TO
                             COMMITTEE MEMBER     TRUSTEE AND        DIRECTORS/        79 DEAN
                                OF 79 DEAN      COMMITTEE MEMBER    TRUSTEES AND       WITTER
NAME OF INDEPENDENT               WITTER          OF 11 TCW/DW         AUDIT        FUNDS AND 11
 DIRECTOR                         FUNDS              FUNDS           COMMITTEES     TCW/DW FUNDS
- ---------------------------  ----------------   ----------------   --------------   -------------
<S>                          <C>                <C>                <C>              <C>
Michael Bozic..............      $126,050           --                 --             $126,050
Edwin J. Garn..............       136,450           --                 --              136,450
John R. Haire..............        98,450           $82,038           $217,350(1)      397,838
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson......       136,450            82,038            --              218,488
Michael E. Nugent..........       124,200            75,038            --              199,238
John L. Schroeder..........       136,450            46,964            --              183,414
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------------
   
(1)  For the 79  Dean Witter Funds in  operation at December  31, 1995. As noted
    above, on July 1, 1996,  Mr. Haire became Chairman  of the Committee of  the
    Independent Trustees and the Audit Committee of the TCW/DW Funds in addition
    to continuing to serve in such positions for the Dean Witter Funds.
    
 
   
    As  of the date of this Statement  of Additional Information, 57 of the Dean
Witter Funds, including the Fund, have adopted a retirement program under  which
an  Independent Director who retires  after serving for at  least five years (or
such lesser period as may be determined by the Board) as an Independent Director
or Trustee of any Dean Witter Fund that has adopted the retirement program (each
such Fund referred to as an "Adopting  Fund" and each such Director referred  to
as  an "Eligible Director") is entitled to retirement payments upon reaching the
eligible retirement age (normally, after attaining age 72). Annual payments  are
based upon length of service. Currently, upon retirement, each Eligible Director
is  entitled to  receive from  the Adopting  Fund, commencing  as of  his or her
retirement date and continuing
    
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
   
for the remainder of his or her life, an annual retirement benefit (the "Regular
Benefit") equal to 25.0% of his or her Eligible Compensation plus 0.4166666%  of
such  Eligible Compensation  for each  full month  of service  as an Independent
Director or Trustee of any Adopting Fund in excess of five years up to a maximum
of 50.0% after ten years of service. The foregoing percentages may be changed by
the Board.(2) "Eligible  Compensation" is  one-fifth of  the total  compensation
earned  by such Eligible Director  for service to the  Adopting Fund in the five
year period prior to  the date of the  Eligible Director's retirement.  Benefits
under the retirement program are not secured or funded by the Adopting Funds.
    
 
   
    The  following  table illustrates  the  retirement benefits  accrued  to the
Fund's Independent Directors by the Fund  for the fiscal year ended October  31,
1996  and by the  57 Dean Witter Funds  (including the Fund)  as of December 31,
1995, and the estimated retirement benefits for the Fund's Independent Directors
from the Fund as  of October 31, 1996  and from the 57  Dean Witter Funds as  of
December 31, 1995.
    
 
   
          RETIREMENT BENEFITS FROM THE FUND AND ALL DEAN WITTER FUNDS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           FOR ALL ADOPTING FUNDS                                     ESTIMATED ANNUAL
                                   --------------------------------------   RETIREMENT BENEFITS           BENEFITS
                                        ESTIMATED                           ACCRUED AS EXPENSES      UPON RETIREMENT(3)
                                     CREDITED YEARS         ESTIMATED      ----------------------  ----------------------
                                      OF SERVICE AT       PERCENTAGE OF                 BY ALL       FROM      FROM ALL
                                       RETIREMENT           ELIGIBLE        BY THE     ADOPTING       THE      ADOPTING
NAME OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR          (MAXIMUM 10)        COMPENSATION       FUND        FUNDS       FUND        FUNDS
- ---------------------------------  -------------------  -----------------  ---------  -----------  ---------  -----------
<S>                                <C>                  <C>                <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>
Michael Bozic....................              10               50.0%      $     393  $    26,359  $     950  $    51,550
Edwin J. Garn....................              10               50.0             577       41,901        950       51,550
John R. Haire....................              10               50.0             372      261,763      2,343      130,404
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson............              10               50.0             240       16,748        950       51,550
Michael E. Nugent................              10               50.0             413       30,370        950       51,550
John L. Schroeder................               8               41.7             763       51,812        792       42,958
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------------
   
(2)  An Eligible Director may elect alternate  payments of his or her retirement
    benefits based upon the combined  life expectancy of such Eligible  Director
    and  his or her spouse  on the date of  such Eligible Director's retirement.
    The amount estimated to be payable under this method, through the  remainder
    of  the later of the lives of such Eligible Director and spouse, will be the
    actuarial equivalent  of  the Regular  Benefit.  In addition,  the  Eligible
    Director  may elect that the surviving spouse's periodic payment of benefits
    will be equal  to either 50%  or 100%  of the previous  periodic amount,  an
    election  that, respectively,  increases or decreases  the previous periodic
    amount so that the  resulting payments will be  the actuarial equivalent  of
    the Regular Benefit.
    
 
   
(3)  Based on  current levels  of compensation.  Amount of  annual benefits also
    varies depending  on  the Director's  elections  described in  Footnote  (2)
    above.
    
 
   
    As  of the date  of this Statement of  Additional Information, the aggregate
number of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund owned by the Fund's officers
and Directors  as a  group was  less  than 1  percent of  the Fund's  shares  of
beneficial interest outstanding.
    
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
INVESTMENT PRACTICES AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS
 
   
    As  discussed in  the Prospectus,  the Fund  may enter  into forward foreign
currency  exchange   contracts  ("forward   contracts")  as   a  hedge   against
fluctuations in future foreign exchange rates. The Fund will conduct its foreign
currency  exchange transactions either on a spot  (i.e., cash) basis at the spot
rate prevailing in  the foreign  currency exchange market,  or through  entering
into  forward  contracts  to  purchase or  sell  foreign  currencies.  A forward
contract involves an  obligation to purchase  or sell a  specific currency at  a
future date, which may be any fixed number of days from the date of the contract
agreed  upon by the parties, at  a price set at the  time of the contract. These
contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted directly between currency
traders and their customers.  Such forward contracts will  only be entered  into
with  United States  banks and their  foreign branches,  insurance companies and
other dealers whose  assets total  $1 billion or  more, or  foreign banks  whose
assets  total $1 billion  or more. A  forward contract generally  has no deposit
requirement, and no commissions are charged at any stage for trades.
    
 
   
    When  the  Fund's  Investment  Manager  believes  that  the  currency  of  a
particular  foreign country may  suffer a substantial  movement against the U.S.
dollar, it may enter into  a forward contract to purchase  or sell, for a  fixed
amount   of  dollars  or   other  currency,  the   amount  of  foreign  currency
approximating the  value of  some  or all  of  the Fund's  portfolio  securities
denominated  in such foreign  currency. The Fund  will also not  enter into such
forward contracts  or  maintain a  net  exposure  to such  contracts  where  the
consummation  of the contracts would  obligate the Fund to  deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess  of the value of  the Fund's portfolio securities  or
other   assets  denominated  in  that   currency.  Under  normal  circumstances,
consideration of the prospect  for currency parities  will be incorporated  into
the longer term investment decisions made with regard to overall diversification
strategies. However, the management of the Fund believes that it is important to
have  the flexibility  to enter into  such forward contracts  when it determines
that the best interests of  the Fund will be  served. The Fund's custodian  bank
will place cash, U.S. Government securities, high grade debt securities or other
liquid  securities in a segregated account of the Fund in an amount equal to the
value of  the Fund's  total  assets committed  to  the consummation  of  forward
contracts  entered into under the circumstances set forth above. If the value of
the securities placed  in the  segregated account declines,  additional cash  or
securities  will be placed in the account on  a daily basis so that the value of
the account will equal the amount of the Fund's commitments with respect to such
contracts.
    
 
    Where, for example, the Fund is  hedging a portfolio position consisting  of
foreign  fixed-income  securities  denominated  in  a  foreign  currency against
adverse exchange rate moves  vis-a-vis the U.S. dollar,  at the maturity of  the
forward  contract for delivery by  the Fund of a  foreign currency, the Fund may
either sell the portfolio security and make delivery of the foreign currency, or
it may retain the security and  terminate its contractual obligation to  deliver
the  foreign  currency  by purchasing  an  "offsetting" contract  with  the same
currency trader obligating it to purchase,  on the same maturity date, the  same
amount of the foreign currency. It is impossible to forecast the market value of
portfolio  securities at the expiration of  the contract. Accordingly, it may be
necessary for  the Fund  to purchase  additional foreign  currency on  the  spot
market  (and  bear the  expense of  such purchase)  if the  market value  of the
security is less than the  amount of foreign currency  the Fund is obligated  to
deliver  and if a decision is made to sell the security and make delivery of the
foreign currency. Conversely,  it may be  necessary to sell  on the spot  market
some  of the foreign currency received upon the sale of the portfolio securities
if its market value exceeds the amount of foreign currency the Fund is obligated
to deliver.
 
    If the Fund retains  the portfolio securities and  engages in an  offsetting
transaction,  the Fund will  incur a gain or  loss to the  extent that there has
been movement in  spot or forward  contract prices.  If the Fund  engages in  an
offsetting transaction, it may subsequently enter into a new forward contract to
sell  the  foreign currency.  Should forward  prices  decline during  the period
between the Fund's entering into  a forward contract for  the sale of a  foreign
currency  and the date it enters into an offsetting contract for the purchase of
the foreign currency, the Fund  will realize a gain to  the extent the price  of
the currency it has
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
agreed  to sell  exceeds the price  of the  currency it has  agreed to purchase.
Should forward prices increase, the  Fund will suffer a  loss to the extent  the
price  of  the currency  it  has agreed  to purchase  exceeds  the price  of the
currency it has agreed to sell.
 
    If the Fund purchases a fixed-income  security which is denominated in  U.S.
dollars  but which will pay  out its principal based upon  a formula tied to the
exchange rate  between the  U.S. dollar  and a  foreign currency,  it may  hedge
against  a decline  in the principal  value of  the security by  entering into a
forward contract to sell or purchase an amount of the relevant foreign  currency
equal to some or all of the principal value of the security.
 
    At  times when the Fund  has written a call or  put option on a fixed-income
security or the currency in which it is denominated, it may wish to enter into a
forward contract to purchase or sell the foreign currency in which the  security
is  denominated. A forward  contract would, for  example, hedge the  risk of the
security on which a call currency option has been written declining in value  to
a greater extent than the value of the premium received for the option. The Fund
will  maintain with its Custodian at  all times cash, U.S. Government securities
or other appropriate high grade debt  obligations in a segregated account  equal
in  value to  all forward contract  obligations and  option contract obligations
entered into in hedge situations such as this.
 
    Although the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S. dollars, it  does
not  intend to convert its holdings of foreign currencies into U.S. dollars on a
daily basis. It will, however, do so from time to time, and investors should  be
aware  of the costs of currency conversion. Although foreign exchange dealers do
not charge a fee for  conversion, they do realize a  profit based on the  spread
between  the prices  at which  they are  buying and  selling various currencies.
Thus, a dealer may  offer to sell a  foreign currency to the  Fund at one  rate,
while  offering a lesser rate of exchange  should the Fund desire to resell that
currency to the dealer.
 
OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS
 
    As discussed in  the Prospectus,  the Fund  may write  covered call  options
against  securities held  in its portfolio  and covered put  options on eligible
portfolio securities and purchase options of  the same series to effect  closing
transactions, and may hedge against potential changes in the market value of its
investments  (or anticipated investments) by purchasing  put and call options on
portfolio (or eligible portfolio) securities  (and the currencies in which  they
are  denominated) and engaging  in transactions involving  futures contracts and
options on such contracts.
 
    Call and put options on U.S. Treasury notes, bonds and bills and on  various
foreign  currencies are listed on several  U.S. and foreign securities exchanges
and are written in over-the-counter transactions ("OTC Options"). Listed options
are issued or guaranteed by  the exchange on which they  trade or by a  clearing
corporation  such as  the Options Clearing  Corporation ("OCC").  Ownership of a
listed call option gives the Fund the right to buy from the OCC (in the U.S.) or
other clearing  corporation or  exchange, the  underlying security  or  currency
covered  by the option at  the stated exercise price (the  price per unit of the
underlying security  or currency)  by filing  an exercise  notice prior  to  the
expiration date of the option. The writer (seller) of the option would then have
the  obligation to sell, to the OCC  (in the U.S.) or other clearing corporation
or exchange, the underlying security or currency at that exercise price prior to
the expiration date of the option, regardless of its then current market  price.
Ownership  of a  listed put  option would give  the Fund  the right  to sell the
underlying security  or currency  to the  OCC (in  the U.S.)  or other  clearing
corporation or exchange at the stated exercise price. Upon notice of exercise of
the  put option, the writer of the  option would have the obligation to purchase
the underlying security or currency from the OCC (in the U.S.) or other clearing
corporation or exchange at the exercise price.
 
    OPTIONS ON TREASURY BONDS  AND NOTES.  Because  trading interest in  options
written  on  Treasury bonds  and  notes tends  to  center on  the  most recently
auctioned issues, the exchanges on which such securities trade will not continue
indefinitely to  introduce  options with  new  expirations to  replace  expiring
options  on  particular  issues.  Instead,  the  expirations  introduced  at the
commencement of options  trading on a  particular issue will  be allowed to  run
their course, with the possible addition of a limited
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
number  of new expirations as the original  ones expire. Options trading on each
issue of bonds or  notes will thus be  phased out as new  options are listed  on
more  recent issues, and  options representing a full  range of expirations will
not ordinarily be available for every issue on which options are traded.
 
    OPTIONS ON TREASURY BILLS.  Because a deliverable Treasury bill changes from
week to week, writers of Treasury bill calls cannot provide in advance for their
potential  exercise  settlement  obligations   by  acquiring  and  holding   the
underlying  security. However,  if the  Fund holds  a long  position in Treasury
bills with a principal amount of the securities deliverable upon exercise of the
option, the position may be  hedged from a risk standpoint  by the writing of  a
call  option. For so long as the call  option is outstanding, the Fund will hold
the Treasury bills in a segregated account with its Custodian, so that they will
be treated as being covered.
 
    OPTIONS ON GNMA CERTIFICATES.   Currently, options on GNMA Certificates  are
only  traded  over-the-counter. Since  the remaining  principal balance  of GNMA
Certificates declines each month as a result of mortgage payments, the Fund,  as
a  writer of  a GNMA call  holding GNMA  Certificates as "cover"  to satisfy its
delivery  obligation  in  the  event  of  exercise,  may  find  that  the   GNMA
Certificates  it holds no  longer have a  sufficient remaining principal balance
for this purpose.  Should this  occur, the  Fund will  purchase additional  GNMA
Certificates from the same pool (if obtainable) or replacement GNMA Certificates
in  the cash market in  order to maintain its cover.  A GNMA Certificate held by
the Fund to cover an option position in any but the nearest expiration month may
cease to represent cover for  the option in the event  of a decline in the  GNMA
coupon  rate at which new pools are  originated under the FHA/VA loan ceiling in
effect at any given time, as such  decline may increase the prepayments made  on
other  mortgage pools. If this should occur, the Fund will no longer be covered,
and the Fund will  either enter into a  closing purchase transaction or  replace
such Certificate with a Certificate which represents cover. When the Fund closes
out  its position or replaces such  Certificate, it may realize an unanticipated
loss and incur transaction costs.
 
    OPTIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES.  The  Fund may purchase and write options  on
foreign  currencies for  purposes similar  to those  involved with  investing in
forward foreign currency exchange  contracts. For example,  in order to  protect
against  declines  in  the  dollar  value  of  portfolio  securities  which  are
denominated in  a foreign  currency, the  Fund may  purchase put  options on  an
amount of such foreign currency equivalent to the current value of the portfolio
securities  involved. As a result, the Fund would be enabled to sell the foreign
currency for a  fixed amount of  U.S. dollars, thereby  "locking in" the  dollar
value  of the portfolio securities (less the amount of the premiums paid for the
options). Conversely, the Fund may  purchase call options on foreign  currencies
in  which securities it  anticipates purchasing are denominated  to secure a set
U.S. dollar price for such securities and protect against a decline in the value
of the U.S.  dollar against such  foreign currency. The  Fund may also  purchase
call and put options to close out written option positions.
 
    The  Fund may also write call options on foreign currency to protect against
potential declines in its portfolio securities which are denominated in  foreign
currencies.  If the  U.S. dollar  value of the  portfolio securities  falls as a
result of a decline in the exchange  rate between the foreign currency in  which
it  is denominated and  the U.S. dollar, then  a loss to  the Fund occasioned by
such value decline would be ameliorated by receipt of the premium on the  option
sold.  At the same time, however,  the Fund gives up the  benefit of any rise in
value of  the relevant  portfolio securities  above the  exercise price  of  the
option  and, in fact, only receives a benefit  from the writing of the option to
the extent that the value of the  portfolio securities falls below the price  of
the  premium received. The  Fund may also  write options to  close out long call
option positions. A put  option on a  foreign currency would  be written by  the
Fund  for the  same reason  it would  purchase a  call option,  namely, to hedge
against an increase in  the U.S. dollar  value of a  foreign security which  the
Fund  anticipates purchasing. Here, the receipt  of the premium would offset, to
the extent of the size of the premium, any increased cost to the Fund  resulting
from  an increase in the U.S. dollar value of the foreign security. However, the
Fund could not  benefit from any  decline in  the cost of  the foreign  security
which is greater than the price of the premium received. The Fund may also write
options to close out long put and call option positions.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
    The  markets in foreign  currency options are relatively  new and the Fund's
ability to establish and close out positions  on such options is subject to  the
maintenance of a liquid secondary market. Although the Fund will not purchase or
write  such options unless and until, in  the opinion of the Investment Manager,
the market  for them  has developed  sufficiently to  ensure that  the risks  in
connection  with such options are not greater  than the risks in connection with
the underlying  currency, there  can be  no assurance  that a  liquid  secondary
market  will exist for  a particular option  at any specific  time. In addition,
options on  foreign  currencies are  affected  by  all of  those  factors  which
influence foreign exchange rates and investments generally.
 
    The  value  of a  foreign  currency option  depends  upon the  value  of the
underlying currency relative to the U.S. dollar.  As a result, the price of  the
option  position may vary with changes in the value of either or both currencies
and have  no  relationship to  the  investment  merits of  a  foreign  security,
including  foreign securities held  in a "hedged"  investment portfolio. Because
foreign  currency  transactions  occurring  in  the  interbank  market   involve
substantially  larger amounts  than those  that may  be involved  in the  use of
foreign currency options, investors may be disadvantaged by having to deal in an
odd lot market (generally  consisting of transactions of  less than $1  million)
for the underlying foreign currencies at prices that are less favorable than for
round lots.
 
    There  is  no  systematic reporting  of  last sale  information  for foreign
currencies or  any  regulatory  requirement that  quotations  available  through
dealers  or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis. Quotation
information available is generally representative of very large transactions  in
the  interbank market and  thus may not  reflect relatively smaller transactions
(i.e., less than $1  million) where rates may  be less favorable. The  interbank
market in foreign currencies is a global, around-the-clock market. To the extent
that  the U.S. options markets  are closed while the  markets for the underlying
currencies remain open, significant price and  rate movements may take place  in
the underlying markets that are not reflected in the options market.
 
   
    OTC OPTIONS.  Exchange-listed options are issued by the OCC (in the U.S.) or
other  clearing corporation or  exchange which assures  that all transactions in
such options  are properly  executed. OTC  options are  purchased from  or  sold
(written)  to dealers or  financial institutions which  have entered into direct
agreements with the Fund. With OTC  options, such variables as expiration  date,
exercise  price  and  premium will  be  agreed  upon between  the  Fund  and the
transacting dealer, without the intermediation of a third party such as the OCC.
If the transacting dealer fails  to make or take  delivery of the securities  or
amount  of foreign currency  underlying an option it  has written, in accordance
with the terms  of that option,  the Fund would  lose the premium  paid for  the
option as well as any anticipated benefit of the transaction.
    
 
   
    COVERED CALL WRITING.  As stated in the Prospectus, the Fund is permitted to
write  covered call options on  portfolio securities and on  the U.S. Dollar and
foreign currencies in which they are denominated, without limit, in order to aid
in achieving its investment objectives. Generally, a call option is "covered" if
the  Fund  owns,  or  has  the   right  to  acquire,  without  additional   cash
consideration  (or for  additional cash consideration  held for the  Fund by its
Custodian in a segregated account) the underlying security (currency) subject to
the option except that in the case  of call options on U.S. Treasury Bills,  the
Fund  might own U.S. Treasury Bills of  a different series from those underlying
the call option,  but with  a principal amount  and value  corresponding to  the
exercise price and a maturity date no later than that of the security (currency)
deliverable  under the call  option. A call  option is also  covered if the Fund
holds a call on the same security  as the underlying security (currency) of  the
written  option, where the exercise price of the call used for coverage is equal
to or less  than the  exercise price  of the call  written or  greater than  the
exercise  price  of  the  call  written if  the  mark  to  market  difference is
maintained by  the Fund  in cash,  U.S. Government  securities or  other  liquid
portfolio  securities which  the Fund holds  in a  segregated account maintained
with its Custodian.
    
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
    The  Fund  will receive  from the  purchaser, in  return for  a call  it has
written, a "premium"; i.e., the price  of the option. Receipt of these  premiums
may  better enable  the Fund to  earn a higher  level of current  income than it
would earn from holding the underlying securities (currencies) alone.  Moreover,
the premium received will offset a portion of the potential loss incurred by the
Fund  if the securities  (currencies) underlying the  option are ultimately sold
(exchanged) by the Fund  at a loss.  Furthermore, a premium  received on a  call
written on a foreign currency will ameliorate any potential loss of value on the
portfolio  security due  to a  decline in  the value  of the  currency. However,
during the option period, the covered call writer has, in return for the premium
on the  option, given  up the  opportunity for  capital appreciation  above  the
exercise  price  should the  market  price of  the  underlying security  (or the
exchange rate of  the currency  in which it  is denominated)  increase, but  has
retained  the risk of loss  should the price of  the underlying security (or the
exchange rate of the currency in  which it is denominated) decline. The  premium
received  will fluctuate with varying economic  market conditions. If the market
value of  the  portfolio  securities  (or  the  currencies  in  which  they  are
denominated)  upon which call options have  been written increases, the Fund may
receive a lower total return from the portion of its portfolio upon which  calls
have been written than it would have had such calls not been written.
 
    As regards listed options and certain OTC options, during the option period,
the  Fund  may be  required, at  any  time, to  deliver the  underlying security
(currency) against payment  of the exercise  price on any  calls it has  written
(exercise  of  certain  listed  and  OTC  options  may  be  limited  to specific
expiration dates).  This obligation  is terminated  upon the  expiration of  the
option period or at such earlier time when the writer effects a closing purchase
transaction.  A closing  purchase transaction  is accomplished  by purchasing an
option of the same series as the option previously written.
 
    Closing purchase transactions are ordinarily effected to realize a profit on
an outstanding call option,  to prevent an  underlying security (currency)  from
being  called, to permit the sale of  an underlying security (or the exchange of
the underlying currency) or to enable the  Fund to write another call option  on
the  underlying security  (currency) with either  a different  exercise price or
expiration date or both. The Fund may realize a net gain or loss from a  closing
purchase  transaction depending upon whether the  amount of the premium received
on the  call option  is more  or less  than the  cost of  effecting the  closing
purchase transaction. Any loss incurred in a closing purchase transaction may be
wholly or partially offset by unrealized appreciation in the market value of the
underlying  security  (currency). Conversely,  a gain  resulting from  a closing
purchase transaction  could be  offset in  whole or  in part  or exceeded  by  a
decline in the market value of the underlying security (currency).
 
    If a call option expires unexercised, the Fund realizes a gain in the amount
of the premium on the option less the commission paid. Such a gain, however, may
be  offset  by  depreciation in  the  market  value of  the  underlying security
(currency) during the  option period. If  a call option  is exercised, the  Fund
realizes  a gain  or loss  from the sale  of the  underlying security (currency)
equal to the difference  between the purchase price  of the underlying  security
(currency)  and the  proceeds of  the sale of  the security  (currency) plus the
premium received on the option less the commission paid.
 
   
    Options written by  the Fund will  normally have expiration  dates of up  to
eighteen  months from the date written. The  exercise price of a call option may
be below, equal to or above the current market value of the underlying  security
at the time the option is written. See "Risks of Options Transactions," below.
    
 
   
    COVERED  PUT WRITING.  As stated in the Prospectus, as a writer of a covered
put option, the  Fund incurs an  obligation to buy  the security underlying  the
option from the purchaser of the put, at the option's exercise price at any time
during  the option period,  at the purchaser's election  (certain listed and OTC
put options written by the Fund will  be exercisable by the purchaser only on  a
specific  date). A put is  "covered" if, at all times,  the Fund maintains, in a
segregated account maintained on its behalf at the Fund's Custodian, cash,  U.S.
Government securities or other liquid portfolio securities in an amount equal to
at  least  the exercise  price of  the option,  at all  times during  the option
period. Similarly, a  short put position  could be  covered by the  Fund by  its
purchase  of a  put option  on the  same security  (currency) as  the underlying
security of the written option, where the exercise price of the purchased option
is equal to or more than the exercise price of the put written or less than  the
exercise price of the
    
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
   
put  written if  the marked to  market difference  is maintained by  the Fund in
cash, U.S. Government securities or other liquid portfolio securities which  the
Fund  holds in a segregated account maintained  at its Custodian. In the case of
listed options, during the option period, the Fund may be required, at any time,
to make  payment  of the  exercise  price  against delivery  of  the  underlying
security  (currency). The operation of and limitations on covered put options in
other respects are substantially identical to those of call options.
    
 
    The Fund  will write  put options  for three  purposes: (1)  to receive  the
income  derived from  the premiums paid  by purchasers; (2)  when the Investment
Manager wishes  to purchase  the  security (or  a  security denominated  in  the
currency  underlying the option) underlying the option at a price lower than its
current market price, in which case it will write the covered put at an exercise
price reflecting the lower purchase  price sought; and (3)  to close out a  long
put  option position. The potential  gain on a covered  put option is limited to
the  premium  received  on  the  option  (less  the  commissions  paid  on   the
transaction)  while  the  potential  loss  equals  the  differences  between the
exercise price of  the option  and the current  market price  of the  underlying
securities  (currencies)  when  the  put is  exercised,  offset  by  the premium
received (less the commissions paid on the transaction).
 
    PURCHASING CALL AND PUT OPTIONS.  As stated in the Prospectus, the Fund  may
purchase  listed and OTC call  and put options in amounts  equalling up to 5% of
its total assets. The Fund  may purchase a call option  in order to close out  a
covered  call position (see "Covered Call Writing" above), to protect against an
increase in price of a security it  anticipates purchasing or, in the case of  a
call  option on foreign currency, to hedge against an adverse exchange rate move
of the currency in which the  security it anticipates purchasing is  denominated
vis-a-vis  the currency in which the exercise price is denominated. The purchase
of  the  call  option  to  effect  a  closing  transaction  on  a  call  written
over-the-counter  may be  a listed or  an OTC  option. In either  case, the call
purchased is likely to be on the same securities (currencies) and have the  same
terms  as the  written option. If  purchased over-the-counter,  the option would
generally be acquired from the  dealer or financial institution which  purchased
the call written by the Fund.
 
    The  Fund may purchase put options on securities (currencies) which it holds
in its  portfolio to  protect  itself against  a decline  in  the value  of  the
security  and to  close out written  put option  positions. If the  value of the
underlying security (currency) were to fall below the exercise price of the  put
purchased  in an amount greater  than the premium paid  for the option, the Fund
would incur no  additional loss. In  addition, the  Fund may sell  a put  option
which  it  has  previously  purchased  prior  to  the  sale  of  the  securities
(currencies) underlying such option. Such a sale  would result in a net gain  or
loss  depending on whether the amount received on  the sale is more or less than
the premium and other transaction  costs paid on the  put option which is  sold.
And  such gain or loss  could be offset in  whole or in part  by a change in the
market value of the underlying security (currency). If a put option purchased by
the Fund expired without being sold or exercised, the premium would be lost.
 
    RISKS OF OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS.  The successful use of options depends on the
ability of  the Investment  Manager  to forecast  correctly interest  rates  and
market  movements. If  the market value  of the portfolio  securities upon which
call options have  been written increases,  the Fund may  receive a lower  total
return from the portion of its portfolio upon which calls have been written than
it would have had such calls not been written. In writing puts, the Fund assumes
the  risk of loss should  the market value of  the underlying securities decline
below the exercise price of the option (any loss being decreased by the  receipt
of  the premium on  the option written).  During the option  period, the covered
call writer  has,  in  return for  the  premium  on the  option,  given  up  the
opportunity  for capital appreciation above the exercise price should the market
price of the  underlying security  (or the  value of  its denominated  currency)
increase,  but has retained the risk of  loss should the price of the underlying
security (or the value of its  denominated currency) decline. The writer has  no
control  over the time  when it may be  required to fulfill  its obligation as a
writer of the option. Once an option writer has received an exercise notice,  it
cannot  effect  a  closing  purchase  transaction  in  order  to  terminate  its
obligation  under  the  option  and  must  deliver  or  receive  the  underlying
securities at the exercise price.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
   
    Prior  to exercise or expiration, an  option position can only be terminated
by entering  into a  closing purchase  or sale  transaction. If  a covered  call
option  writer is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction or to purchase
an offsetting  OTC option,  it cannot  sell the  underlying security  until  the
option  expires or the  option is exercised. Accordingly,  a covered call option
writer may not be able  to sell an underlying security  at a time when it  might
otherwise be advantageous to do so. A secured put option writer who is unable to
effect  a closing purchase  transaction or to purchase  an offsetting OTC option
would continue to bear the risk of decline in the market price of the underlying
security until the option  expires or is exercised.  In addition, a secured  put
writer  would be unable  to utilize the  amount held in  cash or U.S. Government
securities or other liquid portfolio securities  as security for the put  option
for other investment purposes until the exercise or expiration of the option.
    
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund's ability to close out its position
as  a writer of an option is dependent  upon the existence of a liquid secondary
market on Option Exchanges. There is no assurance that such a market will exist,
particularly in the case of OTC options, as such options will generally only  be
closed  out by entering into a  closing purchase transaction with the purchasing
dealer. However, the  Fund may be  able to purchase  an offsetting option  which
does  not close out its  position as a writer but  constitutes an asset of equal
value to the obligation  under the option  written. If the Fund  is not able  to
either  enter  into a  closing purchase  transaction  or purchase  an offsetting
position, it will be required to maintain the securities subject to the call, or
the collateral underlying the put, even  though it might not be advantageous  to
do  so,  until a  closing  transaction can  be entered  into  (or the  option is
exercised or expires).
 
    Among the possible reasons for the  absence of a liquid secondary market  on
an  exchange are:  (i) insufficient  trading interest  in certain  options; (ii)
restrictions on  transactions  imposed  by an  exchange;  (iii)  trading  halts,
suspensions  or other restrictions imposed with respect to particular classes or
series of  options or  underlying securities;  (iv) interruption  of the  normal
operations  on an exchange; (v)  inadequacy of the facilities  of an exchange or
the Options Clearing Corporation  ("OCC") to handle  current trading volume;  or
(vi)  a decision by one or more  exchanges to discontinue the trading of options
(or a  particular class  or series  of options),  in which  event the  secondary
market  on that exchange (or in that class  or series of options) would cease to
exist, although outstanding options on that exchange that had been issued by the
OCC as  a result  of trades  on that  exchange would  generally continue  to  be
exercisable in accordance with their terms.
 
    In the event of the bankruptcy of a broker through which the Fund engages in
transactions  in  options, the  Fund could  experience  delays and/or  losses in
liquidating open positions purchased or sold  through the broker and/or incur  a
loss  of all or part  of its margin deposits with  the broker. Similarly, in the
event of the bankruptcy of  the writer of an OTC  option purchased by the  Fund,
the  Fund could experience  a loss of  all or part  of the value  of the option.
Transactions are  entered  into by  the  Fund  only with  brokers  or  financial
institutions deemed creditworthy by the Fund's management.
 
    Each  of  the exchanges  has established  limitations governing  the maximum
number of options on the same  underlying security or futures contract  (whether
or  not covered) which may be written by a single investor, whether acting alone
or in concert with others (regardless of whether such options are written on the
same or different exchange  or are held  or written on one  or more accounts  or
through one or more brokers). An exchange may order the liquidation of positions
found  to be in violation  of these limits and it  may impose other sanctions or
restrictions. These position limits  may restrict the  number of listed  options
which the Fund may write.
 
    The  hours of trading for options may  not conform to the hours during which
the underlying securities  are traded.  To the  extent that  the option  markets
close  before the markets  for the underlying  securities, significant price and
rate movements can take place in the underlying markets that cannot be reflected
in the option markets.
 
    The extent to which the Fund  may enter into transactions involving  options
may  be limited by the Internal Revenue Code's requirements for qualification as
a regulated investment company and the Fund's intention to qualify as such  (see
"Dividends, Distributions and Taxes" in the Prospectus).
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
    FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  As stated in the  Prospectus, the Fund may purchase and
sell interest rate, currency, and index futures contracts ("futures contracts"),
that are traded  on U.S.  and foreign  commodity exchanges,  on such  underlying
securities as U.S. Treasury bonds, notes and bills and/or any foreign government
fixed-income   security  ("interest   rate"  futures),   on  various  currencies
("currency futures") and on such indexes  of U.S. and foreign securities as  may
exist or come into being ("index" futures).
 
    The  Fund  will purchase  or sell  interest rate  futures contracts  for the
purpose or hedging  some or all  of the  value of its  portfolio securities  (or
anticipated  portfolio securities) against changes in prevailing interest rates.
If the  Investment  Manager  anticipates  that  interest  rates  may  rise  and,
concomitantly,  the price of certain of  its portfolio securities fall, the Fund
may sell an  interest rate  futures contract.  If declining  interest rates  are
anticipated,  the Fund may purchase an interest rate futures contract to protect
against a potential  increase in  the price of  securities the  Fund intends  to
purchase.  Subsequently, appropriate securities may be  purchased by the Fund in
an orderly fashion; as securities are purchased, corresponding futures positions
would be terminated by offsetting sales of contracts.
 
    The Fund will purchase  or sell index futures  contracts for the purpose  of
hedging  some  or all  of its  portfolio  (or anticipated  portfolio) securities
against changes in their prices. If the Investment Manager anticipates that  the
prices  of securities  held by  the Fund may  fall, the  Fund may  sell an index
futures contract. Conversely, if  the Fund wishes  to hedge against  anticipated
price rises in those securities which the Fund intends to purchase, the Fund may
purchase an index futures contract.
 
    The  Fund will purchase or sell currency  futures on currencies in which its
portfolio securities (or anticipated  portfolio securities) are denominated  for
the  purposes of hedging against anticipated changes in currency exchange rates.
The Fund will enter into currency futures contracts for the same reasons as  set
forth  above for  entering into forward  foreign currency  contracts; namely, to
"lock-in" the  value  of  a security  purchased  or  sold in  a  given  currency
vis-a-vis  a different currency or to hedge against an adverse currency exchange
rate movement of  a portfolio security's  (or anticipated portfolio  security's)
denominated currency vis-a-vis a different currency.
 
    In  addition to the above, interest rate, index and currency futures will be
bought or sold in order to close out a short or long position maintained by  the
Fund in a corresponding futures contract.
 
    Although  most interest rate  futures contracts call  for actual delivery or
acceptance of  securities,  the contracts  usually  are closed  out  before  the
settlement  date without  the making or  taking of delivery.  A futures contract
sale is  closed  out by  effecting  a futures  contract  purchase for  the  same
aggregate  amount  of the  specific  type of  security  (currency) and  the same
delivery date. If  the sale  price exceeds  the offsetting  purchase price,  the
seller  would be paid the difference and would realize a gain. If the offsetting
purchase price exceeds the sale price,  the seller would pay the difference  and
would  realize a loss. Similarly,  a futures contract purchase  is closed out by
effecting a futures contract sale for the same aggregate amount of the  specific
type  of security (currency) and the same  delivery date. If the offsetting sale
price exceeds the purchase price, the purchaser would realize a gain, whereas if
the purchase  price  exceeds the  offsetting  sale price,  the  purchaser  would
realize a loss. There is no assurance that the Fund will be able to enter into a
closing transaction.
 
   
    INTEREST RATE FUTURES CONTRACTS.  When the Fund enters into an interest rate
futures contract, it is initially required to deposit with the Fund's Custodian,
in a segregated account in the name of the broker performing the transaction, an
"initial  margin"  of cash  or U.S.  Government securities  or other  high grade
short-term obligations equal to approximately 2% of the contract amount. Initial
margin requirements are established by the exchanges on which futures  contracts
trade  and may, from  time to time,  change. In addition,  brokers may establish
margin deposit requirements in excess of those required by the exchanges.
    
 
    Initial  margin  in  futures  transactions  is  different  from  margin   in
securities transactions in that initial margin does not involve the borrowing of
funds  by a brokers' client but is, rather,  a good faith deposit on the futures
contract which will be returned to the  Fund upon the proper termination of  the
futures
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
   
contract.  The margin deposits made are marked  to market daily and the Fund may
be required to make subsequent deposits of cash or U.S. Government securities or
other high  grade short-term  obligations called  "variation margin,"  with  the
Fund's   futures  contract  clearing  broker,  which  are  reflective  of  price
fluctuations in the futures contract. Currently, interest rate futures contracts
can be purchased on debt securities such as U.S. Treasury Bills and Bonds,  U.S.
Treasury Notes with Maturities between 6 1/2 and 10 years, GNMA Certificates and
Bank Certificates of Deposit.
    
 
    CURRENCY  FUTURES.   Generally,  foreign  currency futures  provide  for the
delivery of a specified amount of a given currency, on the exercise date, for  a
set  exercise  price  denominated in  U.S.  dollars or  other  currency. Foreign
currency futures contracts would be entered  into for the same reason and  under
the  same  circumstances as  forward  foreign currency  exchange  contracts. The
Investment Manager  will assess  such  factors as  cost spreads,  liquidity  and
transaction costs in determining whether to utilize futures contracts or forward
contracts  in its foreign currency transactions and hedging strategy. Currently,
currency futures exist for,  among other foreign  currencies, the Japanese  yen,
West  German marks,  Canadian dollars, British  pound, Swiss  franc and European
currency unit.
 
    Purchasers and sellers of foreign currency futures contracts are subject  to
the  same risks that  apply to the  buying and selling  of futures generally. In
addition, there are risks associated with foreign currency futures contracts and
their use  as a  hedging device  similar  to those  associated with  options  on
foreign  currencies described above.  Further, settlement of  a foreign currency
futures contract must occur within the country issuing the underlying  currency.
Thus,  the Fund must accept or make  delivery of the underlying foreign currency
in accordance with any U.S. or foreign restrictions or regulations regarding the
maintenance of  foreign  banking  arrangements  by U.S.  residents  and  may  be
required  to pay any fees, taxes or  charges associated with such delivery which
are assessed in the issuing country.
 
    Options on foreign currency futures contracts may involve certain additional
risks. Trading options on foreign currency futures contracts is relatively  new.
The  ability to establish and close out  positions on such options is subject to
the maintenance of a liquid secondary market. To reduce this risk, the Fund will
not purchase or write options on  foreign currency futures contracts unless  and
until,  in the  Investment Manager's  opinion, the  market for  such options has
developed sufficiently that the  risks in connection with  such options are  not
greater than the risks in connection with transactions in the underlying foreign
currency futures contracts.
 
    INDEX  FUTURES  CONTRACTS.   As discussed  in the  Prospectus, the  Fund may
invest in index  futures contracts. An  index futures contract  sale creates  an
obligation  by the Fund, as seller, to  deliver cash at a specified future time.
An index futures contract  purchase would create an  obligation by the Fund,  as
purchaser,  to  take  delivery  of  cash at  a  specified  future  time. Futures
contracts on indexes  do not require  the physical delivery  of securities,  but
provide  for  a final  cash  settlement on  the  expiration date  which reflects
accumulated profits and losses credited or debited to each party's account.
 
    The Fund  is  required to  maintain  margin deposits  with  brokerage  firms
through  which it effects  index futures contracts  in a manner  similar to that
described above  for interest  rate futures  contracts. Currently,  the  initial
margin  requirements  range from  3% to  10%  of the  contract amount  for index
futures. In  addition, due  to current  industry practice,  daily variations  in
gains  and losses on open contracts are required  to be reflected in cash in the
form of variation margin payments. The  Fund may be required to make  additional
margin payments during the term of the contract.
 
    At  any time prior to expiration of the futures contract, the Fund may elect
to close  the position  by taking  an opposite  position which  will operate  to
terminate  the Fund's position in the futures contract. A final determination of
variation margin is  then made, additional  cash is  required to be  paid by  or
released to the Fund and the Fund realizes a loss or gain.
 
    OPTIONS  ON FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Fund may purchase and write call and put
options on futures  contracts which  are traded on  an exchange  and enter  into
closing  transactions  with respect  to such  options  to terminate  an existing
position. An option  on a  futures contract gives  the purchaser  the right  (in
return  for the premium paid) to assume a position in a futures contract (a long
position if the option is a
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
call and a short position if the option is a put) at a specified exercise  price
at  any time  during the term  of the option.  Upon exercise of  the option, the
delivery of the futures position  by the writer of the  option to the holder  of
the option is accompanied by delivery of the accumulated balance in the writer's
futures margin account, which represents the amount by which the market price of
the  futures contract at the time of exercise exceeds, in the case of a call, or
is less than, in  the case of  a put, the  exercise price of  the option on  the
futures contract.
 
    The  Fund will purchase and write options on futures contracts for identical
purposes to  those  set forth  above  for the  purchase  of a  futures  contract
(purchase  of a call option or  sale of a put option)  and the sale of a futures
contract (purchase of a put option or sale of a call option), or to close out  a
long  or short  position in futures  contracts. If, for  example, the Investment
Manager wished  to  protect  against  an increase  in  interest  rates  and  the
resulting  negative  impact  on  the  value of  a  portion  of  its fixed-income
portfolio, it might write  a call option on  an interest rate futures  contract,
the  underlying security of  which correlates with the  portion of the portfolio
the Investment Manager seeks to hedge.  Any premiums received in the writing  of
options  on futures  contracts may, of  course, provide a  further hedge against
losses resulting from price declines in portions of the Fund's portfolio.
 
    LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS  ON FUTURES.  The Fund may  not
enter into futures contracts or purchase related options thereon if, immediately
thereafter, the amount committed to margin plus the amount paid for premiums for
unexpired  options on futures  contracts exceeds 5%  of the value  of the Fund's
total assets, after taking into  account unrealized gains and unrealized  losses
on such contracts it has entered into, provided, however, that in the case of an
option that is in-the-money (the exercise price of the call (put) option is less
(more)  than  the  market price  of  the  underlying security)  at  the  time of
purchase, the  in-the-money  amount  may  be excluded  in  calculating  the  5%.
However,  there is no overall limitation on  the percentage of the Fund's assets
which may be subject to  a hedge position. In  addition, in accordance with  the
regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC") under which the
Fund  is exempted from registration  as a commodity pool  operator, the Fund may
only enter into futures contracts and options on futures contracts  transactions
for  purposes of hedging a part or all of its portfolio. If the CFTC changes its
regulations so that  the Fund  would be permitted  to write  options on  futures
contracts  for purposes other  than hedging the  Fund's investments without CFTC
registration, the  Fund may  engage  in such  transactions for  those  purposes.
Except  as described above, there are no other limitations on the use of futures
and options thereon by the Fund.
 
    The writer of an option on a futures contract is required to deposit initial
and variation margin  pursuant to  requirements similar to  those applicable  to
futures  contracts. Premiums received from the writing of an option on a futures
contract are included in initial margin deposits.
 
    RISKS OF  TRANSACTIONS  IN  FUTURES  CONTRACTS AND  RELATED  OPTIONS.    The
successful  use of  futures and  related options depends  on the  ability of the
Investment Manager to accurately predict market and interest rate movements.  As
stated  in  the Prospectus,  the Fund  may  sell a  futures contract  to protect
against the decline in the  value of securities (or  the currency in which  they
are  denominated) held  by the  Fund. However, it  is possible  that the futures
market may advance and the  value of securities (or  the currency in which  they
are  denominated)  held  in the  portfolio  of  the Fund  may  decline.  If this
occurred, the Fund would lose money on the futures contract and also  experience
a  decline in value of its portfolio securities. However, while this could occur
for a very brief  period or to  a very small  degree, over time  the value of  a
diversified  portfolio will tend  to move in  the same direction  as the futures
contracts.
 
    If the Fund purchases  a futures contract to  hedge against the increase  in
value  of  securities it  intends  to buy  (or the  currency  in which  they are
denominated), and the value of such securities (currencies) decreases, then  the
Fund may determine not to invest in the securities as planned and will realize a
loss  on the futures contract that is not  offset by a reduction in the price of
the securities.
 
   
    If the Fund has sold a call option on a futures contract, it will cover this
position by holding, in a segregated account maintained at its Custodian,  cash,
U.S.  Government securities or other liquid  portfolio securities equal in value
(when added to any initial or variation  margin on deposit) to the market  value
of  the securities (currencies) underlying the  futures contract or the exercise
price of the option.
    
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
Such a  position may  also  be covered  by  owning the  securities  (currencies)
underlying the futures contract, or by holding a call option permitting the Fund
to  purchase the same contract at a price  no higher than the price at which the
short position was established.
 
   
    In addition, if the Fund holds a long position in a futures contract it will
hold cash, U.S. Government securities or other liquid portfolio securities equal
to the purchase price of the contract  (less the amount of initial or  variation
margin  on  deposit) in  a segregated  account  maintained for  the Fund  by its
Custodian. Alternatively, the Fund could cover its long position by purchasing a
put option on the same futures contract with an exercise price as high or higher
than the price of the contract held by the Fund.
    
 
    Exchanges limit the amount by which the price of a futures contract may move
on any day. If the price moves equal the daily limit on successive days, then it
may prove impossible to liquidate a futures position until the daily limit moves
have ceased. In the event of adverse price movements, the Fund would continue to
be required to  make daily  cash payments of  variation margin  on open  futures
positions. In such situations, if the Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to
sell  portfolio securities to meet daily variation margin requirements at a time
when it may be disadvantageous to do  so. In addition, the Fund may be  required
to  take or  make delivery of  the instruments underlying  interest rate futures
contracts it holds at a time when it is disadvantageous to do so. The  inability
to  close out options and futures positions could also have an adverse impact on
the Fund's ability to effectively hedge its portfolio.
 
    Futures contracts and options thereon which are purchased or sold on foreign
commodities  exchanges  may  have  greater  price  volatility  than  their  U.S.
counterparts.  Furthermore, foreign commodities exchanges  may be less regulated
and under less governmental scrutiny than U.S. exchanges. Brokerage commissions,
clearing costs and other transaction costs  may be higher on foreign  exchanges.
Greater  margin requirements may limit the  Fund's ability to enter into certain
commodity transactions on foreign exchanges. Moreover, differences in  clearance
and  delivery  requirements  on foreign  exchanges  may occasion  delays  in the
settlement of the Fund's transactions effected on foreign exchanges.
 
    In the event of the bankruptcy of a broker through which the Fund engages in
transactions in futures  or options  thereon, the Fund  could experience  delays
and/or losses in liquidating open positions purchased or sold through the broker
and/or  incur a  loss of  all or part  of its  margin deposits  with the broker.
Similarly, in  the event  of  the bankruptcy  of the  writer  of an  OTC  option
purchased  by the Fund, the Fund  could experience a loss of  all or part of the
value of the option. Transactions are entered into by the Fund only with brokers
or financial institutions deemed creditworthy by the Investment Manager.
 
    While the futures contracts and options transactions to be engaged in by the
Fund for  the  purpose  of  hedging the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  are  not
speculative  in nature, there are risks inherent in the use of such instruments.
One such risk which may arise in employing futures contracts to protect  against
the  price volatility of portfolio securities  (and the currencies in which they
are denominated) is that the prices of securities and indexes subject to futures
contracts (and thereby  the futures contract  prices) may correlate  imperfectly
with the behavior of the cash prices of the Fund's portfolio securities (and the
currencies  in which they are denominated). Another  such risk is that prices of
interest rate  futures contracts  may not  move in  tandem with  the changes  in
prevailing  interest rates against  which the Fund seeks  a hedge. A correlation
may also  be distorted  by the  fact that  the futures  market is  dominated  by
short-term  traders seeking to profit from  the difference between a contract or
security price objective and their cost of borrowed funds. Such distortions  are
generally minor and would diminish as the contract approached maturity.
 
    As  stated  in  the Prospectus,  there  may exist  an  imperfect correlation
between the price movements of futures  contracts purchased by the Fund and  the
movements  in the prices of the securities (currencies) which are the subject of
the hedge.  If participants  in the  futures  market elect  to close  out  their
contracts  through  offsetting  transactions  rather  than  meet  margin deposit
requirements, distortions in the normal relationship between the debt securities
or currency markets and  futures markets could  result. Price distortions  could
also  result if investors in  futures contracts opt to  make or take delivery of
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
underlying securities  rather than  engage in  closing transactions  due to  the
resultant  reduction in the liquidity of the futures market. In addition, due to
the fact that, from the point  of view of speculators, the deposit  requirements
in  the futures markets  are less onerous  than margin requirements  in the cash
market, increased participation by speculators in the futures market could cause
temporary price distortions. Due to the possibility of price distortions in  the
futures market and because of the imperfect correlation between movements in the
prices of securities and movements in the prices of futures contracts, a correct
forecast  of interest rate trends  may still not result  in a successful hedging
transaction.
 
    As stated in the Prospectus, there  is no assurance that a liquid  secondary
market  will exist for futures  contracts and related options  in which the Fund
may invest. In the event a liquid market does not exist, it may not be  possible
to  close out a futures  position, and in the  event of adverse price movements,
the Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments of  variation
margin.  In addition, limitations  imposed by an  exchange or board  of trade on
which futures contracts are traded may  compel or prevent the Fund from  closing
out  a contract which may result in reduced  gain or increased loss to the Fund.
The absence of a liquid market in futures contracts might cause the Fund to make
or take delivery of the underlying securities (currencies) at a time when it may
be disadvantageous to do so.
 
    The extent to which the Fund  may enter into transactions involving  futures
contracts  and options  thereon may  be limited  by the  Internal Revenue Code's
requirements for qualification as a regulated investment company and the  Fund's
intention  to qualify as  such (see "Dividends, Distributions  and Taxes" in the
Prospectus).
 
    Compared to the purchase or sale of futures contracts, the purchase of  call
or  put options on  futures contracts involves  less potential risk  to the Fund
because the maximum amount  at risk is  the premium paid  for the options  (plus
transaction  costs). However, there may be  circumstances when the purchase of a
call or put  option on a  futures contract would  result in a  loss to the  Fund
notwithstanding that the purchase or sale of a futures contract would not result
in  a loss, as in the  instance where there is no  movement in the prices of the
futures contract or underlying securities (currencies).
 
OTHER INVESTMENT POLICIES
 
    REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  When cash may be  available for only a few days,  it
may  be invested by the Fund in repurchase  agreements until such time as it may
otherwise be  invested  or used  for  payments of  obligations  of the  Fund.  A
repurchase  agreement may  be viewed as  a type  of secured lending  by the Fund
which typically involves the  acquisition by the  Fund of government  securities
from  a  selling  financial  institution  such  as  a  bank,  savings  and  loan
association or broker-dealer.  The agreement  provides that the  Fund will  sell
back  to  the  institution,  and  that  the  institution  will  repurchase,  the
underlying security ("collateral") at a specified  price and at a fixed time  in
the  future, usually  not more than  seven days  from the date  of purchase. The
collateral  will   be  maintained   in  a   segregated  account   and  will   be
marked-to-market  daily to determine  that the full value  of the collateral, as
specified in the agreement, is always at least equal to the purchase price  plus
accrued  interest. If required, additional collateral will be requested from the
counterparty  and  when  received  added   to  the  account  to  maintain   full
collateralization.  In the event the original seller defaults on its obligations
to repurchase, as a result of its bankruptcy or otherwise, the Fund will seek to
sell the collateral, which action could  involve costs or delays. In such  case,
the Fund's ability to dispose of the collateral to recover its investment may be
restricted or delayed.
 
    The  Fund will accrue interest from the  institution until the time when the
repurchase is to  occur. Although  such date  is deemed by  the Fund  to be  the
maturity date of a repurchase agreement, the maturities of securities subject to
repurchase agreements are not subject to any limits and may exceed one year.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
    While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with direct
investments in debt securities, the Fund follows procedures designed to minimize
such   risks.  Repurchase  agreements  will   be  transacted  only  with  large,
well-capitalized and  well-established  financial institutions  whose  financial
condition  will be continuously monitored by  the management of the Fund subject
to procedures established by the Directors. The procedures also require that the
collateral underlying the agreement be specified.
 
   
    REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.   The  Fund may also  use reverse  repurchase
agreements  for purposes  of meeting  redemptions or  as part  of its investment
strategy. Reverse repurchase agreements involve  sales by the Fund of  portfolio
assets  concurrently with an agreement by the Fund to repurchase the same assets
at a later date at a fixed price. Generally, the effect of such a transaction is
that the Fund  can recover all  or most of  the cash invested  in the  portfolio
securities  involved during the term of  the reverse repurchase agreement, while
it will be  able to  keep the interest  income associated  with those  portfolio
securities.  Such transactions are only advantageous if the interest cost to the
Fund of the reverse  repurchase transaction is less  than the cost of  obtaining
the  cash otherwise. Opportunities  to achieve this advantage  may not always be
available, and the  Fund intends to  use the reverse  repurchase technique  only
when  it will be to its advantage to do so. The Fund will establish a segregated
account with  its  custodian  bank  in  which it  will  maintain  cash  or  cash
equivalents   or  other  liquid  portfolio   securities  (i.e.  U.S.  Government
securities) equal in value to its  obligations in respect of reverse  repurchase
agreements.  Reverse repurchase agreements are considered borrowings by the Fund
and, in accordance  with legal  requirements, the  Fund will  maintain an  asset
coverage  (including the proceeds) of at least  300% with respect to all reverse
repurchase agreements. Reverse repurchase agreements  may not exceed 10% of  the
Fund's  total assets.  The Fund will  make no purchases  of portfolio securities
while it is still subject to a reverse repurchase agreement.
    
 
   
    WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED  DELIVERY SECURITIES  AND FORWARD  COMMITMENTS.   As
discussed  in  the Prospectus,  from time  to  time, in  the ordinary  course of
business, the Fund may purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery
basis  and may purchase or  sell securities on a  forward commitment basis. When
such transactions  are  negotiated,  the price  is  fixed  at the  time  of  the
commitment,  but delivery and payment  can take place a  month or more after the
date of  the commitment.  The  securities so  purchased  are subject  to  market
fluctuation  and no interest accrues to  the purchaser during this period. While
the Fund will  only purchase securities  on a when-issued,  delayed delivery  or
forward  commitment basis  with the intention  of acquiring  the securities, the
Fund may  sell  the securities  before  the settlement  date,  if it  is  deemed
advisable. At the time the Fund makes the commitment to purchase securities on a
when-issued  or delayed delivery basis, the Fund will record the transaction and
thereafter reflect the value, each day, of such security in determining the  net
asset  value of the Fund.  At the time of delivery  of the securities, the value
may be more  or less than  the purchase price.  The Fund will  also establish  a
segregated  account with the Fund's custodian bank in which it will continuously
maintain cash or U.S. Government securities or other liquid portfolio securities
equal  in  value  to  commitments  for  such  when-issued  or  delayed  delivery
securities;  subject to  this requirement, the  Fund may  purchase securities on
such basis without  limit. An increase  in the percentage  of the Fund's  assets
committed  to the  purchase of securities  on a when-issued  or delayed delivery
basis may increase  the volatility  of the Fund's  net asset  value. The  Fund's
management  and the Directors do not believe  that the Fund's net asset value or
income will be adversely affected by its purchase of securities on such basis.
    
 
   
    WHEN, AS AND IF ISSUED SECURITIES.  As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund
may purchase securities  on a "when,  as and  if issued" basis  under which  the
issuance of the security depends upon the occurrence of a subsequent event, such
as  approval of  a merger,  corporate reorganization,  leveraged buyout  or debt
restructuring. The commitment for the purchase of any such security will not  be
recognized  in the portfolio of the Fund until the Investment Manager determines
that issuance of the security  is probable. At such  time, the Fund will  record
the  transaction and, in determining its net asset value, will reflect the value
of the security daily. At such time,  the Fund will also establish a  segregated
account  with its custodian bank in which  it will continuously maintain cash or
U.S. Government securities or other  liquid portfolio securities equal in  value
to recognized commitments for such securities.
    
Settle-
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
ment  of the trade will occur within five business days of the occurrence of the
subsequent event. The value of the Fund's commitments to purchase the securities
of any one  issuer, together with  the value  of all securities  of such  issuer
owned  by the Fund, may not exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets at
the time  the  initial commitment  to  purchase  such securities  is  made  (see
"Investment  Restrictions"). Subject to the foregoing restrictions, the Fund may
purchase securities on such basis without  limit. An increase in the  percentage
of  the Fund's assets committed to the purchase of securities on a "when, as and
if issued" basis may increase the volatility of its net asset value. The  Fund's
management and the Directors do not believe that the net asset value of the Fund
will be adversely affected by its purchase of securities on such basis. The Fund
may  also sell securities on a "when, as  and if issued" basis provided that the
issuance of  the  security  will  result  automatically  from  the  exchange  or
conversion of a security owned by the Fund at the time of the sale.
 
   
    LENDING  OF  PORTFOLIO SECURITIES.    Consistent with  applicable regulatory
requirements, the Fund may lend its portfolio securities to brokers, dealers and
other financial institutions, provided that such loans are callable at any  time
by the Fund (subject to notice provisions described below), and are at all times
secured by cash or appropriate high grade debt obligations, which are maintained
in a segregated account pursuant to applicable regulations and that are at least
equal  to  the market  value, determined  daily, of  the loaned  securities. The
advantage of such loans is that the Fund continues to receive the income on  the
loaned  securities while at the  same time earning interest  on the cash amounts
deposited as collateral, which will  be invested in short-term obligations.  The
Fund  will not lend its portfolio securities  if such loans are not permitted by
the laws or regulations of any state in which its shares are qualified for  sale
and  will not lend more than 25% of the value of its total assets. A loan may be
terminated by the borrower on one business  day's notice, or by the Fund on  two
business  days' notice. If  the borrower fails to  deliver the loaned securities
within two days after receipt  of notice, the Fund  could use the collateral  to
replace  the  securities while  holding the  borrower liable  for any  excess of
replacement cost over collateral.  As with any extensions  of credit, there  are
risks  of  delay in  recovery  and in  some  cases even  loss  of rights  in the
collateral should  the borrower  of the  securities fail  financially.  However,
these  loans of portfolio  securities will only  be made to  firms deemed by the
Fund's management to  be creditworthy and  when the income  which can be  earned
from such loans justifies the attendant risks. Upon termination of the loan, the
borrower  is required to return the securities to  the Fund. Any gain or loss in
the  market  price  during  the  loan  period  would  inure  to  the  Fund.  The
creditworthiness  of firms to which the Fund lends its portfolio securities will
be monitored on an ongoing basis by the Fund's management pursuant to procedures
adopted and reviewed,  on an ongoing  basis, by  the Board of  Directors of  the
Fund.
    
 
    When  voting or consent rights which accompany loaned securities pass to the
borrower, the Fund will follow the  policy of calling the loaned securities,  to
be  delivered within one day after notice, to permit the exercise of such rights
if the matters involved would have a material effect on the Fund's investment in
such loaned securities.  The Fund will  pay reasonable finder's,  administrative
and custodial fees in connection with a loan of its securities. The Fund has not
to  date nor does it presently intend to lend any of its portfolio securities in
the foreseeable future.
 
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    In addition to the investment restrictions enumerated in the Prospectus, the
investment  restrictions  listed  below  have  been  adopted  by  the  Fund   as
fundamental   policies,  except  as  otherwise   indicated.  Under  the  Act,  a
fundamental policy may  not be changed  without the  vote of a  majority of  the
outstanding  voting  securities of  the  Fund, as  defined  in the  Act.  Such a
majority is defined as the lesser of (a) 67% or more of the shares present at  a
meeting  of shareholders, if the holders of 50% of the outstanding shares of the
Fund are present or represented by proxy or (b) more than 50% of the outstanding
shares of the Fund.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
    The Fund may not:
 
        1. Purchase or sell real estate or interests therein, although the  Fund
           may  purchase  securities  of  issuers which  engage  in  real estate
    operations and securities secured by real estate or interests therein.
 
        2. Purchase  oil,  gas  or  other  mineral  leases,  rights  or  royalty
           contracts  or exploration  or development  programs, except  that the
    Fund may invest in the securities of companies which operate, invest in,  or
    sponsor such programs.
 
        3. Borrow  money  (except insofar  as  the Fund  may  be deemed  to have
           borrowed by entrance  into a  reverse repurchase agreement  up to  an
    amount  not exceeding 10% of the Fund's  total assets), except that the Fund
    may borrow from a  bank for temporary or  emergency purposes in amounts  not
    exceeding  5% (taken  at the lower  of cost  or current value)  of its total
    assets (not  including the  amount  borrowed). The  Fund will  not  purchase
    portfolio  securities  while  any borrowings,  including  reverse repurchase
    agreements, of the Fund are outstanding.
 
        4. Issue senior securities as defined in  the Act except insofar as  the
           Fund  may be deemed to have issued a senior security by reason of (a)
    entering into any repurchase or reverse repurchase agreement; (b) purchasing
    any securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis; (c) purchasing or
    selling futures contracts,  forward foreign exchange  contracts or  options;
    (d)  borrowing money in accordance with restrictions described above; or (e)
    lending portfolio securities.
 
        5. Make loans of  money or securities,  except: (a) by  the purchase  of
           publicly  distributed debt obligations  in which the  Fund may invest
    consistent with its investment objectives and policies; (b) by investment in
    repurchase or reverse repurchase agreements; or (c) by lending its portfolio
    securities.
 
        6. Engage in the underwriting of securities, except insofar as the  Fund
           may  be deemed  an underwriter  under the  Securities Act  of 1933 in
    disposing of a portfolio security.
 
        7. Invest for the  purpose of  exercising control or  management of  any
           other issuer.
 
        8. Purchase or sell commodities or commodities contracts except that the
           Fund may purchase or write interest rate, currency and stock and bond
    index futures contracts and related options thereon.
 
        9. Pledge  its assets  or assign  or otherwise  encumber them  except to
           secure permitted borrowings.  (For the purpose  of this  restriction,
    collateral   arrangements  with  respect  to  the  writing  of  options  and
    collateral arrangements  with respect  to initial  or variation  margin  for
    futures are not
    deemed to be pledges of assets.)
 
       10. Purchase  securities on  margin (but  the Fund  may obtain short-term
           loans as  are  necessary  for the  clearance  of  transactions).  The
    deposit  or payment by the fund of initial or variation margin in connection
    with futures  contracts or  related options  thereon is  not considered  the
    purchase of a security on margin.
 
       11. Purchase   securities  of  other   investment  companies,  except  in
           connection  with   a   merger,   consolidation,   reorganization   or
    acquisition.
 
       12. Invest  more than  5% of  its net assets  in warrants  (valued at the
           lower of cost or market), including  not more than 2% of such  assets
    which  are not listed on  the New York or  American Stock Exchange. However,
    warrants acquired by the Fund in  units or attached to other securities  may
    be deemed to be without value.
 
    If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment, a later
increase  or  decrease  in  percentage  resulting from  a  change  in  values of
portfolio securities or amount of total or  net assets will not be considered  a
violation of any of the foregoing restrictions.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    Subject to the general supervision of the Board of Directors, the Investment
Manager  is responsible for decisions  to buy and sell  securities for the Fund,
the selection  of  brokers and  dealers  to  effect the  transactions,  and  the
negotiation  of brokerage commissions, if any. Purchases and sales of securities
on a stock  exchange are effected  through brokers who  charge a commission  for
their  services. The Fund expects that the  primary market for the securities in
which it intends to invest will generally be the over-the-counter market. In the
over-the-counter market, securities are generally  traded on a "net" basis  with
dealers  acting as principal for their own accounts without a stated commission,
although the price of the security usually includes a profit to the dealer.  The
Fund  expects  that  securities  will  be  purchased  at  times  in underwritten
offerings where the  price includes  a fixed amount  of compensation,  generally
referred  to as  the underwriter's concession  or discount.  Options and futures
transactions will usually be effected through a broker and a commission will  be
charged.   On  occasion,  the  Fund  may  also  purchase  certain  money  market
instruments directly from an issuer, in  which case no commissions or  discounts
are paid. During the fiscal years ended October 31, 1994, 1995 and 1996 the Fund
paid  $17,164,  $9,450 and  $2,100,  respectively, in  brokerage  commissions on
portfolio securities transactions.
    
 
   
    The Investment Manager currently serves as investment manager to a number of
clients, including other  investment companies,  and may  in the  future act  as
investment  manager or adviser to  others. It is the  practice of the Investment
Manager to cause purchase and sale  transactions to be allocated among the  Fund
and  others whose  assets it manages  in such  manner as it  deems equitable. In
making such  allocations  among the  Fund  and other  client  accounts,  various
factors  may be considered, including  the respective investment objectives, the
relative size of portfolio  holdings of the same  or comparable securities,  the
availability  of  cash  for  investment,  the  size  of  investment  commitments
generally held and  the opinions  of the  persons responsible  for managing  the
portfolios of the Fund and other client accounts. In the case of certain initial
and  secondary public offerings,  the Investment Manager  may utilize a pro-rata
allocation process based on the size of  the Dean Witter Funds involved and  the
number of shares available from the public offering.
    
 
    The  policy of the Fund regarding purchases  and sales of securities for its
portfolio is that  primary consideration  will be  given to  obtaining the  most
favorable  prices and efficient executions of transactions. Consistent with this
policy, when  securities transactions  are  effected on  a stock  exchange,  the
Fund's  policy is  to pay commissions  which are considered  fair and reasonable
without necessarily determining that the lowest possible commissions are paid in
all circumstances.  The Fund  believes that  a requirement  always to  seek  the
lowest  possible commission cost could impede effective portfolio management and
preclude the Fund and  the Investment Manager from  obtaining a high quality  of
brokerage  and research services. In seeking  to determine the reasonableness of
brokerage commissions paid  in any  transaction, the  Investment Manager  relies
upon  its experience  and knowledge  regarding commissions  generally charged by
various brokers and  on its judgment  in evaluating the  brokerage and  research
services received from the broker effecting the transaction. Such determinations
are necessarily subjective and imprecise, as in most cases an exact dollar value
for those services is not ascertainable.
 
    The  Fund  anticipates that  certain of  its transactions  involving foreign
securities will be effected on  securities exchanges. Fixed commissions on  such
transactions  are  generally  higher  than  negotiated  commissions  on domestic
transactions. There is also generally less government supervision and regulation
of foreign securities exchanges and brokers than in the United States.
 
    In seeking to implement the Fund's policies, the Investment Manager  effects
transactions  with those brokers and dealers who the Investment Manager believes
provide the  most  favorable  prices  and are  capable  of  providing  efficient
executions.  If the Investment  Manager believes such  prices and executions are
obtainable from more  than one broker  or dealer, it  may give consideration  to
placing  portfolio transactions with those brokers  and dealers who also furnish
research and other services to the Fund or the Investment Manager. Such services
may  include,   but   are   not  limited   to,   any   one  or   more   of   the
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
following:  information as  to the  availability of  securities for  purchase or
sale; statistical or factual information  or opinions pertaining to  investment;
wire services; and appraisals or evaluations of portfolio securities.
 
    The information and services received by the Investment Manager from brokers
and  dealers may be  of benefit to  the Investment Manager  in the management of
accounts of some of its other clients and may not in all cases benefit the  Fund
directly.  While  the receipt  of  such information  and  services is  useful in
varying degrees and would  generally reduce the amount  of research or  services
otherwise  performed by the Investment Manager  and thereby reduce its expenses,
it is of  indeterminable value  and the management  fee paid  to the  Investment
Manager  is not reduced by  any amount that may be  attributable to the value of
such services.
 
    Pursuant to an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Fund may
effect principal transactions in certain money market instruments with DWR.  The
Fund  will limit  its transactions  with DWR  to U.S.  Government and Government
Agency Securities, Bank  Money Instruments  (i.e., Certificates  of Deposit  and
Bankers'  Acceptances) and Commercial Paper.  Such transactions will be effected
with DWR only when the  price available from DWR  is better than that  available
from other dealers.
 
   
    Consistent  with  the  policy  described  above,  brokerage  transactions in
securities listed on exchanges or admitted to unlisted trading privileges may be
effected through DWR. In order for DWR to effect any portfolio transactions  for
the  Fund, the commissions, fees  or other remuneration received  by DWR must be
reasonable and fair compared to the commissions, fees or other remuneration paid
to other brokers  in connection with  comparable transactions involving  similar
securities  being purchased or sold on an exchange during a comparable period of
time. This standard  would allow DWR  to receive no  more than the  remuneration
which  would  be  expected  to  be  received  by  an  unaffiliated  broker  in a
commensurate arm's-length transaction. Furthermore,  the Directors of the  Fund,
including  a majority of the  Directors who are not  "interested" persons of the
Fund, as  defined in  the  Act, have  adopted  procedures which  are  reasonably
designed to provide that any commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to DWR
are  consistent  with the  foregoing  standard. The  Fund  did not  pay  DWR any
brokerage commissions during the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996.
    
 
    Section 11(a) of  the Securities  Exchange Act of  1934 generally  prohibits
members  of  the  United  States national  securities  exchanges  from executing
exchange transactions for their affiliates and institutional accounts which they
manage. To the extent Section  11(a) would apply to acting  as a broker for  the
Fund  in  any of  its  portfolio transactions  executed  on any  such securities
exchange of which it is a  member, appropriate written consents have been  given
in Rule 11a2-2(T).
 
THE DISTRIBUTOR
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    As  discussed in the Prospectus, shares of  the Fund are distributed by Dean
Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"). The Distributor has entered into a
selected dealer agreement  with DWR,  which through its  own sales  organization
sells  shares of the Fund. In addition,  the Distributor may enter into selected
dealer  agreements  with  other  selected  broker-dealers.  The  Distributor,  a
Delaware corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of DWDC. The Directors of the
Fund,  including a majority  of the Directors who  are not, and  were not at the
time they voted,  interested persons of  the Fund,  as defined in  the Act  (the
"Independent  Directors"), approved, at their meeting  held on October 30, 1992,
the current  Distribution  Agreement  appointing the  Distributor  as  exclusive
distributor  of  the Fund's  shares and  providing for  the Distributor  to bear
distribution expenses not borne by the Fund. The current Distribution  Agreement
is  substantively identical to the Fund's previous distribution agreement in all
material  respects,  except  for  the   dates  of  effectiveness.  The   current
Distribution Agreement took effect on June 30, 1993, upon the spin-off by Sears,
Roebuck  and Co. of its remaining shares of DWDC. By its terms, the Distribution
Agreement had an initial term ending April  30, 1994, and provides that it  will
remain in effect from year to year thereafter if approved by the Board. At their
meeting  held on April 17, 1996, the Directors, including all of the Independent
Directors, approved the continuation of  the Distribution Agreement until  April
30, 1997.
    
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
    The  Distributor bears all expenses incurred in providing services under the
Distribution Agreement. Such  expenses include  the payment  of commissions  for
sales of the Fund's shares and incentive compensation to account executives. The
Distributor  also pays certain  expenses in connection  with the distribution of
the Fund's shares, including the  costs of preparing, printing and  distributing
advertising or promotional materials, and the costs of printing and distributing
prospectuses  and supplements thereto  used in connection  with the offering and
sale of the  Fund's shares.  The Fund bears  the costs  of initial  typesetting,
printing   and  distribution   of  prospectuses   and  supplements   thereto  to
shareholders. The Fund  also bears  the costs of  registering the  Fund and  its
shares  under federal  and state securities  laws. The Fund  and the Distributor
have agreed  to  indemnify each  other  against certain  liabilities,  including
liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. Under the Distribution
Agreement,  the Distributor uses  its best efforts in  rendering services to the
Fund, but in the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence  or
reckless disregard of its obligations, the Distributor is not liable to the Fund
or  any of its shareholders for  any error of judgment or  mistake of law or for
any act or omission or for any losses sustained by the Fund or its shareholders.
 
   
    PLAN OF  DISTRIBUTION.   To  compensate  the Distributor  for  the  services
provided  and for the expenses  borne by the Distributor  or any selected dealer
under the Distribution Agreement,  the Fund has adopted  a Plan of  Distribution
pursuant  to Rule 12b-1  under the Act  (the "Plan") pursuant  to which the Fund
pays the  Distributor compensation  accrued  daily and  payable monthly  at  the
annual  rate of 0.75%  of the lesser  of: (a) the  average daily aggregate gross
sales of  the Fund's  shares since  the  inception of  the Fund  (not  including
reinvestments  of dividends  or capital  gains distributions),  less the average
daily aggregate net asset value of  the Fund's shares redeemed since the  Fund's
inception upon which a contingent deferred sales charge has been imposed or upon
which  such charge has been waived; or  (b) the Fund's average daily net assets.
The Distributor also receives the proceeds of contingent deferred sales  charges
imposed  on certain  redemptions of  shares, which  are separate  and apart from
payments made pursuant to the Plan (see "Redemption and  Repurchases--Contingent
Deferred  Sales Charge" in the Prospectus). The Distributor of the shares of the
Fund has informed the Fund that it received approximately $575,000, $106,991 and
$32,838 in contingent deferred sales charges for the fiscal years ended  October
31, 1994, 1995 and 1996, respectively.
    
 
    At  their  meeting held  on October  30,  1992, the  Directors of  the Fund,
including all of the Directors who are not "interested persons" of the Fund  (as
defined in the Act) and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the
operation  of  the Plan  (the "Independent  12b-1 Directors"),  approved certain
amendments to the Plan which took effect  in January, 1993 and were designed  to
reflect  the  fact  that  upon  the  reorganization  described  above  the share
distribution activities theretofore performed for  the Fund by DWR were  assumed
by  the Distributor and DWR's sales  activities are now being performed pursuant
to the terms of a selected dealer agreement between the Distributor and DWR. The
amendments provide that payments under the Plan will be made to the  Distributor
rather  than  to  DWR  as they  had  been  before the  amendment,  and  that the
Distributor in turn  is authorized to  make payments to  DWR, its affiliates  or
other  selected  broker-dealers  (or  direct that  the  Fund  pay  such entities
directly). The Distributor  is also  authorized to retain  part of  such fee  as
compensation for its own distribution-related expenses. At their meeting held on
April  28, 1993,  the Directors, including  a majority of  the Independent 12b-1
Directors, also approved certain technical amendments to the Plan in  connection
with  amendments adopted by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
to its Rules of Fair  Practice. At their meeting held  on October 26, 1995,  the
Directors  of  the  Fund,  including all  of  the  Independent  12b-1 Directors,
approved an amendment to the Plan to  permit payments to be made under the  Plan
with  respect to certain  distribution expenses incurred  in connection with the
distribution of shares, including personal services to shareholders with respect
to holdings of such shares, of  an investment company whose assets are  acquired
by the Fund in a tax-free reorganization.
 
    The  Distributor has informed the Fund that a portion of the fees payable by
the Fund each year  pursuant to the  Plan equal to 0.25%  of the Fund's  average
daily  net assets is  characterized as a  "service fee" under  the Rules of Fair
Practice of the National Association of  Securities Dealers, Inc. (of which  the
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
Distributor is a member). Such portion of the fee is a payment made for personal
service and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts. The remaining portion of
the  Plan fees  payable by  the Fund is  characterized as  an "asset-based sales
charge" as defined in the aforementioned Rules of Fair Practice.
 
   
    Pursuant to the Plan  and as required by  Rule 12b-1, the Directors  receive
and  review promptly  after the  end of each  calendar quarter  a written report
provided by the Distributor of the amounts expended by the Distributor under the
Plan and the  purpose for which  such expenditures were  made. The Fund  accrued
amounts  payable to the Distributor under the Plan, during the fiscal year ended
October 31, 1996, of $688,258. This amount  is equal to payments required to  be
paid  monthly by the Fund which were computed at the annual rate of 0.75% of the
average daily net assets. This 12b-1 fee is treated by the Fund as an expense in
the year it is accrued.
    
 
    The Plan was  adopted in order  to permit the  implementation of the  Fund's
method  of distribution. Under  this distribution method shares  of the Fund are
sold without a sales load  being deducted at the time  of purchase, so that  the
full amount of an investor's purchase payment will be invested in shares without
any  deduction  for  sales charges.  Shares  of the  Fund  may be  subject  to a
contingent deferred sales charge, payable to the Distributor, if redeemed during
the three years after their purchase. DWR compensates its account executives  by
paying  them, from its own funds, commissions for the sale of the Fund's shares,
currently a gross  sales credit of  up to 3%  of the amount  sold and an  annual
residual commission of up to 0.25 of 1% of the current value of the amount sold.
The gross sales credit is a charge which reflects commissions paid by DWR to its
account  executives  and  DWR's Fund  associated  distribution-related expenses,
including sales compensation, and overhead and other branch office distribution-
related expenses including: (a) the  expenses of operating DWR's branch  offices
in  connection with the sale of Fund shares, including lease costs, the salaries
and employee benefits of operations and sales support personnel, utility  costs,
communications  costs and the costs of stationery and supplies; (b) the costs of
client sales seminars; (c) travel expenses of mutual fund sales coordinators  to
promote  the sale  of Fund  shares; and  (d) other  expenses relating  to branch
promotion of  Fund  share  sales.  The distribution  fee  that  the  Distributor
receives  from the Fund under the Plan, in effect, offsets distribution expenses
incurred under the Plan on behalf of the Fund and its opportunity costs, such as
the gross  sales  credit  and  an assumed  interest  charge  thereon  ("carrying
charge").  In the  Distributor's reporting of  the distribution  expenses to the
Fund, such assumed  interest (computed  at the  "broker's call  rate") has  been
calculated on the gross sales credit as it is reduced by amounts received by the
Distributor under the Plan and any contingent deferred sales charges received by
the  Distributor upon redemption of shares of the Fund. No other interest charge
is included as a  distribution expense in the  Distributor's calculation of  its
distribution costs for this purpose. The broker's call rate is the interest rate
charged to securities brokers on loans secured by exchange-listed securities.
 
   
    The  Fund paid 100%  of the $688,258  accrued under the  Plan for the fiscal
year ended October 31, 1996 to the Distributor. The Distributor and DWR estimate
that they have spent, pursuant  to the Plan, $22,642,863  on behalf of the  Fund
since  the inception of the Fund. It is  estimated that this amount was spent in
approximately the  following ways:  (i) 7.80%  ($1,765,428) --  advertising  and
promotional  expenses;  (ii) 0.74%  ($167,015) --  printing of  prospectuses for
distribution to other than current shareholders; and (iii) 91.46%  ($20,710,420)
- --  other expenses, including the gross sales credit and the carrying charge, of
which  8.92%  ($1,848,162)  represents  carrying  charges,  35.64%  ($7,380,802)
represents  commission credits to DWR branch offices for payments of commissions
to account executives  and 55.44%  ($11,481,456) represents  overhead and  other
branch office distribution-related expenses.
    
 
   
    At  any given time, the  expenses of distributing shares  of the Fund may be
more or less than the total of (i) the payments made by the Fund pursuant to the
Plan and  (ii)  the  proceeds  of contingent  deferred  sales  charges  paid  by
investors  upon redemption of shares. DWR has  advised the Fund that such excess
amount, including the  carrying charge designed  to approximate the  opportunity
costs  incurred by DWR which arise from it having advanced monies without having
received the amount  of any sales  charges imposed at  the time of  sale of  the
Fund's  shares, totalled $6,987,294 as of October  31, 1996. Because there is no
requirement under  the Plan  that  the Distributor  be  reimbursed for  all  its
expenses  or any requirement that the Plan  be continued from year to year, this
excess amount does not constitute a
    
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
liability of the Fund. Although there is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay
expenses incurred in excess of payments  made to the Distributor under the  Plan
and  the proceeds  of contingent deferred  sales charges paid  by investors upon
redemption of shares, if  for any reason the  Plan is terminated, the  Directors
will  consider at  that time  the manner  in which  to treat  such expenses. Any
cumulative expenses incurred but not yet recovered through distribution fees  or
contingent  deferred sales charges,  may or may not  be recovered through future
distribution fees or contingent deferred sales charges.
 
    No interested person of the Fund, nor any Director of the Fund who is not an
interested person of the Fund, as defined in the Act, has any direct or indirect
financial interest in the operation  of the Plan except  to the extent that  the
Distributor,  InterCapital, DWR or  certain of their employees  may be deemed to
have such  an interest  as a  result  of benefits  derived from  the  successful
operation  of the  Plan or  as a result  of receiving  a portion  of the amounts
expended thereunder by the Fund.
 
   
    Under its terms, the  Plan had an  initial term ending  April 30, 1991,  and
provided  that it will remain  in effect from year  to year thereafter, provided
such continuance is approved  annually by a vote  of the Directors, including  a
majority of the Independent 12b-1 Directors. The Plan was initially submitted to
and  approved  by  the  Directors  of the  Fund,  including  a  majority  of the
Independent 12b-1  Directors,  at their  meeting  held  on April  29,  1992  and
subsequently  by the shareholders at the Special Meeting of Shareholders held on
June 24,  1992. Continuation  of the  Plan  was most  recently approved  by  the
Directors, including a majority of the Independent 12b-1 Directors, on April 17,
1996  at  a meeting  called for  the purpose  of  voting on  such Plan.  At that
meeting, the Directors and the Independent 12b-1 Directors, after evaluating all
the information  they deemed  necessary  to make  an informed  determination  of
whether  or not the Plan  should be continued, approved  the continuation of the
Plan until April 30, 1997. In  making their determination to continue the  Plan,
the  Directors considered: (1) the Fund's  experience under the Plan and whether
such experience indicates  that the Plan  is operating as  anticipated; (2)  the
benefits  the Fund  had obtained,  was obtaining and  would be  likely to obtain
under the Plan; and (3) what services  had been provided and were continuing  to
be  provided under the Plan  to the Fund and  its shareholders. Based upon their
review, the  Directors of  the Fund,  including each  of the  Independent  12b-1
Directors,  determined  that  continuation of  the  Plan  would be  in  the best
interest of the  Fund and would  have a reasonable  likelihood of continuing  to
benefit the Fund and its shareholders. In the Directors' quarterly review of the
Plan,  they  will  consider  its  continued  appropriateness  and  the  level of
compensation provided therein.
    
 
    The Plan may not be  amended to increase materially  the amount to be  spent
for  the services described therein without  approval of the shareholders of the
Fund, and all  material amendments  of the  Plan must  also be  approved by  the
Director  in the manner described above. The Plan may be terminated at any time,
without payment of any penalty, by vote  of a majority of the Independent  12b-1
Directors or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the
Fund (as defined in the Act) on not more than thirty days' written notice to any
other  party to the  Plan. So long  as the Plan  is in effect,  the election and
nomination of Independent Directors shall be committed to the discretion of  the
Independent Directors.
 
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    As stated in the Prospectus, short-term securities with remaining maturities
of  sixty days  or less at  the time of  purchase are valued  at amortized cost,
unless the  Directors determine  such does  not reflect  the securities'  market
value,  in which  case these securities  will be  valued at their  fair value as
determined by the Directors. Other short-term debt securities will be valued  on
a  mark-to-market basis until  such time as  they reach a  remaining maturity of
sixty days, whereupon they will be valued at amortized cost using their value on
the  61st  day  unless  the  Directors  determine  such  does  not  reflect  the
securities' market value, in which case these securities will be valued at their
fair market value as determined by the Directors. All other securities and other
assets  are  valued  at their  fair  value  as determined  in  good  faith under
procedures established by and under the supervision of the Directors.
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
    The net asset value per share of  the Fund is determined once daily at  4:00
p.m.,  New York time (or, on days when  the New York Stock Exchange closes prior
to 4:00 p.m., at such earlier time) on each day that the New York Stock Exchange
is open and on each other day in  which there is a sufficient degree of  trading
in  the Fund's investments  to affect the  net asset value,  except that the net
asset value may  not be computed  on a day  on which no  orders to purchase,  or
tenders  to sell or redeem, Fund shares  have been received, by taking the value
of all assets of the Fund,  subtracting its liabilities, dividing by the  number
of  shares outstanding  and adjusting  to the nearest  cent. The  New York Stock
Exchange currently observes the following holidays: New Year's Day,  Presidents'
Day,  Good Friday, Memorial  Day, Independence Day,  Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day
and Christmas Day.
 
    The Board of  Directors has  adopted a procedure  to value  over-the-counter
options purchased or sold by the Fund whereby the Investment Manager will secure
daily  bid and asked quotations  from the counterparty to  the option, and value
the option at the mean of such bid and asked quotations.
 
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Upon the purchase of shares of the Fund, a Shareholder Investment Account is
opened for the investor on  the books of the Fund  and maintained by the  Fund's
Transfer  Agent, Dean  Witter Trust Company  (the "Transfer Agent").  This is an
open account in which shares owned by the investor are credited by the  Transfer
Agent  in lieu  of issuance of  a share  certificate. If a  share certificate is
desired, it must be requested in writing for each transaction. Certificates  are
issued  only for full shares and may be  redeposited in the account at any time.
There is no charge  to the investor  for issuance of  a certificate. Whenever  a
shareholder  instituted transaction  takes place  in the  Shareholder Investment
Account, the shareholder will be mailed  a confirmation of the transaction  from
the Fund or from DWR or other selected broker-dealer.
 
    AUTOMATIC  INVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS  AND DISTRIBUTIONS.    As stated  in the
Prospectus,  all   income  dividends   and  capital   gains  distributions   are
automatically  paid  in  full and  fractional  shares  of the  Fund,  unless the
shareholder requests that they be paid in  cash. Each purchase of shares of  the
Fund is made upon the condition that the Transfer Agent is thereby automatically
appointed  as agent of the  investor to receive all  dividends and capital gains
distributions on shares owned by the investor. Such dividends and  distributions
will  be paid, at the  net asset value per  share, in shares of  the Fund (or in
cash if the shareholder so requests) on the monthly payment date, which will  be
no  later than  the last  business day of  the month  for which  the dividend or
distribution is  payable.  Processing  of  dividend  checks  begins  immediately
following  the monthly payment date. Shareholders  who have requested to receive
dividends in cash will normally receive their monthly dividend check during  the
first  ten days of the following month. At  any time an investor may request the
Transfer Agent, in writing,  to have subsequent  dividends and/or capital  gains
distributions  paid  to  him  or  her in  cash  rather  than  shares.  To assure
sufficient time to process  the change, such request  should be received by  the
Transfer  Agent at  least five  business days  prior to  the record  date of the
dividend or distribution.  In the case  of recently purchased  shares for  which
registration  instructions  have  not been  received  on the  record  date, cash
payments will  be made  to DWR  or  other selected  broker-dealer, and  will  be
forwarded to the shareholder, upon the receipt of proper instructions.
 
   
    TARGETED   DIVIDENDS.SM    In  states   where  it  is  legally  permissable,
shareholders may also have all income dividends and capital gains  distributions
automatically invested in shares of an open-end Dean Witter Fund other than Dean
Witter  Global  Short-Term Income  Fund  Inc. Such  investment  will be  made as
described above for automatic investment in shares of the Fund, at the net asset
value per share of the selected Dean Witter Fund as of the close of business  on
the  payment  date of  the  dividend or  distribution,  and will  begin  to earn
dividends, if any, in the  selected Dean Witter Fund  the next business day.  To
participate in the Targeted Dividends program, shareholders should contact their
DWR  or other  selected broker-dealer account  executive or  the Transfer Agent.
Shareholders of the Fund must be shareholders
    
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
of the Dean Witter  Fund targeted to receive  investments from dividends at  the
time  they enter  the Targeted  Dividends Program.  Investors should  review the
prospectus of the Targeted Dean Witter Fund before entering the program.
 
   
    EASYINVEST.SM   Shareholders  may  subscribe  to  EasyInvest,  an  automatic
purchase  plan  which  provides  for  any  amount  from  $100  to  $5,000  to be
transferred automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis,  to the Transfer Agent  for investment in shares  of
the Fund. Shares purchased through EasyInvest will be added to the shareholder's
existing  account at the  net asset value  calculated the same  business day the
transfer of  funds is  effected.  For further  information  or to  subscribe  to
EasyInvest,   shareholders   should  contact   their   DWR  or   other  selected
broker-dealer account executive or the Transfer Agent.
    
 
    INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS OR DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  As discussed  in
the  Prospectus,  any shareholder  who receives  a  cash payment  representing a
dividend or distribution  may invest such  dividend or distribution  at the  net
asset  value next  determined after receipt  by the Transfer  Agent, without the
imposition of a contingent deferred  sales charge upon redemption, by  returning
the check or the proceeds to the Transfer Agent within 30 days after the payment
date.  If the  shareholder returns the  proceeds of a  dividend or distribution,
such funds  must  be accompanied  by  a  signed statement  indicating  that  the
proceeds  constitute a dividend or distribution  to be invested. Such investment
will be made at the net asset  value per share next determined after receipt  of
the check or proceeds by the Transfer Agent.
 
    SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL PLAN.   As discussed in  the Prospectus, a systematic
withdrawal plan (the "Withdrawal Plan") is available for shareholders who own or
purchase shares of the  Fund having a  minimum value of  $10,000 based upon  the
then  current  net asset  value.  The Withdrawal  Plan  provides for  monthly or
quarterly (March, June, September and December)  checks in any amount, not  less
than  $25, or in any  whole percentage of the  account balance, on an annualized
basis. Any applicable contingent deferred sales charge will be imposed on shares
redeemed under the Withdrawal Plan (see "Redemptions and Repurchases--Contingent
Deferred  Sales  Charge"   in  the  Prospectus).   Therefore,  any   shareholder
participating  in the Withdrawal Plan will  have sufficient shares redeemed from
his or  her account  so that  the  proceeds (net  of any  applicable  contingent
deferred  sales charge)  to the  shareholder will  be the  designated monthly or
quarterly amount.
 
    The Transfer Agent  acts as agent  for the shareholder  in tendering to  the
Fund  for redemption sufficient full and fractional shares to provide the amount
of the periodic  withdrawal payment  designated in the  application. The  shares
will  be  redeemed at  their net  asset value  determined, at  the shareholder's
option, on the tenth or twenty-fifth day (or next following business day) of the
relevant month or quarter and normally a  check for the proceeds will be  mailed
by  the Transfer Agent within  five business days after  the date of redemption.
The Withdrawal Plan may be terminated at any time by the Fund.
 
    Withdrawal Plan payments should  not be considered  as dividends, yields  or
income.  If periodic withdrawal plan payments continuously exceed net investment
income and  net capital  gains, the  shareholder's original  investment will  be
correspondingly reduced and ultimately exhausted.
 
    Each  withdrawal constitutes  a redemption  of shares  and any  gain or loss
realized must  be  recognized for  federal  income tax  purposes.  Although  the
shareholder  may  make  additional  investments  of  $2,500  or  more  under the
Withdrawal Plan,  withdrawals made  concurrently  with purchases  of  additional
shares  may  be  inadvisable because  of  the contingent  deferred  sales charge
applicable to the redemption of shares purchased during the preceding six  years
(see "Redemptions and Repurchases-- Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").
 
    Any  shareholder who wishes to have  payments under the Withdrawal Plan made
to a third party or sent to an address other than the one listed on the  account
must  send complete written instructions to the  Transfer Agent to enroll in the
Withdrawal Plan.  The  shareholder's  signature on  such  instructions  must  be
guaranteed  by a commercial bank or trust company  (not a savings bank), or by a
member of a national securities exchange. A shareholder may, at any time, change
the amount and interval of
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
withdrawal  payments  through  his  or  her  Account  Executive  or  by  written
notification to the Transfer Agent. In addition, the party and/or the address to
which  checks are mailed may be changed  by written notification to the Transfer
Agent, with signature  guarantees required  in the manner  described above.  The
shareholder may also terminate the Withdrawal Plan at any time by written notice
to  the Transfer Agent.  In the event  of such termination,  the account will be
continued as a regular shareholder investment account. The shareholder may  also
redeem  all  or part  of the  shares held  in the  Withdrawal Plan  account (see
"Redemptions and Repurchases" in the Prospectus) at any time.
 
    DIRECT INVESTMENTS THROUGH TRANSFER AGENT.  As discussed in the  Prospectus,
a  shareholder may  make additional  investments in Fund  shares at  any time by
sending a check in any amount, not less than $100, payable to Dean Witter Global
Short-Term Income Fund Inc., directly to the Fund's Transfer Agent. Such amounts
will be applied to the purchase of Fund shares at the net asset value per  share
next  computed after receipt  of the check  or purchase payment  by the Transfer
Agent. The shares so purchased will be credited to the investor's account.
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund makes available to its shareholders
an Exchange Privilege whereby shareholders of the Fund may exchange their shares
for shares of  other Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a  contingent deferred  sales
charge  ("CDSC funds"),  for shares  of Dean  Witter Short-Term  Bond Fund, Dean
Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust, Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust,
Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund, Dean Witter Balanced Income Fund, Dean  Witter
Intermediate  Term U.S. Treasury Trust and for  shares of five Dean Witter Funds
which  are  money  market  funds  (the  foregoing  eleven  non-CDSC  funds   are
hereinafter  referred to as  the "Exchange Funds"). Exchanges  may be made after
the shares  of  the Fund  acquired  by purchase  (not  by exchange  or  dividend
reinvestment)  have been held  for thirty days.  There is no  waiting period for
exchanges of shares acquired by  exchange or dividend reinvestment. An  exchange
will  be treated  for federal income  tax purposes  the same as  a repurchase or
redemption of shares, on which the shareholder may realize a gain or loss.
 
    Any new account  established through  the Exchange Privilege  will have  the
same registration and cash dividend or dividend reinvestment plan as the present
account,  unless  the  Transfer  Agent  receives  written  notification  to  the
contrary. For  telephone  exchanges,  the exact  registration  of  the  existing
account and the account number must be provided.
 
    Any  shares  held  in  certificate  form cannot  be  exchanged  but  must be
forwarded to the  Transfer Agent  and deposited into  the shareholder's  account
before  being eligible for exchange. (Certificates  mailed in for deposit should
not be endorsed.)
 
    As described  below, and  in  the Prospectus  under the  captions  "Exchange
Privilege"  and "Contingent Deferred Sales  Charge", a contingent deferred sales
charge ("CDSC")  may be  imposed upon  a redemption,  depending on  a number  of
factors,  including the number of years from the time of purchase until the time
of redemption or  exchange ("holding period").  When shares of  the Fund or  any
other  CDSC  fund are  exchanged for  shares  of an  Exchange Fund,  without the
imposition of the CDSC at  the time of the exchange.  During the period of  time
the  shareholder remains in the  Exchange Fund (calculated from  the last day of
the month  in which  the the  Exchange Fund  shares were  acquired) the  holding
period or "year since purchase payment made" is frozen. When shares are redeemed
out  of an Exchange  Fund, they will be  subject to a CDSC  which would be based
upon the period of time the shareholder held shares in a CDSC fund. However,  in
the  case of shares exchanged for shares  of an Exchange Fund, upon a redemption
of shares which results  in a CDSC  being imposed, a credit  (not to exceed  the
amount  of the CDSC) will be given in an amount equal to the Exchange Fund 12b-1
distribution fees which are attributable to those shares. Shareholders acquiring
shares of an  Exchange Fund  pursuant to  this exchange  privilege may  exchange
those  shares back into a  CDSC fund from the Exchange  Fund, with no CDSC being
imposed on such exchange. The holding period previously frozen when shares  were
first  exchanged for shares of the Exchange Fund resumes on the date shares of a
CDSC fund  are  reacquired.  Thus, a  CDSC  is  imposed only  upon  an  ultimate
redemption,  based upon the time (calculated as described above) the shareholder
was invested in a CDSC fund.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
    If shares of the Fund are exchanged for shares of another CDSC fund having a
CDSC which  is imposed  at a  higher  rate or  is subject  to a  different  time
schedule  than the CDSC  imposed upon a redemption  of a share  of the Fund, the
higher CDSC will  be imposed  upon redemption of  shares of  the fund  exchanged
into.  Likewise, if shares of another CDSC  fund are exchanged for shares of the
Fund, upon  redemption  of  shares of  the  Fund,  a CDSC  will  be  imposed  in
accordance  with the CDSC schedule applicable to  the fund with the higher CDSC.
Moreover, if shares of the  Fund are exchanged for  shares of another CDSC  fund
with  a  different CDSC  schedule imposing  a higher  CDSC and  are subsequently
exchanged again for shares of  the Fund, the higher  CDSC will still apply  upon
ultimate redemption of shares of the Fund.
 
    In  addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares of
Dean Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales  charge
funds"),  but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged for
shares of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired  in
exchange  for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for shares
of other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge  fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    When  shares initially purchased in a CDSC  fund are exchanged for shares of
another CDSC fund, or for  shares of an Exchange Fund,  the date of purchase  of
the shares of the fund exchanged into, for purposes of the CDSC upon redemption,
will  be the  last day  of the month  in which  the shares  being exchanged were
originally purchased.  In allocating  the purchase  payments between  funds  for
purposes of the CDSC, the amount which represents the current net asset value of
shares  at the time of the exchange which  were (i) purchased more than three or
six years (depending on the CDSC schedule applicable to the shares) prior to the
exchange,  (ii)  originally  acquired  through  reinvestment  of  dividends   or
distributions  (of the Fund or  another Dean Witter Fund)  and (iii) acquired in
exchange for shares of front-end sales charge funds, or for shares of other Dean
Witter Funds  for  which  shares  of front-end  sales  charge  funds  have  been
exchanged  (all  such shares  called "Free  Shares"),  will be  exchanged first.
Shares of Dean Witter Strategist Fund acquired prior to November 8, 1989, shares
of Dean Witter American Value Fund acquired prior to April 30, 1984, and  shares
of  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc. and Dean Witter Natural Resource
Development Securities Inc. acquired prior to July 2, 1984, are also  considered
Free  Shares  and  will be  the  first Free  Shares  to be  exchanged.  After an
exchange, all dividends earned on shares in an Exchange Fund will be  considered
Free  Shares. If the exchanged amount exceeds  the value of such Free Shares, an
exchange is made,  on a block-by-block  basis, of non-Free  Shares held for  the
longest period of time (except that if shares held for identical periods of time
but subject to different CDSC schedules are held in a block in the same Exchange
Privilege  account, the shares  of that block  that are subject  to a lower CDSC
rate will be exchanged prior to the shares  of that block that are subject to  a
higher  CDSC rate). Shares  equal to any  appreciation in the  value of non-Free
shares exchanged will be treated as Free Shares, and the amount of the  purchase
payments for the non-Free Shares of the fund exchanged into will be equal to the
lesser  of (a) the purchase payments for, or (b) the current net asset value of,
the exchanged non-Free  Shares. If  an exchange  between funds  would result  in
exchange  of only  part of  a particular block  of non-Free  Shares, then shares
equal to any appreciation  in the value of  the block (up to  the amount of  the
exchange)  will be treated as Free Shares  and exchanged first, and the purchase
payment for  that block  will  be allocated  on a  pro  rata basis  between  the
non-Free  Shares of  that block  to be  retained and  the non-Free  Shares to be
exchanged. The  prorated amount  of such  purchase payment  attributable to  the
retained  non-Free Shares will  remain as the purchase  payment for such shares,
and the amount  of purchase payment  for the exchanged  non-Free Shares will  be
equal  to the lesser of (a) the prorated  amount of the purchase payment for, or
(b) the current net asset value of, those exchanged non-Free Shares. Based  upon
the  procedures  described  in  the  Prospectus  under  the  caption "Contingent
Deferred Sales Charge", any  applicable CDSC will be  imposed upon the  ultimate
redemption  of shares of any  fund, regardless of the  number of exchanges since
those shares were originally purchased.
 
    With respect to  the redemption  or repurchase of  shares of  the Fund,  the
application  of proceeds to the purchase of new  shares in the Fund or any other
of the funds and the general administration of the
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
Exchange Privilege, the Transfer Agent acts as agent for the Distributor and for
the shareholder's selected  broker-dealer, if  any, in the  performance of  such
functions.  With respect to exchanges,  redemptions or repurchases, the Transfer
Agent shall  be  liable for  its  own negligence  and  not for  the  default  or
negligence of its correspondents or for losses in transit. The Fund shall not be
liable  for any default or negligence of  the Transfer Agent, the Distributor or
any selected broker-dealer.
 
    The Distributor and any selected broker-dealer have authorized and appointed
the Transfer Agent to act as their  agent in connection with the application  of
proceeds of any redemption of Fund shares to the purchase of shares of any other
fund  and the general administration of the Exchange Privilege. No commission or
discounts will be paid to the Distributor or any selected broker-dealer for  any
transactions pursuant to this Exchange Privilege.
 
   
    Exchanges  are subject to  the minimum investment  requirement and any other
conditions imposed by each fund. (The  minimum initial investment is $5,000  for
Dean  Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc., Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market
Trust, Dean  Witter  Tax-Free Daily  Income  Trust and  Dean  Witter  California
Tax-Free  Daily Income  Trust, although  those funds  may, at  their discretion,
accept initial investments of as low  as $1,000. The minimum initial  investment
is  $10,000 for Dean Witter Short-Term  U.S. Treasury Trust, although that fund,
in its discretion, may accept initial purchases of as low as $5,000. The minimum
initial investment is  $5,000 for Dean  Witter Special Value  Fund. The  minimum
initial  investment  for all  other  Dean Witter  Funds  for which  the Exchange
Privilege is available  is $1,000.)  Upon exchange  into an  Exchange Fund,  the
shares  of  that fund  will  be held  in  a special  Exchange  Privilege Account
separately from accounts of  those shareholders who  have acquired their  shares
directly  from that  fund. As a  result, certain services  normally available to
shareholders of money market  funds, including the  check writing feature,  will
not be available for funds held in that account.
    
 
    The  Fund and each  of the other Dean  Witter Funds may  limit the number of
times this  Exchange  Privilege  may  be exercised  by  any  investor  within  a
specified  period of  time. Also,  the Exchange  Privilege may  be terminated or
revised at any time by  the Fund and/or any of  the Dean Witter Funds for  which
shares  of the Fund have been exchanged, upon  such notice as may be required by
applicable regulatory agencies (presently sixty days for termination or material
revision), provided that six months' prior written notice of termination will be
given to the shareholders who  hold shares of an  Exchange Fund pursuant to  the
Exchange  Privilege, and  provided further  that the  Exchange Privilege  may be
terminated or materially revised without notice  at times (a) when the New  York
Stock  Exchange is  closed for other  than customary weekends  and holidays, (b)
when trading on that Exchange is restricted,  (c) when an emergency exists as  a
result of which disposal by the Fund of securities owned by it is not reasonably
practicable or it is not reasonably practicable for the Fund fairly to determine
the value of its net assets, (d) during any other period when the Securities and
Exchange  Commission by  order so  permits (provided  that applicable  rules and
regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission shall govern as to whether
the conditions prescribed  in (b)  or (c)  exist) or (e)  if the  Fund would  be
unable   to  invest  amounts  effectively  in  accordance  with  its  investment
objective(s), policies and restrictions.
 
    The Exchange Privilege may be terminated or revised at any time by the  Fund
and/or  any  of such  Dean Witter  Funds for  which  shares of  the Fund  may be
exchanged, upon such notice as may be required by applicable regulatory agencies
(presently  sixty  days'  prior  written  notice  for  termination  or  material
revision),  provided that six months' prior  notice of termination will be given
to shareholders  who hold  shares of  Exchange Funds  pursuant to  the  Exchange
Privilege, and provided further that the Exchange Privilege may be terminated or
materially   revised  without   notice  under   certain  unusual  circumstances.
Shareholders maintaining margin  accounts with DWR  or another Selected  Broker-
Dealer  are  referred  to  their  account  executive  regarding  restrictions on
exchange of shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.
 
    The current  prospectus for  each of  the Dean  Witter Funds  describes  its
investment objective(s) and policies. Shareholders should obtain a copy and read
it  carefully  before  investing.  Exchange Funds  are  subject  to  the minimum
investment requirement and  any other conditions  imposed by each  Fund. In  the
case  of  any  shareholder  holding  a  share  certificate  or  certificates, no
exchanges may be made until all
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
applicable share  certificates have  been  received by  the Transfer  Agent  and
deposited  in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated for federal
income tax purposes the same  as a repurchase or  redemption of shares on  which
the  shareholder will realize  a capital gain  or loss. However,  the ability to
deduct capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is
an exchange of  shares within ninety  days after the  shares are purchased.  The
Exchange  Privilege is only available in states where an exchange may legally be
made.
 
    For further  information  regarding  the  Exchange  Privilege,  shareholders
should  contact their DWR  or other selected  broker-dealer account executive or
the Transfer Agent.
 
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    REDEMPTION.  As stated in the Prospectus, shares of the Fund can be redeemed
for cash at any time at the net asset value per share next determined;  however,
such  redemption  proceeds  may  be  reduced by  the  amount  of  any applicable
contingent deferred  sales  charges  (see  below).  If  shares  are  held  in  a
shareholder's  account  without  a  share  certificate,  a  written  request for
redemption to the Fund's Transfer Agent at  P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ  07303
is  required. If  certificates are  held by  the shareholder  the shares  may be
redeemed by surrendering the certificates with a written request for redemption.
The share  certificate, or  an accompanying  stock power,  and the  request  for
redemption,  must be  signed by the  shareholder or shareholders  exactly as the
shares are registered. Each request  for redemption, whether or not  accompanied
by  a share certificate, must  be sent to the  Fund's Transfer Agent, which will
redeem the shares at their net asset value next computed (see "Purchase of  Fund
Shares"  in the Prospectus)  after it receives the  request, and certificate, if
any, in good order. Any redemption request received after such computation  will
be  redeemed at the next determined net asset value. The term "good order" means
that the share  certificate, if  any, and  request for  redemption are  properly
signed,  accompanied by  any documentation required  by the  Transfer Agent, and
bear signature guarantees when  required by the Fund  or the Transfer Agent.  If
redemption  is requested by a corporation,  partnership, trust or fiduciary, the
Transfer Agent may require that written evidence of authority acceptable to  the
Transfer Agent be submitted before such request is accepted.
 
   
    Whether  certificates are held  by the shareholder  or shares are  held in a
shareholder's account, if the proceeds are to  be paid to any person other  than
the record owner, or if the proceeds are to be paid to a corporation (other than
the Distributor or a selected broker-dealer for the account of the shareholder),
partnership,  trust or fiduciary, or sent to the shareholder at an address other
than the  registered  address, signatures  must  be guaranteed  by  an  eligible
guarantor  acceptable  to the  Transfer Agent  (shareholders should  contact the
Transfer Agent for  a determination as  to whether a  particular institution  is
such  an eligible guarantor). A  stock power may be  obtained from any dealer or
commercial bank. The Fund may  change the signature guarantee requirements  from
time  to time upon notice to shareholders, which may be by means of a supplement
to the prospectus or a new prospectus.
    
 
    CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.  As stated in the Prospectus, a contingent
deferred sales charge ("CDSC") will be imposed on any redemption by an  investor
if  after such redemption the current value of the investor's shares of the Fund
is less  than the  dollar amount  of all  payments by  the shareholder  for  the
purchase  of Fund shares during the preceding three years. However, no CDSC will
be imposed to the extent  that the net asset value  of the shares redeemed  does
not  exceed: (a) the current net asset value of shares purchased more than three
years prior to the redemption,  plus (b) the current  net asset value of  shares
purchased  through reinvestment  of dividends  or distributions  of the  Fund or
another Dean Witter Fund (see "Shareholder Services--Targeted Dividends"),  plus
(c) the current net asset value of shares acquired in exchange for (i) shares of
Dean  Witter front-end sales charge  funds, or (ii) shares  of other Dean Witter
Funds for which shares of front-end sales charge funds have been exchanged  (see
"Shareholder Services--Exchange Privilege"), plus (d) increases in the net asset
value  of  the investor's  shares above  the  total amount  of payments  for the
purchase of Fund shares made during the preceding three years. The CDSC will  be
paid to the Distributor.
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
    In  determining the applicability of the CDSC to each redemption, the amount
which represents an  increase in the  net asset value  of the investor's  shares
above  the amount of  the total payments  for the purchase  of shares within the
last three years  will be  redeemed first. In  the event  the redemption  amount
exceeds  such increase in value, the next portion of the amount redeemed will be
the amount  which  represents the  net  asset  value of  the  investor's  shares
purchased  more than three years prior to the redemption and/or shares purchased
through reinvestment of  dividends or  distributions and/or  shares acquired  in
exchange  for shares of Dean Witter front-end  sales charge funds, or for shares
of other Dean Witter funds for which shares of front-end sales charge funds have
been exchanged. A portion of the  amount redeemed which exceeds an amount  which
represents  both such increase in  value and the value  of shares purchased more
than three  years  prior  to  the redemption  and/or  shares  purchased  through
reinvestment  of  dividends  or  distributions  and/or  shares  acquired  in the
above-described exchanges will be subject to a CDSC.
 
    The amount of the CDSC, if any,  will vary depending on the number of  years
from  the time  of payment  for the purchase  of Fund  shares until  the time of
redemption of such shares. For purposes of determining the number of years  from
the  time of any payment for the purchase  of shares, all payments made during a
month will be aggregated  and deemed to have  been made on the  last day of  the
month. The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           CONTINGENT DEFERRED
                               YEAR SINCE                                   SALES CHARGE AS A
                                PURCHASE                                      PERCENTAGE OF
                              PAYMENT MADE                                   AMOUNT REDEEMED
                      ----------------------------                        ---------------------
<S>                                                                       <C>
First...................................................................            3.0%
Second..................................................................            2.0%
Third...................................................................            1.0%
Fourth and thereafter...................................................              None
</TABLE>
 
    In determining the rate of the CDSC, it will be assumed that a redemption is
made  of shares held by  the investor for the longest  period of time within the
applicable three year period. This will result in any such CDSC being imposed at
the  lowest  possible  rate.  Accordingly,  shareholders  may  redeem,   without
incurring  any CDSC,  amounts equal to  any net  increase in the  value of their
shares above the amount  of their purchase payments  made within the past  three
years and amounts equal to the current value of shares purchased more than three
years  prior  to the  redemption and  shares  purchased through  reinvestment of
dividends or distributions  or acquired in  exchange for shares  of Dean  Witter
front-end sales charge funds, or for shares of other Dean Witter Funds for which
shares  of front-end sales  charge funds have  been exchanged. The  CDSC will be
imposed in accordance  with the  table shown  above, on  any redemptions  within
three  years  of  purchase  which  are in  excess  of  these  amounts  and which
redemptions  are  not  (a)  requested  within  one  year  of  death  or  initial
determination  of disability of  a shareholder, or (b)  made pursuant to certain
taxable distributions from retirement plans or retirement accounts, as described
in the Prospectus.
 
    PAYMENT FOR SHARES REDEEMED OR REPURCHASED.  As discussed in the Prospectus,
payment for shares presented for repurchase or redemption will be made by  check
within  seven days after receipt by the Transfer Agent of the certificate and/or
written request in "good order". Such payment  may be postponed or the right  of
redemption suspended at times (a) when the New York Stock Exchange is closed for
other than customary weekends and holidays, (b) when trading on that Exchange is
restricted,  (c) when an emergency  exists as a result  of which disposal by the
Fund of  securities owned  by it  is not  reasonably practicable  or it  is  not
reasonably  practicable for the  Fund fairly to  determine the value  of its net
assets, or  (d)  during  any  other period  when  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  by order so permits; provided  that applicable rules and regulations
of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  shall  govern as  to  whether  the
conditions  prescribed in (b)  or (c) exist.  If the shares  to be redeemed have
recently been  purchased  by check  (including  a certified  or  bank  cashier's
check),  payment  of redemption  proceeds may  be delayed  for the  minimum time
needed to verify that the check used  for investment has been honored (not  more
than fifteen days from the time of investment of the
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
proceeds  of the check  by the Transfer  Agent). Shareholders maintaining margin
accounts with  DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer are  referred  to  their
account  executive regarding  restrictions on redemption  of shares  of the Fund
pledged in the margin account.
 
    TRANSFERS OF SHARES.  In the event a shareholder requests a transfer of  any
shares  to a  new registration,  such shares  will be  transferred without sales
charge at the time of  transfer. With regard to the  status of shares which  are
either  subject to the contingent  deferred sales charge or  free of such charge
(and with regard to the  length of time shares subject  to the charge have  been
held),  any transfer involving less than all of the shares in an account will be
made on a pro-rata basis (that is, by transferring shares in the same proportion
that the transferred shares bear to the total shares in the account  immediately
prior  to the transfer). The  transferred shares will continue  to be subject to
any applicable  contingent deferred  sales charge  as if  they had  not been  so
transferred.
 
    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  As discussed in the Prospectus, a shareholder who
has had  his  or her  shares  redeemed or  repurchased  and has  not  previously
exercised  this reinstatement  privilege may  within 30  days after  the date of
redemption or repurchase reinstate  any portion of all  of the proceeds of  such
redemption  or repurchase  in shares  of the  Fund at  the net  asset value next
determined after  a  reinstatement  request, together  with  such  proceeds,  is
received by the Transfer Agent.
 
    Exercise  of the reinstatement privilege will  not affect the federal income
tax treatment of any  gain or loss realized  upon the redemption or  repurchase,
except that if the redemption or repurchase resulted in a loss and reinstatement
is  made in shares of the Fund, some or all of the loss, depending on the amount
reinstated, will not be allowed as a deduction for federal income tax  purposes,
but  will  be applied  to  adjust the  cost basis  of  the shares  acquired upon
reinstatement.
 
DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund will determine either to distribute
or to retain  all or part  of any net  long-term capital gains  in any year  for
reinvestment.  If any such gains are retained,  the Fund will pay federal income
tax thereon, and, if the Fund makes an election, the shareholders would  include
such  undistributed gains in their income and shareholders will be able to claim
their share of the  tax paid by  the Fund as a  credit against their  individual
federal income tax.
 
    Gains  or  losses on  sales  of securities  by  the Fund  will  generally be
long-term capital gains or losses if the  securities have been held by the  Fund
for  more than twelve months. Gains or losses on the sale of securities held for
twelve months or less will be generally short-term gains or losses.
 
    The Fund intends to remain qualified as a regulated investment company under
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code"). If so qualified,
the Fund will not be subject to federal income tax on its net investment  income
and  capital  gains,  if  any,  realized during  any  fiscal  year  in  which it
distributes such income and capital gains to its shareholders. In addition,  the
Fund  intends to distribute to its  shareholders each calendar year a sufficient
amount of ordinary  income and capital  gains to  avoid the imposition  of a  4%
excise tax.
 
   
    Any  dividend or capital  gains distribution received  by a shareholder from
any investment company will have the effect  of reducing the net asset value  of
the  shareholder's stock in that company by  the exact amount of the dividend or
capital  gains  distribution.  Furthermore,  capital  gains  distributions   and
dividends  are subject to  federal income taxes.  If the net  asset value of the
shares should be reduced below a shareholder's  cost as a result of the  payment
of  dividends or the distribution of  realized net long-term capital gains, such
payment or  distribution  would  be  in  part  a  return  of  the  shareholder's
investment  to the  extent of such  reduction below the  shareholder's cost, but
nonetheless would be fully taxable.  Therefore, an investor should consider  the
tax  implications of purchasing Fund shares  immediately prior to a distribution
record date.
    
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
    Any loss realized  by shareholders upon  a redemption of  shares within  six
months of the date of their purchase will be treated as a long-term capital loss
to  the extent of  any distributions of  net long-term capital  gains during the
six-month period.
 
    Dividends, interest and capital gains received by the Fund may give rise  to
withhholding  and  other taxes  imposed  by foreign  countries.  Tax conventions
between certain countries  and the United  States may reduce  or eliminate  such
taxes.  Investors may be entitled to claim  United States foreign tax credits or
deductions with  respect  to  such  taxes, subject  to  certain  provisions  and
limitations  contained in the Code. If more  than 50% of the Fund's total assets
at the close of its fiscal  year consist of securities of foreign  corporations,
the  Fund  would be  eligible  and would  determine whether  or  not to  file an
election with the Internal Revenue Service pursuant to which shareholders of the
Fund will be  required to  include their respective  pro rata  portions of  such
withholding  taxes in  their United States  income tax returns  as gross income,
treat such respective pro rata portions as  taxes paid by them, and deduct  such
respective   pro   rata  portions   in  computing   their  taxable   income  or,
alternatively, use  them as  foreign  tax credits  against their  United  States
income  taxes. The Fund will report annually  to its shareholders the amount per
share of such withholding.
 
    SPECIAL RULES FOR CERTAIN FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS.  In general,  gains
from  foreign  currencies and  from foreign  currency options,  foreign currency
futures and forward foreign exchange contracts relating to investments in stock,
securities or  foreign  currencies are  currently  considered to  be  qualifying
income  for purposes  of determining whether  the Fund qualifies  as a regulated
investment company. It is currently unclear, however, who will be treated as the
issuer of certain foreign currency instruments or how foreign currency  options,
futures,  or forward foreign  currency contracts will be  valued for purposes of
the regulated investment company diversification requirements applicable to  the
Fund.  The Fund may  request a private  letter ruling from  the Internal Revenue
Service on some or all of these issues.
 
    Under Code Section 988, special rules are provided for certain  transactions
in  a  foreign currency  other than  the  taxpayer's functional  currency (I.E.,
unless certain special rules apply, currencies  other than the U.S. dollar).  In
general,  foreign currency gains or losses  from forward contracts, from futures
contracts that are not "regulated futures contracts", and from unlisted  options
will be treated as ordinary income or loss under Code Section 988. Also, certain
foreign  exchange gains or  losses derived with  respect to foreign fixed-income
securities are also  subject to  Section 988 treatment.  In general,  therefore,
Code  Section 988 gains  or losses will  increase or decrease  the amount of the
Fund's  investment  company  taxable  income  available  to  be  distributed  to
shareholders as ordinary income, rather than increasing or decreasing the amount
of  the Fund's net capital gain. Additionally, if Code Section 988 losses exceed
other investment company taxable  income during a taxable  year, the Fund  would
not be able to make any ordinary dividend distributions.
 
    Shareholders  are urged to consult their attorneys or tax advisers regarding
specific questions as to federal, state or local taxes.
 
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    As discussed in the  Prospectus, from time  to time the  Fund may quote  its
"yield"  and/or its "total return" in advertisements and sales literature. Yield
is calculated for any  30-day period as follows:  the amount of interest  and/or
dividend  income  for each  security in  the Fund's  portfolio is  determined in
accordance with  regulatory requirements;  the total  for the  entire  portfolio
constitutes  the Fund's gross income for the period. Expenses accrued during the
period are subtracted to arrive at "net investment income". The resulting amount
is divided by the product of  the net asset value per  share on the last day  of
the  period multiplied by  the average number of  Fund shares outstanding during
the period that were entitled to dividends. This amount is added to 1 and raised
to the sixth power. 1 is then  subtracted from the result and the difference  is
multiplied  by 2 to arrive at the  annualized yield. For the 30-day period ended
October 31, 1996, the Fund's yield, calculated pursuant to the formula described
above, was 4.98%.
    
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
   
    The Fund's "average annual total return" represents an annualization of  the
Fund's  total return  over a  particular period and  is computed  by finding the
annual percentage rate  which will result  in the ending  redeemable value of  a
hypothetical  $1,000 investment made at the beginning of a one, five or ten year
period, or  for  the  period  from  the  date  of  commencement  of  the  Fund's
operations, if shorter than any of the foregoing. The ending redeemable value is
reduced  by any contingent deferred sales charge at  the end of the one, five or
ten year or other  period. For the  purpose of this  calculation, it is  assumed
that  all dividends and distributions are  reinvested. The formula for computing
the average annual total return involves  a percentage obtained by dividing  the
ending  redeemable value by the amount of  the initial investment, taking a root
of the quotient  (where the root  is equivalent to  the number of  years in  the
period)  and subtracting 1 from  the result. The average  annual total return of
the Fund for the fiscal  year ended October 31, 1996,  for the five years  ended
October  31,  1996  and  for  the  period  November  1,  1990  (commencement  of
operations) through October 31, 1996 were 9.66%, 5.93% and 6.19%, respectively.
    
 
   
    In addition to the foregoing, the  Fund may advertise its total return  over
different  periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or other
types of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect  the
deduction  of the  contingent deferred sales  charge which,  if reflected, would
reduce the performance quoted. For example,  the average annual total return  of
the  Fund may be calculated in the manner described above, but without deduction
for any applicable contingent deferred sales charge. Based on this  calculation,
the  average annual total return for the  Fund for the fiscal year ended October
31, 1996, for the five years ended October 31, 1996 and for the period  November
1, 1990 through October 31, 1996 were 12.66%, 5.93% and 6.19%, respectively.
    
 
   
    In  addition, the Fund may compute  its aggregate total return for specified
periods by determining the  aggregate percentage rate which  will result in  the
ending  value of a hypothetical  $1,000 investment made at  the beginning of the
period. For the purpose  of this calculation, it  is assumed that all  dividends
and  distributions  are reinvested.  The formula  for computing  aggregate total
return involves a percentage obtained by dividing the ending value (without  the
reduction  for  any  contingent deferred  sales  charge) by  the  initial $1,000
investment  and  subtracting  1  from   the  result.  Based  on  the   foregoing
calculation, the Fund's total return for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996,
for  the five years ended  October 31, 1996 and for  the period November 1, 1990
through October 31, 1996 were 12.66%, 33.39% and 43.39%, respectively.
    
 
   
    The Fund  may  also advertise  the  growth of  hypothetical  investments  of
$10,000,  $50,000 and $100,000 in  shares of the Fund by  adding 1 to the Fund's
aggregate total return to date (expressed  as a decimal and without taking  into
account  the  effect of  any applicable  contingent  deferred sales  charge) and
multiplying by $10,000, $50,000 or $100,000, as the case may be. Investments  of
$10,000,  $50,000 and  $100,000 in  the Fund  at inception  would have  grown to
$14,339, $71,695 and $143,390, respectively, at October 31, 1996.
    
 
    The Fund from time  to time may also  advertise its performance relative  to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent organizations.
 
DESCRIPTION OF COMMON STOCK
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The  Fund is authorized to issue 500,000,000 shares of common stock of $0.01
par value. Shares  of the  Fund, when  issued, are  fully paid,  non-assessable,
fully  transferable and redeemable at  the option of the  holder. All shares are
equal as to  earnings, assets and  voting privileges. There  are no  conversion,
preemptive or other subscription rights. In the event of liquidation, each share
of  common stock of  the Fund is  entitled to its  portion of all  of the Fund's
assets after  all debts  and  expenses have  been  paid. Except  for  agreements
entered  into  by  the  Fund  in its  ordinary  course  of  business  within the
limitations of the Fund's fundamental investment policies (which may be modified
only by shareholder  vote), the Fund  will not issue  any securities other  than
common stock.
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
    The  shares of the  Fund do not  have cumulative voting  rights, which means
that the holders  of more  than 50%  of the shares  voting for  the election  of
directors  can elect 100% of the directors if  they choose to do so, and in such
event, the holders of the remaining less  than 50% of the shares voting for  the
election  of directors will  not be able to  elect any person  or persons to the
Board of Directors.
 
    The Fund's By-Laws provide that one or  more of the Fund's Directors may  be
removed,  either with or without  cause, at any time  by the affirmative vote of
the Fund's shareholders holding a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to
vote for the election of Directors. A special meeting of the shareholders of the
Fund will  be  called  by the  Fund's  Secretary  upon the  written  request  of
shareholders entitled to vote at least 10% of the Fund's outstanding shares. The
Fund will also comply with the provisions of Section 16(c) of the Act.
 
CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The  Chase Manhattan Bank N.A., One Chase Plaza, New York, New York 10005 is
the Custodian of the Fund's assets in the United States and around the world. As
Custodian, The Chase Manhattan  Bank has contracted  with various foreign  banks
and  depositaries to hold portfolio securities  of non-U.S. issuers on behalf of
the Fund.  Any of  the Fund's  cash balances  with the  Custodian in  excess  of
$100,000  are unprotected  by federal deposit  insurance. Such  balances may, at
times, be substantial.
 
   
    Dean Witter Trust  Company, Harborside Financial  Center, Plaza Two,  Jersey
City,  New Jersey 07311 is the Transfer  Agent of the Fund's shares and Dividend
Disbursing Agent for payment of dividends  and distributions on Fund shares  and
Agent  for shareholders  under various  investment plans  described herein. Dean
Witter Trust  Company is  an affiliate  of Dean  Witter InterCapital  Inc.,  the
Fund's   Investment  Manager  and  Dean  Witter  Distributor  Inc.,  the  Fund's
Distributor. As Transfer Agent and Dividend Disbursing Agent, Dean Witter  Trust
Company's  responsibilities include maintaining shareholder accounts, disbursing
cash  dividends  and  reinvesting  dividends,  processing  account  registration
changes, handling purchase and redemption transactions, mailing prospectuses and
reports,   mailing   and  tabulating   proxies,  processing   share  certificate
transactions, and maintaining shareholder records and lists. For these  services
Dean Witter Trust Company receives a per shareholder account fee.
    
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Price  Waterhouse LLP serves as the independent accountants of the Fund. The
independent accountants  are  responsible  for  auditing  the  annual  financial
statements of the Fund.
 
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The  Fund will send to shareholders, at least semi-annually, reports showing
the  Fund's  portfolio  and  other  information.  An  annual  report  containing
financial  statements  audited  by  independent  accountants  will  be  sent  to
shareholders each year.
 
    The Fund's fiscal year ends on  October 31. The financial statements of  the
Fund  must be  audited at  least once  a year  by independent  accountants whose
selection is made annually by the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
LEGAL COUNSEL
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Sheldon Curtis,  Esq., who  is an  officer and  the General  Counsel of  the
Investment Manager, is an officer and the General Counsel of the Fund.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
EXPERTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
    The  financial statements of  the Fund for  the year ended  October 31, 1996
included in  this  Statement  of  Additional  Information  and  incorporated  by
reference  in the Prospectus have been  so included and incorporated in reliance
on the report  of Price Waterhouse  LLP, independent accountants,  given on  the
authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
    
 
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    This  Statement of Additional Information and  the Prospectus do not contain
all of the  information set  forth in the  Registration Statement  the Fund  has
filed  with the  Securities and  Exchange Commission.  The complete Registration
Statement may  be obtained  from  the Securities  and Exchange  Commission  upon
payment of the fee prescribed by the rules and regulations of the Commission.
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   PRINCIPAL
   AMOUNT IN                                                 COUPON     MATURITY
   THOUSANDS                                                  RATE        DATE          VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>              <S>                                        <C>        <C>         <C>
                 GOVERNMENT & CORPORATE BONDS (82.4%)
                 AUSTRALIA (4.6%)
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATION
Au$       4,530  Queensland Treasury Corp+................    8.00   %   07/14/99  $     3,694,315
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 DENMARK (3.7%)
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATION
     DKr 15,300  Denmark Treasury Note....................    9.00       11/15/00        2,965,269
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 GERMANY (6.5%)
                 BANKING - INTERNATIONAL
$         5,000  Bayerische Vereinsbank+..................    8.125      01/27/00        5,262,505
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 ITALY (21.1%)
                 FINANCE (0.5%)
    ITL 560,000  Credit Suisse Finance Gibraltar..........   11.625      05/27/97          375,650
                                                                                   ---------------
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS (20.6%)
         11,570M Italy Treasury Bond+.....................    9.50       02/01/99        8,003,612
         11,880M Italy Treasury Bond+.....................   10.50       07/15/00        8,597,471
                                                                                   ---------------
                                                                                        16,601,083
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL ITALY.....................................................       16,976,733
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 NEW ZEALAND (6.6%)
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS
NZ$       7,300  New Zealand Treasury Bill+...............    8.52       09/17/97        4,805,650
            765  New Zealand Treasury Bond+...............   10.00       07/15/97          547,111
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL NEW ZEALAND...............................................        5,352,761
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 PORTUGAL (5.1%)
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATION
    PTE 616,000  Portugal Treasury Bond+..................    8.375      01/23/99        4,147,882
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 SPAIN (21.9%)
                 GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS
     ESP  1,679M Spain Treasury Bond+.....................   10.10       02/28/01       14,610,333
            330M Spain Treasury Bond+.....................   11.30       01/15/02        3,028,764
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL SPAIN.....................................................       17,639,097
                                                                                   ---------------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       44
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   PRINCIPAL
   AMOUNT IN                                                 COUPON     MATURITY
   THOUSANDS                                                  RATE        DATE          VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>              <S>                                        <C>        <C>         <C>
                 UNITED STATES (12.9%)
                 BANKING (10.0%)
$         5,000  National Bank of Detroit.................    6.85   %   05/11/98  $     5,064,350
          3,000  Norwest Corp+............................    5.75       03/15/98        2,995,950
                                                                                   ---------------
                                                                                         8,060,300
                                                                                   ---------------
                 U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATION (2.9%)
          2,250  U.S. Treasury Note+......................    7.50       10/31/99        2,346,030
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL UNITED STATES.............................................       10,406,330
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL GOVERNMENT & CORPORATE BONDS
                 (IDENTIFIED COST $65,387,399)...................................       66,444,892
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (18.8%)
                 TIME DEPOSITS (a) (12.6%)
                 AUSTRALIA (1.5%)
                 BANKING - INTERNATIONAL
Au$       1,511  Chase Manhattan Bank.....................    6.375      11/06/96        1,195,728
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 ITALY (2.2%)
                 BANKING - INTERNATIONAL
    ITL   2,730M Chase Manhattan Bank.....................    7.50       11/06/96        1,797,946
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 NEW ZEALAND (7.1%)
                 BANKING - INTERNATIONAL
NZ$       2,037  Bank of New York.........................    9.25       11/06/96        1,439,232
          6,003  Bankers Trust............................    9.25       11/06/96        4,240,905
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL NEW ZEALAND...............................................        5,680,137
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 UNITED STATES (1.8%)
                 BANKING
$         1,450  Republic National Bank...................    5.3125     11/01/96        1,450,000
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL TIME DEPOSITS
                 (IDENTIFIED COST $10,042,667)...................................       10,123,811
                                                                                   ---------------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       45
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   PRINCIPAL
   AMOUNT IN                                                 COUPON     MATURITY
   THOUSANDS                                                  RATE        DATE          VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>              <S>                                        <C>        <C>         <C>
                 COMMERCIAL PAPER (b) (6.2%)
                 UNITED STATES
$         5,000  J.P. Morgan & Co.
                 (Amortized Cost $5,000,000)..............    5.50   %   11/01/96  $     5,000,000
                                                                                   ---------------
 
                 TOTAL SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
                 (IDENTIFIED COST $15,042,667)...................................       15,123,811
                                                                                   ---------------
 
TOTAL INVESTMENTS
(IDENTIFIED COST $80,430,066) (C)........      101.2%    81,568,703
 
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF CASH AND OTHER
ASSETS...................................       (1.2)      (943,222)
                                               -----   ------------
 
NET ASSETS...............................      100.0%  $ 80,625,481
                                               -----   ------------
                                               -----   ------------
 
<FN>
- ---------------------
 M   In millions.
 +   Some or all of these securities are segregated in connection with open
     forward foreign currency contracts.
(a)  Subject to withdrawal restrictions until maturity.
(b)  Security was purchased on a discount basis. The interest rate shown has
     been adjusted to reflect a money market equivalent yield.
(c)  The aggregate cost for federal income tax purposes is $80,430,066; the
     aggregate gross unrealized appreciation is $1,333,333 and the aggregate
     gross unrealized depreciation is $194,696, resulting in net unrealized
     appreciation of $1,138,637.
</TABLE>
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY CONTRACTS OPEN AT OCTOBER 31, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       UNREALIZED
     CONTRACTS           IN EXCHANGE      DELIVERY   APPRECIATION/
    TO DELIVER               FOR            DATE      DEPRECIATION
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                  <C>                  <C>        <C>
    $     2,953,825       DKr 17,253,810  11/01/96   $      5,409
     DEM 20,500,000       $   13,633,945  04/01/97        (11,145)
      DEM 7,092,960       $    4,711,991  05/29/97        (25,921)
     NLG  5,000,000       $    2,983,098  07/29/97            254
     CHF 10,000,000       $    8,343,067  09/19/97        207,472
    Y   650,000,000       $    6,026,889  10/31/97         (4,496)
                                                     --------------
Net unrealized appreciation........................  $    171,573
                                                     --------------
                                                     --------------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       46
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
OCTOBER 31, 1996
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>
ASSETS:
Investments in securities, at value
  (identified cost $80,430,066).............................  $81,568,703
Unrealized appreciation on open forward foreign currency
  contracts.................................................      213,135
Cash (including $9,844 in foreign currency).................       29,466
Receivable for:
    Interest................................................    2,396,108
    Compensated forward foreign currency contracts..........    1,047,292
    Capital stock sold......................................       57,061
Prepaid expenses and other assets...........................       38,323
                                                              -----------
 
     TOTAL ASSETS...........................................   85,350,088
                                                              -----------
 
LIABILITIES:
Unrealized depreciation on open forward foreign currency
  contracts.................................................       41,562
Payable for:
    Investments purchased...................................    2,959,233
    Capital stock repurchased...............................    1,290,352
    Compensated forward foreign currency contracts..........      170,593
    Plan of distribution fee................................       52,903
    Investment management fee...............................       38,795
    Dividends to shareholders...............................       28,052
Accrued expenses and other payables.........................      143,117
                                                              -----------
 
     TOTAL LIABILITIES......................................    4,724,607
                                                              -----------
 
NET ASSETS:
Paid-in-capital.............................................   81,864,831
Net unrealized appreciation.................................    1,310,245
Accumulated undistributed net investment income.............    3,329,736
Accumulated net realized loss...............................   (5,879,331)
                                                              -----------
 
     NET ASSETS.............................................  $80,625,481
                                                              -----------
                                                              -----------
 
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE,
  8,537,086 SHARES OUTSTANDING (UNLIMITED SHARES AUTHORIZED
  OF $.01 PAR VALUE)........................................
                                                                    $9.44
                                                              -----------
                                                              -----------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       47
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, CONTINUED
 
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1996
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>
NET INVESTMENT INCOME:
 
INTEREST INCOME (net of $156,236 foreign withholding tax)...  $ 7,553,965
                                                              -----------
 
EXPENSES
Plan of distribution fee....................................      688,258
Investment management fee...................................      504,723
Transfer agent fees and expenses............................       95,328
Professional fees...........................................       82,375
Custodian fees..............................................       63,270
Shareholder reports and notices.............................       45,476
Registration fees...........................................       22,467
Directors' fees and expenses................................       16,104
Other.......................................................        5,541
                                                              -----------
 
     TOTAL EXPENSES.........................................    1,523,542
                                                              -----------
 
     NET INVESTMENT INCOME..................................    6,030,423
                                                              -----------
 
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS):
Net realized gain (loss) on:
    Investments.............................................    3,977,732
    Futures contracts.......................................     (186,475)
    Foreign exchange transactions...........................    1,132,362
                                                              -----------
 
     NET GAIN...............................................    4,923,619
                                                              -----------
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on:
    Investments.............................................     (508,587)
    Translation of forward foreign currency contracts, other
      assets and liabilities denominated in foreign
      currencies............................................      350,998
                                                              -----------
 
     NET DEPRECIATION.......................................     (157,589)
                                                              -----------
 
     NET GAIN...............................................    4,766,030
                                                              -----------
 
NET INCREASE................................................  $10,796,453
                                                              -----------
                                                              -----------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       48
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, CONTINUED
 
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR       FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED              ENDED
                                                              OCTOBER 31, 1996   OCTOBER 31, 1995
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                           <C>                <C>
 
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS:
 
OPERATIONS:
Net investment income.......................................    $  6,030,423       $  8,040,438
Net realized gain (loss)....................................       4,923,619         (2,375,703)
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation..........        (157,589)         4,237,361
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
 
     NET INCREASE...........................................      10,796,453          9,902,096
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
 
DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS FROM:
Net investment income.......................................      (5,418,221)        (6,576,785)
Paid-in-capital.............................................        --               (1,427,490)
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
 
     TOTAL..................................................      (5,418,221)        (8,004,275)
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
Net decrease from capital stock transactions................     (31,691,587)       (65,075,624)
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
 
     NET DECREASE...........................................     (26,313,355)       (63,177,803)
 
NET ASSETS:
Beginning of period.........................................     106,938,836        170,116,639
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
 
     END OF PERIOD
    (INCLUDING UNDISTRIBUTED NET INVESTMENT INCOME OF
    $3,329,736 AND DISTRIBUTIONS IN EXCESS OF NET INVESTMENT
    INCOME OF $121,077, RESPECTIVELY).......................    $ 80,625,481       $106,938,836
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
                                                              ----------------   ----------------
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                       49
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996
 
1. ORGANIZATION AND ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc. (the "Fund") is registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act"), as a
non-diversified, open-end management investment company. The Fund's investment
objective is to achieve as high a level of current income as is consistent with
prudent investment risk. The Fund was incorporated in Maryland on August 2, 1990
and commenced operations on November 1, 1990.
 
The preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect reported amounts and disclosures. Actual results could differ from those
estimates. The following is a summary of significant accounting policies:
 
A. VALUATION OF INVESTMENTS --  (1) all portfolio securities for which
over-the-counter market quotations are readily available are valued at the
latest available bid price prior to the time of valuation; (2) listed options
are valued at the latest sale price on the exchange on which they are listed
unless no sales of such options have taken place that day, in which case they
will be valued at the mean between their latest bid and asked price; (3) futures
contracts are valued at the latest sale price on the commodities exchange on
which they trade unless the Directors determine that such price does not reflect
their market value, in which case it will be valued at fair value as determined
by the Directors; (4) when market quotations are not readily available,
including circumstances under which it is determined by the Investment Manager
that sale or bid prices are not reflective of a security's market value,
portfolio securities are valued at their fair value as determined in good faith
under procedures established by and under the general supervision of the
Directors (valuation of debt securities for which market quotations are not
readily available may be based upon current market prices of securities which
are comparable in coupon, rating and maturity or an appropriate matrix utilizing
similar factors); (5) certain portfolio securities may be valued by an outside
pricing service approved by the Directors. The pricing service utilizes a matrix
system incorporating security quality, maturity and coupon as the evaluation
model parameters, and/or research and evaluations by its staff, including review
of broker-dealer market price quotations, if available, in determining what it
believes is the fair valuation of the securities valued by such pricing service;
and (6) short-term debt securities having a maturity date of more than sixty
days at time of purchase are valued on a mark-to-market basis until sixty days
prior to maturity and thereafter at amortized cost based on their value on the
61st day. Short-term debt securities having a maturity date of sixty days or
less at the time of purchase are valued at amortized cost.
 
                                       50
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
B. ACCOUNTING FOR INVESTMENTS --  Security transactions are accounted for on the
trade date (date the order to buy or sell is executed). Realized gains and
losses on security transactions are determined by the identified cost method.
Discounts are accreted over the life of the respective securities. Interest
income is accrued daily.
 
C. FUTURES CONTRACTS --  A futures contract is an agreement between two parties
to buy and sell financial instruments at a set price on a future date. Upon
entering into such a contract, the Fund is required to pledge to the broker cash
or U.S. Government securities equal to the minimum initial margin requirements
of the applicable futures exchange. Pursuant to the contract, the Fund agrees to
receive from or pay to the broker an amount of cash equal to the daily
fluctuation in the value of the contract which is known as variation margin.
Such receipts or payments are recorded by the Fund as unrealized gains or
losses. Upon closing of the contract, the Fund realizes a gain or loss equal to
the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and
the value at the time it was closed.
 
D. FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION --  The books and records of the Fund are
maintained in U.S. dollars as follows: (1) the foreign currency market value of
investment securities, other assets and liabilities and forward contracts are
translated at the exchange rates prevailing at the end of the period; and (2)
purchases, sales, income and expenses are translated at the exchange rates
prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions. The resultant exchange
gains and losses are included in the Statement of Operations as realized and
unrealized gain/loss on foreign exchange transactions. Pursuant to U.S. Federal
income tax regulations, certain foreign exchange gains/losses included in
realized and unrealized gain/loss are included in or are a reduction of ordinary
income for federal income tax purposes. The Fund does not isolate that portion
of the results of operations arising as a result of changes in the foreign
exchange rates from the changes in the market prices of the securities.
 
E. FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY CONTRACTS --  The Fund may enter into forward
foreign currency contracts which are valued daily at the appropriate exchange
rates. The resultant unrealized exchange gains and losses are included in the
Statement of Operations as unrealized foreign currency gain or loss. The Fund
records realized gains or losses on delivery of the currency or at the time the
forward contract is extinguished (compensated) by entering into a closing
transaction prior to delivery.
 
F. FEDERAL INCOME TAX STATUS --  It is the Fund's policy to comply with the
requirements of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment
companies and to distribute all of its taxable income to its shareholders.
Accordingly, no federal income tax provision is required.
 
                                       51
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
G. DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS --  The Fund records dividends
and distributions to its shareholders on the record date. The amount of
dividends and distributions from net investment income and net realized capital
gains are determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations which may
differ from generally accepted accounting principles. These "book/tax"
differences are either considered temporary or permanent in nature. To the
extent these differences are permanent in nature, such amounts are reclassified
within the capital accounts based on their federal tax-basis treatment;
temporary differences do not require reclassification. Dividends and
distributions which exceed net investment income and net realized capital gains
for financial reporting purposes but not for tax purposes are reported as
dividends in excess of net investment income or distributions in excess of net
realized capital gains. To the extent they exceed net investment income and net
realized capital gains for tax purposes, they are reported as distributions of
paid-in-capital.
 
2. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT
 
Pursuant to an Investment Management Agreement with Dean Witter InterCapital
Inc. (the "Investment Manager"), the Fund pays the Investment Manager a
management fee, accrued daily and payable monthly, by applying the following
annual rates to the net assets of the Fund determined as of the close of each
business day: 0.55% to the portion of the average daily net assets not exceeding
$500 million and 0.50% to the portion of the average daily net assets exceeding
$500 million.
 
Under the terms of the Agreement, in addition to managing the Fund's
investments, the Investment Manager maintains certain of the Fund's books and
records and furnishes, at its own expense, office space, facilities, equipment,
clerical, bookkeeping and certain legal services and pays the salaries of all
personnel, including officers of the Fund who are employees of the Investment
Manager. The Investment Manager also bears the cost of telephone services, heat,
light, power and other utilities provided to the Fund.
 
3. PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
Shares of the Fund are distributed by Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the
"Distributor"), an affiliate of the Investment Manager. The Fund has adopted a
Plan of Distribution (the "Plan") pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act pursuant
to which the Fund pays the Distributor compensation, accrued daily and payable
monthly, at an annual rate of 0.75% of the lesser of: (a) the average daily
aggregate gross sales of the Fund's shares since the Fund's inception (not
including reinvestment of dividend or capital gains distributions) less the
average daily aggregate net asset value of the Fund's shares
 
                                       52
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
redeemed since the Fund's inception upon which a contingent deferred sales
charge has been imposed or upon which such charge has been waived; or (b) the
Fund's average daily net assets. Amounts paid under the Plan are paid to the
Distributor to compensate it for the services provided and the expenses borne by
it and others in the distribution of the Fund's shares, including the payment of
commissions for sales of the Fund's shares and incentive compensation to, and
expenses of, account executives of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., an affiliate of
the Investment Manager and Distributor, and other employees and selected
broker-dealers, who engage in or support distribution of the Fund's shares or
who service shareholder accounts, including overhead and telephone expenses,
printing and distribution of prospectuses and reports used in connection with
the offering of the Fund's shares to other than current shareholders and
preparation, printing and distribution of sales literature and advertising
materials. In addition, the Distributor may be compensated under the Plan for
its opportunity costs in advancing such amounts, which compensation would be in
the form of a carrying charge on any unreimbursed expenses incurred by the
Distributor.
 
Provided that the Plan continues in effect, any cumulative expenses incurred but
not yet recovered may be recovered through future distribution fees from the
Fund and contingent deferred sales charges from the Fund's shareholders.
 
Although there is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay expenses incurred in
excess of payments made to the Distributor under the Plan and the proceeds of
contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors upon redemption of shares,
if for any reason the Plan is terminated, the Directors will consider at that
time the manner in which to treat such expenses. The Distributor has advised the
Fund that such excess amounts, including carrying charges, totaled $6,987,294 at
October 31, 1996.
 
The Distributor has informed the Fund that for the year ended October 31, 1996,
it received approximately $33,000 in contingent deferred sales charges from
certain redemptions of the Fund's shares.
 
4. SECURITY TRANSACTIONS AND TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
 
The cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of portfolio securities, excluding
short-term investments, for the year ended October 31, 1996 were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            PURCHASES          SALES
                                          --------------   --------------
<S>                                       <C>              <C>
Corporate Bonds.........................  $     --         $   17,666,443
Foreign Government Bonds................     111,836,649      110,991,299
U.S. Government and Agency
 Obligations............................       2,075,000       25,532,233
</TABLE>
 
                                       53
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
Dean Witter Trust Company, an affiliate of the Investment Manager and
Distributor, is the Fund's transfer agent. At October 31, 1996, the Fund had
transfer agent fees and expenses payable of approximately $11,000.
 
The Fund has an unfunded noncontributory defined benefit pension plan covering
all independent Directors of the Fund who will have served as independent
Directors for at least five years at the time of retirement. Benefits under this
plan are based on years of service and compensation during the last five years
of service. Aggregate pension costs for the year ended October 31, 1996 included
in Directors' fees and expenses in the Statement of Operations amounted to
$2,863. At October 31, 1996, the Fund had an accrued pension liability of
$46,815 which is included in accrued expenses in the Statement of Assets and
Liabilities.
 
5. CAPITAL STOCK
 
Transactions in capital stock were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  FOR THE YEAR                      FOR THE YEAR
                                                             ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1996            ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1995
                                                         -------------------------------   -------------------------------
                                                             SHARES           AMOUNT           SHARES           AMOUNT
                                                         --------------   --------------   --------------   --------------
<S>                                                      <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>
Sold...................................................       9,251,527   $   85,394,562          332,379   $    2,925,344
Reinvestment of dividends and distributions............         348,451        3,177,482          535,338        4,696,544
                                                         --------------   --------------   --------------   --------------
                                                              9,599,978       88,572,044          867,717        7,621,888
Repurchased............................................     (13,089,159)    (120,263,631)      (8,316,754)     (72,697,512)
                                                         --------------   --------------   --------------   --------------
Net decrease...........................................      (3,489,181)  $  (31,691,587)      (7,449,037)  $  (65,075,624)
                                                         --------------   --------------   --------------   --------------
                                                         --------------   --------------   --------------   --------------
</TABLE>
 
6. FEDERAL INCOME TAX STATUS
 
During the year ended October 31, 1996, the Fund utilized approximately
$1,579,000 of its net capital loss carryover. At October 31, 1996, the Fund had
a net capital loss carryover of approximately $6,756,000 of which $741,000 will
be available through October 31, 2001, $4,853,000 will be available through
October 31, 2002 and $1,162,000 will be available through October 31, 2003 to
offset future capital gains to the extent provided by regulations.
 
As of October 31, 1996, the Fund had temporary book/tax differences primarily
attributable to the mark-to-market of open forward foreign currency exchange
contracts and compensated forward foreign currency exchange contracts and
permanent book/tax differences primarily attributable to foreign currency gains.
To reflect reclassifications arising from permanent book/tax differences for the
year ended October 31, 1996, accumulated net realized loss was charged and
accumulated undistributed net investment income was credited $2,838,611.
 
                                       54
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1996, CONTINUED
 
7. PURPOSES OF AND RISKS RELATING TO CERTAIN FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency contracts ("forward contracts")
to facilitate settlement of foreign currency denominated portfolio transactions
or to manage its foreign currency exposure or to sell, for a fixed amount of
U.S. dollars or other currency, the amount of foreign currency approximating the
value of some or all of its holdings denominated in such foreign currency or an
amount of foreign currency other than the currency in which the securities to be
hedged are denominated approximating the value of some or all of its holdings to
be hedged. Additionally, when the Investment Manager anticipates purchasing
securities at some time in the future, the Fund may enter into a forward
contract to purchase an amount of currency equal to some or all the value of the
anticipated purchase for a fixed amount of U.S. dollars or other currency.
 
To hedge against adverse interest rate, foreign currency and market risks, the
Fund may enter into written options on interest rate futures and interest rate
future contracts ("derivative investments").
 
At October 31, 1996, there were no outstanding forward contracts other than
those used to facilitate settlement of foreign currency denominated portfolio
transactions and to manage foreign currency exposure.
 
These derivative instruments involve elements of market risk in excess of the
amount reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The Fund bears the
risk of an unfavorable change in the foreign exchange rates underlying the
forward contracts. Risks may also arise upon entering into these contracts from
the potential inability of the counterparties to meet the terms of their
contracts.
 
   
At October 31, 1996 investments in securities of issuers in Spain and Italy
represented 45.2% of the Fund's net assets. These investments, which involve
risks and considerations not present with respect to U.S. securities, may be
affected by economic or political developments in these regions.
    
 
                                       55
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
Selected ratios and per share data for a share of capital stock outstanding
throughout each period:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         FOR THE YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31
                                     ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       1996        1995        1994        1993        1992        1991
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<S>                                  <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
 
Net asset value,
 beginning of period...............  $    8.89   $   8.73    $   9.23    $   9.41    $   9.77    $  10.00
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
Net investment income..............       0.61       0.54        0.72        0.70        0.82        0.95
Net realized and unrealized gain
 (loss)............................       0.48       0.16       (0.66)      (0.27)      (0.46)      (0.23)
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
Total from investment operations...       1.09       0.70        0.06        0.43        0.36        0.72
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
Less dividends and distributions
 from:
   Net investment income...........      (0.54)     (0.44)      (0.13)      (0.61)      (0.72)      (0.95)
   Paid-in-capital.................     --          (0.10)      (0.43)      --          --          --
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
Total dividends and
 distributions.....................      (0.54)     (0.54)      (0.56)      (0.61)      (0.72)      (0.95)
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
Net asset value, end of period.....  $    9.44   $   8.89    $   8.73    $   9.23    $   9.41    $   9.77
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
                                     ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------
 
TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+...........      12.66%      8.27%       0.65%       4.72%       3.76%       7.49%
 
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS:
Expenses...........................       1.66%      1.68%       1.63%       1.55%       1.55%       1.61%
 
Net investment income..............       6.57%      6.17%       6.35%       6.97%       8.43%       9.49%
 
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period, in
 thousands.........................    $80,625    $106,939    $170,117    $305,278    $441,191    $462,263
 
Portfolio turnover rate............        138%       188%        123%        221%        149%          8%
<FN>
 
- ---------------------
+    Does not reflect the deduction of sales charge. Calculated based on the net
     asset value of the last business day of the period.
</TABLE>
 
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                                       56
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
TO THE SHAREHOLDERS AND BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
 
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including
the portfolio of investments, and the related statements of operations and of
changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all
material respects, the financial position of Dean Witter Global Short-Term
Income Fund Inc. (the "Fund") at October 31, 1996, the results of its operations
for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years
in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the six years
in the period then ended, in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter
referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fund's
management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial
statements in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards which
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about
whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles
used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included
confirmation of securities at October 31, 1996 by correspondence with the
custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for the opinion expressed
above.
 
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
1177 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10036
DECEMBER 17, 1996
 
                                       57
<PAGE>

                 DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.

                            PART C  OTHER INFORMATION

Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits

     (a)  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

          (1)  Financial statements and schedules, included
               in Prospectus (Part A):                                Page in
                                                                      Prospectus
                                                                      ----------
          Financial highlights for the years ended
          October 31, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996.......         4

          Financial statements included in the Statement of
          Additional Information (Part B):                             Page in
                                                                         SAI
                                                                         ---

          Portfolio of Investments at October 31, 1996......             44

          Statement of assets and liabilities at
          October 31, 1996..................................             47

          Statement of operations for the year ended 
          October 31, 1996..................................             48

          Statement of changes in net assets for the
          years ended October 31, 1995 and 1996 .............            49

          Notes to Financial Statements......................            50

          Financial highlights for the years ended
          October 31, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996 .            56


          (3) Financial statements included in Part C:

          None

     (b)       EXHIBITS


 2.     --    Amended and Restated By-Laws of the Registrant dated as of
              October 25, 1996

11.    --     Consent of Independent Accountants

16.    --     Schedules for Computation of Performance Quotations
<PAGE>

27.    --     Financial Data Schedule

_____________________
 All other exhibits were previously filed and are hereby incorporated by
reference.


Item 25.  PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH REGISTRANT.

          None

Item 26.  NUMBER OF HOLDERS OF SECURITIES.

          (1)                                (2)
                                     Number of Record Holders
     Title of Class                    at December 3, 1996
     --------------                  ------------------------

Shares of Common Stock                        6,233

Item 27.  INDEMNIFICATION

       Reference is made to Section 3.15 of the Registrant's By-Laws and Section
2-418 of the Maryland General Corporation Law.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 (the "Act") may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling
persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the
Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the  Securities and Exchange
Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act
and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the event that a claim for indemnification
against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses
incurred or paid by a director, officer, or controlling person of the Registrant
in connection with the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is
asserted against the Registrant by such director, officer or controlling person
in connection with the shares being registered, the Registrant will, unless in
the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent,
submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such
indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act, and will
be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

     The Registrant hereby undertakes that it will apply the indemnification
provision of its by-laws in a manner consistent with Release 11330 of the
Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940, so
long as the interpretation of Sections 17(h) and 17(i) of such Act remains in
effect.
<PAGE>

     Registrant, in conjunction with the Investment Manager, Registrant's
Directors, and other registered investment management companies managed by the
Investment Manager, maintains insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a
Director, officer, employee, or agent of Registrant, or who is or was serving at
the request of Registrant as a trustee, director, officer, employee or agent of
another trust or corporation, against any liability asserted against him and
incurred by him or arising out of his position.  However, in no event will
Registrant maintain insurance to indemnify any such person for any act for which
Registrant itself is not permitted to indemnify him.


Item 28.  BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER.

     See "The Fund and Its Management" in the Prospectus regarding the business
of the investment adviser.  The following information is given regarding
officers of Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.  InterCapital is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Dean Witter, Discover & Co.  The principal address of the Dean
Witter Funds is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.

     The term "Dean Witter Funds" used below refers to the following registered
investment companies:

Closed-End Investment Companies
- -------------------------------
 (1) InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
 (2) High Income Advantage Trust
 (3) High Income Advantage Trust II
 (4) High Income Advantage Trust III
 (5) Municipal Income Trust
 (6) Municipal Income Trust II
 (7) Municipal Income Trust III
 (8) Dean Witter Government Income Trust
 (9) Municipal Premium Income Trust
(10) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
(11) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
(12) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
(13) Prime Income Trust
(14) InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
(15) InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
(16) InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
(17) InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
(18) InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
(19) InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
(20) InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
(21) InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
(22) InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
(23) InterCapital Insured California Municipal Securities
(24) InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities


                                        3
<PAGE>

Open-End Investment Companies:
- ------------------------------
 (1) Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
 (2) Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
 (3) Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (4) Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
 (5) Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
 (6) Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
 (7) Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
 (8) Dean Witter Retirement Series
 (9) Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
(10) Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
(11) Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
(12) Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
(13) Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
(14) Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
(15) Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
(16) Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
(17) Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
(18) Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
(19) Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation Fund
(20) Dean Witter American Value Fund
(21) Dean Witter Strategist Fund
(22) Dean Witter Utilities Fund
(23) Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
(24) Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust
(25) Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
(26) Dean Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust
(27) Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
(28) Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
(29) Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
(30) Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
(31) Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
(32) Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(33) Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
(34) Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
(35) Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
(36) Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
(37) Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
(38) Active Assets Government Securities Trust
(39) Active Assets Money Trust
(40) Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
(41) Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
(42) Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
(43) Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
(44) Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
(45) Dean Witter High Income Securities
(46) Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
(47) Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund
(48) Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
(49) Dean Witter Select Dimensions Investment Series
(50) Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund
(51) Dean Witter Balanced Income Fund
(52) Dean Witter Hawaii Municipal Trust
(53) Dean Witter Capital Appreciation Fund


                                        4
<PAGE>

(54) Dean Witter Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(55) Dean Witter Information Fund
(56) Dean Witter Japan Fund
(57) Dean Witter Income Builder Fund
(58) Dean Witter Special Value Fund

The term "TCW/DW Funds" refers to the following registered investment companies:

Open-End Investment Companies
- -----------------------------
 (1) TCW/DW Core Equity Trust
 (2) TCW/DW North American Government Income Trust
 (3) TCW/DW Latin American Growth Fund
 (4) TCW/DW Income and Growth Fund
 (5) TCW/DW Small Cap Growth Fund
 (6) TCW/DW Balanced Fund
 (7) TCW/DW Total Return Trust
 (8) TCW/DW Mid-Cap Equity Trust
 (9) TCW/DW Global Telecom Trust
 (10)TCW/DW Strategic Income Trust

Closed-End Investment Companies
- -------------------------------
 (1) TCW/DW Term Trust 2000
 (2) TCW/DW Term Trust 2002
 (3) TCW/DW Term Trust 2003
 (4) TCW/DW Emerging Markets Opportunities Trust

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        -------------------------------------------------

Charles A. Fiumefreddo   Executive Vice President and Director of Dean
Chairman, Chief          Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR"); Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and    Executive Officer and Director of Dean Witter
Director                 Distributors Inc. ("Distributors") and Dean
                         Witter Services Company Inc. ("DWSC"); Chairman and
                         Director of Dean Witter Trust Company ("DWTC");
                         Chairman, Director or Trustee, President and Chief
                         Executive Officer of the Dean Witter Funds and
                         Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Trustee of the
                         TCW/DW Funds; Formerly Executive Vice President and
                         Director of Dean Witter, Discover & Co. ("DWDC");
                         Director and/or officer of various DWDC subsidiaries.

Philip J. Purcell        Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director of
Director                 of DWDC and DWR; Director of DWSC and Distributors;
                         Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds; Director
                         and/or officer of various DWDC subsidiaries.

Richard M. DeMartini     Executive Vice President of DWDC; President and
Director                 Chief Operating Officer of Dean Witter Capital;


                                        5
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- ------------------       ------------------------------------------------

                         Director of DWR, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC; Trustee
                         of the TCW/DW Funds; Member (since January, 1993) and
                         Chairman (since January, 1995) of the Board of
                         Directors of NASDAQ.

James F. Higgins         Executive Vice President of DWDC; President and
Director                 Chief Operating Officer of Dean Witter Financial;
                         Director of DWR, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC.

Thomas C. Schneider      Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
Executive Vice           Officer of DWDC, DWR, DWSC and Distributors;
President, Chief         Director of DWR, DWSC and Distributors.
Financial Officer and
Director


Christine A. Edwards     Executive Vice President, Secretary and General
Director                 Counsel of DWDC and DWR; Executive Vice President,
                         Secretary and Chief Legal Officer of Distributors;
                         Director of DWR, DWSC and Distributors.

Robert M. Scanlan        President and Chief Operating Officer of DWSC,
President and Chief      Executive Vice President of Distributors;
Operating Officer        Executive Vice President and Director of DWTC;
                         Vice President of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW
                         Funds.

John Van Heuvelen        President, Chief Operating Officer and Director
Executive Vice           of DWTC.
President

Joseph J. McAlinden
Executive Vice President
and Chief Investment
Officer                  Vice President of the Dean Witter Funds and Director of
                         DWTC.

Sheldon Curtis           Assistant Secretary of DWR; Senior Vice President,
Senior Vice President,   Secretary and General Counsel of DWSC; Senior Vice
General Counsel and      President, Assistant General Counsel and Assistant
Secretary                Secretary of Distributors; Senior Vice President
                         and Secretary of DWTC; Vice President, Secretary and
                         General Counsel of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW
                         Funds.

Peter M. Avelar
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Mark Bavoso
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


                                        6
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        -------------------------------------------------

Richard Felegy
Senior Vice President

Edward Gaylor
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Robert S. Giambrone
Senior Vice President    Senior Vice President of DWSC, Distributors
                         and DWTC and Director of DWTC; Vice President
                         of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW Funds.

Rajesh K. Gupta
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kenton J. Hinchcliffe
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kevin Hurley
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Jenny Beth Jones         Vice President of Dean Witter Special Value Fund.
Senior Vice President

John B. Kemp, III        Director of the Provident Savings Bank, Jersey
Senior Vice President    City, New Jersey.

Anita Kolleeny
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Jonathan R. Page
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Ira N. Ross
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Rochelle G. Siegel
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Paul D. Vance
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Elizabeth A. Vetell
Senior Vice President

James F. Willison
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Ronald J. Worobel
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


                                        7
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

Thomas F. Caloia         First Vice President and Assistant Treasurer of
First Vice President     DWSC, Assistant Treasurer of Distributors;
and Assistant            Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of the
Treasurer                Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW Funds.

Marilyn K. Cranney       Assistant Secretary of DWR; First Vice President
First Vice President     and Assistant Secretary of DWSC; Assistant
and Assistant Secretary  Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW
                         Funds.

Barry Fink               First Vice President and Assistant Secretary of
First Vice President     DWSC; Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter
and Assistant Secretary  Funds and the TCW/DW Funds.

Michael Interrante       First Vice President and Controller of DWSC;
First Vice President     Assistant Treasurer of Distributors;First Vice
and Controller           President and Treasurer of DWTC.


Robert Zimmerman
First Vice President

Joan Allman
Vice President

Joseph Arcieri
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kirk Balzer
Vice President           Vice President of Various Dean Witter Funds.

Douglas Brown
Vice President

Philip Casparius
Vice President

Thomas Chronert
Vice President


Rosalie Clough
Vice President

Patricia A. Cuddy
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

B. Catherine Connelly
Vice President


                                        8
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

Salvatore DeSteno
Vice President           Vice President of DWSC.

Frank J. DeVito
Vice President           Vice President of DWSC.

Bruce Dunn
Vice President

Jeffrey D. Geffen
Vice President

Deborah Genovese
Vice President

Peter W. Gurman
Vice President

John Hechtlinger
Vice President

Peter Hermann
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds

Elizabeth Hinchman
Vice President

David Hoffman
Vice President

David Johnson
Vice President

Christopher Jones
Vice President

James Kastberg
Vice President

Stanley Kapica
Vice President

Michael Knox
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds

Konrad J. Krill
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Paula LaCosta
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


                                        9
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        -------------------------------------------------

Thomas Lawlor
Vice President

Gerard Lian
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

LouAnne D. McInnis       Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and       Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary      the TCW/DW Funds.

Sharon K. Milligan
Vice President

Julie Morrone
Vice President

David Myers
Vice President

James Nash
Vice President

Richard Norris
Vice President

Anne Pickrell
Vice President           Vice President of Dean Witter Global Short-
                         Term Income Fund Inc.
Hugh Rose
Vice President

Robert Rossetti
Vice President

Ruth Rossi               Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and       Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary      the TCW/DW Funds.

Carl F. Sadler
Vice President

Rafael Scolari
Vice President           Vice President of Prime Income Trust

Peter Seeley             Vice President of Dean Witter World
Vice President           Wide Income Trust

Jayne M. Stevlingson
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


                                       10
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION        OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER         OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.        AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

Kathleen Stromberg
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Vinh Q. Tran
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Alice Weiss
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Katherine Wickham
Vice President


Item 29.    PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS

     (a)  Dean Witter Distributors Inc. ("Distributors"), a Delaware
     corporation, is the principal underwriter of the Registrant.
     Distributors is also the principal underwriter of the following
     investment companies:

 (1)      Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
 (2)      Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (3)      Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (4)      Dean Witter Retirement Series
 (5)      Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
 (6)      Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation
 (7)      Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
 (8)      Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
 (9)      Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
(10)      Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
(11)      Active Assets Money Trust
(12)      Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
(13)      Active Assets Government Securities Trust
(14)      Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
(15)      Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
(16)      Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
(17)      Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
(18)      Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
(19)      Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
(20)      Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
(21)      Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
(22)      Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
(23)      Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
(24)      Dean Witter Utilities Fund
(25)      Dean Witter Strategist Fund
(26)      Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust
(27)      Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
(28)      Prime Income Trust
(29)      Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
(30)      Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
(31)      Dean Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust
(32)      Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
(33)      Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
(34)      Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
(35)      Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(36)      Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust


                                       11
<PAGE>

(37)      Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
(38)      Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
(39)      Dean Witter American Value Fund
(40)      Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
(41)      Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
(42)      Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
(43)      Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
(44)      Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
(45)      Dean Witter High Income Securities
(46)      Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
(47)      Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund
(48)      Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund
(49)      Dean Witter Balanced Income Fund
(50)      Dean Witter Hawaii Municipal Trust
(51)      Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
(52)      Dean Witter Capital Appreciation Fund
(53)      Dean Witter Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(54)      Dean Witter Information Fund
(55)      Dean Witter Japan Fund
(56)      Dean Witter Income Builder Fund
(57)      Dean Witter Special Value Fund
 (1)      TCW/DW Core Equity Trust
 (2)      TCW/DW North American Government Income Trust
 (3)      TCW/DW Latin American Growth Fund
 (4)      TCW/DW Income and Growth Fund
 (5)      TCW/DW Small Cap Growth Fund
 (6)      TCW/DW Balanced Fund
 (7)      TCW/DW Total Return Trust
 (8)      TCW/DW Mid-Cap Equity Trust
 (9)      TCW/DW Global Telecom Trust
 (10)     TCW/DW Strategic Income Trust

     (b)  The following information is given regarding directors and officers of
     Distributors not listed in Item 28 above.  The principal address of
     Distributors is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.  None of
     the following persons has any position or office with the Registrant.

                                    Positions and
                                    Office with
     Name                           Distributors
     ----                           -------------

     Fredrick K. Kubler            Senior Vice President, Assistant
                                   Secretary and Chief Compliance
                                   Officer.

     Michael T. Gregg              Vice President and Assistant
                                   Secretary.

Item 30.    LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

       All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Rules thereunder are
maintained by the Investment Manager at its offices, except records


                                       12
<PAGE>

relating to holders of shares issued by the Registrant, which are maintained by
the Registrant's Transfer Agent, at its place of business as shown in the
prospectus.


Item 31.    MANAGEMENT SERVICES

        Registrant is not a party to any such management-related service
contract.

Item 32.    UNDERTAKINGS

        Registrant hereby undertakes to furnish each person to whom a prospectus
is delivered with a copy of the Registrant's latest annual report to
shareholders, upon request and without charge.


                                       13
<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of
the requirements for effectiveness of this Registration Statement pursuant to
Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this Post-
Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York and State of
New York on the 24th day of December, 1996.

                           DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.



                                       By      /s/ Sheldon Curtis
                                          ----------------------------------
                                                 Sheldon Curtis
                                           Vice President and Secretary

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Post-
Effective Amendment No. 7 has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

     Signatures                    Title                     Date
     ----------                    -----                     ----

(1) Principal Executive Officer    President, Chief
                                   Executive Officer,
                                   Director Chairman
By  /s/ Charles A. Fiumefreddo                              12/24/96
    ----------------------------
        Charles A. Fiumefreddo

(2) Principal Financial Officer    Treasurer and Principal
                                   Accounting Officer

By  /s/ Thomas F. Caloia                                    12/24/96
    ----------------------------
        Thomas F. Caloia

(3) Majority of the Directors

    Charles A. Fiumefreddo (Chairman)
    Philip J. Purcell


By  /s/ Sheldon Curtis                                      12/24/96
    ----------------------------
        Sheldon Curtis
        Attorney-in-Fact


    Michael Bozic              Manuel H. Johnson
    Edwin J. Garn              Michael E. Nugent
    John R. Haire              John L. Schroeder

By  /s/ David M. Butowsky                                   12/24/96
    ----------------------------
        David M. Butowsky
        Attorney-in-Fact
<PAGE>

                                  EXHIBIT INDEX

 2.     --    Amended and Restated By-Laws of the Registrant dated as of
              October 25, 1996

11.    --     Consent of Independent Accountants

16.    --     Schedules for Computation of Performance
              Quotations

27.    --     Financial Data Schedule

- ---------------
  All other exhibits were previously filed and are hereby
  incorporated by reference.

<PAGE>

                                   BY-LAWS

                                      OF

                DEAN WITTER GLOBAL SHORT-TERM INCOME FUND INC.
                 AMENDED AND RESTATED AS OF OCTOBER 25, 1996

                                  ARTICLE I

                                   OFFICES

   SECTION 1.1. PRINCIPAL OFFICE. The principal office of the Corporation in
the State of Maryland shall be in the City of Baltimore.

   SECTION 1.2. OTHER OFFICES. In addition to its principal office in the
State of Maryland, the Corporation may have an office or offices in the City
of New York, State of New York, and at such other places as the Board of
Directors may from time to time designate or the business of the Corporation
may require.

                                  ARTICLE II

                            STOCKHOLDERS' MEETINGS

   SECTION 2.1. PLACE OF MEETINGS. Meetings of stockholders shall be held at
such place, within or without the State of Maryland, as may be designated
from time to time by the Board of Directors.

   SECTION 2.2. ANNUAL MEETINGS. Annual or other meetings of the
stockholders, unless required by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, or the Maryland General Corporation Law shall not be required to be
held but may, in the discretion of the Directors, be held notwithstanding the
absence of a requirement under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, or the Maryland General Corporation Law to hold such a meeting.

   SECTION 2.3. SPECIAL MEETINGS. Special meetings of stockholders of the
Corporation shall be held whenever called by the Board of Directors or the
President of the Corporation. Special meetings of stockholders shall also be
called by the Secretary upon the written request of the holders of shares
entitled to vote not less than ten percent (10%) of all the votes entitled to
be cast at such meeting. Such request shall state the purpose or purposes of
such meeting and the matters proposed to be acted on thereat. The Secretary
shall inform such stockholders of the reasonable estimated cost of preparing
and mailing such notice of the meeting, and upon payment to the Corporation
of such costs, the Secretary shall give notice stating the purpose or
purposes of the meeting to all entitled to a vote at such meeting. Unless
requested by stockholders entitled to cast a majority of all the votes
entitled to be cast at the meeting, a special meeting need not be called to
consider any matter which is substantially the same as a matter voted upon at
any special meeting of stockholders held during the preceding twelve months.

   SECTION 2.4. NOTICE OF MEETINGS. Written or printed notice of every
stockholders' meeting stating the place, date and time, and in the case of a
special meeting the purpose or purposes thereof, shall be given by the
Secretary not less than ten (10) nor more than ninety (90) days before such
meeting to each stockholder entitled to vote at such meeting, either by mail
or by presenting it to him personally, or by leaving it at his residence or
usual place of business. If mailed, such notice shall be deemed to be given
when deposited in the United States mail, postage prepaid, directed to the
stockholder at his address as it appears on the records of the Corporation.

   SECTION 2.5. QUORUM AND ADJOURNMENT OF MEETINGS. Except as otherwise
provided by law, by the Charter of the Corporation, or by these By-Laws, at
all meetings of stockholders the holders of a majority of the shares issued
and outstanding and entitled to vote thereat, present in person or
represented by proxy, shall be requisite and shall constitute a quorum for
the transaction of business. In the absence of a quorum, the stockholders
present or represented by proxy and entitled to vote thereat shall have power
<PAGE>

to adjourn the meeting from time to time (but in no event to a date more than
120 days after the original record date) without notice other than
announcement at the meeting, until a quorum shall be present. At any
adjourned meeting at which a quorum shall be present, any business may be
transacted if the meeting had been held as originally called.

   SECTION 2.6. VOTING RIGHTS, PROXIES. At each meeting of the stockholders
at which a quorum is present, each holder of stock entitled to vote thereat
shall be entitled to one vote (with fractional votes for fractional shares)
in person or by proxy, executed in writing by the stockholder or his duly
authorized attorney-in-fact, for each share of stock of the Corporation
entitled to vote so registered in his name on the books of the Corporation on
the date fixed as the record date for the determination of stockholders
entitled to vote at such meeting. In all elections of directors, each share
of stock may be voted once for each individual to be elected and for whose
election such share is entitled to be voted. No proxy shall be valid after
eleven months from its date, unless otherwise provided in the proxy. At all
meetings of stockholders, unless the voting is conducted by inspectors, all
questions relating to the qualification of voters and the validity of proxies
and the acceptance or rejection of votes shall be decided by the chairman of
the meeting.

   SECTION 2.7. VOTE REQUIRED. Except as otherwise provided by law, by the
Charter of the Corporation, or by these By-Laws, at each meeting of
stockholders at which a quorum is present, all matters shall be decided by a
majority of the votes cast by the stockholders present in person or
represented by proxy and entitled to vote with respect to any such matter.

   SECTION 2.8. INSPECTORS OF ELECTION. In advance of any meeting of
stockholders, the Directors may appoint Inspectors of Election to act at the
meeting or any adjournment thereof. If Inspectors of Election are not so
appointed, the chairman of any meeting of stockholders may, and on the
request of any stockholder or his proxy shall, appoint Inspectors of Election
of the meeting. In case any person appointed as Inspector fails to appear or
fails or refuses to act, the vacancy may be filled by appointment made by the
Directors in advance of the convening of the meeting or at the meeting by the
person acting as chairman. The Inspectors of Election shall determine the
number of shares of stock outstanding, the shares of stock represented at the
meeting, the existence of a quorum, the authenticity, validity and effect of
proxies, shall receive votes, ballots or consents, shall hear and determine
all challenges and questions in any way arising in connection with the right
to vote, shall count and tabulate all votes or consents, determine the
results, and do such other acts as may be proper to conduct the election or
vote with fairness to all stockholders. On request of the chairman of the
meeting or of any stockholder or his proxy, the Inspectors of Election shall
make a report in writing of any challenge or question or matter determined by
them and shall execute a certificate of any facts found by them.

   SECTION 2.9. ACTION BY STOCKHOLDERS WITHOUT MEETING. Except as otherwise
provided by law, the provisions of these By-Laws relating to notices and
meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, any action required or permitted to
be taken at any meeting of stockholders may be taken without a meeting if a
consent in writing setting forth the action shall be signed by all the
stockholders entitled to vote upon the action and such consent shall be filed
with the records of the Corporation.

   SECTION 2.10. PRESENCE AT MEETINGS. Presence at meetings of stockholders
requires physical attendance by the stockholder or his or her proxy at the
meeting site and does not encompass attendance by telephonic or other
electronic means.

                                 ARTICLE III

                                  DIRECTORS

   SECTION 3.1. NUMBER AND TERM. The Board of Directors shall consist of not
less than three (3) and not more than fifteen (15) directors, the number of
directors to be fixed from time to time within the above-specified limits by
the affirmative vote of a majority of the whole Board of Directors. At the
first annual meeting of stockholders and at each meeting thereafter called
for the purpose of electing directors, the stockholders shall elect directors
to hold office until their successors are elected and qualify. Directors need
not be stockholders of the Corporation.

                                        2
<PAGE>

   SECTION 3.2. POWERS. The business of the Corporation shall be managed by
the Board of Directors which may exercise all powers of the Corporation and
do all lawful acts and things which are not by law or by the Charter of the
Corporation, or by these By-Laws, directed or required to be exercised or
done exclusively by the stockholders.

   SECTION 3.3. ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS. The first meeting of each newly
elected Board of Directors for the purposes of organization and the election
of officers and otherwise shall be held at such time and place as shall be
specified in a notice given as hereinafter provided for special meetings of
the Board of Directors, or as shall be specified in a written waiver signed
by all directors.

   SECTION 3.4. REGULAR MEETINGS. Regular meetings of the Board of Directors
may be held at such time and place as shall be determined from time to time
by the Board of Directors without further notice.

   SECTION 3.5. SPECIAL MEETINGS. Special meetings of the Board of Directors
may be called at any time by the President and shall be called by such
President or the Secretary upon the written request of any two (2) directors.

   SECTION 3.6. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETINGS. Written notice of special
meetings of the Board of Directors, stating the place, date and time thereof,
shall be given not less than two (2) days before such meeting to each
director, personally, by telegram, by mail, or by leaving such notice at his
place of residence or usual place of business. If mailed, such notice shall
be deemed to be given when deposited in the United States mail, postage
prepaid, directed to the director at his address as it appears on the records
of the Corporation.

   SECTION 3.7. TELEPHONE MEETINGS. Any member or members of the Board of
Directors or of any committee designated by the Board, may participate in a
meeting of the Board, or any such committee, as the case may be, by means of
a conference telephone or similar communications equipment if all persons
participating in the meeting can hear each other at the same time.
Participation in a meeting by these means constitutes presence in person at
the meeting. This Section 3.7 shall not be applicable to meetings held for
the purpose of voting in respect of approval of contracts or agreements
whereby a person undertakes to serve or act as investment adviser of, or
principal underwriter for, the Corporation, or in respect of other matters as
to which the Investment Company Act of 1940 requires a vote cast in person.

   SECTION 3.8. QUORUM, VOTING AND ADJOURNMENT OF MEETINGS. At all meetings
of the Board of Directors, a majority of the whole Board shall be requisite
to and shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. If a quorum
is present, the affirmative vote of a majority of the directors present shall
be the act of the Board of Directors, unless the concurrence of a greater
proportion is expressly required for such action by law, the Charter of the
Corporation or these By-Laws. If at any meeting of the Board there be less
than a quorum present, the directors present thereat may adjourn the meeting
from time to time, without notice other than announcement at the meeting
until a quorum shall have been obtained.

   SECTION 3.9. REMOVAL. Any one or more of the directors may be removed,
either with or without cause, at any time, by the affirmative vote of the
stockholders holding a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote
for the election of directors. (For purposes of determining the circumstances
and procedures under which such removal of directors may take place, the
provisions of Section 16(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 shall be
applicable to the same extent as if the Corporation were subject to the
provisions of that Section.) The successor or successors of any director or
directors so removed may be elected by the stockholders entitled to vote
thereon at the same meeting to fill any resulting vacancies for the unexpired
term of removed directors. Except as provided by law, pending, or in the
absence of, such an election, the successor or successors of any director or
directors so removed may be chosen by the Board of Directors.

   SECTION 3.10. VACANCIES. Except as otherwise provided by law, any vacancy
occurring in the Board of Directors and newly created directorships resulting
from an increase in the authorized number of directors may be filled by the
vote of a majority of the directors then in office or, if only one director
shall then be in office, by such director. A director elected by the Board of
Directors to fill a vacancy shall be elected to hold office until the next
annual meeting of stockholders or until his successor is elected and
qualifies.


                                        3
<PAGE>

   SECTION 3.11. ACTION BY DIRECTORS WITHOUT MEETING. The provisions of these
By-Laws covering notices and meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, and
except as required by law, any action required or permitted to be taken at
any meeting of the Board of Directors may be taken without a meeting if a
consent in writing setting forth the action shall be signed by all of the
directors entitled to vote upon the action and such written consent is filed
with the minutes of proceedings of the Board of Directors.

   SECTION 3.12. EXPENSES AND FEES. Each director may be allowed expenses, if
any, for attendance at each regular or special meeting of the Board of
Directors and shall receive for services rendered as a director of the
Corporation such compensation as may be fixed by the Board of Directors.
Nothing herein contained shall be construed to preclude any director from
serving the Corporation in any other capacity and receiving compensation
therefor.

   SECTION 3.13. EXECUTION OF INSTRUMENTS AND DOCUMENTS AND SIGNING OF CHECKS
AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS AND TRANSFERS. All instruments, documents and other
papers shall be executed in the name and on behalf of the Corporation and all
checks, notes, drafts and other obligations for the payment of money by the
Corporation shall be signed, and all transfer of securities standing in the
name of the Corporation shall be executed, by the President, any Vice
President or the Treasurer or by any one or more officers or agents of the
Corporation as shall be designated for that purpose by vote of the Board of
Directors; notwithstanding the above, nothing in this Section 3.13 shall be
deemed to preclude the electronic authorization, by designated persons, of
the Corporation's Custodian (as described herein in Section 10.1) to transfer
assets of the Corporation, as provided for herein in Section 10.1.

   SECTION 3.14. CONTRACTS. Except as otherwise provided by law or by the
Charter of the Corporation, no contract or transaction between the
Corporation and any partnership or corporation, and no act of the
Corporation, shall in any way be affected or invalidated by the fact that any
officer or director of the Corporation is pecuniarily or otherwise interested
therein or is a member, officer or director of such interest shall be known
to the Board of Directors of the Corporation. Specifically, but without
limitation of the foregoing, the Corporation may enter into one or more
contracts appointing Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. investment manager of the
Corporation, and may otherwise do business with Dean Witter InterCapital
Inc., notwithstanding the fact that one or more of the directors of the
Corporation and some or all of its officers are, have been or may become
directors, officers, members, employees, or stockholders of Dean Witter
InterCapital Inc.; and in the absence of fraud, the Corporation and Dean
Witter InterCapital Inc. may deal freely with each other, and neither such
contract appointing Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. investment manager to the
Corporation nor any other contract or transaction between the Corporation and
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. shall be invalidated or in any wise affected
thereby, nor shall any director or officer of the Corporation by reason
thereof be liable to the Corporation or to any stockholder or creditor of the
Corporation or to any other person for any loss incurred under or by reason
of any such contract or transaction. For purposes of this paragraph, any
reference to "Dean Witter InterCapital Inc." shall be deemed to include said
company and any parent, subsidiary or affiliate of said company and any
successor (by merger, consolidation or otherwise) to said company or any such
parent, subsidiary or affiliate.

   SECTION 3.15. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES AND
AGENTS. (a) The Corporation shall indemnify any person who was or is a party
or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending, or completed
action, suit, or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative, or
investigative (other than an action by or in the right of the Corporation) by
reason of the fact that he is or was a director, officer, employee or agent
of the Corporation. The indemnification shall be against judgments,
penalties, fines, settlements and reasonable expenses, including attorneys'
fees, actually incurred in connection with the proceeding, unless it is
established that: (i) the act or omission of the director was material to the
matter giving rise to the proceeding; and (A) was committed in bad faith, or
(B) was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty; or (ii) the director
actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property, or
services, or (iii) in the case of any criminal proceeding, the director had
reasonable cause to believe that the act or omission was unlawful. Officers,
employees, and agents of the Corporation are entitled to indemnification and
the advancement of expenses to the same extent as directors. The termination
of any action, suit, or proceeding by judgment, order or settlement, shall
not,


                                        4
<PAGE>

of itself, create a presumption that the person did not meet the requisite
standard of conduct set forth above. The termination of any proceeding by
conviction, a plea of nolo contendere or its equivalent, or an entry of an
order of probation prior to judgment, creates a rebuttable presumption that
the person did not meet the requisite standard of conduct.

   (b) The Corporation shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action
or suit by or on behalf of the Corporation to obtain a judgment or decree in
its favor by reason of the fact that he is or was a director, officer,
employee, or agent of the Corporation. The indemnification shall be against
judgments, penalties, fines, settlements and reasonable expenses, including
attorney's fees, actually incurred in connection with the proceeding, if he
met the standard of conduct set forth in paragraph (a) above, except that no
indemnification shall be made in respect of any proceeding as to which the
person has been adjudged to be liable to the Corporation, except to the
extent that a court of appropriate jurisdiction determines upon application
of that person that, despite the failure to meet the requisite standard of
conduct or an actual adjudication of liability, but in view of all relevant
circumstances of the case, the person is fairly and reasonably entitled to
indemnity for those expenses which the court shall deem proper, provided such
director or officer is not adjudged to be liable by reason of his willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties
involved in the conduct of his office.

   (c) To the extent that a director, officer, employee, or agent of the
Corporation has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any
action, suit or proceeding referred to in subsection (a) or (b) or in defense
of any claim, issue or matter therein, he shall be indemnified against
expenses, including attorneys' fees, actually and reasonably incurred by him
in connection therewith.

   (d)(1) Unless a court orders otherwise, any indemnification under
subsection (a) or (b) of this section may be made by the Corporation only as
authorized in the specific case after a determination that indemnification of
the director, officer, employee, or agent is proper in the circumstances
because he has met the applicable standard of conduct set forth in subsection
(a) or (b).

      (2) The determination shall be made:

        (i) By the Board of Directors, by a majority vote of a quorum which
     consists of directors who were not parties to the action ("non-party
     directors"), suit or proceeding; or if a quorum of non-party directors
     is not obtainable, by a majority vote of a committee of at least two
     non-party directors; or

       (ii) If the required quorum is not obtainable, or if a quorum of
     disinterested directors so directs, by independent legal counsel in a
     written opinion; or

      (iii) By the stockholders.

      (3) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
subsection (d), no person shall be entitled to indemnification for any
liability, whether or not there is an adjudication of liability, arising by
reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless
disregard of duties as described in Sections 17(h) and (i) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended ("disabling conduct"). A person shall be
deemed not liable by reason of disabling conduct if, either:

       (i) a final decision on the merits is made by a court or other body
     before whom the proceeding was brought that the person to be indemnified
     ("indemnitee") was not liable by reason of disabling conduct; or

      (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination,
     based upon a review of the facts, that the indemnitee was not liable by
     reason of disabling conduct, is made by either--

          (A) a majority of a quorum of directors who are neither "interested
         persons" of the Corporation, as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the
         Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, nor parties to the
         action, suit or proceeding, or

          (B) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.


                                        5
<PAGE>

   (e) Expenses, including attorneys' fees, incurred by a director, officer,
employee or agent of the Corporation in defending a civil or criminal action,
suit or proceeding may be paid by the Corporation in advance of the final
disposition thereof if:

    (1) authorized in the specific case by the Board of Directors; and

    (2) the Corporation receives an undertaking by or on behalf of the
   director, officer, employee or agent of the Corporation to repay the
   advance if it is not ultimately determined that such person is entitled to
   be indemnified by the Corporation; and

    (3) either

          (i) such person provides a security for his undertaking, or

         (ii) the Corporation is insured against losses by reason of any
       lawful advances, or

        (iii) a determination, based on a review of readily available facts,
       that there is reason to believe that such person ultimately will be
       found entitled to indemnification, is made by either--

            (A) a majority of a quorum which consists of directors who are
           neither "interested persons" of the Corporation, as defined in
           Section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
           amended, nor parties to the action, suit or proceeding, or

            (B) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.

   (f) The indemnification provided by this Section shall not be deemed
exclusive of any other rights to which a person may be entitled under any
by-law, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or
otherwise, both as to action in his official capacity and as to action in
another capacity while holding the office, and shall continue as to a person
who has ceased to be a director, officer, employee, or agent and inure to the
benefit of the heirs, executors and administrators of such person.

   (g) The Corporation may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any
person who is or was a director, officer, employee, or agent of the
Corporation, against any liability asserted against him and incurred by him
in any such capacity, or arising out of his status as such. However, in no
event will the Corporation pay for that portion of the premium, if any, for
insurance to indemnify any officer or director against liability for any act
for which the Corporation itself is not permitted to indemnify him.

   (h) Nothing contained in this Section shall be construed to protect any
director or officer of the Corporation against any liability to the
Corporation or to its security holders to which he would otherwise be subject
by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless
disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his office.

   (i) Any indemnification of, or advance of expenses to, a director in
accordance with this Section, if arising out of a proceeding by or in the
right of the Corporation, shall be reported in writing to the shareholders
with the notice of the next stockholders' meeting or prior to the meeting.

                                  ARTICLE IV

                                  COMMITTEES

   SECTION 4.1. EXECUTIVE AND OTHER COMMITTEES.  The Board of Directors, by
resolution adopted by a majority of the whole Board, may designate an
Executive Committee and/or other committees, each committee to consist of two
(2) or more of the directors of the Corporation and may delegate to such
committees, in the intervals between meetings of the Board of Directors, any
or all of the powers of the Board of Directors in the management of the
business and affairs of the Corporation, except the power to: declare
dividends or distributions of stock; issue stock; recommend to stockholders
any action requiring stockholder approval; amend the By-Laws of the
Corporation; or approve any merger or share exchange which does not require
shareholder approval. In the absence of any member of any such committee, the
members thereof present at any meeting, whether or not they constitute a
quorum, may appoint a member of the Board of Directors to act in place of
such absent member. Each such committee shall keep a record of its
proceedings.


                                        6
<PAGE>

   The Executive Committee and any other committee shall fix its own rules or
procedure, but the presence of at least fifty percent (50%) of the members of
the whole committee shall in each case be necessary to constitute a quorum of
the committee and the affirmative vote of the majority of the members of the
committee present at the meeting shall be necessary to take action.

   All actions of the Executive Committee shall be reported to the Board of
Directors at the meeting thereof next succeeding to the taking of such
action.

   SECTION 4.2. ADVISORY COMMITTEE. The Board of Directors may appoint an
advisory committee which shall be composed of persons who do not serve the
Corporation in any other capacity and which shall have advisory functions
with respect to the investments, business or activities of the Corporation as
may be delegated to it, but which shall have no power to determine that any
security or other investment shall be purchased, sold or otherwise disposed
of by the Corporation, or to take action by or in the name of the
Corporation. The number of persons constituting any such advisory committee
shall be determined from time to time by the Board of Directors. The members
of any such advisory committee may receive compensation for their services
and may be allowed such fees and expenses for the attendance at meetings as
the Board of Directors may from time to time determine to be appropriate.

   SECTION 4.3. COMMITTEE ACTION WITHOUT MEETING. The provisions of these
By-Laws covering notices and meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, and
except as required by law, any action required or permitted to be taken at
any meeting of any Committee of the Board appointed pursuant to Section 4.1
of these By-Laws may be taken without a meeting if a consent in writing
setting forth the action shall be signed by all members of the Committee
entitled to vote upon the action and such written consent is filed with the
records of the proceedings of the Committee.

                                  ARTICLE V

                                   OFFICERS

   SECTION 5.1. EXECUTIVE OFFICERS. The executive officers of the Corporation
shall be a Chairman of the Board, a President, one or more Vice Presidents, a
Secretary and a Treasurer. The Board of Directors may also elect one or more
Assistant Vice Presidents, Assistant Secretaries and Assistant Treasurers and
may elect, or may delegate to the President the power to appoint, such other
officers and agents as the Board of Directors shall at any time or from time
to time deem advisable. The Chairman of the Board shall be selected from
among the directors but none of the other executive officers need be a member
of the Board of Directors. Two or more offices, except those of President and
any Vice President, may be held by the same person, but no officer shall
execute, acknowledge or verify any instrument in more than one capacity. The
executive officers of the Corporation shall be elected by the Board of
Directors.

   SECTION 5.2. TERM, REMOVAL AND VACANCIES. Each officer of the Corporation
shall hold office until his successor is elected and has qualified. Any
officer or agent of the Corporation may be removed by the Board of Directors
whenever, in its judgment, the best interests of the Corporation will be
served thereby, but such removal shall be without prejudice to the
contractual rights, if any, of the person so removed.

   SECTION 5.3. COMPENSATION OF OFFICERS. The compensation of officers and
agents of the Corporation shall be fixed by the Board of Directors, or by the
President to the extent provided by the Board of Directors with respect to
officers appointed by the President.

   SECTION 5.4. POWER AND DUTIES. All officers and agents of the Corporation,
as between themselves and the Corporation, shall have such authority and
perform such duties in the management of the Corporation as may be provided
in or pursuant to these By-Laws, or, to the extent not so provided, as may be
prescribed by the Board of Directors; provided, that no rights of any third
party shall be affected or impaired by any such By-Law or resolution of the
Board unless he has knowledge thereof.

   SECTION 5.5. THE CHAIRMAN. The Chairman, if any, or in his absence the
President, shall preside at all meetings of the stockholders and of the Board
of Directors; and he shall perform such other duties as the Board of
Directors may from time to time prescribe.


                                        7
<PAGE>

   SECTION 5.6. THE PRESIDENT. The President shall be the chief executive
officer of the Corporation; he shall have general and active management of
the business of the Corporation, shall see that all orders and resolutions of
the Board of Directors are carried into effect, and, in connection therewith,
shall be authorized to delegate to one or more Vice Presidents such of his
powers and duties at such times and in such manner as he may deem advisable.

   In the absence of the Chairman, the President shall preside at all
meetings of the stockholders and the Board of Directors; and he shall perform
such other duties as the Board of Directors may, from time to time,
prescribe.

   SECTION 5.7. THE VICE PRESIDENTS. The Vice Presidents shall be of such
number and shall have such titles as may be determined from time to time by
the Board of Directors. The Vice President, or, if there be more than one,
the Vice Presidents in the order of their seniority as may be determined from
time to time by the Board of Directors shall, in the absence or disability of
the President, exercise the powers and perform the duties of that officer;
and he or they shall perform such other duties as the Board of Directors may
from time to time prescibe.

   SECTION 5.8. THE ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENTS. The Assistant Vice President,
or, if there be more than one, the Assistant Vice Presidents, shall perform
such duties and have such powers as may be assigned them from time to time by
the Board of Directors or the President.

   SECTION 5.9. THE SECRETARY. The Secretary shall attend all meetings of the
Board of Directors and all meetings of the stockholders and record all the
proceedings of the meetings of the stockholders and of the Board of Directors
in a book to be kept for that purpose, and shall perform like duties for the
standing committees when required. He shall give, or cause to be given,
notice of all meetings of the stockholders and special meetings of the Board
of Directors, and shall perform such other duties and have such powers as the
Board of Directors, may from time to time prescribe. He shall keep in safe
custody the seal of the Corporation and affix or cause the same to be affixed
to any instrument requiring it, and, when so affixed, it shall be attested by
his signature.

   SECTION 5.10. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES. The Assistant Secretary, or, if
there be more than one, the Assistant Secretaries in the order determined by
the Board of Directors or the President, shall in the absence or disability
of the Secretary, perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Secretary
and shall perform such duties and have such other powers as the Board of
Directors or the President may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 5.11. THE TREASURER. The Treasurer shall be the chief financial
officer of the Corporation. He shall keep or cause to be kept full and
accurate accounts or receipts and disbursements in books belonging to the
Corporation, and he shall render to the Board of Directors whenever any of
them require it, an account of his transactions as Treasurer and of the
financial condition of the Corporation; and he shall perform such other
duties as the Board of Directors may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 5.12. THE ASSISTANT TREASURERS. The Assistant Treasurer, or, if
there shall be more than one, the Assistant Treasurers in the order
determined by the Board of Directors or the President, shall, in the absence
or disability of the Treasurer, perform the duties and exercise the powers of
the Treasurer and shall perform such other duties and have such powers as the
Board of Directors, or the President, may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 5.13. DELEGATION OF DUTIES. Whenever an officer is absent or
disabled, or whenever for any reason the Board of Directors may deem it
desirable, the Board may delegate the powers and duties of an officer to any
other officer or officers or to any Director or Directors.

                                  ARTICLE VI

                                CAPITAL STOCK

   SECTION 6.1. ISSUANCE OF STOCK. The Corporation shall not issue its shares
of capital stock except as approved by the Board of Directors.


                                        8
<PAGE>

   SECTION 6.2. CERTIFICATES OF STOCK. Certificates for shares of each class
of the capital stock of the Corporation shall be in such form and of such
design as the Board of Directors shall approve, subject to the right of the
Board of Directors to change such form and design at any time or from time to
time, and shall be entered in the books of the Corporation as they are
issued. Each such certificate shall bear a distinguishing number; shall
exhibit the holder's name and certify the number of full shares owned by such
holder; shall be signed by or in the name of the Corporation by the
President, or a Vice President or an Assistant Vice President, and
countersigned by the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary or the Treasurer of
the Corporation; shall be sealed with the corporate seal; and shall contain
such recitals as may be required by law. Where any stock certificate is
signed by a Transfer Agent or by a Registrar, the signature of such corporate
officers and the corporate seal may be facsimile, printed or engraved. The
Corporation may, at its option, defer the issuance of a certificate or
certificates to evidence shares of capital stock owned of record by any
stockholder until such time as demand therefor shall be made upon the
Corporation or its Transfer Agent, but upon the making of such demand each
stockholder shall be entitled to such certificate or certificates.

   In case any officer or officers who shall have signed, or whose facsimile
signature or signatures shall appear on, any such certificate or certificates
shall cease to be such officer or officers of the Corporation, whether
because of death, resignation or otherwise, before such certificate or
certificates shall have been delivered by the Corporation, such certificate
or certificates shall, nevertheless, be adopted by the Corporation and be
issued and delivered as though the person or persons who signed such
certificate or certificates or whose facsimile signature or signatures shall
appear therein had not ceased to be such officer or officers of the
Corporation.

   No certificate shall be issued for any share of stock until such share is
fully paid.

   SECTION 6.3. TRANSFER OF STOCK. Transfers of shares of the capital stock
of the Corporation shall be made only on the books of the Corporation by the
holder thereof, or by his attorney thereunto duly authorized by a power of
attorney duly executed and filed with the Corporation or a Transfer Agent of
the Corporation, if any, upon written request in proper form if no share
certificate has been issued, or in the event such certificate has been
issued, upon presentation and surrender in proper form of said certificate.

   SECTION 6.4. RECORD DATE. The Board of Directors may fix in advance a date
as the record date for the purpose of determining stockholders entitled to
notice of, or to vote at, any meeting of stockholders, or stockholders
entitled to receive payment of any dividend or the allotment of any rights,
or in order to make a determination of stockholders for any other purpose.
Such date, in any case shall be not more than ninety (90) days, and in case
of a meeting of stockholders not less than ten (10) days prior to the date on
which particular action requiring such determination of stockholders is to be
taken. In lieu of fixing a record date the Board of Directors may provide
that the stock transfer books shall be closed for a stated period but not to
exceed, in any case, twenty (20) days. If the stock transfer books are closed
for the purpose of determining stockholders entitled to notice of a vote at a
meeting of stockholders, such books shall be closed for at least ten (10)
days immediately preceding such meeting.

   SECTION 6.5. LOST, STOLEN, DESTROYED AND MULTILATED CERTIFICATES. The
Board of Directors may direct a new certificate or certificates to be issued
in place of any certificate or certificates theretofore issued by the
Corporation alleged to have been lost, stolen or destroyed, upon satisfactory
proof of such loss, theft, or destruction; and the Board of Directors may, in
its discretion, require the owner of the lost, stolen or destroyed
certificate, or his legal representative, to give to the Corporation and to
such Registrar, Transfer Agent and/or Transfer Clerk as may be authorized or
required to countersign such new certificate or certificates, a bond in such
sum and of such type as they may direct, and with such surety or sureties, as
they may direct, as indemnity against any claim that may be against them or
any of them on account of or in connection with the alleged loss, theft or
destruction of any such certificate.

   SECTION 6.6. REGISTERED OWNERS OF STOCK. The Corporation shall be entitled
to recognize the exclusive right of a person registered on its books as the
owner of shares of stock to receive dividends, and to vote as such owner, and
to hold liable for calls and assessments a person registered on its books as
the


                                        9
<PAGE>

owner of shares of stock, and shall not be bound to recognize any equitable
or other claim to or interest in such share or shares on the part of any
other person, whether or not it shall have express or other notice thereof,
except as otherwise provided by the laws of Maryland.

   SECTION 6.7. FRACTIONAL DENOMINATIONS. Subject to any applicable
provisions of law and the Charter of the Corporation, the Corporation may
issue shares of its capital stock in fractional denominations, provided that
the transactions in which and the terms and conditions upon which shares in
fractional denominations may be issued may from time to time be limited or
determined by or under the authority of the Board of Directors.

                                 ARTICLE VII

                                SALE OF STOCK

   SECTION 7.1. SALE OF STOCK. Upon the sale of each share of its Common
Stock, except as otherwise permitted by applicable laws and regulations, the
Corporation shall receive in cash or in securities valued as provided in
Article VIII of these By-Laws, not less than the current net asset value
thereof, exclusive of any distributing commission or discount, and in no
event less than the par value thereof.

   SECTION 7.2. REDEMPTION OF STOCK. Subject to and in accordance with any
applicable laws and regulations and any applicable provisions of the
Corporation's Articles of Incorporation, the Corporation shall redeem all
outstanding shares of its capital stock duly delivered or offered for
redemption by any registered stockholder in a manner prescribed by or under
authority of the Board of Directors. Any shares so delivered or offered for
redemption shall be redeemed at a redemption price prescribed by the Board of
Directors in accordance with applicable laws and regulations; provided that
in no event shall such price be less than the applicable net asset value of
such shares as determined in accordance with the provisions of Article VIII
of these By-Laws. The Corporation may redeem, at current net asset value,
shares not offered for redemption held by any shareholder whose shares have a
value of less than $100, or such lesser amount as may be fixed by the Board
of Directors; provided that before the Corporation redeems such shares it
must notify the shareholder that the value of his shares is less than $100
and allow him 60 days to make an additional investment in an amount which
will increase the value of his account to $100 or more. The Corporation shall
pay redemption prices in cash.

                                 ARTICLE VIII

                DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE; VALUATION OF
                    PORTFOLIO SECURITIES AND OTHER ASSETS

   SECTION 8.1. NET ASSET VALUE. The net asset value of a share of Common
Stock of the Corporation shall be determined in accordance with applicable
laws and regulations under the supervision of such persons and at such time
or times as shall from time to time be prescribed by the Board of Directors.
Each such determination shall be made by subtracting from the value of the
assets of the Corporation (as determined pursuant to Section 8.2 of these
By-Laws) the amount of its liabilities, dividing the remainder by the number
of shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding, and adjusting the results
to the nearest full cent per share.

   SECTION 8.2. VALUATION OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES AND OTHER ASSETS. Except as
otherwise required by any applicable law or regulation of any regulatory
agency having jurisdiction over the activities of the Corporation, the
Corporation shall determine the value of its portfolio securities and other
assets as follows:

      (a) securities for which market quotations are readily available shall
    be valued at current market value determined in such manner as the Board
    of Directors may from time to time prescribe;

      (b) all other securities and assets shall be valued at amounts deemed
    best to reflect their fair value as determined in good faith by or under
    the supervision of such persons and at such time or times as shall from
    time to time be prescribed by the Board of Directors.


                                       10
<PAGE>

   All quotations, sale prices, bid and asked prices and other information
shall be obtained from such sources as the persons making such determination
believe to be reliable and any determination of net asset value based thereon
shall be conclusive.

                                  ARTICLE IX

                         DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

   Subject to any applicable provisions of law and the Charter of the
Corporation, dividends and distributions upon the Common Stock of the
Corporation may be declared at such intervals as the Board of Directors may
determine, in cash, in securities or other property, or in shares of stock of
the Corporation, from any sources permitted by law, all as the Board of
Directors shall from time to time determine.

   Inasmuch as the computation of net income and net profits from the sale of
securities or other properties for federal income tax purposes may vary from
the computation thereof on the books of the Corporation, the Board of
Directors shall have power, in its discretion, to distribute as income
dividends and as capital gain distributions, respectively, amounts sufficient
to enable the Corporation to avoid or reduce liability for federal income
taxes.

                                  ARTICLE X

                                  CUSTODIAN

   SECTION 10.1. APPOINTMENT AND DUTIES. The Corporation shall at all times
employ a bank or trust company having the qualifications specified by the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as custodian with authority as
its agent, but subject to such restrictions, limitations and other
requirements, if any, as may be contained in these By-Laws and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended:

      (1) to receive and hold the securities owned by the Corporation and
    deliver the same upon written or electronically transmitted order;

      (2) to receive and receipt for any moneys due to the Corporation and
    deposit the same in its own banking department or elsewhere as the
    Directors may direct;

      (3) to distribute such funds upon orders or vouchers;

      (4) to keep the books and accounts of the Corporation and furnish
    clerical and accounting services;

      (5) to compute the net income of the Corporation and the net asset value
    of the Corporation and its shares;

all upon such basis of compensation as may be agreed upon between the
Directors and the custodian. If so directed by a vote of a majority of the
shares of stock outstanding, the custodian shall deliver and pay over all
property of the Corporation held by it as specified in such vote.

   The Board of Directors may also authorize the custodian to employ one or
more sub-custodians from time to time to perform such of the acts and
services of the custodian and upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed
upon between the custodian and such sub-custodian and approved by the Board
of Directors.

   SECTION 10.2. CENTRAL CERTIFICATE SYSTEM. Subject to such rules,
regulations and orders as the Commission may adopt, the Directors may direct
the custodian to deposit all or any part of the securities owned by the
Corporation in a system for the central handling of securities established by
a national securities exchange or a national securities association
registered with the Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or
such other person as may be permitted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, or otherwise in accordance with the Investment Company Act of
1940, pursuant to which system all securities of any particular class or
series of any issuer deposited within the system are treated as fungible and
may be transferred or pledged by bookkeeping entry without physical delivery
of such securities, provided that all such deposits shall be subject to
withdrawal only upon the order of the Corporation.


                                       11
<PAGE>

                                  ARTICLE XI

                              BOOKS AND RECORDS

   SECTION 11.1. LOCATION. The books and records of the Corporation may be
kept outside the State of Maryland at such place or places as the Board of
Directors may from time to time determine, except as otherwise required by
law.

   SECTION 11.2. STOCK LEDGERS. The Corporation shall maintain at the office
of its Transfer Agent an original stock ledger containing the names and
addresses of all stockholders and the number of shares held by each
stockholder. Such stock ledger may be in written form or any other form
capable of being converted into written form within a reasonable time for
visual inspection.

   SECTION 11.3. ANNUAL STATEMENT. The President or a Vice President or the
Treasurer shall prepare or cause to be prepared annually a full and correct
statement of the affairs of the Corporation, including a statement of assets
and liabilities and a statement of operations for the preceding fiscal year,
which shall be submitted at the annual meeting of stockholders if such
meeting be held, and shall be filed within twenty (20) days thereafter at the
principal office of the Corporation in the State of Maryland.

                                 ARTICLE XII

                               WAIVER OF NOTICE

   Whenever any notice of the time, place or purpose of any meeting of
stockholders, directors, or of any committee is required to be given under
the provisions of the statute or under the provisions of the Charter of the
Corporation or these By-Laws, a waiver thereof in writing, signed by the
person or persons entitled to such notice and filed with the records of the
meeting, whether before or after the holding thereof, or actual attendance at
the meeting of Directors or committee in person, shall be deemed equivalent
to the giving of such notice to such person.

                                 ARTICLE XIII

                                MISCELLANEOUS

   SECTION 13.1. SEAL. The Board of Directors shall adopt a corporate seal,
which shall be in the form of a circle, and shall have inscribed thereon the
name of the Corporation, the year of its incorporation, and the words
"Corporate Seal--Maryland." Said seal may be used by causing it or a
facsimile thereof to be impressed or affixed or reproduced or otherwise.

   SECTION 13.2. FISCAL YEAR. The fiscal year of the Corporation shall end on
such date as the Board of Directors may by resolution specify, and the Board
of Directors may by resolution change such date for future fiscal years at
any time and from time to time.

   SECTION 13.3. ORDERS FOR PAYMENT OF MONEY. All orders or instructions for
the payment of money of the Corporation, and all notes or other evidences of
indebtedness issued in the name of the Corporation, shall be signed by such
officer or officers or such other person or persons as the Board of Directors
may from time to time designate, or as may be specified in or pursuant to the
agreement between the Corporation and the bank or trust company appointed as
Custodian of the securities and funds of the Corporation.

                                 ARTICLE XIV

                     COMPLIANCE WITH FEDERAL REGULATIONS

   The Board of Directors is hereby empowered to take such action as they may
deem to be necessary, desirable or appropriate so that the Corporation is or
shall be in compliance with any federal or state statute, rule or regulation
with which compliance by the Corporation is required.


                                       12
<PAGE>

                                  ARTICLE XV

                                  AMENDMENTS

   These By-Laws may be amended, altered, or repealed at any annual or
special meeting of the stockholders by the affirmative vote of the holders of
a majority of the shares of capital stock of the Corporation issued and
outstanding and entitled to vote, provided notice of the general purpose of
the proposed amendment, alteration or repeal is given in the notice of said
meeting; or, at any meeting of the Board of Directors, by a vote of a
majority of the whole Board of Directors, provided, however, that any By-Law
or amendment or alteration of the By-Laws adopted by the Board of Directors
may be amended, altered or repealed and any By-Law repealed by the Board of
Directors may be reinstated, by vote of the stockholders of the Corporation.


                                       13


<PAGE>


CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS




We hereby consent to the use in the Statement of Additional Information 
constituting part of this Post-Effective Amendment No. 7 to the Registration 
Statement on Form N-1A (the "Registration Statement") of our report dated 
December 17, 1996, relating to the financial statements and financial 
highlights of Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund, which appears in such 
Statement of Additional Information, and to the incorporation by reference of 
our report into the Prospectus which constitutes part of this Registration 
Statement. We also consent to the reference to us under the heading "Financial 
Highlights" in such Prospectus and to the references to us under the headings 
"Independent Accountants" and "Experts" in the Statement of Additional
Information.


/s/ PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
December 17, 1996








<PAGE>

                   SCHEDULE OF COMPUTATION OF YIELD QUOTATION
                             DW GLOBAL SHORT TERM 
                         30 day Yield as of 10/31/96




                                   6
     YIELD = 2{ [ ((a-b)/c * d) + 1] -1}



     WHERE:     a = Dividends and interest earned during the period

                b = Expenses accrued for the period

                c = The average daily number of shares outstanding
                    during the period that were entitled to receive
                    dividends

                d = The maximum offering price per share on the last
                    day of the period


                                                                    6
     YIELD = 2{ [(( 475561.31-136411.65)/8787128.68*9.395080)+1] -1}

          =    4.980661
<PAGE>

               SCHEDULE FOR COMPUTATIONS OF PERFORMANCE QUOTATIONS
                          GLOBAL SHORT TERM INCOME FUND




(A) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS (I.E. STANDARDIZED COMPUTATIONS)
                     _                              _
                    |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:            |       |                        |
                    |  /\ n |         ERV            |
               T  = |    \  |    -------------       |  - 1
                    |     \ |          P             |
                    |      \|                        |
                    |_                              _|

          T = AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN
          n = NUMBER OF YEARS
          ERV = ENDING REDEEMABLE VALUE
          P = INITIAL INVESTMENT

                                                                  (A)
  $1,000        ERV AS OF      AGGREGATE      NUMBER OF     AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P    31-Oct-96    TOTAL RETURN     YEARS - n    TOTAL RETURN - T
- ------------    ---------    ------------     ---------    ----------------
 31-Oct-95      $1,096.60        9.66%          1.00             9.66%

 31-Oct-91      $1,333.90       33.39%          5.00             5.93%

 01-Nov-90      $1,433.90       43.39%          6.00             6.19%


(B) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITHOUT DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE
    SALES CHARGE  (NON STANDARD COMPUTATIONS)

(C) TOTAL RETURN WITHOUT DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE
    (NON STANDARD COMPUTATIONS)

                     _                              _
                    |        ___________________     |
FORMULA:            |       |                        |
                    |  /\ n |         EV             |
               t =  |    \  |    -------------       |  - 1
                    |     \ |         P              |
                    |      \|                        |
                    |_                              _|



                        EV
               TR = ----------    - 1
                        P



     t  = AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN
          (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)
     n  = NUMBER OF YEARS
     EV = ENDING VALUE (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)
     P  = INITIAL INVESTMENT
     TR = TOTAL RETURN (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)



                                  (C)                             (B)
  $1,000        EV AS OF         TOTAL        NUMBER OF     AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P    31-Oct-96     RETURN -TR      YEARS - n      TOTAL RETURN
- ------------    ---------     ----------      ---------     --------------
 31-Oct-95      $1,126.60       12.66%          1.00            12.66%

 31-Oct-91      $1,333.90       33.39%          5.00             5.93%

 01-Nov-90      $1,433.90       43.39%          5.999            6.19%

(D)  GROWTH OF $10,000
(E)  GROWTH OF $50,000
(F)  GROWTH OF $100,000

FORMULA:  G = (TR+1)*P
          G = GROWTH OF INITIAL INVESTMENT
          P = INITIAL INVESTMENT
          TR= TOTAL RETURN SINCE INCEPTION

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   (D)                      (E)                      (F)
               TOTAL          GROWTH OF                GROWTH OF                 GROWTH OF
INVESTED - P   RETURN - TR    $10,000 INVESTMENT -G    $50,000 INVESTMENT -G     $100,000 INVESTMENT -G
- ------------   -----------    ---------------------    ---------------------     ----------------------
<S>           <C>            <C>                      <C>                       <C>
01-Nov-90         43.39              $14,339                  $71,695                   $143,390
</TABLE>


<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
<ARTICLE> 6
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1996
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1996
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                       80,430,066
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                      81,568,703
<RECEIVABLES>                                3,500,461
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                 280,924
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                              85,350,088
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                     2,959,233
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                    1,765,374
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                          4,724,607
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                    81,864,831
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                        8,537,086
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                       12,026,267
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                    3,329,736
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                    (5,879,331)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                     1,310,245
<NET-ASSETS>                                80,625,481
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                            7,553,965
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                               1,523,542
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                      6,030,423
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                     4,923,619
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                    (157,589)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                       10,796,453
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                  (5,418,221)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                      9,251,527
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>               (13,089,159)
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                            348,451
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                    (26,313,355)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                  (7,964,339)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                      (121,077)
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                          504,723
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                              1,523,542
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                        91,767,804
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             8.89
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .61
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                            .48
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                             (.54)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.44
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.66
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>


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