DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
485BPOS, 1995-01-06
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<PAGE>
   
    AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON JANUARY 6, 1995
    

                                                      REGISTRATION NO.: 33-39598

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- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                                ----------------

                                   FORM N-1A
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                       UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933                      /X/
                       PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.                           / /
   
                        POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 4                       /X/
    
                                     AND/OR
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
                                 ACT OF 1940                                 /X/
   
                               AMENDMENT NO. 6                               /X/
    
                               ------------------

                        DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
                        (A MASSACHUSETTS BUSINESS TRUST)

               (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)
        ___ immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
   
        _X_ on January 11, 1995 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.  PURSUANT TO SECTION (B)(2)  OF RULE 24F-2, THE
REGISTRANT FILED A RULE 24F-2 NOTICE FOR ITS FISCAL YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,  1994
WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON DECEMBER 1, 1994.
    
           AMENDING THE PROSPECTUS AND UPDATING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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<PAGE>
                        DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST

                             CROSS-REFERENCE SHEET

                                   FORM N-1A

<TABLE>
<S>                                             <C>
ITEM                                                                           CAPTION
- ----------------------------------------------  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
PART A                                                                       PROSPECTUS
 1.  .........................................  Cover Page
 2.  .........................................  Summary of Fund Expenses; Prospectus Summary
 3.  .........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes
 4.  .........................................  Investment Objective and Policies; The Fund and its Management; Cover
                                                 Page; Investment Restrictions; Prospectus Summary
 5.  .........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Back Cover; Investment Objectives and
                                                 Policies
 6.  .........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes; Additional Information
 7.  .........................................  Purchase of Fund Shares; Shareholder Services
 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; Trustees and Officers
15.  .........................................  Trustees and Officers
16.  .........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Purchase of Fund Shares; Custodian and
                                                 Transfer Agent; Independent Accountants
17.  .........................................  Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage
18.  .........................................  Description of Shares; Validity of Shares of Beneficial Interest
19.  .........................................  Repurchase of Fund Shares; Redemptions and Repurchases; Statement of
                                                 Assets and Liabilities; Shareholder Services
20.  .........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes
21.  .........................................  The Distributor
22.  .........................................  Performance Information
23.  .........................................  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
   
              JANUARY 11, 1995
    

              Dean Witter Premier Income Trust (the "Fund") is an open-end,
diversified management investment company, whose investment objective is to earn
a high level of current income consistent with low volatility of principal. The
Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing primarily in high
quality fixed rate and adjustable rate mortgage-backed securities and other
asset-backed securities which either are issued or guaranteed by the United
States Government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or rated Aaa by Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. or AAA by Standard & Poor's Corporation or, if not
rated, determined to be of comparable quality. See "Investment Objective and
Policies."

   
               Shares of the Fund are offered at net asset value plus a sales
charge of 3.0% of the offering price, scaled down on purchases of $100,000 or
more. In addition, pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 Plan of Distribution under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Fund may reimburse the Distributor, in an
amount equal to payments not exceeding the annual rate of 0.20% of the average
daily net assets of the Fund, for specific expenses incurred in promoting the
distribution of the Fund's shares.
    

   
               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 January 11, 1995, 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 numbers 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/6
   Risk Considerations/13
Investment Restrictions/16
Purchase of Fund Shares/17
Shareholder Services/20
Redemptions and Repurchases/22
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes/23
Performance Information/24
Additional Information/25
    

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
    Premier Income Trust
    Two World Trade Center
    New York, New York 10048
    (212) 392-2550 or
    (800) 526-3143
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
<TABLE>
<S>                 <C>
The                 The Fund is organized as a Trust, commonly known as a Massachusetts business trust, and is an open-end,
Fund                diversified management investment company investing primarily in high-quality fixed rate and adjustable rate
                    mortgage-backed securities and in asset-backed securities.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares Offered      Shares of beneficial interest with $0.01 par value (see page 24).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offering            The price of the shares offered by this prospectus varies with the changes in the value of the Fund's
Price               investments. The offering price, determined once daily as of 4:00 p.m., New York time, on each day that the New
                    York Stock Exchange is open, is equal to the net asset value plus a sales charge of 3.0% of the offering price,
                    scaled down on purchases of $100,000 or over (see page 17).
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Minimum             Minimum initial investment, $1,000. Minimum subsequent investment, $100 (see page 17).
Purchase
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment          The investment objective of the Fund is to earn a high level of current income consistent with low volatility of
Objective           principal.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment Manager  Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital"), the Investment Manager of the Fund, and its wholly-owned
and                 subsidiary, Dean Witter Services Company Inc., serve in various investment management, advisory, management and
Sub-Advisor         administrative capacities to ninety investment companies and other portfolios with assets of approximately $67.8
                    billion at November 30, 1994. BlackRock Financial Management L.P. (the "Sub-Advisor") has been retained by the
                    Investment Manager to provide investment advice and manage the Fund's portfolio. The Sub-Advisor currently
                    serves as the investment adviser to fixed income investors in the United States and overseas through funds with
                    combined net assets in excess of $22 billion (see page 5).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fee      The Investment Manager receives a monthly fee at the annual rate of 0.50% of daily net assets. The Sub-Advisor
                    receives a monthly fee from the Investment Manager equal to 40% of the Investment Manager's monthly fee (see
                    page 5).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends           Income dividends are declared daily and paid monthly; capital gains distributions, if any, are paid at least
                    annually. Income dividends and capital gains distributions are automatically reinvested in additional shares at
                    net asset value unless the shareholder elects to receive cash.
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Plan of             The Fund is authorized to reimburse Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor") for specific expenses
Distribution        incurred in promoting the distribution of the Fund's shares pursuant to a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule
                    12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Reimbursement may in no event exceed an amount equal to payments
                    at the annual rate of 0.20 of 1% of average daily net assets of the Fund (see page 18). The Distributor also
                    receives a sales charge of 3% of the offering price.
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Special Risk        The net asset value of the Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes in the market value of its portfolio
Considerations      securities. Mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities have different characteristics than traditional debt
                    securities, primarily in that interest and principal payments are made more frequently, usually monthly, and
                    that principal may be prepaid at any time (see page 7). Mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities generally
                    decrease in value as a result of increases in interest rates and may benefit less than other fixed-income
                    securities from declining interest rates because of prepayment risks. The types of mortgage-backed securities in
                    which the Fund may invest include derivative products such as collateralized mortgage obligations and stripped
                    mortgage-backed securities, which are highly sensitive to changes in prepayment and interest rates and have
                    special characteristics and risks (see pages 8 and 9). Asset-backed securities involve certain risks not posed
                    by mortgage-backed securities, resulting mainly from the fact that asset-backed securities do not usually
                    contain the complete benefit of a security interest in the related collateral (see page 10). In addition, the
                    Fund may utilize certain investment techniques, including options and futures for hedging purposes, and the use
                    of leverage, including reverse repurchase agreements and dollar rolls, which entail additional risks (see pages
                    10-15).
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced Sales       Right of Accumulation; Letter of Intent; Automatic Investment of Dividends and Distributions; EasyInvestSM;
Charges and         Systematic Withdrawal Plan; Exchange Privilege (see pages 18-21).
Shareholder
Services
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    

  THE ABOVE IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING
                                   ELSEWHERE
        IN THIS PROSPECTUS AND 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
year ended October 31, 1994.
    

    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
the Fund will incur.

   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                    <C>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases
  (as a percentage of offering price)................................................        3.0%
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Reinvested Dividends.................................        None
Deferred Sales Charge................................................................       None
Redemption Fees......................................................................        None
Exchange Fee.........................................................................        None
ANNUAL FUND EXPENSES (AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fees......................................................................       0.50 %
12b-1 Fees*..........................................................................       0.18 %
Other Expenses.......................................................................       0.90 %
Total Fund Expenses..................................................................       1.58 %
<FN>
- ------------
* THE 12B-1 FEE IS CHARACTERIZED AS A SERVICE FEE WITHIN THE MEANING OF NATIONAL
  ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS, INC. ("NASD") GUIDELINES.
</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...............................................................   $      46    $      78    $     113    $     212
</TABLE>
    

    THE ABOVE  EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE  CONSIDERED A  REPRESENTATION OF  PAST  OR
FUTURE  EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES OF THE FUND MAY BE MORE 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" and "Purchase of Fund Shares."

    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 ratios and per share data  for a share of beneficial interest
outstanding throughout each  period and  the data relating  to debt  outstanding
have  been audited by  Price Waterhouse LLP,  independent accountants. This data
should be read in conjunction with the financial statements, 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           FOR THE PERIOD
                                                                      OCTOBER 31,              JULY 1, 1991*
                                                           ---------------------------------      THROUGH
                                                             1994       1993        1992      OCTOBER 31, 1991
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
<S>                                                        <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of period.....................      $9.18      $9.69        $9.95           $9.60
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
Net investment income....................................       0.54       0.73         0.71            0.26
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments...      (0.41)     (0.45)       (0.21)           0.37
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
Total from investment operations.........................       0.13       0.28         0.50            0.63
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
Less dividends and distributions from:
    Net investment income................................      (0.54)     (0.61)       (0.71)          (0.26  )
    Net realized gain on investments.....................     --          (0.18)       (0.05)          (0.02  )
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
Total dividends and distributions........................      (0.54)     (0.79)       (0.76)          (0.28  )
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
Net asset value, end of period...........................      $8.77      $9.18        $9.69           $9.95
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------
                                                           ---------  ---------  -----------  ----------------

TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+.................................       1.44%      2.87%        5.18%           6.41  %(1)
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period (in thousands).................    $43,875    $90,260     $154,860        $132,219
Ratios of expenses to average net assets:
  Operating expenses.....................................       1.24%      0.95%        0.99%           0.85  %(2)
  Interest expense.......................................       0.34%      0.65%        0.61%           0.84  %(2)
    Total expenses.......................................       1.58%      1.60%        1.60%           1.69  %(2)(3)
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets.....       5.32%      7.32%        7.05%           7.50  %(2)(3)
Portfolio turnover rate..................................        393%       412%         254%             91  %(1)
</TABLE>
    

   
- ------------
    
   
_*  COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS.
    
   
_+  DOES NOT REFLECT THE DEDUCTION OF SALES LOAD.
    
   
(1) NOT ANNUALIZED.
    
   
(2) ANNUALIZED.
    
   
(3) IF THE  FUND HAD  BORNE ALL  EXPENSES THAT  WERE ASSUMED  BY THE  INVESTMENT
    MANAGER, THE ABOVE ANNUALIZED EXPENSE RATIO WOULD HAVE BEEN 1.85% ($.065 PER
    SHARE)  AND THE ABOVE ANNUALIZED NET INVESTMENT INCOME RATIO WOULD HAVE BEEN
    7.34% ($.253 PER SHARE).
    

   
                         SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    

                                       4
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dean Witter Premier Income  Trust (the "Fund")  is an open-end,  diversified
management investment company. The Fund is a trust of the type commonly known as
a   "Massachusetts  business  trust"  and  was   organized  under  the  laws  of
Massachusetts on March 27, 1991.

    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  ninety investment companies,  thirty of which  are
listed   on  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange,  with  combined  total  assets  of
approximately $65.8 billion at  November 30, 1994.  The Investment Manager  also
manages  and  advises  portfolios  of  pension  plans,  other  institutions  and
individuals which aggregated approximately $2.0 billion at such date.
    
    The Fund  has  retained the  Investment  Manager to  provide  administrative
services, manage its business affairs and supervise the investment of the Fund's
assets.  InterCapital has retained Dean Witter  Services Company Inc. to perform
the aforementioned administrative services for the Fund.
    Under a Sub-Advisory Agreement  between BlackRock Financial Management  L.P.
(the  "Sub-Advisor") and  the Investment  Manager, the  Sub-Advisor provides the
Fund with  investment advice  and portfolio  management relating  to the  Fund's
investments  in portfolio securities, subject to  the overall supervision of the
Investment Manager. The Fund's Trustees review the various services provided  by
or  under the direction of the Investment  Manager and the Sub-Advisor to ensure
that the  Fund's general  investment policies  and programs  are being  properly
carried out and that administrative services are being provided to the Fund in a
satisfactory manner.

   
    The Sub-Advisor, whose address is 345 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10154,
is  a Delaware limited partnership organized in April, 1988 by Laurence D. Fink,
Ralph L. Schlosstein and The Blackstone  Group (a private investment bank).  The
Sub-Advisor's  general partners are Messrs.  Fink and Schlosstein and Blackstone
Financial Management Inc. (all the  stock of which is  owned by partners of  The
Blackstone  Group). The Sub-Advisor serves as investment adviser to fixed-income
investors in the U.S.  and overseas with  combined net assets  in excess of  $22
billion as of November 30, 1994.
    

   
    On  June 16, 1994, the partners of the Sub-Adviser entered into a definitive
agreement to sell their  partnership interests in the  Sub-Adviser to PNC  Bank,
N.A. ("PNC"), headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (the "Transaction"). The
Transaction, which was subject to bank regulatory approval, is expected to close
in  early 1995 and  is subject to  various conditions. After  the closing of the
Transaction, BlackRock will retain its name and will continue to operate out  of
its  New York  office. All members  of the Sub-Adviser's  senior management team
have agreed to sign long-term employment  contracts and will be responsible  for
managing the day-to-day affairs of the Sub-Adviser. Following the closing of the
Transaction,  the Sub-Adviser will become a wholly owned corporate subsidiary of
PNC Asset Management Group, Inc., the holding company for PNC's asset management
business.
    

   
    PNC is a commercial bank offering a wide range of domestic and international
commercial banking,  retail banking  and trust  services to  its customers.  Its
principal office is located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    

                                       5
<PAGE>
   
    PNC  is a wholly-owned  indirect subsidiary of PNC  Bank Corp. (the "Holding
Company"), a bank holding company organized  under the laws of the  Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania.
    

   
    In order to assure continuity of investment advisory services to the Fund by
the  Sub-Adviser after the Transaction,  the Board met in  person on October 20,
1994, for the purpose of considering whether  it would be in the best  interests
of  the  Fund  and  its  shareholders  for  InterCapital  to  enter  into  a new
sub-advisory agreement with the  Sub-Adviser (the "New Sub-Advisory  Agreement")
to  take effect upon consummation of the Transaction. At its meeting, the Board,
including each of the Trustees who are not "interested persons" of the Fund,  as
that  term is defined in the  1940 Act (the "Independent Trustees"), unanimously
approved the  New Sub-Advisory  Agreement  and recommended  it for  approval  by
Shareholders.  The  New  Sub-Advisory  Agreement  is  identical  to  the current
Sub-Advisory Agreement except for the  effective date and the stated  expiration
date. The meeting of Shareholders will take place on or about February 17, 1995.
    

    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 0.50% to the Fund's net assets. As compensation for its  services
provided pursuant to the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Investment Manager pays the
Sub-Advisor monthly compensation equal to 40% of its monthly compensation.

   
    For  the  fiscal  year  ended  October  31,  1994,  the  Fund  accrued total
compensation to the Investment Manager amounting to 0.50% of the Fund's  average
daily  net assets (of which 40% was accrued to the Sub-Advisor by the Investment
Manager) and the Fund's total expenses  amounted to 1.58% of the Fund's  average
daily net assets.
    

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The  investment objective  of the Fund  is to  earn a high  level of current
income consistent  with  low  volatility of  principal.  The  Fund's  investment
objective  is a  fundamental policy and  may not be  changed without shareholder
approval. There  is  no assurance  that  the  objective will  be  achieved.  The
following  policies may be changed by  the Board of Trustees without shareholder
approval.

    The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing under normal
circumstances at least 65% of its total assets in (i) fixed rate and  adjustable
rate   mortgage-backed  securities   ("Mortgage-Backed  Securities")   and  (ii)
securities backed by other assets, such as automobile or credit card receivables
and home equity loans ("Asset-Backed  Securities"). The Fund will only  purchase
Mortgage-Backed  Securities  and  Asset-Backed Securities  which  are  issued or
guaranteed by the United States Government, its agencies or instrumentalities or
are rated Aaa by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or AAA by  Standard
&  Poor's Corporation ("S&P") or,  if not rated, determined  to be of comparable
quality by the Investment Manager and  the Sub-Advisor. (Currently there are  no
Asset-Backed  Securities issued or  guaranteed by the  United States Government,
its  agencies  or  instrumentalities.)  The  Fund  expects  that  under   normal
circumstances the market value dollar weighted average life (or period until the
next reset date) of the Fund's portfolio securities will be no greater than five
years.

    The  Fund  seeks to  achieve low  volatility by  investing in  a diversified
portfolio of securities which the Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor believe
will, in  the aggregate,  be  resistant to  significant fluctuations  in  market
value.  The Investment Manager and Sub-Advisor  believe that the Fund's policies
of purchasing  shorter term  Mortgage-Backed  and Asset-Backed  Securities  will
reduce   the  volatility   of  the  Fund's   net  asset  value   over  the  long

                                       6
<PAGE>
term. Although the values of  fixed-income securities generally increase  during
periods  of declining interest  rates and decrease  during periods of increasing
interest rates, the extent of these fluctuations has historically generally been
smaller for short term  securities than for  securities with longer  maturities.
Conversely,  the yield available on short  term securities has also historically
been lower on average than those available from longer term securities.

    While  the  Fund  invests   primarily  in  Mortgage-Backed  Securities   and
Asset-Backed Securities, under ordinary circumstances it may invest up to 35% of
its  total assets in (i) U.S. Government securities (securities guaranteed as to
principal  and   interest   by   the   United  States   or   its   agencies   or
instrumentalities),  (ii) corporate  debt securities,  including adjustable rate
securities, rated Aaa by Moody's or AAA by S&P or, if unrated, determined to  be
of  comparable quality by the Fund's Trustees, (iii) with respect to up to 5% of
the Fund's  total  assets, high  quality  municipal securities,  including  zero
coupon  securities, with  the highest  rating by Moody's  or S&P,  or (iv) money
market instruments.  U.S. Government  securities in  which the  Fund may  invest
include Treasury bills, notes and bonds, including zero coupon securities. Money
market  instruments  in  which the  Fund  may  invest are  securities  issued or
guaranteed by the U.S.  Government (Treasury bills,  notes and bonds,  including
zero  coupon securities); bank obligations;  Eurodollar certificates of deposit;
obligations of savings institutions; fully insured certificates of deposit;  and
commercial  paper rated within the  two highest grades by  Moody's or S&P or, if
not rated, issued by a company having an outstanding debt issue rated AAA by S&P
or Aaa by Moody's.

    In an effort to increase investment return or to hedge the Fund's portfolio,
the  Fund  may  engage  in  various  investment  techniques,  including  reverse
repurchase  agreements,  dollar  rolls,  purchasing  and  selling  call  and put
options, entering  into interest  rate futures  contracts and  related  options,
purchasing  securities on a when-issued,  delayed delivery or forward commitment
basis and lending portfolio securities (see "Other Investment Policies" below).

    There may be periods during which, in the opinion of the Investment  Manager
and  the Sub-Advisor, market conditions warrant reduction  of some or all of the
Fund's securities holdings. During such periods, the Fund may adopt a  temporary
"defensive"  posture in which greater than 35%  of its total assets are invested
in U.S. Government securities, money market instruments or cash.

MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES

    Mortgage-Backed  Securities  are  securities  that  directly  or  indirectly
represent a participation in, or are secured by and payable from, mortgage loans
secured  by real  property. The term  Mortgage-Backed Securities  as used herein
includes adjustable rate  mortgage securities and  derivative mortgage  products
such as collateralized mortgage obligations, stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities
and other products described below.

    There  are currently  three basic  types of  Mortgage-Backed Securities: (i)
those issued  or  guaranteed by  the  United States  Government  or one  of  its
agencies   or  instrumentalities,  such  as  the  Government  National  Mortgage
Association ("GNMA"), the Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA") and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC") (securities issued by GNMA, but
not those issued by FNMA or FHLMC, are backed by the "full faith and credit"  of
the  United  States); (ii)  those issued  by private  issuers that  represent an
interest in  or  are  collateralized by  Mortgage-Backed  Securities  issued  or
guaranteed   by  the  United  States  Government  or  one  of  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities; and (iii) those issued  by private issuers that represent  an
interest  in or  are collateralized by  whole mortgage  loans or Mortgage-Backed
Securities without  a  government guarantee  but  usually having  some  form  of
private credit enhancement.

    The  Fund  will  invest  in  mortgage  pass-through  securities representing
participation interests in  pools of  residential mortgage  loans originated  by
United States governmental or private lenders and

                                       7
<PAGE>
guaranteed,  to the  extent provided  in such  securities, by  the United States
Government or one of its  agencies or instrumentalities. Such securities,  which
are   ownership  interests  in  the   underlying  mortgage  loans,  differ  from
conventional debt securities, which provide for periodic payment of interest  in
fixed  amounts (usually semiannually)  and principal payments  at maturity or on
specified call  dates.  Mortgage  pass-through securities  provide  for  monthly
payments  that  are  a  "pass-through" of  the  monthly  interest  and principal
payments (including any  prepayments) made  by the individual  borrowers on  the
pooled  mortgage loans, net of any fees paid to the guarantor of such securities
and the servicer of the underlying mortgage loans.

   
    The mortgage pass-through securities  in which the  Fund may invest  include
those issued or guaranteed by GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC. GNMA certificates are direct
obligations  of the U.S. Government and, as  such, are backed by the "full faith
and credit" of the United States. FNMA is a federally chartered, privately owned
corporation and FHLMC is a corporate instrumentality of the United States.  FNMA
and FHLMC certificates are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States  but the issuing  agency or instrumentality  has the right  to borrow, to
meet its obligations, from  an existing line of  credit with the U.S.  Treasury.
The U.S. Treasury has no legal obligation to provide such line of credit and may
choose  not to do so. Each of GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC guarantee timely distribution
of interest  to  certificate  holders.  GNMA  and  FNMA  also  guarantee  timely
distribution  of scheduled  principal payments. FHLMC  generally guarantees only
the ultimate collection of principal of the underlying mortgage loans.
    

    Certificates for  Mortgage-Backed  Securities  evidence  an  interest  in  a
specific  pool of  mortgages. These certificates  are, in  most cases, "modified
pass-through" instruments, wherein the issuing agency guarantees the payment  of
principal  and interest on mortgages underlying the certificates, whether or not
such amounts are collected by the issuer on the underlying mortgages.

    ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE SECURITIES.  The Fund may also invest in adjustable
rate mortgage securities  ("ARMs"), which are  pass-through mortgage  securities
collateralized  by  mortgages  with  adjustable rather  than  fixed  rates. ARMs
eligible for inclusion in a mortgage pool generally provide for a fixed  initial
mortgage  interest  rate for  either the  first three,  six, twelve  or thirteen
scheduled monthly  payments.  Thereafter,  the interest  rates  are  subject  to
periodic adjustment based on changes to a designated benchmark index.

    ARMs  contain maximum and  minimum rates beyond  which the mortgage interest
rate may not vary over the lifetime  of the security. In addition, certain  ARMs
provide  for additional limitations on the  maximum amount by which the mortgage
interest rate  may  adjust  for any  single  adjustment  period.  Alternatively,
certain  ARMs contain limitations on changes in the required monthly payment. In
the event that a monthly payment is not sufficient to pay the interest  accruing
on  an ARM, any  such excess interest is  added to the  principal balance of the
mortgage loan, which is repaid through  future monthly payments. If the  monthly
payment  for such an instrument  exceeds the sum of  the interest accrued at the
applicable mortgage interest  rate and  the principal payment  required at  such
point  to amortize the outstanding principal  balance over the remaining term of
the loan,  the excess  is  utilized to  reduce  the then  outstanding  principal
balance of the ARM.

    PRIVATE  MORTGAGE  PASS-THROUGH  SECURITIES.  Private  mortgage pass-through
securities are  structured  similarly  to  the GNMA,  FNMA  and  FHLMC  mortgage
pass-through  securities  and  are issued  by  originators of  and  investors in
mortgage  loans,  including  savings  and  loan  associations,  mortgage  banks,
commercial  banks,  investment banks  and  special purpose  subsidiaries  of the
foregoing. These securities usually are backed  by a pool of conventional  fixed
rate  or  adjustable rate  mortgage loans.  Since private  mortgage pass-through
securities typically are not guaranteed by an entity having the credit status of
GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC, such

                                       8
<PAGE>
securities  generally  are  structured  with   one  or  more  types  of   credit
enhancement.  Types  of credit  enhancements  are described  under "Asset-Backed
Securities" below.

   
    COLLATERALIZED   MORTGAGE    OBLIGATIONS   AND    MULTICLASS    PASS-THROUGH
SECURITIES.   Collateralized mortgage obligations or "CMOs" are debt obligations
collateralized by mortgage loans or mortgage pass-through securities. Typically,
CMOs are collateralized  by GNMA, FNMA  or FHLMC Certificates,  but also may  be
collateralized  by whole loans or private mortgage pass-through securities (such
collateral  collectively  hereinafter   referred  to   as  "Mortgage   Assets").
Multiclass  pass-through securities are equity interests  in a trust composed of
Mortgage Assets. Payments of principal of  and interest on the Mortgage  Assets,
and  any reinvestment income thereon,  provide the funds to  pay debt service on
the  CMOs  or  make  scheduled  distributions  on  the  multiclass  pass-through
securities.  CMOs may be  issued by agencies or  instrumentalities of the United
States government,  or by  private  originators of,  or investors  in,  mortgage
loans,  including  savings  and loan  associations,  mortgage  banks, commercial
banks, investment banks and special  purpose subsidiaries of the foregoing.  The
issuer  of a series  of CMOs may elect  to be treated as  a Real Estate Mortgage
Investment  Conduit  ("REMIC").  REMICs  include  governmental  and/or   private
entities  that issue a  fixed pool of  mortgages secured by  an interest in real
property. REMICs are  similar to  CMOs in that  they issue  multiple classes  of
securities,  but  unlike  CMOs, which  are  required  to be  structured  as debt
securities, REMICs  may be  structured as  indirect ownership  interests in  the
underlying assets of the REMICs themselves. However, there are no effects on the
Fund  from investing in CMOs issued by  entities that have elected to be treated
as REMICs, and all  future references to  CMOs shall also  be deemed to  include
REMICs.
    

    In  a CMO, a series of bonds  or certificates is issued in multiple classes.
Each class of CMOs, often  referred to as a "tranche",  is issued at a  specific
fixed  or floating coupon rate  and has a stated  maturity or final distribution
date. Principal prepayments  on the  Mortgage Assets may  cause the  CMOs to  be
retired substantially earlier than their stated maturities or final distribution
dates.  Interest is  paid or accrues  on all classes  of the CMOs  on a monthly,
quarterly or  semiannual  basis. Certain  CMOs  may have  variable  or  floating
interest  rates and  others may be  stripped (securities which  provide only the
principal or interest feature of the underlying security).

   
    The principal of and interest on the Mortgage Assets may be allocated  among
the  several classes of a  CMO series in a  number of different ways. Generally,
the purpose of the allocation of the cash  flow of a CMO to the various  classes
is to obtain a more predictable cash flow to the individual tranches than exists
with  the  underlying  collateral  of  the CMO.  As  a  general  rule,  the more
predictable the cash flow is on a  CMO tranche, the lower the anticipated  yield
will  be on that tranche  at the time of  issuance relative to prevailing market
yields on Mortgage-Backed Securities.  As part of the  process of creating  more
predictable  cash flows on most of the tranches in a series of CMOs, one or more
tranches generally must  be created that  absorb most of  the volatility in  the
cash flows on the underlying mortgage loans. The yields on these tranches, which
may  include  Stripped Mortgage-Backed  Securities  as described  below,  may be
higher than prevailing market yields on Mortgage-Backed Securities with  similar
maturities.  As a result of the uncertainty of the cash flows of these tranches,
the market prices of and yield on these tranches tend to be more volatile.
    

    The Fund  also may  invest in,  among other  things, parallel  pay CMOs  and
Planned  Amortization Class CMOs ("PAC Bonds"). Parallel pay CMOs are structured
to provide payments of principal  on each payment date  to more than one  class.
These  simultaneous payments  are taken into  account in  calculating the stated
maturity date or final distribution date of each class, which, as with other CMO
structures, must be retired  by its stated maturity  date or final  distribution
date but may be retired

                                       9
<PAGE>
earlier. PAC Bonds generally require payments of a specified amount of principal
on  each payment date. PAC Bonds always  are parallel pay CMOs with the required
principal payment on such securities having the highest priority after  interest
has been paid to all classes.
    STRIPPED MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES. Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities are
derivative  multiclass mortgage securities.  Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities
may be issued by agencies or instrumentalities of the United States  government,
or by private originators of, or investors in, mortgage loans, including savings
and  loan associations, mortgage  banks, commercial banks,  investment banks and
special purpose subsidiaries of the foregoing.
   
    Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities usually are structured with two  classes
that receive different proportions of the interest and principal distribution on
a  pool of Mortgage Assets. A common type of Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities
will have one class  receiving some of  the interest and  most of the  principal
from  the  Mortgage Assets,  while  the other  class  will receive  most  of the
interest and the remainder of the principal. In the most extreme case, one class
will receive all of  the interest (the interest-only  or "IO" class), while  the
other  class  will receive  all  of the  principal  (the principal-only  or "PO"
class). PO classes generate income through the accretion of the deep discount at
which such  securities are  purchased,  and, while  PO  classes do  not  receive
periodic  payments of  interest, they  receive monthly  payments associated with
scheduled  amortization  and  principal  prepayment  from  the  Mortgage  Assets
underlying  the PO  class. The  yield to  maturity on  an IO  class is extremely
sensitive to  the rate  of  principal payments  (including prepayments)  on  the
related  underlying Mortgage Assets, and a  rapid rate of principal payments may
have a  material  adverse  effect  on  the Fund's  yield  to  maturity.  If  the
underlying  Mortgage Assets  experience greater than  anticipated prepayments of
principal, the Fund  may fail to  fully recoup its  initial investment in  these
securities even if the securities are rated Aaa by Moody's or AAA by S&P.
    

   
    The Fund may purchase Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities for income, or for
hedging   purposes  to  protect  the  Fund's  portfolio  against  interest  rate
fluctuations. For example, since an IO class  will tend to increase in value  as
interest  rates rise, it may be utilized to hedge against a decrease in value of
other fixed-income securities in a rising interest rate environment. The  Fund's
management  understands that the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission
considers privately  issued  Stripped  Mortgage-Backed  Securities  representing
interest  only or  principal only  components of  U.S. Government  or other debt
securities to be  illiquid securities. The  Fund will treat  such securities  as
illiquid  so long as the staff maintains such position. Stripped Mortgage-Backed
Securities issued by the U.S. Government  or its agencies, and which are  backed
by  fixed-rate  mortgages,  will  be  treated as  liquid  provided  they  are so
determined by, or under procedures approved by, the Board of Trustees. The  Fund
may not invest more than 10% of its net assets in illiquid securities.
    

ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES

    The securitization techniques used to develop Mortgage-Backed Securities are
also  applied to a  broad range of other  assets. Through the  use of trusts and
special purpose corporations, various types of assets, primarily automobile  and
credit  card  receivables  and  home  equity  loans,  are  being  securitized in
pass-through  structures  similar  to   the  mortgage  pass-through   structures
described above or in a pay-through structure similar to the CMO structure.

    New  instruments and  variations of existing  Mortgage-Backed Securities and
Asset-Backed Securities continue  to be developed.  The Fund may  invest in  any
such  instruments or  variations as may  be developed, to  the extent consistent
with  its   investment  objective   and  policies   and  applicable   regulatory
requirements.

                                       10
<PAGE>
    TYPES  OF CREDIT  ENHANCEMENT.  Mortgage-Backed  Securities and Asset-Backed
Securities are often backed by a pool of assets representing the obligations  of
a  number of different parties. To lessen  the effect of failures by obligors on
underlying assets to  make payments,  those securities may  contain elements  of
credit  support, which  fall into two  categories: (i)  liquidity protection and
(ii) protection against losses resulting from ultimate default by an obligor  on
the underlying assets. Liquidity protection refers to the provision of advances,
generally  by the entity  administering the pool  of assets, to  ensure that the
receipt of  payments  on  the  underlying  pool  occurs  in  a  timely  fashion.
Protection against losses resulting from default ensures ultimate payment of the
obligations on at least a portion of the assets in the pool. This protection may
be provided through guarantees, insurance policies or letters of credit obtained
by  the  issuer  or  sponsor  from  third  parties,  through  various  means  of
structuring the transaction  or through  a combination of  such approaches.  The
degree  of  credit  support  provided  for  each  issue  is  generally  based on
historical information respecting the level  of credit risk associated with  the
underlying  assets. Delinquencies or losses in excess of those anticipated could
adversely affect the return on  an investment in a  security. The Fund will  not
pay  any fees for credit  support, although the existence  of credit support may
increase the price of a security.
   
OTHER INVESTMENT POLICIES
    
   
    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
designed 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  AND DOLLAR  ROLLS.__The  Fund may  also  use
reverse  repurchase  agreements  and  dollar rolls  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.
    

   
    The  Fund may enter into dollar rolls in which the Fund sells securities for
delivery in  the  current  month  and  simultaneously  contracts  to  repurchase
substantially  similar (same type  and coupon) securities  on a specified future
date. During the roll period, the  Fund foregoes principal and interest paid  on
the  securities. The Fund  is compensated by the  difference between the current
sales price and the lower forward price for the future purchase (often  referred
to  as the "drop") as well as by the interest earned on the cash proceeds of the
initial sale.
    

   
    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. An increase in  the
percentage  of the Fund's  assets committed to  the purchase of  securities on a
when-issued, delayed delivery or forward
    
commit-

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
ment basis may increase the volatility of  the Fund's net asset value. The  Fund
will  establish a segregated  account with its  custodian bank in  which it will
maintain cash,  U.S.  Government securities  or  other liquid  high  grade  debt
obligations  equal  in value  to its  obligations in  respect of  when-issued or
delayed delivery securities and forward commitments. The Fund's ability to enter
into such transactions is not otherwise limited, but the Fund expects that under
normal circumstances no  more than 15%  of the  Fund's total assets  will be  so
invested.
    
   
    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  buy-out  or  debt  restructuring.  If  the
anticipated  event does not  occur and the  securities are not  issued, the Fund
will have lost an investment opportunity.  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  may
also  sell securities  on a  "when, as  and if  issued" basis  provided that the
issuance of a security will result automatically from the exchange or conversion
of a security owned by the Fund at the time of 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 certain notice provisions described in the Statement  of
Additional  Information), and are at all  times secured by cash, U.S. Government
securities or  other high  grade  debt securities,  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 in securities which are subject  to
restrictions  on  resale  because  they  have  not  been  registered  under  the
Securities Act  of  1933,  as  amended (the  "Securities  Act"),  or  which  are
otherwise  not readily marketable. 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 and
Sub-Adviser pursuant to  procedures adopted by  the Trustees 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.
    

   
    OPTIONS  AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  The Fund is permitted to enter into call
and put options  on U.S. Treasury  notes, bonds  and bills which  are listed  on
Exchanges  and written in over-the-counter  transactions ("OTC options"). Listed
options are issued by the Options Clearing Corporation ("OCC"). OTC options  are
purchased from or sold (written) to dealers or financial institutions which have
entered  into direct agreements with the Fund.  The Fund may purchase listed and
over-the-counter  call  and  put  options  on  U.S.  Government  securities  and
Mortgage-Backed  Securities in amounts  equalling up to 5%  of its total assets.
The Fund may purchase call and put options on securities which it holds (or  has
the right to acquire) in its portfolio only for hedging purposes.
    

   
    The  Fund  may  also  purchase  and  sell  interest  rate  futures contracts
("futures contracts")  that  are traded  on  U.S. commodity  exchanges  on  such
underlying  securities  as  U.S.  Treasury bonds,  notes  and  bills, Eurodollar
instruments and  Mortgage-Backed  Securities. The  Fund  will purchase  or  sell
futures  contracts only for the purpose of hedging its portfolio (or anticipated
portfolio) securities against changes in prevailing interest rates, and not  for
speculative purposes.
    

                                       12
<PAGE>
   
    The  Fund may also purchase 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.
    

   
RISK CONSIDERATIONS
    
   
    The  net asset value of the Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes in the
market value of the Fund's portfolio securities. The market value of the  Fund's
portfolio  securities will  increase or decrease  due to a  variety of economic,
market and political factors which cannot be predicted, in particular  movements
in  interest rates  and, with respect  to foreign  currencies, currency exchange
rates. A decline in prevailing interest  rates generally increases the value  of
fixed-income securities, while an increase in rates usually reduces the value of
those  securities. (The Fund's  yield also will  vary based on  the yield of the
Fund's portfolio securities.)
    

   
    MORTGAGE-BACKED  AND   ASSET-BACKED   SECURITIES.      Mortgage-Backed   and
Asset-Backed  Securities have certain different characteristics than traditional
debt securities. Among  the major  differences are that  interest and  principal
payments  are made more  frequently, usually monthly, and  that principal may be
prepaid at  any time  because  the underlying  mortgage  loans or  other  assets
generally  may be prepaid at any time. As a result, if the Fund purchases such a
security at  a premium,  a prepayment  rate that  is faster  than expected  will
reduce  yield to maturity, while a prepayment  rate that is slower than expected
will have the opposite effect of increasing yield to maturity. Alternatively, if
the Fund  purchases  these  securities  at  a  discount,  faster  than  expected
prepayments  will increase, while slower  than expected prepayments will reduce,
yield to maturity. The  Fund may invest  a portion of  its assets in  derivative
Mortgage-Backed Securities such as Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities which are
highly  sensitive to  changes in prepayment  and interest  rates. The Investment
Manager and  the Sub-Advisor  will seek  to manage  these risks  (and  potential
benefits)  by  investing in  a variety  of such  securities and  through hedging
techniques.
    

    Mortgage-Backed Securities  and  Asset-Backed  Securities,  like  all  fixed
income  securities,  generally decrease  in value  as a  result of  increases in
interest rates.  In  addition,  although generally  the  value  of  fixed-income
securities  increases during  periods of falling  interest rates  and, as stated
above, decreases  during  periods of  rising  interest  rates, as  a  result  of
prepayments  and other  factors, this  is not  always the  case with  respect to
Mortgage-Backed Securities and Asset-Backed Securities.

    Although the extent of  prepayments on a pool  of mortgage loans depends  on
various  economic and other factors, as a general rule prepayments on fixed rate
mortgage loans  will increase  during a  period of  falling interest  rates  and
decrease  during  a  period  of  rising  interest  rates.  Accordingly,  amounts
available for reinvestment by the Fund are likely to be greater during a  period
of  declining interest rates and, as a  result, likely to be reinvested at lower
interest rates  than during  a  period of  rising interest  rates.  Asset-Backed
Securities,  although less  likely to  experience the  same prepayment  rates as
Mortgage-Backed  Securities,  may  respond  to  certain  of  the  same   factors
influencing prepayments, while at other times different factors, such as changes
in  credit use  and payment patterns  resulting from social,  legal and economic
factors,  will   predominate.   Mortgage-Backed  Securities   and   Asset-Backed
Securities  generally decrease  in value  as a  result of  increases in interest
rates and may  benefit less than  other fixed income  securities from  declining
interest rates because of the risk of prepayment.

   
    The  Fund may  invest in mortgage  derivative securities, such  as CMOs, the
average life of which is  determined using mathematical models that  incorporate
prepayment  assumptions  and  other  factors that  involve  estimates  of future
economic and  market conditions.  These estimates  may vary  from actual  future
results,  particularly during periods of extreme market volatility. In addition,
under
    

                                       13
<PAGE>
   
certain market conditions,  such as those  that developed in  1994, the  average
weighted  life of mortgage derivative securities  may not accurately reflect the
price volatility  of such  securities. For  example, in  periods of  supply  and
demand  imbalances in the market for such  securities and/or in periods of sharp
interest rate  movements,  the  prices of  mortgage  derivative  securities  may
fluctuate  to  a  greater  extent  than would  be  expected  from  interest rate
movements alone.
    
   
    The Fund's investments  in mortgage derivative  securities also subject  the
Fund  to extension risk. Extension risk  is the possibility that rising interest
rates may  cause prepayments  to occur  at  a slower  than expected  rate.  This
particular  risk may effectively change a security which was considered short or
intermediate-term at the time of  purchase into a long-term security.  Long-term
securities  generally fluctuate more  widely in response  to changes in interest
rates than short or intermediate-term securities.
    
    There are certain risks  associated specifically with  CMOs. CMOs issued  by
private  entities are not  U.S. Government securities and  are not guaranteed by
any government agency, although the securities  underlying a CMO may be  subject
to  a guarantee. Therefore, if  the collateral securing the  CMO, as well as any
third party credit support or guarantees,  is insufficient to make payment,  the
holder could sustain a loss. However, as stated above, the Fund will invest only
in  CMOs  which are  rated AAA  by S&P  or Aaa  by Moody's  or, if  unrated, are
determined to be  of comparable quality.  Also, a number  of different  factors,
including  the extent of prepayment of  principal of the Mortgage Assets, affect
the availability of cash for principal payments by the CMO issuer on any payment
date and,  accordingly, affect  the timing  of principal  payments on  each  CMO
class.
   
    Asset-Backed  Securities  involve  certain  risks  that  are  not  posed  by
Mortgage-Backed Securities,  resulting mainly  from the  fact that  Asset-Backed
Securities do not usually contain the complete benefit of a security interest in
the  related  collateral. For  example,  credit card  receivables  generally are
unsecured and the debtors are  entitled to the protection  of a number of  state
and federal consumer credit laws, some of which may reduce the ability to obtain
full  payment. In the case  of automobile receivables, due  to various legal and
economic factors,  proceeds  from  repossessed  collateral  may  not  always  be
sufficient to support payments on these securities.
    

   
    STRIPPED  MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES.  The yield  to maturity on an IO class
is extremely sensitive to the rate of principal payments (including prepayments)
on the  related  underlying Mortgage  Assets,  and  a rapid  rate  of  principal
payments  may have a material adverse effect on the Fund's yield to maturity. If
the underlying Mortgage Assets  experience greater than anticipated  prepayments
of  principal, the Fund may fail to fully recoup its initial investment in these
securities even if the securities are rated Aaa by Moody's or AAA by S&P.
    

   
    The Fund may purchase Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities for income, or for
hedging  purposes  to  protect  the  Fund's  portfolio  against  interest   rate
fluctuations.  For example, since an IO class  will tend to increase in value as
interest rates rise, it may be utilized to hedge against a decrease in value  of
other  fixed-income securities in  a rising interest  rate environment. The Fund
understands that the staff of  the Securities and Exchange Commission  considers
privately  issued Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities representing interest only
or principal only components of U.S.  Government or other debt securities to  be
illiquid  securities. The Fund will treat such securities as illiquid so long as
the staff maintains such position. Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities issued by
the U.S.  Government  or  its  agencies, and  which  are  backed  by  fixed-rate
mortgages,  will be  treated as  liquid provided they  are so  determined by, or
under procedures approved  by, the Board  of Trustees. The  Fund may not  invest
more  than  10% of  its  total assets  in  illiquid securities  (see "Investment
Restrictions" below).
    

                                       14
<PAGE>
   
    REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS AND DOLLAR ROLLS.   The Fund will establish  a
segregated  account with its custodian bank in which it will maintain cash, U.S.
Government securities or other liquid high grade debt obligations equal in value
to its obligations in respect of reverse repurchase agreements and dollar rolls.
Reverse repurchase agreements and dollar rolls 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  or dollar  roll files  for bankruptcy or
becomes insolvent,  the Fund's  use of  the  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.
    

   
    Reverse repurchase agreements  and dollar rolls  are speculative  techniques
involving leverage, and are considered borrowings by the Fund. The Fund does not
expect  to engage in reverse repurchase agreements and dollar rolls with respect
to greater than 25% of the Fund's total assets.
    

    OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  Exchanges may 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.

   
    Participation  in the options  or futures markets  involves investment risks
and transaction costs to which the Fund  would not be subject absent the use  of
these  strategies. If  the Investment  Manager's or  Sub-Advisors' prediction of
movements in the direction of the securities, currency or interest rate  markets
are  inaccurate, the adverse consequences to the  Fund (e.g., a reduction in the
Fund's net asset  value or a  reduction in  the amount of  income available  for
distribution)  may leave the  Fund in a  worse position than  if such strategies
were not  used.  Risks  inherent  in  the  use  of  options,  futures  contracts
and  options  on  futures contracts  include  (a) dependence  on  the Investment
Manager's or  Sub-Advisors'  ability  to  predict  correctly  movements  in  the
direction  of interest rates, as well as securities and/or currency markets; (b)
imperfect correlation between  the price  of options and  futures contracts  and
options  thereon and  movements in  the prices  of the  securities or currencies
being hedged;  (c) the  fact that  skills  needed to  use these  strategies  are
different  from those  needed to select  portfolio securities;  (d) the possible
absence of a liquid secondary market for any particular instrument at any  time;
and (e) the possible need to defer closing out certain hedged positions to avoid
adverse tax consequences.
    

   
    Another  such risk is that the price of the futures contract may not move in
tandem with the change in prevailing interest rates against which the Fund seeks
a hedge. A correlation may 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. See the Statement of Additional Information for further discussion  of
such risks.
    

    New  futures  contracts, options  and other  financial products  and various
combinations thereof continue to be developed.  The Fund may invest in any  such
futures,  options or products as may be developed, to the extent consistent with
its investment objective and applicable regulatory requirements.

   
    For additional risk  disclosure, please refer  to the "Investment  Objective
and  Policies" and "Portfolio Characteristics" sections of the Prospectus and to
the "Investment Practices and Policies"  section of the Statement of  Additional
Information.
    

PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

    The  Fund's portfolio is actively managed  by its Investment Manager and the
Sub-Advisor with  a view  to achieving  the Fund's  investment objective.  As  a
result of the Fund's investment objective and

                                       15
<PAGE>
policies,  and  the nature  of the  Mortgage-Backed Securities  and Asset-Backed
Securities markets, the Fund's portfolio turnover  rate may exceed 200%, but  is
not  expected to exceed 300%.  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 trading policy.

   
    In  determining which  securities to  purchase for the  Fund or  hold in the
Fund's portfolio,  the  Investment Manager  and  the Sub-Advisor  will  rely  on
information from various sources, including research, analysis and appraisals of
brokers   and  dealers,   including  Dean   Witter  Reynolds   Inc.  ("DWR"),  a
broker-dealer affiliate of InterCapital; the views  of Trustees of the Fund  and
others  regarding  economic  developments  and  interest  rate  trends;  and the
Investment Manager's  and  Sub-Advisor's  own  analysis  of  factors  they  deem
relevant.  The Fund  is part of  the Dean Witter  family of mutual  funds and is
managed by  its  Investment  Manager,  InterCapital,  and  by  its  Sub-Advisor,
BlackRock Financial Management ("BlackRock"). BlackRock manages in excess of $22
billion  of  net assets  on behalf  of  individual and  institutional investors,
including 21  closed-end funds  and  3 open-end  funds. Along  with  BlackRock's
portfolio  management team,  Scott Amero has  been the  Fund's primary portfolio
manager since its inception. Mr. Amero is a Partner of BlackRock and a member of
its Investment Strategy Committee, and is a specialist in the mortgage and short
duration sectors.  His  areas  of  expertise  include  asset-backed  securities,
adjustable  rate mortgage securities and other short duration mortgage products.
Prior to joining  BlackRock in 1990,  Mr. Amero  was a Vice  President in  Fixed
Income  Research at  The First  Boston Corporation,  where he  became the firm's
primary strategist for short duration securities.
    

    Brokerage commissions are not  normally charged on the  purchase or sale  of
Mortgage-Backed  Securities or U.S. Government securities, but such transactions
generally involve costs  in the form  of spreads between  bid and asked  prices.
Orders  for transactions in portfolio securities are  placed for the Fund with a
number of brokers and dealers,  which may include DWR.  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.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The investment restrictions  listed below  are among  the restrictions  that
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.

    The Fund may not:

    1. With respect to 75% of its total assets, invest
more  than 5%  of the value  of its  total assets in  the securities  of any one
issuer (other  than obligations  issued,  or guaranteed  by, the  United  States
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities).

    2. Purchase more than 10% of all outstanding
voting securities of any one issuer.

    3. Invest 25% or more of the value of its total
assets  in securities of issuers in any  one industry, except that the Fund will
invest at least 25% of its assets in Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities
under normal market conditions. This  restriction does not apply to  obligations
issued  or  guaranteed  by  the  United States  Government  or  its  agencies or
instrumentalities.

    4. Invest more than 10% of its total assets in
"illiquid securities" and repurchase agreements which have a maturity of  longer
than  seven days. The staff of the  Securities and Exchange Commission has taken
the position that OTC  options are illiquid  securities. The Investment  Manager
and Sub-Advisor disagree with this position.
Neverthe-

                                       16
<PAGE>
less,  the  Fund has  agreed to  treat  OTC options  as illiquid  securities for
purposes of this  investment restriction  so long  as the  staff maintains  such
position.

    5. 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 Mortgage-Backed Securities or Asset-Backed Securities or to any obligation of
the United States Government, its agencies or instrumentalities.

    6. Purchase or sell commodities or
commodities  contracts except that the Fund  may purchase and sell interest rate
futures contracts and related options thereon.

    7. 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 initial or variation margin
for futures are not deemed to be pledges of assets.)

    8. 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.

    9. Borrow money in excess of 33 1/3% of the
Fund's total assets (including the proceeds of the borrowings).

    If  a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment (except
in the  case of  Restriction 9),  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.

PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The  Fund offers its  shares for sale  to the public  on a continuous basis.
Shares of  the  Fund are  distributed  by  Dean Witter  Distributors  Inc.  (the
"Distributor"),   an  affiliate  of  the   Investment  Manager,  pursuant  to  a
Distribution Agreement between the Fund and  the Distributor and offered by  DWR
and  other dealers  who 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 Premier Income Trust,
directly to Dean Witter Trust Company  (the "Transfer Agent") at P.O. Box  1040,
Jersey  City, NJ  07303 or by  contacting an  account executive of  DWR or other
Selected Broker-Dealer.  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.
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),
plus  a sales  charge (expressed  as a  percentage of  the offering  price) on a
single transaction as shown in the following table:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      SALES CHARGE
                        ----------------------------------------
                           PERCENTAGE           APPROXIMATE
      AMOUNT OF             OF PUBLIC          PERCENTAGE OF
  SINGLE TRANSACTION     OFFERING PRICE       AMOUNT INVESTED
- ----------------------  -----------------  ---------------------
<S>                     <C>                <C>
Less than $100,000....          3.00%                 3.09%
$100,000 but less than
 $250,000.............          2.50                  2.56
</TABLE>

                                       17
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      SALES CHARGE
                        ----------------------------------------
                           PERCENTAGE           APPROXIMATE
      AMOUNT OF             OF PUBLIC          PERCENTAGE OF
  SINGLE TRANSACTION     OFFERING PRICE       AMOUNT INVESTED
- ----------------------  -----------------  ---------------------
$250,000 but less than
 $500,000.............          2.00                  2.04
<S>                     <C>                <C>
$500,000 but less than
 $1,000,000...........          1.25                  1.27
$1,000,000 and over...         -0-                  -0-
</TABLE>

    The above schedule of sales charges  is applicable to purchases in a  single
transaction  by, among others: (a) an individual;  (b) an individual, his or her
spouse and their children under the age  of 21 purchasing shares for his or  her
own  accounts; (c) a trustee  or other fiduciary purchasing  shares for a single
trust estate or  a single fiduciary  account; (d) a  pension, profit-sharing  or
other  employee benefit plan qualified or non-qualified under Section 401 of the
Internal Revenue  Code;  (e)  tax-exempt  organizations  enumerated  in  Section
501(c)(3)  or  (13) of  the Internal  Revenue Code;  (f) employee  benefit plans
qualified under Section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code of a single employer or
of employers who are  "affiliated persons" of each  other within the meaning  of
Section  2(a)(3)(c)  of the  Act and  for  investments in  Individual Retirement
Accounts of employees of a single employer through Systematic Payroll  Deduction
Plans, or (g) any other organized group of persons, whether incorporated or not,
provided  the organization has been in existence for at least six months and has
some purpose other than  the purchase of redeemable  securities of a  registered
investment company at a discount.

   
    Shares  of  the Fund  are  sold through  the  Distributor on  a  normal five
business day settlement basis; that is, payment is due on the fifth business day
(settlement date) after the order is placed with the Distributor. Shares of  the
Fund  purchased through the  Distributor are entitled  to any dividends declared
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 any
dividends declared 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. Sales personnel are compensated
for selling shares  of the Fund  at the time  of their sale  by the  Distributor
and/or 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/or the Distributor  reserve the right  to reject any
purchase order.
    

REDUCED SALES CHARGE

    RIGHT OF ACCUMULATION.  Investors may benefit from a reduction of the  sales
charges  in accordance with the above schedule if the cumulative net asset value
of shares of the  Fund purchased in a  single transaction, together with  shares
previously  purchased which are held at the time of such transaction, amounts to
$100,000 or more.

    The Distributor must be notified by  the shareholder at the time a  purchase
order  is placed that  the purchase qualifies  for the reduced  charge under the
Right of  Accumulation. Similar  notification must  be made  in writing  by  the
shareholder  when such an order is placed by mail. The reduced sales charge will
not be granted if:  (a) such notification  is not furnished at  the time of  the
order;  or (b) a review of the records  of the Distributor or the Transfer Agent
fails to confirm the investor's represented holdings.

    LETTER OF INTENT.  The foregoing schedule of reduced sales charges will also
be available to investors  who enter into a  written Letter of Intent  providing
for the purchase, within a thirteen-month period, of shares of the Fund from the
Distributor. The cost of shares of the Fund which were previously purchased at a
price  including a front-end sales charge during  the 90-day period prior to the
date of receipt by the Distributor of the Letter of

                                       18
<PAGE>
Intent, which  are still  owned by  the  shareholder, may  also be  included  in
determining the applicable reduction.

    For  further information concerning purchases  of the Fund's shares, contact
the Distributor or consult the Statement of Additional Information.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

   
    The Fund has  entered into  a Plan of  Distribution pursuant  to Rule  12b-1
under  the Act, whereby the  expenses of certain activities  and services 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's account executives and others who engage in or support
distribution of 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. Reimbursements for these expenses will be made in monthly
payments by the Fund to the Distributor, which will in no event exceed an amount
equal  to a payment at  the annual rate of  0.20 of 1% of  the average daily net
assets of the Fund. Expenses incurred by the Distributor pursuant to the Plan in
any fiscal year will not be reimbursed  by the Fund through payments accrued  in
any  subsequent  fiscal year.  No interest  or other  financial charges  will be
incurred on any distribution expense incurred by the Distributor under the  Plan
or on any unreimbursed expenses due to the Distributor pursuant to the Plan. The
fee payable pursuant to the Plan, equal to 0.20% of the Fund's average daily net
assets, is characterized as a service fee within the meaning of NASD guidelines.
The  Fund  accrued  $112,520  to  the  Distributor,  pursuant  to  the  Plan  of
Distribution, for the year  ended October 31,  1994. This is  an accrual at  the
annual rate of 0.18% of the Fund's average daily net assets.
    

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 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 is  valued
at  its last  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  closing
bid  price, and (2)  all portfolio securities  for which over-the-counter market
quotations are readily available are valued at the latest 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 and/or the
Sub-Advisor 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
Fund's Trustees (valuation  of securities  for which market  quotations are  not
readily  available may  also be based  upon current market  prices of securities
which are comparable  in coupon, rating  and maturity or  an appropriate  matrix
utilizing similar factors).

    Certain  of  the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  for  which  reliable market
quotations are generally not readily available are valued by an outside  pricing
service  approved  by  the  Fund's  Trustees.  The  pricing  service  utilizes a
computerized grid  matrix and/  or  research and  evaluations  by its  staff  in
determining  what  it believes  is the  fair value  of the  portfolio securities
valued by such pricing service.

    Short-term debt securities with remaining  maturities of sixty days or  less
at the time of
pur-

                                       19
<PAGE>
chase  are valued at amortized cost, unless the Trustees determine such does not
reflect the  securities' fair  value, in  which case  these securities  will  be
valued at their fair value as determined by the Trust
ees.

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. 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
in  shares of the  Fund (or in cash  if the shareholder so  requests) at the net
asset value per share (without sales charge) 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 checks during the
first ten days of the following month.

    EASYINVESTSM.   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.

    SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN.  A 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 offering price. The plan provides for monthly or quarterly
(March, June, September, December)  checks in any dollar  amount, not less  than
$25 or in any whole percentage of the account balances, on an annualized basis.

    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.

    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 front-end (at time of purchase) sales charge
("FESC funds"), for shares of Dean Witter Funds sold with a contingent  deferred
sales  charge  ("CDSC funds"),  and for  shares of  Dean Witter  Short-Term U.S.
Treasury Trust, Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust, Dean Witter Short-Term
Bond Fund and five Dean Witter Funds which are money market funds (the foregoing
eight non-FESC and 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. However,  shares  of  CDSC funds,  including  shares  acquired  in
exchange  for shares  of FESC  funds, may  not be  exchanged for  shares of FESC
funds. Thus, shareholders  who exchange  their Fund  shares for  shares of  CDSC
funds  may subsequently exchange those shares for  shares of other CDSC funds or
Exchange Funds but may not reacquire FESC fund shares by exchange.

    An exchange to another FESC fund, to a CDSC fund or to an 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

                                       20
<PAGE>
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
Exchange  Funds, FESC  funds and CDSC  funds can  be effected on  the same basis
(except that CDSC fund shares  may not be exchanged  for shares of FESC  funds).
Shares  of a CDSC  fund acquired in exchange  for shares of an  FESC fund (or in
exchange for shares of other Dean Witter Funds for which shares of an FESC  fund
have  been exchanged)  are not subject  to any contingent  deferred sales charge
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.  Also,  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.  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 their 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. 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.
    

    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)  526-3143 (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
proce-

                                       21
<PAGE>
dures  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.

    For additional information about the Exchange Privilege, shareholders should
contact  their  DWR or  other Selected  Broker-Dealer  account executive  or the
Transfer Agent.

REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    REDEMPTION.  Shares  of the Fund  can be redeemed  for cash at  any time  at
their  current  net  asset value  per  share  (without any  redemption  or other
charge). 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(s),   the  shares   may  be   redeemed  by   surrendering  the
certificate(s) with a written request for redemption, along with any  additional
information required by the Transfer Agent.
    

    REPURCHASE.    DWR  and  other  Selected  Broker-Dealers  are  authorized to
repurchase shares 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 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 determined (see "Purchase of Fund Share -- Determination of Net Asset
Value")  after such repurchase order is  received. Repurchase orders received by
DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers prior to 4:00 p.m., New York time, on  any
business  day will be priced at  the net asset value per  share that is based on
that day's close.  Repurchase orders received  after 4:00 p.m.,  New York  time,
will  be  priced  on  the  basis of  the  next  business  day's  close. Selected
Broker-Dealers may charge for their services in connection with the  repurchase,
but  the Fund, DWR and  the Distributor do not charge  a fee. Payment for shares
repurchased may be made by the Fund to DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers for
the  account  of  the  shareholder.  The   offer  by  DWR  and  other   Selected
Broker-Dealers  to  repurchase  shares  from  dealers  or  shareholders  may  be
suspended 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  at
times 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, 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.

                                       22
<PAGE>
    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.   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  the redemption or repurchase,
reinstate any portion or all of the proceeds of such redemption or repurchase in
shares of  the Fund  at their  net asset  value (without  a sales  charge)  next
determined  after  a  reinstatement  request,  together  with  the  proceeds, is
received by the Transfer Agent.

    INVOLUNTARY REDEMPTION.  The Fund reserves the right, on sixty days' notice,
to redeem at their 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 Internal Revenue  Code) whose shares  have a value  of
less  than $100 as a result of redemptions or repurchases, or such lesser amount
as may be fixed by the Board of Trustees. 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 $100 and allow the shareholder sixty
days to make an additional investment in an amount which will increase the value
of the account to $100 or more before the redemption is processed.

DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    DIVIDENDS  AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.    The  Fund  declares  dividends  from   net
investment  income on each day the New  York Stock Exchange is open for business
to shareholders of  record as of  the close of  business the preceding  business
day.  Such dividends are paid monthly. The Fund intends to distribute all of the
Fund's net investment income on an annual basis.

    Net realized  short-term  and  long-term  capital gains,  if  any,  will  be
distributed at least once per year, although the Investment Manager reserves the
right to retain a portion of long-term gains for reinvestment.

    All  dividends and  capital gains distributions  will be  paid in additional
Fund  shares  (without   sales  charge)  and   automatically  credited  to   the
shareholder's  account  without  issuance  of  a  share  certificate  unless the
shareholder requests  in  writing that  all  dividends  be paid  in  cash.  (See
"Shareholder Services -- Automatic Investment of Dividends and Distributions".)

    TAXES.   Because the  Fund intends to  distribute all of  its net investment
income and net  short-term capital  gains to shareholders  and otherwise  remain
qualified  as a regulated investment company  under Subchapter M of the Internal
Revenue 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 listed options on securities,
futures and options on futures may be 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 short-term  gains being available for
distribution.

    Shareholders who are  required to pay  taxes on their  income 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

                                       23
<PAGE>
following year prior to February 1 will be deemed received by the shareholder in
the prior year.
    After the  end  of  the  calendar  year,  shareholders  will  be  sent  full
information  on  their dividends  and any  capital  gains distributions  for tax
purposes, including information as  to the portion  taxable as ordinary  income,
the  portion taxable as capital  gains and any portion  treated as a non-taxable
return of capital. Any such return of capital will reduce the shareholders'  tax
basis  in  their  shares.  To  avoid  being  subject  to  a  31%  federal backup
withholding  tax  on  taxable  dividends,  distributions  and  the  proceeds  of
redemptions  and repurchases, shareholders' taxpayer identification numbers must
be furnished and certified as to their accuracy.

    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. Capital  gains distributions are not eligible for
the corporate dividends received deduction.
    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 advisor. Shareholders  will be notified annually  by the Fund as to
the Federal tax status  of dividends and distributions  paid or retained by  the
Fund.

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 maximum offering price
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 one year, as well as over 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 incurred by shareholders, for the period. 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, year-by-year or  other
types  of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect the
deduction of the front-end  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 by adding  1
to  the Fund's aggregate total return to date and multiplying by $9,700, $48,500
and $97,500 ($10,000, $50,000  and $100,000 adjusted for  3%, 3% and 2.5%  sales
charges,  respectively.  The  Fund from  time  to  time may  also  advertise its
performance relative to  certain performance  rankings and  indexes compiled  by
independent organizations (such as Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.).

                                       24
<PAGE>
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    VOTING  RIGHTS.  All shares of beneficial  interest of the Fund are of $0.01
par value and are equal as to earnings, assets and voting privileges.
   
    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
Trustees may call  Special Meetings  of Shareholders for  action by  shareholder
vote  as may be required  by the Act or the  Declaration of Trust. Under certain
circumstances, the Trustees may be removed by  action of the Trustees or by  the
Shareholders.
    

    Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a business trust may, under certain
circumstances,  be held  personally liable  as partners  for obligations  of the
Fund. However,  the  Declaration of  Trust  contains an  express  disclaimer  of
shareholder  liability for  acts or  obligations of  the Fund  and requires that
notice of such disclaimer be given  in each instrument entered into or  executed
by  the Fund, and provides for indemnification and reimbursement of expenses out
of the  Fund's property  for  any shareholder  held  personally liable  for  the
obligations  of the  Fund. Thus, the  risk of a  shareholder incurring financial
loss on account of  shareholder liability is limited  to circumstances in  which
the  Fund  itself would  be  unable to  meet  its obligations.  Given  the above
limitations on  shareholder personal  liability, and  the nature  of the  Fund's
assets  and operations,  the possibility  of the Fund  being unable  to meet its
obligations is remote and, in the opinion of Massachusetts counsel to the  Fund,
the risk to Fund shareholders of personal liability is remote.

    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.

                                       25
<PAGE>
                        THE DEAN WITTER FAMILY OF FUNDS

   
MONEY MARKET FUNDS                       DEAN WITTER RETIREMENT SERIES
Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.       Liquid Asset Series
Dean Witter U.S. Government Money        U.S. Government Money Market Series
Market Trust                             U.S. Government Securities Series
Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust  Intermediate Income Securities Series
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily    American Value Series
Income Trust                             Capital Growth Series
Dean Witter New York Municipal Money     Dividend Growth Series
Market Trust                             Strategist Series
EQUITY FUNDS                             Utilities Series
Dean Witter American Value Fund          Value-Added Market Series
Dean Witter Natural Resource             Global Equity Series
Development Securities Inc.              ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS
Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities   Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
Inc.                                     Dean Witter Strategist Fund
Dean Witter Developing Growth            ACTIVE ASSETS ACCOUNT PROGRAM
Securities Trust                         Active Assets Money Trust
Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series    Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
Dean Witter Utilities Fund               Active Assets Government Securities
Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities    Trust
Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
Dean Witter Precious Metals and
Minerals Trust
Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
Dean Witter Health Services Trust
Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth
Securities
Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund
Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
FIXED-INCOME FUNDS
Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities
Trust
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income
Fund
Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income
Fund
Dean Witter Convertible Securities
Trust
Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
Dean Witter Intermediate Income
Securities
Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income
Fund Inc.
Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal
Series Trust
Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury
Trust
Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal
Trust
Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
Dean Witter High Income Securities
    
<PAGE>

   
Dean Witter
Premier Income Trust
                                    Dean Witter
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
TRUSTEES                            Premier Income
Jack F. Bennett                     Trust
Michael Bozic
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Edwin J. Garn
John R. Haire
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson
Paul Kolton
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
Thomas F. Caloia
Treasurer
CUSTODIAN
The Bank of New York
90 Washington Street
New York, New York 10286
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.
SUB-ADVISOR
BlackRock Financial Management L.P.
                                         PROSPECTUS -- JANUARY 11, 1995
    
<PAGE>
   
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                                                                     DEAN WITTER
JANUARY 11, 1995
    
                                                            PREMIER INCOME TRUST

- ---------------------------------------------------------

    Dean  Witter Premier Income  Trust (the "Fund")  is an open-end, diversified
management investment  company, whose  investment objective  is to  earn a  high
level  of current income  consistent with low volatility  of principal. The Fund
seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing primarily in high-quality
Mortgage-Backed Securities and securities backed by other assets  ("Asset-Backed
Securities").

   
    A  Prospectus for the Fund dated January  11, 1995, 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 number 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
Premier Income Trust
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
(212) 392-2550
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
The Fund and its Management............................................................          3

Trustees and Officers..................................................................          9
Investment Practices and Policies......................................................         12
Investment Restrictions................................................................         22

Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage...................................................         23

The Distributor........................................................................         25
Determination of Net Asset Value.......................................................         29
Shareholder Services...................................................................         29

Redemptions and Repurchases............................................................         32

Dividends, Distributions and Taxes.....................................................         33

Performance Information................................................................         35

Description of Shares..................................................................         36

Custodian and Transfer Agent...........................................................         37

Independent Accountants................................................................         38
Reports to Shareholders................................................................         38
Legal Counsel..........................................................................         38
Experts................................................................................         38
Registration Statement.................................................................         38

Financial Statements -- October 31, 1994...............................................         39
</TABLE>
    

                                       2
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE FUND

    The  Fund is a Trust of the type commonly known as a "Massachusetts business
trust" and was organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts  on
March 27, 1991.

THE INVESTMENT MANAGER

    Dean  Witter  InterCapital Inc.,  a  Delaware corporation,  (the "Investment
Manager" or "InterCapital"), 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  and Sub-Advisor, subject  to review by  the
Fund's  Board of Trustees. In addition, Trustees of the Fund provide guidance on
economic factors and interest rate trends. Information as to these Trustees  and
officers is contained under the caption "Trustees and Officers".

   
    InterCapital  is also  the investment manager  or investment  adviser of the
following management  investment companies:  Active Assets  Money Trust,  Active
Assets  Tax-Free Trust, Active  Assets California Tax-Free  Trust, Active Assets
Government Securities Trust, InterCapital  Income Securities Inc.,  InterCapital
Insured Municipal Bond Trust, InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust, InterCapital
Insured  Municipal  Income  Trust,  InterCapital  Insured  Municipal Securities,
InterCapital California  Insured Municipal  Income Trust,  InterCapital  Insured
California  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Investment
Trust,  InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Income  Trust,  InterCapital   Quality
Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  California  Quality  Municipal Securities,
InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities, High Income Advantage Trust,
High Income Advantage  Trust II, High  Income Advantage Trust  III, Dean  Witter
Government  Income Trust,  Dean Witter High  Yield Securities  Inc., Dean Witter
Tax-Free Daily  Income  Trust, Dean  Witter  Tax-Exempt Securities  Trust,  Dean
Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc., Dean Witter Natural Resource Development
Securities  Inc., Dean Witter American Value Fund, Dean Witter Developing Growth
Securities Trust, Dean Witter  U.S. Government Money  Market Trust, 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 World  Wide Income  Trust, Dean  Witter California  Tax-Free
Income  Fund, Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund, Dean Witter Convertible
Securities Trust, Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust, Dean Witter  Value-Added
Market  Series, Dean  Witter Utilities Fund,  Dean Witter  Managed Assets Trust,
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust, Dean Witter Strategist Fund,
Dean  Witter  Intermediate   Income  Securites,  Dean   Witter  Capital   Growth
Securities, Dean Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust, Dean Witter New York
Municipal Money Market Trust, Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc., Dean Witter
Global  Short-Term Income Fund Inc., Dean  Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc., Dean
Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust, Dean Witter Short-Term U.S.  Treasury
Trust,  Dean Witter Premier Income Trust,  Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust,
Dean Witter Health Sciences  Trust, Dean Witter  Retirement Series, Dean  Witter
Global  Dividend Growth  Securities, Dean  Witter Limited  Term Municipal Trust,
Dean Witter Short-Term Bond
    

                                       3
<PAGE>
   
Fund, Dean Witter  Global Utilities  Fund, Dean Witter  High Income  Securities,
Dean  Witter National Municipal Trust,  Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund,
Dean Witter  Mid-Cap  Growth  Fund, Dean  Witter  Select  Dimensions  Investment
Series,  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 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 Global Convertible Trust, TCW/DW Total Return
Trust,  TCW/DW  Emerging Markets  Opportunities 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.
    

    The  Investment Manager also serves as an investment adviser for Dean Witter
World Wide Investment Fund,  an investment company organized  under the laws  of
Luxembourg,  shares of which are not available for purchase in the United States
or by American citizens outside the United States.

    Pursuant to an Investment Management Agreement (the "Management  Agreement")
with  the Investment  Manager, the Fund  has retained the  Investment Manager to
supervise the investment of the  Fund's assets. The Investment Manager,  through
consultation  with BlackRock  Financial Management L.P.  (the "Sub-Advisor") and
through  its  own  portfolio  management  staff,  obtains  and  evaluates   such
information and advice relating to the economy, securities markets, and specific
securities  as  it considers  necessary or  useful  to continuously  oversee the
management of the assets of the Fund in a manner consistent with its  investment
objective.

    Under  the terms  of the Management  Agreement, the  Investment Manager also
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 that were previously performed directly
    

                                       4
<PAGE>
by InterCapital. The  foregoing internal  reorganization did not  result in  any
change  of 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 Management Agreement.

    Expenses   not  expressly  assumed  by  the  Investment  Manager  under  the
Management Agreement, by the Sub-Advisor pursuant to the Sub-Advisory  Agreement
(see  below), 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 share  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  Trustees'  meetings  and of
preparing, printing and mailing of proxy statements and reports to shareholders;
fees and  travel  expenses of  Trustees  or members  of  any advisory  board  or
committee  who are not employees of the Investment Manager or Sub-Advisor or any
corporate affiliate  of  the Investment  Manager  or Sub-Advisor;  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 the  Fund's legal  counsel, including  counsel to  the Trustees  who are  not
interested  persons of the Fund or of the Investment Manager or Sub-Advisor (not
including compensation  or  expenses  of  attorneys who  are  employees  of  the
Investment  Manager or Sub-Advisor) and independent accountants; membership dues
of industry  associations;  interest  on  Fund  borrowings;  postage;  insurance
premiums on property or personnel (including officers and directors) 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.

    The   Management  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  Management Agreement in no
way restricts  the  Investment Manager  from  acting as  investment  manager  or
adviser to others.

   
    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 0.50% to the Fund's daily net assets. For the fiscal years ended October
31, 1994,  1993 and  1992, the  Fund  accrued to  the Investment  Manager  total
compensation under the Management Agreement in the amounts of $306,372, $657,860
and $722,695, respectively.
    

   
    Pursuant  to a Sub-Advisory Agreement between the Investment Manager and the
Sub-Advisor,  the  Sub-Advisor  has  been  retained,  subject  to  the   overall
supervision  of  the  Investment  Manager  and  the  Trustees  of  the  Fund, to
continuously furnish investment advice concerning individual portfolio  security
selections.
    

    The  Sub-Advisor  provides asset  management services  with respect  to high
quality fixed income  instruments, with particular  emphasis on  Mortgage-Backed
Securities.  The Sub-Advisor currently serves as the investment adviser to fixed
income  investors   in  the   United  States   and  overseas   through   several

                                       5
<PAGE>
   
funds  with combined net assets under management in excess of $22 billion. These
include twenty-one closed-end investment  companies: The BlackRock Income  Trust
Inc.,  The BlackRock Target Term Trust  Inc., The BlackRock Advantage Term Trust
Inc., The BlackRock  Strategic Term Trust  Inc., The BlackRock  1998 Term  Trust
Inc.,  The BlackRock Municipal Term Trust  Inc., The BlackRock Insured Municipal
Term Trust Inc., The BlackRock North American Government Income Trust Inc.,  The
BlackRock  Investment Quality Term  Trust Inc., The  BlackRock Insured Municipal
2008 Term Trust Inc., The BlackRock California Insured Municipal 2008 Term Trust
Inc., The  BlackRock  Florida  Insured  Municipal  2008  Term  Trust  Inc.,  The
BlackRock  New York Insured  Municipal 2008 Term Trust  Inc., The BlackRock 1999
Term Trust  Inc., The  BlackRock Investment  Quality Municipal  Trust Inc.,  The
BlackRock  California  Investment Quality  Municipal  Trust Inc.,  The BlackRock
Florida  Investment  Quality  Municipal  Trust  Inc.,  The  BlackRock  New  York
Investment  Quality Municipal  Trust Inc.,  The BlackRock  New Jersey Investment
Quality Municipal Trust  Inc., The  BlackRock Investment Grade  2009 Term  Trust
Inc.  and The BlackRock 2001 Term Trust Inc., which were designed for individual
investors and are listed on either the New York or American Stock Exchange. Each
of these  funds  is a  closed-end  management investment  company  that  invests
primarily in investment grade Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities and in
securities  that are issued or  guaranteed by the U.S.  government or one of its
agencies or instrumentalities or invests in Municipal Securities. Another  fund,
BlackRock   Short  Duration  L.P.,  was   privately  placed  with  institutional
investors, and  invests  in  high credit  quality  short-duration  fixed  income
instruments.  The  Sub-Advisor  also serves  as  the investment  advisor  to six
offshore funds: BlackRock  Fund for  Fannie Mae  Mortgage Securities,  BlackRock
Freddie  Mac Mortgage Securities Fund, BFM  Mortgage Performance Fund, BFM Libor
Mortgage Fund, BSY  Financial Corp. and  Gemini I. Each  of these funds  invests
primarily  in  U.S.  Mortgage-Backed Securities.  In  addition,  the Sub-Advisor
serves as  investment advisor  to several  institutional investors  in  separate
accounts.
    

    The Sub-Advisor's general and limited partners and employees include several
individuals  with extensive experience in  creating, evaluating and investing in
Mortgage-Backed Securities, Asset-Backed Securities and hedging products.  Prior
to  co-founding the Sub-Advisor  (of which he  is a general  partner), from July
1976 to  March  1988,  Laurence  D.  Fink  was  employed  by  The  First  Boston
Corporation  where he had been a Managing  Director since January 1979. At First
Boston, he was a member of the  Management Committee and co-head of its  Taxable
Fixed  Income Division. He  also managed the Financial  Futures and Fixed Income
Options Department and  the Mortgage and  Real Estate Products  Group. Ralph  L.
Schlosstein,  President and a  co-founder of the  Sub-Advisor (of which  he is a
general partner), was employed  by Shearson Lehman  Brothers Inc. from  February
1981  to March 1988 and became a  Managing Director in August, 1984. At Shearson
Lehman, he was co-head of the  Mortgage and Savings Institutions Group.  Messrs.
Fink  and  Schlosstein,  along  with  other  members  of  the  Sub-Advisor, were
instrumental in  many of  the  major innovations  in these  securities  markets,
including  the creation of  the fixed and  floating rate collateralized mortgage
obligation,  asset-backed  securities   and  the  senior-subordinated   mortgage
pass-through securities.

   
    On  June 16, 1994, the partners of the Sub-Adviser entered into a definitive
agreement to sell their  partnership interests in the  Sub-Adviser to PNC  Bank,
N.A. ("PNC"), headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (the "Transaction"). The
Transaction, which was subject to bank regulatory approval, is expected to close
in  early 1995 and  is subject to  various conditions. After  the closing of the
Transaction, BlackRock will retain its name and will continue to operate out  of
its  New York  office. All members  of the Sub-Adviser's  senior management team
have   agreed    to   sign    long-term    employment   contracts    and    will
    

                                       6
<PAGE>
   
be responsible for managing the day-to-day affairs of the Sub-Adviser. Following
the  closing  of the  Transaction, the  Sub-Adviser  will become  a wholly-owned
corporate subsidiary of PNC  Asset Management Group,  Inc., the holding  company
for PNC's asset management business.
    

   
    PNC is a commercial bank offering a wide range of domestic and international
commercial  banking, retail  banking and  trust services  to its  customers. Its
principal office is located in  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. PNC is a  wholly-owned
indirect  subsidiary of PNC  Bank Corp. (the "Holding  Company"), a bank holding
company organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
    

   
    In order to assure continuity of  investment advisory services to the  Trust
by the Sub-Adviser after the Transaction, the Board met in person on October 20,
1994,  for the purpose of considering whether  it would be in the best interests
of the Trust  and its shareholders  for InterCapital  to enter into  a new  sub-
advisory  agreement with the  Sub-Adviser (the "New  Sub-Advisory Agreement") to
take effect upon  consummation of the  Transaction. At its  meeting, the  Board,
including each of the Trustees who are not "interested persons" of the Trust, as
that  term is defined in the  1940 Act (the "Independent Trustees"), unanimously
approved the  New Sub-Advisory  Agreement  and recommended  it for  approval  by
Shareholders.  The  New  Sub-Advisory  Agreement  is  identical  to  the current
Sub-Advisory Agreement except for the  effective date and the stated  expiration
date. The meeting of shareholders will take place on or about February 17, 1995.
    

    Both the Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor have authorized any of their
directors, partners, officers and employees who have been elected as Trustees or
officers of the Fund to serve in the capacities in which they have been elected.
Services  furnished by directors, the Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor may
be furnished by directors,  partners, officers and  employees of the  Investment
Manager  and the  Sub-Advisor. In connection  with the services  rendered by the
Sub-Advisor, the Sub-Advisor bears the following expenses: (a) the salaries  and
expenses  of its personnel;  and (b) all  expenses incurred by  it in connection
with performing the services provided by it as Sub-Advisor, as described above.

   
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  the Investment Manager and expenses of  the Fund and the Investment Manager
assumed by the Sub-Advisor, the Investment Manager pays the Sub-Advisor  monthly
compensation  equal  to 40%  of  the Investment  Manager's  monthly compensation
payable under the Management Agreement. For  the fiscal years ended October  31,
1994,  1993  and  1992,  the  Investment  Manager  informed  the  Fund  that the
Investment Manager  accrued  to the  Sub-Advisor  total compensation  under  the
Sub-Advisory Agreement of $122,549, $263,144 and $289,078, respectively.
    

    Pursuant  to the Management Agreement  and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, total
operating expenses of the Fund are subject to applicable limitations under rules
and regulations  of states  where the  Fund is  authorized to  sell its  shares.
Therefore, operating expenses are effectively subject to the most restrictive of
such  limitations as the same  may be amended from  time to time. Presently, the
most restrictive limitation is  as follows. If, in  any fiscal year, the  Fund's
total   operating  expenses,  exclusive  of  taxes,  interest,  brokerage  fees,
distribution fees  and  extraordinary  expenses  (to  the  extent  permitted  by
applicable  state securities laws  and regulations), exceed 2  1/2% of the first
$30,000,000 of average daily net assets, 2%  of the next $70,000,000 and 1  1/2%
of any excess over $100,000,000, the Investment

                                       7
<PAGE>
   
Manager  will reimburse the Fund for the  amount of such excess. Pursuant to the
Sub-Advisory Agreement,  if any  such reimbursement  is made  by the  Investment
Manager,  the Investment Manager  will, in turn,  be reimbursed for  40% of such
payment by the Sub-Advisor. The reimbursement, if any, will be calculated  daily
and  credited  on  a monthly  basis.  The  Fund's expenses  did  not  exceed the
limitation set forth above during the fiscal years ended October 31, 1992,  1993
and 1994.
    

    The Investment Manager paid the organizational expenses of the Fund incurred
prior  to the offering of the Fund's  shares. The Fund reimbursed the Investment
Manager for  $150,000 of  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 Management Agreement and  the Sub-Advisory Agreement (the  "Agreements")
were  initially approved by the Board of Trustees on October 30, 1992 and by the
shareholders of the Fund at a Meeting of Shareholders held on January 12,  1993.
The  Agreements are substantially  identical to the  prior investment management
agreement and sub-advisory agreement which were initially approved by the Fund's
Trustees on April 16, 1991  and by DWR as the  then sole shareholder on May  15,
1991.  The Agreements took effect on June  30, 1993, upon the spin-off of Sears,
Roebuck and  Co.  of  its remaining  shares  of  DWDC. Both  Agreements  may  be
terminated  at any time, without penalty, on  thirty days notice by the Trustees
of the Fund, by the holders of a majority, as defined in the Investment  Company
Act  of 1940, as amended (the "Act"), of  the outstanding shares of the Fund, by
the Investment Manager,  or the Sub-Advisor  (Sub-Advisory Agreement only).  The
Agreements  will automatically  terminate in the  event of  their assignment (as
defined in the Act).
    

   
    Under its terms, both Agreements had an initial term ending April 30,  1994,
and  provide  that each  will continue  from year  to year  thereafter, provided
continuance of each 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  Trustees  of the  Fund; provided  that  in either  event  such
continuance  is approved annually by  the vote of a  majority of the Trustees of
the Fund  who are  not parties  to the  Agreements or  "interested persons"  (as
defined  in the Act) of any such party (the "Independent Trustees"), which votes
must be cast in  person at a meeting  called for the purpose  of voting on  such
approval.  At their meeting held on April 8, 1994, the Fund's Board of Trustees,
including a majority of the Independent Trustees, approved continuation of  each
Agreement until April 30, 1995.
    

   
    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 Management Agreement is terminated, or if the affiliation between
InterCapital 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.
    

                                       8
<PAGE>
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The  Trustees 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 Dean  Witter Funds  and the  TCW/DW Funds  are shown
below.

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    NAME, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                  PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                            <C>
Jack F. Bennett                                Retired; Director or  Trustee of the  Dean Witter Funds;  formerly
Trustee                                        Senior   Vice   President  and   Director  of   Exxon  Corporation
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky Weitzen             (1975-January, 1989) and Under Secretary of the U.S. Treasury  for
 Shalov & Wein                                 Monetary Affairs (1974-1975); Director of Philips Electronics N.V.
Counsel to the Independent Trustees            (electronics),  Tandem  Computers  Inc.  and  Massachusetts Mutual
114 West 47th Street                           Insurance Co.; director or  trustee of various not-for-profit  and
New York, New York                             business organizations.
Michael Bozic                                  President  and Chief Executive Officer  of Hills Department Stores
Trustee                                        (since May, 1991); formerly  Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer
c/o Hills Stores Inc.                          (January,  1987-August,  1990) and  President and  Chief Operating
15 Dan Road                                    Officer (August,  1990-February, 1991)  of the  Sears  Merchandise
Canton, Massachusetts                          Group  of Sears, Roebuck and Co.;  Director or Trustee of the Dean
                                               Witter Funds; Director of Harley Davidson Credit Inc., the  United
                                               Negro College Fund and Domain Inc. (home decor retailer).
Charles A. Fiumefreddo*                        Chairman,  Chief Executive  Officer and  Director of InterCapital,
Chairman of the Board,                         Dean Witter Distributors Inc. ("Distributors") and DWSC; Executive
 President, Chief Executive Officer            Vice President and Director of DWR; Chairman, Director or Trustee,
 and Trustee                                   President and Chief  Executive Officer of  the Dean Witter  Funds;
Two World Trade Center                         Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Trustee of the TCW/DW Funds;
New York, New York                             Chairman  and Director of Dean  Witter Trust Company ("DWTC"); Di-
                                               rector and/or  officer  of  various  DWDC  subsidiaries;  formerly
                                               Executive  Vice President  and Director  of DWDC  (until February,
                                               1993).
Edwin J. Garn                                  Director or  Trustee of  the Dean  Witter Funds;  formerly  United
Trustee                                        States  Senator (R-Utah) (1974-1992)  and Chairman, Senate Banking
c/o Huntsman Chemical Corporation              Committee (1980-1986);  formerly Mayor  of  Salt Lake  City,  Utah
2000 Eagle Gate Tower                          (1971-1974);  formerly Astronaut,  Space Shuttle  Discovery (April
Salt Lake City, Utah                           12-19, 1985); Vice Chairman, Huntsman Chemical Corporation  (since
                                               January,   1993);  member  of  the  board  of  various  civic  and
                                               charitable organizations.
</TABLE>
    

                                       9
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    NAME, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                  PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                            <C>
John R. Haire                                  Chairman of the Audit Committee  and Chairman of the Committee  of
Trustee                                        the  Independent Directors or Trustees  and Director or Trustee of
Two World Trade Center                         the Dean  Witter  Funds; Trustee  of  the TCW/DW  Funds;  formerly
New York, NY                                   President,  Council for Aid to  Education (1978-October, 1989) and
                                               Chairman and  Chief Executive  Officer of  Anchor Corporation,  an
                                               Investment  Adviser (1964-1978);  Director of  Washington National
                                               Corporation (insurance) and Bowne & Co. Inc., (printing).
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson                          Senior Partner, Johnson  Smick International,  Inc., a  consulting
Trustee                                        firm;  Koch Professor  of International Economics  and Director of
c/o Johnson Smick International, Inc.          the Center for  Global Market Studies  at George Mason  University
1133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.                  (since September, 1990); Co-Chairman and a founder of the Group of
Washington, DC                                 Seven  Council (G7C), an  international economic commission (since
                                               September, 1990); Director  or Trustee of  the Dean Witter  Funds;
                                               Trustee  of  the  TCW/DW  Funds;  Director  of  Greenwich  Capital
                                               Markets, Inc. (broker-dealer); formerly Vice Chairman of the Board
                                               of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (February, 1986-August,
                                               1990) and Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury (1982-1986).
Paul Kolton                                    Director or  Trustee of  the Dean  Witter Funds;  Chairman of  the
Trustee                                        Audit  Committee and Chairman of  the Committee of the Independent
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky Weitzen             Trustees and Trustee of the TCW/DW Funds; formerly Chairman of the
 Shalov & Wein                                 Financial Accounting Standards Advisory Council; formerly Chairman
Counsel to the Independent Trustees            and Chief  Executive  Officer  of  the  American  Stock  Exchange;
114 West 47th Street                           Director   of  UCC  Investors   Holding  Inc.  (Uniroyal  Chemical
New York, New York                             Company);  director   or   trustee   of   various   not-for-profit
                                               organizations.
Michael E. Nugent                              General  Partner,  Triumph  Capital,  L.P.,  a  private investment
Trustee                                        partnership (since April, 1988); Director  or Trustee of the  Dean
c/o Triumph Capital, L.P.                      Witter  Funds,  and Trustee  of  the TCW/DW  Funds;  formerly Vice
237 Park Avenue                                President,  Bankers  Trust  Company  and  BT  Capital  Corporation
New York, New York                             (September,   1984-March,  1988);  Director  of  various  business
                                               organizations.
Philip J. Purcell*                             Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer  of
Trustee                                        DWDC,   DWR  and   Novus  Credit   Services,  Inc.;   Director  of
Two World Trade Center                         InterCapital, DWSC and  Distributors; Director or  Trustee of  the
New York, New York                             Dean  Witter  Funds;  Director  and/or  officer  of  various  DWDC
                                               subsidiaries.
</TABLE>
    

                                       10
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    NAME, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS                  PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                            <C>
John L. Schroeder                              Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of the  Home
Trustee                                        Insurance Company (since August, 1991); Director or Trustee of the
c/o The Home Insurance Company                 Dean   Witter  Funds;  Director  of  Citizens  Utilities  Company;
59 Maiden Lane                                 formerly Chairman  and Chief  Investment Officer  of  Axe-Houghton
New York, New York                             Management and the Axe-Houghton Funds (April, 1983-June, 1991) and
                                               President  of  USF&G  Financial Services,  Inc.  (June, 1990-June,
                                               1991).
Sheldon Curtis                                 Senior  Vice   President,  Secretary   and  General   Counsel   of
Vice President, Secretary and                  InterCapital  and  DWSC; Senior  Vice  President and  Secretary of
 General Counsel                               DWTC; Senior  Vice President,  Assistant Secretary  and  Assistant
Two World Trade Center                         General  Counsel of Distributors; Assistant Secretary of DWR; Vice
New York, New York                             President, Secretary and General Counsel of the Dean Witter  Funds
                                               and the TCW/DW Funds.
Thomas F. Caloia                               First  Vice  President (since  May  1991) and  Assistant Treasurer
Treasurer                                      (since January, 1993)  of InterCapital; First  Vice President  and
Two World Trade Center                         Assistant  Treasurer of DWSC;  Treasurer of the  Dean Witter Funds
New York, New York                             and the TCW/DW Funds; previously Vice President of InterCapital.
<FN>
- ------------------------
*Denotes Trustees who are  "interested persons" of the  Fund, as defined in  the
 Act.
</TABLE>
    

   
    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,  David  A.  Hughey,  Executive  Vice  President  and  Chief
Administrative Officer of InterCapital, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC and Director
of DWTC,  Edmund C.  Puckhaber,  Executive Vice  President of  InterCapital  and
Director  of DWTC and Thomas H. Connelly, Senior Vice President of InterCapital,
are Vice Presidents of the Fund. Barry  Fink and Marilyn K. Cranney, First  Vice
Presidents and Assistant General Counsels of InterCapital and DWSC, and Lawrence
S.  Lafer, Lou  Anne D.  McInnis and Ruth  Rossi, Vice  Presidents and Assistant
General Counsels  of InterCapital  and DWSC,  are Assistant  Secretaries of  the
Fund.
    

   
    The Fund pays each Trustee who is not an employee or retired employee of the
Investment  Manager or  an affiliated  company an  annual fee  of $1,200 ($1,600
prior to December 31, 1993) plus $50  for each meeting of the Board of  Trustees
or  of any committee of the Board of  Trustees attended by the Trustee in person
(the Fund pays the Chairman of the  Audit Committee an additional annual fee  of
$1,000  ($1,200  prior  to December  31,  1993)  and pays  the  Chairman  of the
Committee of the  Independent Trustees an  additional annual fee  of $2,400,  in
each  case inclusive  of the Committee  meeting fees). The  Fund also reimburses
such Trustees for travel  and other out-of-pocket expenses  incurred by them  in
connection  with  attending such  meetings. The  Fund  has adopted  a retirement
program under which an Independent Trustee who retires after a minimum  required
period  of service  would be entitled  to retirement payments  upon reaching the
eligible retirement age (normally, after attaining age 72) based upon length  of
service  and computed  as a  percentage of  one-fifth of  the total compensation
earned by such Trustee for service to the Fund in the five-year period prior  to
the  date  of the  Trustee's retirement.  As of  the date  of this  Statement of
Additional Information, the  aggregate shares of  the Fund owned  by the  Fund's
officers and
    

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
Trustees  as a group was less than 1  percent of the Fund's shares of beneficial
interest outstanding.  For the  fiscal year  ended October  31, 1994,  the  Fund
accrued  a total of $35,498 for Trustees'  fees, and expenses and benefits under
the above-described retirement program.
    

INVESTMENT PRACTICES AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

    As discussed  in  the  Prospectus,  the Fund  may  invest  in,  among  other
securities,   securities  issued  by  the   U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities. Such securities include:

        (1) U.S. Treasury bills (maturities of one year or less), U.S.  Treasury
    notes  (maturities of one  to ten years) and  U.S. Treasury bonds (generally
    maturities of greater than ten years),  all of which are direct  obligations
    of  the U.S.  Government and,  as such,  are backed  by the  "full faith and
    credit" of the United States.

        (2) Securities  issued by  agencies and  instrumentalities of  the  U.S.
    Government  which are  backed by  the full  faith and  credit of  the United
    States. Among the  agencies and instrumentalities  issuing such  obligations
    are  the Federal  Housing Administration,  the Government  National Mortgage
    Association ("GNMA"), the Department of  Housing and Urban Development,  the
    Export-Import  Bank, the  Farmers Home Administration,  the General Services
    Administration,  the  Maritime   Administration  and   the  Small   Business
    Administration.  The maturities of such  obligations range from three months
    to 30 years.

        (3) Securities issued  by agencies and  instrumentalities which are  not
    backed  by the full faith and credit of the United States, but 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. Among the agencies
    and instrumentalities  issuing such  obligations  are the  Tennessee  Valley
    Authority,  the Federal National Mortgage  Association ("FNMA"), the Federal
    Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC") and the U.S. Postal Service.

        (4) Securities issued  by agencies and  instrumentalities which are  not
    backed  by the  full faith and  credit of  the United States,  but which are
    backed by the  credit of the  issuing agency or  instrumentality. Among  the
    agencies and instrumentalities issuing such obligations are the Federal Farm
    Credit System and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

    Neither  the value nor the yield of the U.S. Government securities which may
be invested in by the  Fund are guaranteed by  the U.S. Government. Such  values
and  yield will  fluctuate with changes  in prevailing interest  rates and other
factors. Generally, as  prevailing interest rates  rise, the value  of any  U.S.
Government  securities held by  the Fund will fall.  Such securities with longer
maturities generally tend to  produce higher yields and  are subject to  greater
market fluctuation as a result of changes in interest rates than debt securities
with  shorter maturities. The  Fund is not  limited as to  the maturities of the
U.S. Government securities in  which it may  invest with respect  to 35% of  its
total assets.

ZERO COUPON SECURITIES

    A  portion of the  U.S. Government securities  purchased by the  Fund may be
"zero coupon" Treasury securities. The Fund may invest in zero coupon securities
up to 5% of its total assets. Zero coupon Treasury securities are U.S.  Treasury
bills,   notes  and   bonds  which  have   been  stripped   of  their  unmatured

                                       12
<PAGE>
interest coupons and receipts or  which are certificates representing  interests
in  such stripped debt obligations and coupons. Such securities are purchased at
a discount from  their face amount,  giving the purchaser  the right to  receive
their  full value at  maturity. A zero  coupon security pays  no interest to its
holder during its  life. Its  value to an  investor consists  of the  difference
between  its face value at the  time of maturity and the  price for which it was
acquired, which is generally  an amount significantly less  than its face  value
(sometimes  referred to  as a  "deep discount"  price). To  the extent  the Fund
invests in  zero  coupon  securities,  it will  not  earn  current  cash  income
available  for distribution  to shareholders. However,  the Fund  will invest in
zero coupon securities only when the Investment Manager and Sub-Advisor  believe
that there will be cash in the Fund's portfolio representing return of principal
on  portfolio securities of  the Fund at least  equal to the  income on the zero
coupon securities. However, in order to  distribute the accrued income from  any
zero  coupon securities, it  may be necessary for  the Fund to  sell some of its
portfolio securities,  which  may  occur at  a  time  when the  Fund  would  not
otherwise have chosen to sell such portfolio securities.

    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 if
prevailing  interest rates  rise. For  this reason,  zero coupon  securities are
subject to substantially  greater market  price fluctuations  during periods  of
changing  prevailing interest  rates than  are comparable  debt securities which
make current distributions of interest. 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.

    Currently the  only U.S.  Treasury security  issued without  coupons is  the
Treasury  bill. However,  a number of  banks and brokerage  firms have separated
("stripped") the  principal  portions  from  the coupon  portions  of  the  U.S.
Treasury  bonds and notes  and sold them  separately in the  form of receipts or
certificates  representing  undivided  interests  in  these  instruments  (which
instruments are generally held by a bank in a custodial or trust account).

MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES

    As  discussed in the Prospectus, the Mortgage-Backed Securities purchased by
the Fund evidence an interest in  a specific pool of mortgages. Such  securities
are issued by GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC.

    GNMA  CERTIFICATES.  GNMA is a wholly-owned corporate instrumentality of the
United States  within  the Department  of  Housing and  Urban  Development.  The
National Housing Act of 1934, as amended (the "Housing Act"), authorized GNMA to
guarantee  the timely payment  of the principal of  and interest on certificates
that are based on and backed by a pool of mortgage loans insured by the  Federal
Housing  Administration under the Housing Act, or  Title V of the Housing Act of
1949 ("FHA  Loans"), or  guaranteed by  the Veterans'  Administration under  the
Servicemen's  Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended  ("VA Loans"), or by pools of
other eligible mortgage loans. The Housing Act provides that the full faith  and
credit  of the U.S. Government is pledged to the payment of all amounts that may
be required to be  paid under any  guarantee. In order  to meet its  obligations
under  such guarantee, GNMA is authorized to  borrow from the U.S. Treasury with
no limitations as to amount.

    The GNMA Certificates  will represent  a pro rata  interest in  one or  more
pools  of the following  types of mortgage  loans; (i) fixed  rate level payment
mortgage loans; (ii) fixed rate graduated payment mortgage

                                       13
<PAGE>
loans; (iii) fixed rate growing equity mortgage loans; (iv) fixed rate  mortgage
loans  secured by manufactured (mobile) homes; (v) mortgage loans on multifamily
residential properties  under construction;  (vi)  mortgage loans  on  completed
multifamily projects; (vii) fixed rate mortgage loans as to which escrowed funds
are used to reduce the borrower's monthly payments during the early years of the
mortgage  loans ("buydown" mortgage  loans); (viii) mortgage  loans that provide
for adjustments in payments  based on periodic changes  in interest rates or  in
other  payment  terms of  the mortgage  loans;  and (ix)  mortgage-backed serial
notes. All of these mortgage loans will be FHA Loans or VA Loans and, except  as
otherwise specified above, will be fully-amortizing loans secured by first liens
on one-to four-family housing units.

    FNMA  CERTIFICATES.    FNMA is  a  federally chartered  and  privately owned
corporation  organized  and  existing   under  the  Federal  National   Mortgage
Association  Charter  Act. FNMA  was originally  established in  1938 as  a U.S.
Government agency to provide supplemental  liquidity to the mortgage market  and
was  transformed into a  stockholder owned and  privately managed corporation by
legislation enacted  in  1968.  FNMA  provides  funds  to  the  mortgage  market
primarily  by  purchasing  home  mortgage  loans  from  local  lenders,  thereby
replenishing their funds for additional lending. FNMA acquires funds to purchase
home mortgage loans from many capital  market investors that may not  ordinarily
invest  in mortgage loans directly, thereby  expanding the total amount of funds
available for housing.

    Each FNMA Certificate will entitle the registered holder thereof to  receive
amounts  representing  such holder's  pro rata  interest in  scheduled principal
payments and interest  payments (at such  FNMA Certificate's pass-through  rate,
which  is net  of any  servicing and guarantee  fees on  the underlying mortgage
loans), and  any  principal  prepayments  on the  mortgage  loans  in  the  pool
represented by such FNMA Certificate and such holder's proportionate interest in
the  full principal  amount of  any foreclosed  or otherwise  finally liquidated
mortgage loan. The full and timely payment of principal of and interest on  each
FNMA  Certificate will be guaranteed  by FNMA, which guarantee  is not backed by
the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.

    Each FNMA Certificate  will represent  a pro rata  interest in  one or  more
pools  of FHA  Loans, VA  Loans or  conventional mortgage  loans (i.e., mortgage
loans that are  not insured  or guaranteed by  any governmental  agency) of  the
following  types: (i) fixed  rate level payment mortgage  loans; (ii) fixed rate
growing equity  mortgage  loans; (iii)  fixed  rate graduated  payment  mortgage
loans;  (iv) variable rate California mortgage  loans; (v) other adjustable rate
mortgage loans;  and  (vi) fixed  rate  mortgage loans  secured  by  multifamily
projects.

    FHLMC  CERTIFICATES.   FHLMC is  a corporate  instrumentality of  the United
States created pursuant to  the Emergency Home Finance  Act of 1970, as  amended
(the "FHLMC Act"). FHLMC was established primarily for the purpose of increasing
the  availability of  mortgage credit for  the financing of  needed housing. The
principal activity of FHLMC  currently consists of the  purchase of first  lien,
conventional,  residential mortgage  loans and  participation interests  in such
mortgage loans and the resale of the mortgage loans so purchased in the form  of
mortgage securities, primarily FHLMC Certificates.

    FHLMC guarantees to each registered holder of a FHLMC Certificate the timely
payment  of interest at the rate provided for by such FHLMC Certificate, whether
or not received.  FHLMC also  guarantees to each  registered holder  of a  FHLMC
Certificate  ultimate collection of all principal of the related mortgage loans,
without any offset or deduction, but  does not, generally, guarantee the  timely
payment of scheduled principal. FHLMC may remit the amount due on account of its
guarantee of collection of

                                       14
<PAGE>
principal  at any  time after  default on an  underlying mortgage  loan, but not
later than 30 days following  (i) foreclosure sale, (ii)  payment of a claim  by
any  mortgage  insurer  or (iii)  the  expiration  of any  right  of redemption,
whichever occurs later, but in any event no later than one year after demand has
been  made  upon  the  mortgagor  for  accelerated  payment  of  principal.  The
obligations of FHLMC under its guarantee are obligations solely of FHLMC and are
not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.

    FHLMC  Certificates represent  a pro  rata interest  in a  group of mortgage
loans (a  "FHLMC Certificate  group")  purchased by  FHLMC. The  mortgage  loans
underlying  the FHLMC Certificates will consist of fixed rate or adjustable rate
mortgage loans with original terms to maturity of between ten and thirty  years,
substantially  all of  which are  secured by  first liens  on one-to four-family
residential properties or multifamily projects. Each mortgage loan must meet the
applicable standards set forth in the  FHLMC Act. A FHLMC Certificate group  may
include  whole  loans,  participation  interests in  whole  loans  and undivided
interests in whole loans and participations comprising another FHLMC Certificate
group.

CORPORATE DEBT SECURITIES

    As described  in  the  Prospectus,  the Fund  may  purchase  corporate  debt
securities  rated Aaa by Moody's or  AAA by S&P or, if  unrated, deemed to be of
comparable quality  by  the Fund's  Trustees.  These debt  securities  may  have
adjustable or fixed rates of interest and in certain instances may be secured by
assets  of the issuer. Adjustable rate corporate debt securities, which the Fund
may purchase up to 5% of its total assets, may have features similar to those of
adjustable rate  Mortgage-Backed  Securities,  but  corporate  debt  securities,
unlike Mortgage-Backed Securities, are not subject to prepayment risk other than
through  contractual  call  provisions  which  generally  impose  a  penalty for
prepayment. Fixed rate debt securities also may be subject to call provisions.

MUNICIPAL OBLIGATIONS

    The Fund may invest up  to 5% of its  total assets in Municipal  Obligations
(consisting  of Municipal Bonds, Municipal Notes and Municipal Commercial Paper)
rated  in  the  highest  rating  category  by  Moody's  Investor  Service,  Inc.
("Moody's")  or Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P"). The Municipal Obligations
in which the Fund  may invest include "zero  coupon" Municipal Obligations.  Any
Municipal  Obligation which depends directly or  indirectly on the credit of the
United States  Government shall  be considered  to have  the highest  rating  by
Moody's and S&P.

    Municipal  Bonds and  Municipal Notes are  debt obligations of  a state, its
cities, municipalities and municipal  agencies which generally have  maturities,
at  the time of their issuance,  of either one year or  more (Bonds) or from six
months to three years (Notes). Municipal Commercial Paper consists of short-term
obligations of  municipalities  which  may  be issued  at  a  discount  and  are
sometimes  referred  to as  Short-Term Discount  Notes.  An obligation  shall be
considered a Municipal Bond, Municipal  Note or Municipal Commercial Paper  only
if,  in the opinion of bond counsel, the interest payable thereon is exempt from
federal income tax.

    The two principal classifications of  Municipal Bonds, Notes and  Commercial
Paper  are "general obligation" and "revenue"  bonds, notes or commercial paper.
General obligation bonds, notes or commercial paper are secured by the  issuer's
pledge  of its faith, credit  and taxing power for  the payment of principal and
interest. Issuers of general obligation bonds, notes or commercial paper include
a state,  its counties,  cities,  towns and  other governmental  units.  Revenue
bonds,  notes or commercial paper  are payable from the  revenues derived from a
particular facility or  class of  facilities or,  in some  cases, from  specific
revenue  sources. Revenue bonds, notes or commercial paper are issued for a wide
variety of

                                       15
<PAGE>
purposes, including the financing of electric, gas, water and sewer systems  and
other public utilities; industrial development and pollution control facilities;
single  and multi-family housing units; public buildings and facilities; air and
marine ports, transportation facilities such as toll roads, bridges and tunnels;
and health and educational  facilities such as  hospitals and dormitories.  They
rely  primarily on user fees to pay debt service, although the principal revenue
source is often supplemented by additional security features which are  intended
to  enhance the  creditworthiness of  the issuer's  obligations. In  some cases,
particularly revenue bonds  issued to  finance housing and  public buildings,  a
direct  or implied "moral obligation"  of a governmental unit  may be pledged to
the payment of debt service. In other  cases, a special tax or other charge  may
augment user fees.

    Included  within  the revenue  bonds  category are  participations  in lease
obligations or installment purchase  contracts (hereinafter collectively  called
"lease  obligations") of municipalities. State and local governments issue lease
obligations to acquire equipment and facilities.

    Lease obligations  may  have  risks not  normally  associated  with  general
obligation   or  other  revenue  bonds.   Leases  and  installment  purchase  or
conditional sale contracts (which may provide  for title to the leased asset  to
pass  eventually  to the  issuer)  have developed  as  a means  for governmental
issuers to acquire  property and  equipment without the  necessity of  complying
with  the constitutional and statutory requirements generally applicable for the
issuance of debt. Certain lease obligations contain "non-appropriation"  clauses
that  provide  that the  governmental issuer  has no  obligation to  make future
payments under  the lease  or contract  unless money  is appropriated  for  such
purpose  by  the appropriate  legislative body  on an  annual or  other periodic
basis.  Consequently,  continued  lease  payments  on  those  lease  obligations
containing  "non-appropriation"  clauses  are  dependent  on  future legislative
actions. If such  legislative actions  do not occur,  the holders  of the  lease
obligation  may  experience  difficulty in  exercising  their  rights, including
disposition of the property.

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  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. 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. The Fund did not  lend any of its portfolio securities during
its fiscal year ended October 31, 1994.
    

    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 Trust 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

                                       16
<PAGE>
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 Investment  Manager  pursuant to  procedures  adopted and  reviewed,  on  an
ongoing basis, by the Board of Trustees 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.

OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS

    OPTIONS  ON TREASURY BONDS  AND NOTES.  Because  trading interest in options
written on Treasury bonds and notes tends to center mostly 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 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.

    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 put options on securities which it holds
(or has the right to acquire) in its portfolio only to protect itself against  a
decline  in the value of  the security. If the  value of the underlying security
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 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. Any such gain  or loss could be offset in whole or  in
part by a change in the market value of the underlying security. If a put option
purchased by the Fund expired without being sold or exercised, the premium would
be lost.

    RISKS  OF OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS.  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  Investment
Manager and the Sub-Advisor.

    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.

                                       17
<PAGE>
    INTEREST RATE FUTURES CONTRACTS.  As a purchaser of an interest rate futures
contract ("futures contract"), the Fund incurs an obligation to take delivery of
a specified  amount of  the  obligation underlying  the  futures 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 futures contracts for the purpose of hedging
its  portfolio  (or  anticipated   portfolio)  securities  against  changes   in
prevailing  interest  rates.  If  the  Investment  Manager  and  the Sub-Advisor
anticipate that interest rates  may rise and, concomitantly,  the price of  U.S.
Government  or other debt securities fall, the Fund may sell a futures contract.
If declining interest  rates are anticipated,  the Fund may  purchase a  futures
contract to protect against a potential increase in the price of U.S. Government
or other debt securities the Fund intends to purchase. Subsequently, appropriate
U.S.  Government or  other debt 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. In  addition, futures
contracts will be bought or sold in order to close out a short or long  position
in a corresponding futures contract.

    As  discussed  in the  Prospectus, the  Fund  may invest  in Mortgage-Backed
Securities, such  as  floating  rate CMOs  or  adjustable  rate  Mortgage-Backed
Securities,  which have interest  rates subject to  periodic adjustment based on
changes to a designated index. One index which may serve as such a benchmark  is
the  London Interbank Offered Rate, or LIBOR. In order for the Fund to hedge its
exposure  to  fluctuations  in  short-term  interest  rates  for  its  portfolio
securities  subject to  the LIBOR  rate, the Fund  may purchase  or sell futures
contracts on U.S. dollar denominated Eurodollar instruments linked to the  LIBOR
rate.

    Although  most 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 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 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.

    When  the Fund enters  into a futures  contract it is  initially required to
deposit with its Custodian, in  a segregated account in  the name of the  broker
performing  the  transaction  an "initial  margin"  of cash  or  U.S. Government
securities equal to approximately  2-3% 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

                                       18
<PAGE>
contract. The margin deposits made are marked  to market daily and the Fund  may
be  required to make subsequent deposits into the segregated account, maintained
at its Custodian for that purpose, of cash or U.S. Government securities, called
"variation margin", in  the name of  the 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,
Eurodollar instruments, U.S. Treasury Notes with Maturities between 6 1/2 and 10
years, GNMA Certificates and Bank Certificates of Deposit.

    OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Fund may purchase 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), and the writer the obligation, 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. 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 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 and
the  Sub-Advisor wished to protect against an increase in interest rates and the
resulting negative  impact on  the value  of a  portion of  its U.S.  Government
securities portfolio, it might purchase a put 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.

   
    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.
    

    RISKS OF TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS  AND RELATED OPTIONS.  As  stated
in  the Prospectus, the Fund may sell  a futures contract to protect against the
decline in the value of U.S. Government securities held by the Fund. However, it
is possible that the futures market may advance and the value of securities held
in the Fund's portfolio may decline. If this were to occur, the Fund would  lose
money  on the futures  contracts and also  experience a decline  in value in its
portfolio securities. However, while this could occur for a very brief period or
to a very  small degree,  over time  the market prices  of the  securities of  a
diversified  portfolio will tend to move in  the same direction as the prices of
futures contracts.

                                       19
<PAGE>
   
    If the Fund purchases  a futures contract to  hedge against the increase  in
value  of U.S. Government  securities it intends  to buy, and  the value of such
securities 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 maintains a short position in 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  high grade debt obligations equal  in
value  (when added to any initial or  variation margin on deposit) to the market
value of the  securities underlying the  futures contract. Such  a position  may
also  be covered by owning the securities 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 high grade debt  obligations
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.

    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.
Transactions  are  entered  into  by  the Fund  only  with  broker  or financial
institutions deemed creditworthy by the Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor.

    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 is that  the prices of securities
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. 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.

                                       20
<PAGE>
    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 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 relationships between the debt securities and futures
market could result. Price distortions could also result if investors in futures
contracts opt to  make or  take delivery  of 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  U.S.  Government
securities  and movements in the prices of futures contracts, a correct forecast
of interest rate  trends by the  Investment Manager  may still not  result in  a
successful hedging transaction.

    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 at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.

    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 contracts or underlying U.S. Government securities.

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. These  agreements, which may  be
viewed  as  a  type  of  secured lending  by  the  Fund,  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  ("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
value  of the collateral, as specified in the agreement, does not decrease below
the purchase price plus  accrued interest. If  such decrease occurs,  additional
collateral  will  be  requested and,  when  received,  added to  the  account to
maintain  full  collateralization.  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.

                                       21
<PAGE>
    While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with direct
investment  in debt securities, the Fund follows procedures designed to minimize
such risks. These procedures include effecting repurchase transactions only with
large,  well-capitalized  and  well-established  financial  institutions   whose
financial  condition will be continually monitored by the Investment Manager and
Sub-Advisor subject to procedures  established by the Board  of Trustees of  the
Fund.  In addition, as  described above, the value  of the collateral underlying
the repurchase  agreement  will be  at  least  equal to  the  repurchase  price,
including  any accrued interest earned on the repurchase agreement. In the event
of a default  or bankruptcy by  a selling financial  institution, the Fund  will
seek  to liquidate such collateral. However,  the exercising of the Fund's right
to liquidate such collateral could involve  certain costs or delays and, to  the
extent  that  proceeds  from  any  sale upon  a  default  of  the  obligation to
repurchase were less than the repurchase price, the Fund could suffer a loss. It
is the current policy of the Fund not to invest in repurchase agreements that do
not mature within  seven days if  any such investment,  together with any  other
illiquid assets held by the Fund, amounts to more than 10% of its total assets.

WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES

    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 -- i.e., delivery  and payment can  take place a month  or more after  the
date  of the  transactions. 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, U.S.  Government securities or  other high  grade debt 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 Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor  and the Board of Trustees do
not believe that the Fund's net asset value or income will be adversely affected
by its purchase of securities on such basis.

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

   
    The Fund may sell portfolio securities without regard to the length of  time
they  have been held whenever such sale  will, in the opinions of the Investment
Manager and the Sub-Advisor,  strengthen the Fund's  position and contribute  to
its  investment objective.  As a result  of the Fund's  investment objective and
policies, and  the nature  of the  Mortgage-Backed Securities  and  Asset-Backed
Securities  markets, the Fund's portfolio turnover  rate may exceed 200%. During
the fiscal years ended October 31, 1993 and 1994, the Fund's portfolio  turnover
rates were 412% and 393%, respectively.
    

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.

                                       22
<PAGE>
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.

    The Fund may not:

         1. Purchase or sell real estate or interests therein (including limited
    partnership interests), 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.  Purchase  securities  of  other  investment  companies,  except  in
    connection  with a  merger, consolidation, reorganization  or acquisition of
    assets.  For  this  purpose,  Mortgage-Backed  Securities  and  Asset-Backed
    Securities are not deemed to be investment companies.

         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 reverse repurchase agreement or dollar roll; (b) borrowing
    money or  other leveraging;  or (c)  purchasing any  securities on  a  when-
    issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis.

         5.  Make loans of money  or securities, except: (a)  by the purchase of
    portfolio securities  in  which the  Fund  may invest  consistent  with  its
    investment  objective  and  policies;  (b) by  investment  in  repurchase or
    reverse purchase 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. Make short sales of securities or maintain a short position.

         9. Invest in securities of any issuer if, to the knowledge of the Fund,
    any officer or trustee of the Fund,  or any officer, director or partner  of
    the  Investment  Manager or  Sub-Advisor owns  more  than 1/2  of 1%  of the
    outstanding voting securities  of such issuer,  and such officers,  trustees
    and  directors who own more than 1/2 of 1% own in the aggregate more than 5%
    of the outstanding voting securities of such issuers.

    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 the foregoing restrictions.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Subject to  the  general  supervision  of the  Trustees  of  the  Fund,  the
Investment  Manager  and  the  Sub-Advisor are  responsible  for  the investment
decisions and the placing of the orders for portfolio

                                       23
<PAGE>
   
transactions  for  the  Fund.  The  Fund's  portfolio  transactions  will  occur
primarily with issuers, underwriters or major dealers acting as principals. Such
transactions are normally on a net basis and do not involve payment of brokerage
commissions.  The  cost  of  securities purchased  from  an  underwriter usually
includes a commission paid by the issuer to the underwriters; transactions  with
dealers  normally reflect the  spread between bid and  asked prices. Options and
futures transactions will usually be effected through a broker and a  commission
will  be charged. During the fiscal years ended October 31, 1994, 1993 and 1992,
the Fund did not pay any brokerage commissions.
    

    The Investment Manager  and the  Sub-Advisor currently  serve 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  and  the  Sub-Advisor   to  cause  purchase  or  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, the  main  factors considered  are  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.

    The policy  of the  Fund regarding  purchases and  sales of  securities  and
futures  contracts for its portfolio is that primary consideration will be given
to obtaining the most favorable prices and efficient execution of  transactions.
In  seeking to  implement the  Fund's policies,  the Investment  Manager and the
Sub-Advisor  effect  transactions  with  those  brokers  and  dealers  who   the
Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor believe provide the most favorable prices
and  are capable of providing efficient executions. If the Investment Manager or
the Sub-Advisor believes such price and execution 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 and/or  the Sub-Advisor. Such
services may include, but are not limited to, any one or more of the  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  and the
Sub-Advisor from brokers and dealers may be of benefit to the Investment Manager
and the Sub-Advisor 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 the Sub-Advisor  and thereby reduce  its expenses, it  is of  indeterminable
value  and the fees paid  to the Investment Manager  and the Sub-Advisor are 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. During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994, the Fund did
not effect any principal transactions with DWR.
    

                                       24
<PAGE>
    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 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 Trustees  of the Fund,
including a majority  of the Trustees  who are not  "interested" Trustees,  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 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 Trustees of the
Fund, including a majority of the Trustees who are not, and were not at the time
they voted,  interested  persons  of  the  Fund, as  defined  in  the  Act  (the
"Independent  Trustees"), 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
took effect on June 30, 1993, upon the spin-off by Sears, Roebuck and Co. of its
remaining  shares of DWDC.  The current Distribution  Agreement is substantively
identical  to  the  Fund's  previous  distribution  agreement  in  all  material
respects,  except for the dates of effectiveness. 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 Trustees,
including a majority of the Independent Trustees.
    

    The Distributor bears all expenses it may incur 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.

                                       25
<PAGE>
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

   
    The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
Act  (the "Plan"). The Plan was approved by  the Trustees on April 16, 1991, and
by DWR  as  the  Fund's then  sole  shareholder  on  May 15,  1991  and  by  the
shareholders  holding  a majority,  as defined  in the  Act, of  the outstanding
voting securities of the Fund at a  Special Meeting of Shareholders of the  Fund
held  on June 29, 1992. The vote of the  Trustees, which was cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose  of voting on such  Plan, included a majority  of
the  Trustees who are  not and were not  at the time  of their voting interested
persons of the Fund and who have and had at the time of their votes no direct or
indirect financial interest in the operation of the Plan (the "Independent 12b-1
Trustees"). In making their decision to  adopt the Plan, the Trustees  requested
from  DWR and  received such  information as  they deemed  necessary to  make an
informed determination as to whether or not adoption of the Plan was in the best
interests of  the shareholders  of  the Fund.  After  due consideration  of  the
information  received, the  Trustees, including the  Independent 12b-1 Trustees,
determined that adoption of the Plan would benefit the shareholders of the Fund.
At their meeting held on October 30,  1992, the Trustees of the Fund,  including
all  of the independent 12b-1 Trustees,  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 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.
    

    The  Fund is authorized  to reimburse the  Distributor for specific expenses
the distributor incurs or  plans to incur in  promoting the distribution of  the
Fund's  shares.  Reimbursement  is  made  through  monthly  payments  in amounts
determined in  advance of  each  fiscal quarter  by  the Trustees,  including  a
majority  of the Independent 12b-1 Trustees.  The amount of each monthly payment
may in no event exceed an amount equal  to a payment at the annual rate of  0.20
of  1% of  the average daily  net assets  of the shares  of the  Fund during the
month. Such payment  is treated  by the Fund  as an  expense in the  year it  is
accrued.  No  interest  or  other  financing charges  will  be  incurred  by the
Distributor for which  reimbursement payments under  the Plan will  be made.  In
addition,  no interest  charges, if  any, incurred  on any  distribution expense
incurred by the Distributor pursuant to the Plan, will be reimbursable under the
Plan.

    The Distributor has informed the Fund that the fee payable by the Fund  each
year pursuant to the Plan not to exceed to 0.20% 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  Distributor
is  a  member).  The fee  is  a payment  made  for personal  service  and/or the
maintenance of shareholder accounts.

    Under the Plan, 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.

                                       26
<PAGE>
   
    For  the  fiscal year  ended  October 31,  1994, the  Fund  paid a  total of
$112,520 pursuant to the Plan. Such payment amounted to an annual rate of  0.18%
of  the Fund's average daily net assets  for such fiscal period. It is estimated
that the amount paid by the Fund for distribution was for expenses which  relate
to  compensation  of  sales  personnel  and  associated  overhead  expenses. The
Distributor has informed the Fund that it received sales charges on sales of the
Fund's shares in the approximate amounts of $1,291,000, $224,000 and $19,200 for
the fiscal years ended 1992, 1993 and 1994, respectively.
    

    The Plan has an initial term which  ended April 30, 1992, and provides  that
from  year  to  year  thereafter  it  will  continue  in  effect,  provided such
continuance is approved annually by a vote of the Trustees, including a majority
of the Independent 12b-1 Trustees. Most  recent continuance of the Plan for  one
year,  until April 30, 1994, was approved by  the Board of Trustees of the Fund,
including a majority of the Independent 12b-1 Trustees, at a Board meeting  held
on  April 28, 1993. At  that meeting, the Trustees,  including a majority of the
Independent 12b-1 Trustees,  also approved certain  technical amendments to  the
Plan in connection with recent amendments adopted by the National Association of
Securities  Dealers, Inc. to its Rules of  Fair Practice. Prior to approving the
continuation  of  the  Plan,  the  Trustees  requested  and  received  from  the
Distributor  and reviewed  all the  information which  they deemed  necessary to
arrive at an informed determination.  In making their determination to  continue
the  Plan, the Trustees 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  Trustees of  the  Fund, including  each  of the  independent 12b-1
Trustees, 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 Trustees'  quarterly review of the Plan, they
will consider  its  continued  appropriateness and  the  level  of  compensation
provided  herein.  An  amendment  to  increase  materially  the  maximum  amount
authorized to be spent under the Plan  and Agreement on behalf of the Fund  must
be  approved by the shareholders of the Fund, and all material amendments to the
Plan must be approved by  the Trustees in the  manner described above. The  Plan
may  be terminated  on behalf of  the Fund at  any time, without  payment of any
penalty, by vote of the holders of a majority of the Independent 12b-1  Trustees
or  by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund (as
defined in the Act) on not more than  30 days written notice to any other  party
to  the Plan. So long as  the Plan is in effect,  the selection or nomination of
the Independent 12b-1 Trustees is committed to the discretion of the Independent
12b-1 Trustees.

    Under the  Plan,  the Distributor  provides  the  Fund, for  review  by  the
Trustees,  and  the  Trustees review,  promptly  after  the end  of  each fiscal
quarter, a  written  report  regarding  the  incremental  distribution  expenses
incurred  by the Distributor on  behalf of the Fund  during such fiscal quarter,
which report  includes (1)  an itemization  of  the types  of expenses  and  the
purposes  therefor; (2) the amounts  of such expenses; and  (3) a description of
the benefits derived by the Fund. In the Trustees' quarterly review of the  Plan
they  consider  its  continued  appropriateness and  the  level  of compensation
provided therein.

    No interested person of the Fund nor any  Trustee of the Fund who is not  an
interested person of the Fund, as defined in the Act, had any direct or indirect
financial  interest in the operation  of the Plan except  to the extent that the
Investment Manager or certain  of its 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.

                                       27
<PAGE>
REDUCED SALES CHARGE

    RIGHT OF  ACCUMULATION.   As  discussed  in the  Prospectus,  investors  may
combine  the  current value  of shares  purchased  in separate  transactions for
purposes of benefitting from the  reduced sales charges available for  purchases
of  shares  of the  Fund totalling  at least  $100,000 in  net asset  value. For
example, if any person or entity  who qualifies for this privilege holds  shares
of  the  Fund  having  a  current value  of  $25,000  and  purchases  $75,000 of
additional shares  of the  Fund,  the sales  charge  applicable to  the  $75,000
purchase would be 2.50% of the offering price.

    The  Distributor must be  notified by the  dealer or the  shareholder at the
time a purchase  order is  placed that the  purchase qualifies  for the  reduced
charge  under the  Right of Accumulation.  Similar notification must  be made in
writing by the dealer or shareholder when  such an order is placed by mail.  The
reduced  sales  charge will  not be  granted  if: (a)  such notification  is not
furnished at the  time of  the order;  or (b)  a review  of the  records of  the
Distributor or Dean Witter Trust Company (the "Transfer Agent") fails to confirm
the investor's represented holdings.

    LETTER OF INTENT.  As discussed in the prospectus under the caption "Reduced
Sales  Charges," reduced sales charges are available to investors who enter into
a written Letter of Intent providing  for the purchase, within a  thirteen-month
period, of shares of the Fund from the Distributor or from a single dealer which
has entered into a Selected Dealer Agreement with the Distributor.

    A  Letter of Intent permits an investor to establish a total investment goal
to be achieved  by any number  of purchases over  a thirteen-month period.  Each
purchase  made  during  the period  will  receive the  reduced  sales commission
applicable to  the amount  represented  by the  goal, as  if  it were  a  single
purchase.  A number of shares equal  in value to 5% of  the dollar amount of the
Letter of Intent will be  held in escrow by the  Transfer Agent, in the name  of
the  shareholder. The initial purchase under a Letter of Intent must be equal to
at least 5% of the stated investment goal.

    The Letter of  Intent does not  obligate the Investor  to purchase, nor  the
Fund  to sell, the indicated  amount. In the event the  Letter of Intent goal is
not achieved within the thirteen-month period,  the investor is required to  pay
the  difference between the  sales charge otherwise  applicable to the purchases
made during this  period and sales  charges actually paid.  Such payment may  be
made  directly to the Distributor or, if not paid, the Distributor is authorized
by the  shareholder to  liquidate a  sufficient number  of his  or her  escrowed
shares to obtain such difference.

    If  the goal is exceeded and purchases pass the next sales charge level, the
sales charge on the entire amount of  the purchase that results in passing  that
level  and  on subsequent  purchases will  be subject  to further  reduced sales
charges in the same manner as set  forth above under RIGHT OF ACCUMULATION,  but
there will be no retroactive reduction of sales charges on previous purchases.

    At  any time while  a Letter of Intent  is in effect,  a shareholder may, by
written notice to the  Distributor, increase the amount  of the stated goal.  In
that  event, only shares  purchased during the previous  90-day period and still
owned by the shareholder will be included in the new sales charge reduction. The
5% escrow and minimum purchase requirements will be applicable to the new stated
goal. Investors electing to purchase shares of the Fund pursuant to a Letter  of
Intent should carefully read such Letter of Intent.

                                       28
<PAGE>
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As  stated  in the  Prospectus,  short-term debt  securities  with remaining
maturities of sixty days or less at the time of purchase are valued at amortized
cost, unless the Trustees 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 Trustees. 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 Trustees 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 Trustees.  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 prices.  Unlisted options  are valued  at the  mean
between their latest bid and asked prices. Futures are valued at the latest sale
price  on  the commodities  exchange  on which  they  trade unless  the Trustees
determine such price  does not reflect  their market value,  in which case  they
will  be valued  at their fair  value as  determined by the  Trustees. 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 Trustees.

   
    The net asset value per share of  the Fund is determined once daily at  4:00
p.m.,  New York 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 have been received to purchase,  or
tenders to sell or redeem, Fund shares, 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.
    

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 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  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 another  selected
broker-dealer.

    INVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS OR DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  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  sales charge,  by
returning  the check or  the proceeds to  the Transfer Agent  within thirty 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.

                                       29
<PAGE>
    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 offering price.
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.

    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
Systematic Withdrawal  Plan, withdrawals  made  concurrently with  purchases  of
additional shares are inadvisable because of the sales charges applicable to the
purchase of additional shares.

    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  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 shareholder
may, at any time, change the amount and interval of 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
Premier  Income Trust, 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 FESC Funds,  for
shares  of Dean Witter CDSC Funds, and for shares of Dean Witter Short-Term U.S.
Treasury Trust, Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust, Dean Witter Short-Term
Bond Fund

                                       30
<PAGE>
and five Dean  Witter Funds which  are money market  funds (the foregoing  eight
non-CDSC  funds are hereinafter referred to  as the "Exchange Funds"). Exchanges
may be made after the shares of the CDSC fund or FESC fund acquired by  purchase
(not by exchange or dividend reinvestment) have been held for thirty days. There
is  no holding period for  exchanges of shares acquired  by exchange or dividend
reinvestment. However,  shares  of  CDSC funds,  including  shares  acquired  in
exchange  for shares  of FESC  funds, may  not be  exchanged for  shares of FESC
funds. Thus, shareholders  who exchange  their Fund  shares for  shares of  CDSC
funds  may subsequently exchange those shares for  shares of other CDSC funds or
Exchange Funds but may not reacquire  FESC fund shares by exchange. 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.

    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).

    The  Transfer Agent acts as agent for  shareholders of the Fund in effecting
redemptions of Fund shares and in applying the proceeds to the purchase of other
fund shares. In  the absence  of negligence on  its part,  neither the  Transfer
Agent  nor the Fund shall be liable for  any redemption of Fund shares caused by
unauthorized telephone instructions.  Accordingly, in such  event, the  investor
shall bear the risk of loss. The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission
is currently considering the propriety of such a policy.

    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 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. 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 Tax-Free  Daily Income  Trust,
Dean  Witter New  York Municipal Money  Market 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
for Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury  Trust is $10,000, although that  fund,
in  its discretion,  may accept  initial investments  of as  low as  $5,000. The
minimum initial  investment  for all  other  Dean  Witter Funds  for  which  the
Exchange Privilege
    

                                       31
<PAGE>
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  those
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  prior written notice  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  current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment objective(s)
and policies, and  shareholders should obtain  a copy and  examine it  carefully
before  investing. 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.

    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
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    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 for the certificate and/or
written request  in good  order. 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. 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
    

                                       32
<PAGE>
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  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 accounts.

    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  As described 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 (without
sales charge) 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.

    INVOLUNTARY REDEMPTION.    As  described  in  the  Prospectus,  due  to  the
relatively  high cost of handling small investments, the Fund reserves the right
to redeem, at net asset value, the shares of any shareholder whose shares have a
value of less than $100, or such lesser  amount as may be fixed by the Board  of
Trustees. 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 $100 and allow him or her 60 days to make an additional investment  in
an  amount which will increase the  value of his or her  account to $100 or more
before the redemption is processed.

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  will notify shareholders  that, following an  election by  the
Fund,  the shareholders will be required  to include such undistributed gains in
determining their taxable income and  may claim their share  of the tax paid  by
the Fund as a credit against their individual federal income tax.

   
    Because  the Fund intends to distribute all of its net investment income and
capital gains to shareholders and otherwise  continue to qualify as a  regulated
investment  company under Subchapter M  of the Internal Revenue  Code, it is not
expected that  the  Fund  will  be  required to  pay  any  federal  income  tax.
Shareholders  will  normally have  to pay  federal income  taxes, and  any state
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 or short-term capital gains, are taxable to the shareholder as
ordinary income regardless of whether the shareholder receives such payments  in
additional  shares or in cash. Any dividends declared in the last quarter of any
year which are paid in the following  calendar year prior to February 1 will  be
deemed received by the shareholder in the prior year.
    

                                       33
<PAGE>
    Gains  or losses on  the sales of  securities by the  Fund generally will 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 short-term capital gains or losses.

   
    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. Capital  gains distributions are not eligible for
the dividends received deduction.
    

    One of the  requirements for  the Fund to  remain qualified  as a  regulated
investment  company is that  less than 30%  of the gross  income be derived from
gains from the sale or other disposition of securities held for less than  three
months.  Accordingly, the Fund  may be restricted  in the writing  of options on
securities held for  less than  three months, in  the writing  of options  which
expire  in less  than three months,  and in effecting  closing transactions with
respect to call or put  options which have been  written or purchased less  than
three  months prior to such transactions. The Fund may also be restricted in its
ability to engage in transactions involving futures contracts.

    Under current federal law,  the Fund will receive  net investment income  in
the form of interest cash payments by virtue of holding fixed-income securities,
including   Treasury  bills,  notes   and  bonds,  and   will  recognize  income
attributable to it  from holding original  issue discount securities,  including
zero  coupon Treasury securities. Current federal tax law requires that a holder
(such as the Fund) of  an original issue discount  security accrue a portion  of
the discount at which the security was purchased as income each year even though
the  Fund receives no interest payment in  cash on the security during the year.
As an investment company,  the Fund must  pay out substantially  all of its  net
investment  income each year. Accordingly, the Fund, to the extent it invests in
original issue discount  securities, may  be required to  pay out  as an  income
distribution  each year an amount which is greater than the total amount of cash
receipts of interest the Fund actually received. Such distributions will be made
from the  available  cash  of  the  Fund or  by  the  liquidation  of  portfolio
securities  if necessary. If a distribution of cash necessitates the liquidation
of portfolio securities, the Investment Manager will select which securities  to
sell. The Fund may realize a gain or loss from such sales. In the event the Fund
realizes  net capital gains from such transactions, its shareholders may receive
a larger capital gain distribution,  if any, than they  would in the absence  of
such transactions.

    In  computing  net investment  income, the  Fund  will amortize  premiums or
accrue discounts on fixed-income securities in the portfolio. Realized gains and
losses on security transactions are determined on the identified cost method.

    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  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 at  either ordinary or  capital gain rates.
Therefore, an investor should consider  the tax implications of purchasing  Fund
shares immediately prior to a dividend or distribution record date.

                                       34
<PAGE>
    The  straddle  rules of  Section  1092 of  the  Internal Revenue  Code where
applicable (i) require the Fund to defer losses incurred on certain transactions
involving securities, options and futures contracts, (ii) may affect the  Fund's
holding  period on the asset underlying an  option or futures contract and (iii)
in certain  instances, may  convert a  short-term capital  loss to  a  long-term
capital loss.

    Exchange-traded  futures contracts, listed options  on futures contracts and
listed options on U.S.  Government securities are  classified as "Section  1256"
contracts  under the Internal Revenue Code.  Section 1256 contracts are required
to be marked-to-market  at the end  of the  Fund's fiscal year,  for purpose  of
Federal  income tax calculations.  The character of gain  or loss resulting from
the  sale,   disposition,  closing   out,  expiration,   other  termination   or
mark-to-market  of  Section 1256  contracts  is generally  treated  as long-term
capital gain or loss to the extent of 60 percent thereof and short-term  capital
gain or loss to the extent of 40 percent thereof.

    Over-the-counter  options are not  classified as Section  1256 contracts and
are not subject to the mark-to-market  or 60 percent-40 percent taxation  rules.
When  put options purchased by the Fund are exercised, the gain or loss realized
on the sales of the underlying securities may be either short-term or long-term,
generally depending upon the  holding period of  the securities. In  determining
the  amount of gain or loss, the sales  proceeds are reduced by the premium paid
for  over-the-counter   puts  or   increased  by   the  premium   received   for
over-the-counter calls.

    After  the  end  of  the  calendar  year,  shareholders  will  be  sent full
information on their dividends and capital gains distributions for tax purposes,
including information as to the portion taxable as ordinary income, any  portion
taxable  as long-term  capital gains  and any  portion treated  as a non-taxable
return of capital. Any such return of capital will reduce the shareholders'  tax
basis  in  their  shares.  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 should  consult  their  attorneys  or  tax  advisers  regarding
specific questions as to state or local taxes and as to the applicability of the
foregoing to their current federal tax situation.

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 maximum offering price  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, 1994, the  Fund's yield, calculated  pursuant to this
formula, was 5.46%.
    

    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

                                       35
<PAGE>
   
period, or  for  the  period  from  the  date  of  commencement  of  the  Fund's
operations,  if  shorter than  any of  the  foregoing. 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 returns of the Fund for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994 and
for the period from  July 1, 1991 (commencement  of operations) through  October
31, 1994 were -1.60% and 3.82%, 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 calculation  may or  may not  reflect the
imposition of the maximum front end sales charge. In addition, the Fund may also
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  by  the  initial  $1,000
investment and subtracting  1 from the  result. Based on  this calculation,  the
average  annual  total  return of  the  Fund,  excluding the  imposition  of the
front-end sales charge, for the fiscal year  ended October 31, 1994 and for  the
period  from  July 1,  1991  through October  31,  1994 were  1.44%  and 16.80%,
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  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,  1994 and  for the period  from July 1,  1991 through October  31, 1994 were
1.44% and 4.77%, 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 and  multiplying by $9,700,  $48,500 or  $97,500
($10,000,  $50,000 or  $100,000 adjusted  for a  3%, 3%  and 2.5%  sales charge,
respectively). Investments of $10,000 and $50,000 adjusted for a 3% sales charge
in the Fund at  inception would have grown  to $11,330 and $56,648  respectively
and an investment of $100,000 adjusted for a 2.5% sales charge, in the Fund from
inception would have grown to $113,880 at October 31, 1994.
    

    The  Fund from time to  time may also advertise  its performance relative to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent organizations.

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The shareholders of the Fund are entitled to a full vote for each full share
held. The  Trustees have  been elected  by  the shareholders  of the  Fund.  The
Trustees  themselves have the power to alter  the number and the terms of office
of the Trustees, and they may at any time lengthen their own terms or make their
terms of  unlimited duration  and appoint  their own  successors, provided  that
always  at least a majority of the Trustees has been elected by the shareholders
of the Fund. Under certain circumstances

                                       36
<PAGE>
the Trustees may  be removed by  action of the  Trustees. The shareholders  also
have  the right under  certain circumstances to remove  the Trustees. The voting
rights of  shareholders are  not cumulative,  so that  holders of  more than  50
percent  of the  shares voting  can, if  they choose,  elect all  Trustees being
selected, while the holders of the remaining shares would be unable to elect any
Trustees.

    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
Trustees may call  Special Meetings  of Shareholders for  action by  shareholder
vote as may be required by the Act or the Declaration of Trust.

    The  Declaration of Trust permits the  Trustees to authorize the creation of
additional series  of  shares  (the  proceeds of  which  would  be  invested  in
separate,  independently managed  portfolios) and  additional classes  of shares
within any  series (which  would be  used  to distinguish  among the  rights  of
different categories of shareholders, as might be required by future regulations
or  other unforeseen circumstances).  However, the Trustees  have not authorized
any such additional series or classes of shares.

    The Declaration of Trust further provides that no Trustee, officer, employee
or agent of  the Fund is  liable to  the Fund or  to a shareholder,  nor is  any
Trustee,  officer, employee or  agent liable to any  third persons in connection
with the affairs of the Fund, except as such liability may arise from his/her or
its own bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence, or reckless  disregard
of  his/her or its  duties. It also  provides that all  third persons shall look
solely to the Fund's property for  satisfaction of claims arising in  connection
with  the affairs of  the Fund. With  the exceptions stated,  the Declaration of
Trust provides that  a Trustee,  officer, employee or  agent is  entitled to  be
indemnified against all liability in connection with the affairs of the Fund.

    The  Fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares of beneficial
interest. The Fund shall be of  unlimited duration subject to the provisions  in
the Declaration of Trust concerning termination by action of the shareholders.

CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  Bank of New York, 90 Washington Street, New York, New York 10286 is the
Custodian of  the  Fund's assets.  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 of  Dean Witter  Distributors 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 from the Fund.

                                       37
<PAGE>
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 Trustees.

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.

EXPERTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  financial  statements  of  the  Fund  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.

                                       38
<PAGE>
   
Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
Portfolio of Investments OCTOBER 31, 1994
    
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT (IN                                                                      COUPON           MATURITY
THOUSANDS)                                                                       RATE              DATES              VALUE
- -----------                                                                  ------------  ---------------------  -------------
<C>          <S>                                                             <C>           <C>                    <C>
             U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS (16.6%)
 $     170   U.S. Treasury Notes...........................................       3.875 %        10/31/95         $     166,175
       250   U.S. Treasury Notes...........................................       6.00            6/30/96               247,422
     5,770   U.S. Treasury Notes...........................................       6.50            9/30/96             5,741,150
     1,150   U.S. Treasury Notes...........................................       6.50            8/15/97             1,134,008
                                                                                                                  -------------
             TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS
               (IDENTIFIED COST $7,290,365)................................                                           7,288,755
                                                                                                                  -------------
             MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (47.0%)
             U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES (38.9%)
     1,175   Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. PC GOLD......................       8.50            7/ 1/06             1,189,992
     3,378   Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. PC GOLD......................       9.00            5/ 1/06             3,462,011
                                                                                                                  -------------
                                                                                                                      4,652,003
                                                                                                                  -------------

     1,300   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. ARM..........................       5.493 +        12/ 1/22             1,305,991
     1,486   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. ARM..........................       5.547 +         9/ 1/24             1,481,617
     1,392   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. ARM..........................       6.109 +         1/ 1/23             1,405,596
     2,025   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. ARM..........................       6.070 +         6/ 1/18             2,007,397
     1,336   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. ARM..........................       7.719 +        12/ 1/20             1,344,994
     1,089   Federal National Mortgage Assoc...............................       8.00           11/ 1/98             1,098,866
                                                                                                                  -------------
                                                                                                                      8,644,461
                                                                                                                  -------------

     2,000   Government National Mortgage Assoc. II........................       7.00               *                1,988,750
                                                                                                                  -------------

     1,816   Government National Mortgage Assoc............................       7.25      11/15/04 - 4/15/06        1,759,762
                                                                                                                  -------------
             TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
               (IDENTIFIED COST $17,224,443)...............................                                          17,044,976
                                                                                                                  -------------
             COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (8.1%)
             U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES (8.1%)
       701   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. 1991-49 D (PAC)..............       8.00           05/25/05               702,989
     1,300   Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. 1189 G.......................       9.125 +        01/15/22             1,478,750
     1,257   Federal National Mortgage Assoc. 1992 I 2.....................      11.50           04/ 1/09             1,372,607
                                                                                                                  -------------
             TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
               (IDENTIFIED COST $3,492,299)................................                                           3,554,346
                                                                                                                  -------------
             PRIVATE ISSUES (0.0%)
         1   Resolution Funding Corp. 1992 - S2 class A17 (TAC I/O)
               (Identified Cost $3,140,687)................................       8.00  +         1/25/22                   524
                                                                                                                  -------------
             TOTAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS
               (IDENTIFIED COST $6,632,986)................................                                           3,554,870
                                                                                                                  -------------
             TOTAL MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES
               (IDENTIFIED COST $23,857,429)...............................                                          20,599,846
                                                                                                                  -------------
</TABLE>

                                       39
<PAGE>
   
Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
Portfolio of Investments OCTOBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
    
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT (IN                                                              COUPON         MATURITY
THOUSANDS)                                                               RATE           DATES            VALUE
- -----------                                                           ----------  ------------------  -----------
<C>          <S>                                                      <C>         <C>                 <C>          <C>
             ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (27.6%)
 $   1,600   MBNA Master Credit Card Trust 1994-C A.................      5.25 %+      3/15/04        $ 1,599,000
     2,400   First U.S.A. Credit Card Master Trust 1994-4 A.........      5.495+       8/15/03          2,401,488
             Household Affinity Credit Card Master Trust I 1994-2
     1,000     A....................................................      7.00         12/15/99           992,187
     1,000   Sears Credit Account Master Trust 1994-2 A.............      7.25         7/16/01            997,500
     1,100   First Chicago Master Trust II 1991 - D A...............      8.40         6/15/98          1,117,875
     1,500   Chase Manhattan Credit Card Master Trust 1991-1 A......      8.75         8/15/99          1,532,805
     2,000   First Chicago Master Trust II 1990 - A A...............      9.25         12/15/96         2,031,240
     1,400   Standard Credit Card Trust 1990-5 A....................      9.375        8/10/96          1,422,302
                                                                                                      -----------
             TOTAL ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
               (IDENTIFIED COST $12,259,694)........................                                   12,094,397
                                                                                                      -----------
             SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (9.3%)
             REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (9.3%)
     4,100   Nikko Securities Co. International, Inc.
               (dated 10/31/94, proceeds $4,100,547; collateralized
               by $4,410,000 Federal National Mortgage Association
               1992-161C 6.75% due 8/25/17, valued at $4,189,500)
               (Identified Cost $4,100,000).........................      4.80         11/ 1/94         4,100,000
                                                                                                      -----------
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<C>          <S>                                                                          <C>         <C>
             TOTAL INVESTMENTS (IDENTIFIED COST $47,507,488)(A).........................      100.5%    44,082,998
             LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF CASH AND OTHER ASSETS.............................       (0.5)      (207,738)
                                                                                          ----------  ------------
             NET ASSETS.................................................................      100.0%  $ 43,875,260
                                                                                          ----------  ------------
                                                                                          ----------  ------------
<FN>
- ---------------
ARM        ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE.
I/O        INTEREST ONLY SECURITY.
PAC        PLANNED AMORTIZATION CLASS.
TAC        TARGETED AMORTIZATION CLASS.
PC         PARTICIPATION CERTIFICATE.
*          SECURITIES  PURCHASED ON A  FORWARD COMMITMENT BASIS WITH  AN APPROXIMATE PRINCIPAL  AMOUNT AND NO DEFINITE
           MATURITY DATE; THE ACTUAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT AND MATURITY DATE WILL BE DETERMINED UPON SETTLEMENT.
+          FLOATING RATE SECURITIES. RATE SHOWN IS THE RATE IN EFFECT AT OCTOBER 31, 1994.
(A)        THE AGGREGATE COST  OF INVESTMENTS  FOR FEDERAL  INCOME TAX PURPOSES  IS $47,508,368;  THE AGGREGATE  GROSS
           UNREALIZED APPRECIATION IS $308,113 AND THE AGGREGATE GROSS UNREALIZED DEPRECIATION IS $3,733,483 RESULTING
           IN NET UNREALIZED DEPRECIATION OF $3,425,370.
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       40
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
OCTOBER 31, 1994
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<S>                                          <C>
ASSETS:
Investments in securities, at value
  (identified cost $47,507,488) (Note 1)...  $ 44,082,998
Cash.......................................         5,680
Receivable for:
  Investments sold.........................     3,890,244
  Principal paydowns.......................        89,110
  Interest.................................       356,575
  Shares of beneficial interest sold.......         2,231
Deferred organizational expenses (Note
  1).......................................        49,917
Prepaid expenses...........................        22,001
                                             ------------
        TOTAL ASSETS.......................    48,498,756
                                             ------------
LIABILITIES:
Payable for:
  Investments purchased....................     4,365,986
  Shares of beneficial interest
    repurchased............................       114,276
  Dividends to shareholders................        26,165
  Investment management fee (Note 2).......        19,120
  Plan of distribution fee (Note 3)........         7,648
  Accrued expenses and other payables (Note
    4).....................................        90,301
                                             ------------
        TOTAL LIABILITIES..................     4,623,496
                                             ------------
NET ASSETS:
Paid-in-capital............................    53,040,822
Accumulated net realized loss..............    (6,417,573)
Net unrealized depreciation on
  investments..............................    (3,424,490)
Accumulated undistributed net investment
  income...................................       676,501
                                             ------------
        NET ASSETS.........................  $ 43,875,260
                                             ------------
                                             ------------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE, 5,001,159 shares
  outstanding (unlimited shares authorized
  of $.01 par value).......................
                                                    $8.77
                                             ------------
                                             ------------
MAXIMUM OFFERING PRICE PER SHARE (net asset
  value plus 3.09% of net asset value)*....
                                                    $9.04
                                             ------------
                                             ------------
- ---------------
* On sales of $100,000 or more, the offering price is
  reduced.
</TABLE>

STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS  FOR THE YEAR
ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1994

<TABLE>
<S>                                          <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  INTEREST INCOME..........................  $ 4,240,056
                                             -----------
  EXPENSES
    Investment management fee (Note 2).....      306,372
    Plan of distribution fee (Note 3)......      112,520
    Professional fees......................      103,160
    Shareholder reports and notices........       57,959
    Transfer agent fees and expenses.......       55,759
    Trustees' fees and expenses (Note 4)...       35,498
    Registration fees......................       32,263
    Organizational expenses (Note 1).......       29,969
    Custodian Fees.........................       17,361
    Other..................................        8,972
                                             -----------
        TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES...........      759,833
    Interest expense.......................      211,396
                                             -----------
        TOTAL EXPENSES.....................      971,229
                                             -----------
          NET INVESTMENT INCOME............    3,268,827
                                             -----------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED LOSS ON
  INVESTMENTS (NOTE 1):
    Net realized loss on investments.......   (1,183,176)
    Net change in unrealized depreciation
      on investments.......................   (1,276,352)
                                             -----------
        NET LOSS ON INVESTMENTS............   (2,459,528)
                                             -----------
          NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS
            RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS......  $   809,299
                                             -----------
                                             -----------
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       41
<PAGE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            FOR THE YEAR ENDED  FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                                                             OCTOBER 31, 1994    OCTOBER 31, 1993
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
<S>                                                                         <C>                 <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS:
  Operations:
    Net investment income.................................................    $    3,268,827      $    9,634,936
    Net realized loss on investments......................................        (1,183,176)         (5,234,554)
    Net change in unrealized depreciation on investments..................        (1,276,352)            397,575
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
      Net increase in net assets resulting from operations................           809,299           4,797,957
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
  Dividends and distributions to shareholders from:
    Net investment income.................................................        (3,900,882)         (8,326,380)
    Net realized gain on investments......................................          --                (2,813,443)
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
                                                                                  (3,900,882)        (11,139,823)
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
    Net decrease from transactions in shares of beneficial interest (Note
      5)..................................................................       (43,293,361)        (58,257,655)
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
        Total decrease....................................................       (46,384,944)        (64,599,521)
NET ASSETS:
  Beginning of period.....................................................        90,260,204         154,859,725
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
  END OF PERIOD (including undistributed net investment income of $676,501
   and $1,308,556, respectively)..........................................    $   43,875,260      $   90,260,204
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
                                                                            ------------------  ------------------
</TABLE>

STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS  FOR THE YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1994
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                          <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH:
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net investment income....................................................................  $   3,268,827
  Adjustments to reconcile net investment income to net cash from operating activities:
    Decrease in receivables and other assets related to operations.........................        596,508
    Decrease in payables related to operations.............................................       (104,232)
    Net amortization of discount/premium...................................................       (143,194)
                                                                                             -------------
      Net cash from operating activities...................................................      3,617,909
                                                                                             -------------
CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
  Purchases of investments.................................................................   (269,793,863)
  Principal sales/prepayments of investments...............................................    333,789,185
  Net purchases of short-term investments..................................................     (4,099,979)
                                                                                             -------------
      Net cash provided by investing activities............................................     59,895,343
                                                                                             -------------
CASH FLOWS USED FOR FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Shares of beneficial interest sold.......................................................      1,699,138
  Shares of beneficial interest repurchased................................................    (47,502,914)
  Net payments for reverse repurchase agreements...........................................    (16,063,333)
                                                                                             -------------
                                                                                               (61,867,109)
  Dividends to shareholders (net of reinvested dividends of $2,249,370)....................     (1,657,486)
                                                                                             -------------
      Net cash used for financing activities...............................................    (63,524,595)
                                                                                             -------------
  Net decrease in cash.....................................................................        (11,343)
  Cash at beginning of year................................................................         17,023
                                                                                             -------------
  CASH AT END OF YEAR......................................................................  $       5,680
                                                                                             -------------
                                                                                             -------------
Cash paid during the year for interest.....................................................  $     211,396
                                                                                             -------------
                                                                                             -------------
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       42
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.  ORGANIZATION AND ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Dean Witter Premier Income Trust (the
"Fund")  is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the
"Act"), as a diversified, open-end  management investment company. The Fund  was
organized  as a  Massachusetts business  trust on  March 27,  1991 and commenced
operations on July 1, 1991.

    The following is a summary of significant accounting policies:

    A.  VALUATION OF INVESTMENTS  - (1) an equity  security listed or traded  on
    the  New York or American 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); (2)
    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;  (3) when  market quotations are  not readily  available,
    portfolio  securities are valued  at their fair value  as determined in good
    faith under procedures established by  and under the general supervision  of
    the  Trustees (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); (4) certain  of the Fund's portfolio securities
    may be valued by  an outside pricing service  approved by the Trustees.  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, in determining  what it believes  is the fair  valuation of  the
    portfolio securities valued by such pricing service; and (5) 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.

    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  on the identified  cost
    method.  In computing net investment income, the Fund amortizes premiums and
    accrues discounts on securities purchased based on the expected life of  the
    securities. Interest income is accrued daily.

    C.   DOLLAR ROLLS - The  Fund may enter into dollar  rolls in which the Fund
    sells securities  for delivery  and simultaneously  contracts to  repurchase
    substantially  similar securities at the current  sales price on a specified
    future date. The difference  between the current sales  price and the  lower
    forward  price for the future purchase (often  referred to as the "drop") is
    amortized over the life of the dollar roll.

    D.  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.

    E.  DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS - The Fund records dividends
    and distributions to its shareholders on the ex-dividend 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"

                                       43
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    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.

    F.  ORGANIZATIONAL EXPENSES - Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. (the "Investment
    Manager")  paid the  organizational expenses  of the  Fund in  the amount of
    approximately $150,000  which  have  been reimbursed  for  the  full  amount
    thereof.  Such expenses  have been deferred  and are being  amortized on the
    straight-line method  over  a period  not  to  exceed five  years  from  the
    commencement of operations.

2.    INVESTMENT  MANAGEMENT  AND  SUB-ADVISORY  AGREEMENTS  -  Pursuant  to  an
Investment  Management  Agreement,  the  Fund  pays  its  Investment  Manager  a
management  fee, accrued daily and payable  monthly, by applying the annual rate
of 0.50% to  the net  assets of  the Fund  determined as  of the  close of  each
business day.

    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.

    Under a Sub-Advisory Agreement  between BlackRock Financial Management  L.P.
(the  "Sub-Advisor") and  the Investment  Manager, the  Sub-Advisor provides the
Fund with  investment advice  and portfolio  management relating  to the  Fund's
investment  in securities, subject to the  overall supervision of the Investment
Manager. As compensation for its services provided pursuant to the  Sub-Advisory
Agreement,  the  Investment Manager  pays  the Sub-Advisor  monthly compensation
equal to 40% of its monthly compensation.

    On June  16, 1994,  the Sub-Advisor  announced that  it had  entered into  a
definitive  agreement to be acquired by PNC Bank, N.A. ("PNC"). The acquisition,
which is subject  to regulatory approval,  is expected to  close in early  1995.
Following  closing,  the  Sub-Advisor  will become  a  subsidiary  of  PNC Asset
Management Group, Inc., the holding company for PNC's asset management business.
The acquisition  will constitute  an assignment  of the  Sub-Advisory  Agreement
between  the Investment  Manager and  the Sub-Advisor.  Under federal securities
laws, an assignment of the Sub-Advisory  Agreement will result in its  immediate
termination.

    Prior  to closing, the Fund will  seek approval from the Fund's shareholders
of a new advisory agreement between  Investment Manager and Sub-Advisor to  take
effect  following the closing. Shareholder approval will be solicited by a proxy
statement.

                                       44
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3.  PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION - Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"), an
affiliate of the  Investment Manager, is  the distributor of  the Fund's  shares
and,  in accordance with  a Plan of  Distribution (the "Plan")  pursuant to Rule
12b-1  under  the  Act,  finances  certain  expenses  in  connection  with   the
distribution of shares of the Fund.

    Under  the Plan,  the Distributor bears  the expense of  all promotional and
distribution related activities on behalf of the Fund, except for expenses  that
the   Trustees  determine  to  reimburse,  as  described  below.  The  following
activities and services may be provided  by the Distributor under the Plan:  (1)
compensation to, and expenses of, Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., an affiliate of the
Investment Manager and Distributor, and other selected broker-dealers; (2) sales
incentives  and bonuses to  sales representatives and  to marketing personnel in
connection with promoting sales of the  Fund's shares; (3) expenses incurred  in
connection  with  promoting  sales  of  the  Fund's  shares;  (4)  preparing and
distributing sales  literature; and  (5) providing  advertising and  promotional
activities, including direct mail solicitation and television, radio, newspaper,
magazine and other media advertisements.

    The  Fund is authorized  to reimburse the  Distributor for specific expenses
the Distributor incurs or  plans to incur in  promoting the distribution of  the
Fund's  shares. The amount of each monthly reimbursement payment may in no event
exceed an amount equal to  a payment at the annual  rate of 0.20% of the  Fund's
average  daily net assets during the month. For the year ended October 31, 1994,
the distribution fee was accrued at the annual rate of 0.18%.

    The Distributor has informed  the Fund that for  the year ended October  31,
1994,  it received approximately $19,200 in  commissions from the sale of Fund's
shares of beneficial interest. Such commissions are not an expense of the  Fund;
they are deducted from the proceeds of sales of shares of beneficial interest.

4.    SECURITY  TRANSACTIONS AND  TRANSACTIONS  WITH  AFFILIATES -  The  cost of
purchases and proceeds from sales/prepayments of portfolio securities, excluding
short-term investments, for the  year ended October  31, 1994 were  $245,451,348
and $295,922,295, respectively. Included in the aforementioned are purchases and
sales   of  U.S.   Government  securities  of   $239,875,992  and  $285,348,222,
respectively.

    Dean Witter  Trust  Company, an  affiliate  of the  Investment  Manager  and
Distributor,  is the Fund's  transfer agent. At  October 31, 1994,  the Fund had
transfer agent fees and expenses payable of approximately $4,800.

    On January 1,  1994, the  Fund adopted an  unfunded noncontributory  defined
benefit pension plan covering all independent Trustees of the Fund who will have
served  as  an  independent Trustee  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, 1994, included in Trustees' fees and expenses in  the
Statement  of Operations amounted to $10,006. At  October 31, 1994, the Fund had
an accrued pension liability of $9,814 which is included in accrued expenses  in
the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

                                       45
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5.    SHARES  OF BENEFICIAL  INTEREST  -  Transactions in  shares  of beneficial
interest were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               FOR THE YEAR ENDED             FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                                OCTOBER 31, 1994               OCTOBER 31, 1993
                                          -----------------------------  -----------------------------
                                             SHARES         AMOUNT          SHARES         AMOUNT
                                          ------------  ---------------  ------------  ---------------
<S>                                       <C>           <C>              <C>           <C>
Sold....................................       188,157  $     1,689,901     2,978,014  $    28,675,877
Reinvestment of dividends and
 distributions..........................       251,787        2,249,370       753,734        7,199,190
                                          ------------  ---------------  ------------  ---------------
                                               439,944        3,939,271     3,731,748       35,875,067
Repurchased.............................    (5,271,058)     (47,232,632)   (9,880,854)     (94,132,722)
                                          ------------  ---------------  ------------  ---------------
Net decrease............................    (4,831,114) $   (43,293,361)   (6,149,106) $   (58,257,655)
                                          ------------  ---------------  ------------  ---------------
                                          ------------  ---------------  ------------  ---------------
</TABLE>

6.  FEDERAL INCOME TAX  STATUS - At October 31,  1994, the Fund had  approximate
net  capital loss carryovers of $6,417,000 of which $1,180,000 will be available
through October 31, 2002  and $5,237,000 will be  available through October  31,
2001 to offset future capital gains to the extent provided by regulations.

7.    REVERSE  REPURCHASE  AND  DOLLAR  ROLL  AGREEMENTS  -  Reverse  repurchase
agreements and  dollar rolls  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 or dollar roll  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 and the  Fund's use of  the
proceeds  of the reverse repurchase agreement may also effectively be restricted
pending such decision.

    Reverse repurchase agreements are collateralized  by Fund securities with  a
market value in excess of the Fund's obligation under the contract.

    During  the  year ended  October  31, 1994,  the  maximum and  average daily
amounts outstanding  for  reverse  repurchase agreements  were  $14,100,000  and
$5,928,019, respectively, with a weighted average interest rate of 3.57%.

8.   REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS - When the  Trust enters into a repurchase agreement,
the Trust's custodian takes possession on behalf of the Trust of the  collateral
pledged  for investments in repurchase agreements. It is the policy of the Trust
to value the  underlying collateral daily  on a mark-to-market  basis to  insure
that  the value, including accrued interest, is at least equal to the repurchase
price plus  accrued interest.  In the  event of  a default  or bankruptcy  by  a
selling  financial institution, the Trust will seek to liquidate the collateral.
However, the exercising of the Trust's right to liquidate such collateral  could
involve  certain costs or delays and, to  the extent that proceeds from any sale
upon a default  of the obligation  to repurchase were  less than the  repurchase
price, the Trust could suffer a loss.

                                       46
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Selected  ratios  and  per  share  data  for  a  share  of  beneficial  interest
outstanding throughout each period:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               FOR THE
                                                                PERIOD
                                                               JULY 1,
                                     FOR THE YEAR ENDED         1991*
                                        OCTOBER 31,            THROUGH
                                ----------------------------   OCTOBER
                                 1994      1993       1992     31, 1991
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
<S>                             <C>       <C>       <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
  PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
  period......................    $9.18     $9.69      $9.95     $9.60
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
Net investment income.........     0.54      0.73       0.71      0.26
Net realized and unrealized
  gain (loss) on
  investments.................    (0.41)    (0.45)     (0.21)     0.37
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
Total from investment
  operations..................     0.13      0.28       0.50      0.63
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
Less dividends and
  distributions from:
    Net investment income.....    (0.54)    (0.61)     (0.71)    (0.26)
    Net realized gain on
  investments.................    --        (0.18)     (0.05)    (0.02)
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
Total dividends and
  distributions...............    (0.54)    (0.79)     (0.76)    (0.28)
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
Net asset value, end of
  period......................    $8.77     $9.18      $9.69     $9.95
                                -------   -------   --------   --------
                                -------   -------   --------   --------

TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+......     1.44%     2.87%      5.18%     6.41%(1)
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period (in
  thousands)..................  $43,875   $90,260   $154,860   $132,219
Ratios of expenses to average
  net assets:
  Operating expenses..........     1.24%     0.95%      0.99%     0.85%(2)
  Interest expense............     0.34%     0.65%      0.61%     0.84%(2)
    Total expenses............     1.58%     1.60%      1.60%     1.69%(2)(3)
Ratio of net investment income
  to average net assets.......     5.32%     7.32%      7.05%     7.50%(2)(3)
Portfolio turnover rate.......      393%      412%       254%       91%(1)
<FN>
- ------------------------
 *   COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS.
 +   DOES NOT REFLECT THE DEDUCTION OF SALES LOAD.
(1)  NOT ANNUALIZED.
(2)  ANNUALIZED.
(3)  IF THE FUND  HAD BORNE  ALL EXPENSES THAT  WERE ASSUMED  BY THE  INVESTMENT
     MANAGER,  THE ABOVE ANNUALIZED  EXPENSE RATIO WOULD  HAVE BEEN 1.85% ($.065
     PER SHARE) AND THE ABOVE ANNUALIZED NET INVESTMENT INCOME RATIO WOULD  HAVE
     BEEN 7.34% ($.253 PER SHARE).
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       47
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the Shareholders and Trustees of Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
In  our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including
the portfolio of investments, and the related statements of operations, of  cash
flows  and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly,
in all material respects, the financial  position of Dean Witter Premier  Income
Trust  (the "Fund") at October  31, 1994, the results  of its operations and its
cash flows 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 three  years in  the period  then  ended and  for the  period July  1,  1991
(commencement  of  operations)  through  October 31,  1991,  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  owned at October 31, 1994  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
December 9, 1994

                                       48
<PAGE>

                        DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST

                            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 period July 1, 1991
          through October 31, 1991, and for the years ended
          October 31, 1992, 1993 and 1994...............................  4


          (2)  Financial statements included in the Statement of
          Additional Information (Part B):                              Page in
                                                                          SAI
                                                                          ---
          Portfolio of Investments at October 31, 1994..................  39

          Statement of assets and liabilities at
          October 31, 1994..............................................  40

          Statement of operations for the year ended
          October 31, 1994..............................................  40

          Statement of changes in net assets for the
          years ended October 31, 1993 and 1994.........................  40

          Notes to Financial Statements................................. 42

          Financial highlights for the period July 1, 1991
          through October 31, 1991, and for the years ended
          October 31, 1992, 1993 and 1994...............................  45


          (3)  Financial statements included in Part C:

          None


     (b)  EXHIBITS:

          11.   -   Consent of Independent Accountants

          16.   -   Schedules for Computation of Performance Quotations

          27.   -   Financial Data Schedule

<PAGE>

          Other -   Power of Attorney

          --------------------------------
          All other exhibits previously filed and 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 November 30, 1994
          --------------                      ------------------------

          Shares of Beneficial Interest               2,964


Item 27.  INDEMNIFICATION


     Pursuant to Section 5.3 of the Registrant's Declaration of Trust and under
Section 4.8 of the Registrant's By-Laws, the indemnification of the Registrant's
trustees, officers, employees and agents is permitted if it is determined that
they acted under the belief that their actions were in or not opposed to the
best interest of the Registrant, and, with respect to any criminal proceeding,
they had reasonable cause to believe their conduct was not unlawful.  In
addition, indemnification is permitted only if it is determined that the actions
in question did not render them liable by reason of willful misfeasance, bad
faith or gross negligence in the performance of their duties or by reason of
reckless disregard of their obligations and duties to the Registrant.  Trustees,
officers, employees and agents will be indemnified for the expense of litigation
if it is determined that they are entitled to indemnification against any
liability established in such litigation.  The Registrant may also advance money
for these expenses provided that they give their undertakings to repay the
Registrant unless their conduct is later determined to permit indemnification.

          Pursuant to Section 5.2 of the Registrant's Declaration of Trust and
paragraph 8 of the Registrant's Investment Management Agreement, neither the
Investment Manager nor any trustee, officer, employee or agent of the Registrant
shall be liable for any action or failure to act, except in the case of bad
faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duties to
the Registrant.

          Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the
Securities Act of 1933 (the "Act") may be permitted to trustees, officers and
controlling persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing

                                        2

<PAGE>

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 trustee, 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
trustee, 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.

          Registrant, in conjunction with the Investment Manager, Registrant's
Trustees, and other registered investment management companies managed by the
Investment Manager, maintains insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a
Trustee, 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

                                        3

<PAGE>

 (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

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 Managed Assets Trust
(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

                                        4

<PAGE>

(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

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 North American Intermediate Income Trust
 (8) TCW/DW Global Convertible Trust
 (9) TCW/DW Total Return 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

                                        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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

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;
                         Director of DWR, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC; Trustee
                         of the TCW/DW Funds.

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.

David A. Hughey          Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative
Executive Vice           Officer of DWSC, Distributors and DWTC; Director
President and Chief      of DWTC; Vice President of the Dean Witter Funds
Administrative Officer   and the TCW/DW 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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

Edmund C. Puckhaber      Director of DWTC; Vice President of the Dean
Executive Vice           Witter Funds.
President

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

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.

Thomas H. Connelly
Senior Vice President    Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

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

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 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.

                                        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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

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.

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

Stephen Brophy
Vice President

Terence P. Brennan, II
Vice President

Douglas Brown
Vice President

Thomas Chronert
Vice President

Rosalie Clough
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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

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

B. Catherine Connelly
Vice President

Salvatore DeSteno
Vice President           Vice President of DWSC.

Frank J. DeVito
Vice President           Vice President of DWSC.

Dwight Doolan
Vice President

Bruce Dunn
Vice President

Jeffrey D. Geffen
Vice President

Deborah Genovese
Vice President

Peter W. Gurman
Vice President

Russell Harper
Vice President

John Hechtlinger
Vice President

David Hoffman
Vice President

David Johnson
Vice President

Christopher Jones
Vice President

Stanley Kapica
Vice President

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

Paul 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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

Lawrence S. Lafer        Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and       Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary      the TCW/DW Funds.

Thomas Lawlor
Vice President

Lou Anne 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

James Mulcahy
Vice President

James Nash
Vice President

Richard Norris
Vice President

Hugh Rose
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

Diane Lisa Sobin
Vice President           Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

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.

                                       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
- -----------------        ------------------------------------------------

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

Marianne Zalys
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 Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
 (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 Managed Assets Trust
(22) Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
(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 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
 (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 North American Intermediate Income Trust
 (8) TCW/DW Global Convertible Trust
 (9) TCW/DW Total Return 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.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             Positions and
                                             Office with
     Name                                    Distributors
     ----                                    -------------
     <S>                                    <C>
     Fredrick K. Kubler                     Senior Vice President, Assistant
                                            Secretary and Chief Compliance
                                            Officer.

     Michael T. Gregg                       Vice President and Assistant
                                            Secretary.
</TABLE>


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 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.

                                       12

<PAGE>

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 19th day of December, 1994.

                                           DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST


                                        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. 4 has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     Signatures                    Title                     Date
     ----------                    -----                     ----
<S>                                <C>                      <C>
(1) Principal Executive Officer    President, Chief
                                   Executive Officer,
                                   Trustee and Chairman
By  /s/ Charles A. Fiumefreddo                              12/19/94
    ---------------------------
        Charles A. Fiumefreddo

(2) Principal Financial Officer    Treasurer and Principal
                                   Accounting Officer

By  /s/ Thomas F. Caloia                                    12/19/94
    ---------------------------
        Thomas F. Caloia

(3) Majority of the Trustees

    Charles A. Fiumefreddo (Chairman)
    Philip J. Purcell

By  /s/ Sheldon Curtis                                      12/19/94
    ---------------------------
        Sheldon Curtis
        Attorney-in-Fact

    Jack F. Bennett            Manuel H. Johnson
    Michael Bozic              Paul Kolton
    Edwin J.Garn               Michael E. Nugent
    John R. Haire              John L. Schroeder

By  /s/ David M. Butowsky                                   12/19/94
    ---------------------------
        David M. Butowsky
        Attorney-in-Fact
</TABLE>


<PAGE>

                      DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST

                                  EXHIBIT INDEX


     Exhibit No.                  Description
     -----------                  -----------

          11.     --     Consent of Independent Accountants

          16.     --     Schedules for Computation of Performance Quotations

          27.     --     Financial Data Schedule

          Other   --     Power of Attorney





<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. 4 to the registration
statement on Form N-1A (the "Registration Statement") of our report dated
December 9, 1994, relating to the financial statements and financial highlights
of Dean Witter Premier Income Trust, 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 references to us under the heading "Financial
Highlights" in such Prospectus and to the references to us under the headings
"Independent Accountants" and "Experts" in such Statement of Additional
Information.





PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP

1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
December 23, 1994


<PAGE>

                        DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST

                   SCHEDULE OF COMPUTATION OF YIELD QUOTATION
                                    10/31/94

                                    6
     YIELD = 2 { [ ((a-b) /cd)  +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



     YIELD = 2 { [ ((262,577.69-55,683.39) /5,109,546.154X 8.99855) +1] -1}

                             = 5.46112%

<PAGE>

                 SCHEDULE FOR COMPUTATIONS OF PERFORMANCE QUOTATIONS
                          DEAN WITTER PREMIER INCOME TRUST




(A) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS (I.E. STANDARDIZED COMPUTATIONS)

                             _                                        _
                            |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:                    |       |           |
                            |  /\ n |          ERV          |
                    T  =    |    \  |     -----------------------  |  - 1
                            |     \ |           P          |
                            |      \|            |
                            |_                   _|

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

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               (A)
  $1,000         ERV AS OF     AGGREGATE        NUMBER OF     AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Oct-94   TOTAL RETURN      YEARS - n     COMPOUND RETURN - T
- -------------    -----------  ----------------  -----------   ----------------
<S>              <C>          <C>               <C>           <C>
 31-Oct-93          $984.00      -1.60%               1.00       -1.60%

 01-Jul-91        $1,133.00      13.30%               3.33        3.82%
</TABLE>

(B) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS (STANDARIZED COMPUTATIONS) WITHOUT WAIVER OF
    FEES AND ASSUMPTION OF EXPENSES.

                             _                                       _
                            |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:                    |       |           |
                            |  /\ n |          EVb          |
                    tb =    |    \  |     -----------------------  |  - 1
                            |     \ |           P         |
                            |      \|            |
                            |_                   _|


            tb = AVERAGE ANNUAL COMPOUND RETURN
                 (DEDUCTION FOR EXPENSES ASSUMED BY FUND MANAGER)
             n = NUMBER OF YEARS
           EVb = ENDING VALUE (DEDUCTION FOR EXPENSES
                 ASSUMED BY FUND MANAGER)
             P = INITIAL INVESTMENT


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               (B)
  $1,000         EVb AS OF          NUMBER OF                 AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Oct-94         YEARS - n             COMPOUND RETURN - tb
- -------------    -----------        -----------        --------------------------
<S>              <C>                <C>                <C>
 01-Jul-91        $1,132.00                  3.33                  3.79%
</TABLE>

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

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

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

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


             t = AVERAGE ANNUAL COMPOUND 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)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        (D)                                               (C)
  $1,000         EV AS OF              TOTAL                 NUMBER OF                   AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Oct-94            RETURN - TR           YEARS - n            COMPOUND RETURN - t
- -------------    -----------           -----------           -----------------    ------ ------------------------
<S>              <C>                   <C>                   <C>                  <C>
 31-Oct-93        $1,014.40                  1.44%                       1.00                       1.44%

 01-Jul-91        $1,168.00                 16.80%                       3.33                       4.77%
</TABLE>


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

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

*ORIGINAL VALUE $9,700,$48,500 & $97,500 RESPECTIVELY ADJUSTED FOR 3.0 %,3.0%
&2.5% SALES CHARGES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       (E)                     (F)                         (G)
$10,000*         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-Jul-91             16.8               $11,330                     $56,648                   $113,880
</TABLE>




<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
<ARTICLE> 6
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1994
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1994
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                       47,507,488
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                      44,082,998
<RECEIVABLES>                                4,338,160
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                   5,680
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                            71,918
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                              48,498,756
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                     4,365,986
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                      257,510
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                          4,623,496
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                    53,040,822
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                                0
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                      676,501
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                    (6,417,573)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                   (3,424,490)
<NET-ASSETS>                                43,875,260
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                            4,240,056
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                 759,833
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                      3,268,827
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                   (1,183,176)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                  (1,276,352)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                          809,299
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                    3,900,882
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                        188,157
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                (5,271,058)
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                            251,787
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                    (43,293,361)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                          306,372
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                             211,396
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                971,229
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                        61,274,341
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             9.18
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .54
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                          (.41)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                             (.54)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               8.77
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.58
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY

     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each of JACK F. BENNETT, EDWIN J.
GARN, JOHN R. HAIRE, JOHN E. JEUCK, MANUEL H. JOHNSON, PAUL KOLTON and MICHAEL
E. NUGENT, whose signatures appear below, constitutes and appoints David M.
Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and Stuart Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful
attorneys-in-fact and agents, with full power of substitution among himself and
each of the persons appointed herein, for him and in his name, place and stead,
in any and all capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration statement
of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to
file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection
therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents
and purposes as he might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming
all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or
cause to be done by virtue hereof.


Dated: May 10, 1994

 /S/Jack F. Bennett                 /S/Manuel H. Johnson
- --------------------               ----------------------
    Jack F. Bennett                    Manuel H. Johnson


 /S/Edwin J. Garn                   /S/Paul Kolton
- --------------------               -----------------------
    Edwin J. Garn                      Paul Kolton

/S/John R. Haire                    /S/Michael E. Nugent
- --------------------               ------------------------
   John R. Haire                       Michael E. Nugent

 /S/John E. Jeuck
- --------------------
    John E. Jeuck

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

24.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
25.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

26. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
27. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
28. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
29. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
30. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
31. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
32. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
33. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
34. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

35. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
36. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
37. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
38. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
40. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
41. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

42. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
43. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

44. High Income Advantage Trust
45. High Income Advantage Trust II
46. High Income Advantage Trust III
47. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
48. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
49. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
50. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
51. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
52. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
53. Municipal Income Trust
54. Municipal Income Trust II
55. Municipal Income Trust III
56. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
57. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
59. Municipal Premium Income Trust
60. Prime Income Trust
61. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
62. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
63. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
64. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
65. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY



     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS that MICHAEL BOZIC, whose signature appears
below, constitutes and appoints David M. Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and Stuart
Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents, with
full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons appointed
herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to
sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER
FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 15, 1994




/S/ Michael Bozic
- ------------------
    Michael Bozic

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY




     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each of CHARLES A. FIUMEFREDDO and
EDWARD R. TELLING, whose signatures appear below, constitutes and appoints
Sheldon Curtis, Marilyn K. Cranney and Barry Fink, or any of them, his true and
lawful attorneys-in-fact and agent, with full power of substitution among
himself and each of the persons appointed herein, for him and in his name, place
and stead, in any and all capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration
statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED
HERETO, and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in
connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to
all intents and purposes as he might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and
confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may
lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.


Dated: May 10, 1994






  /S/Charles A. Fiumefreddo             /S/Edward R. Telling
- ---------------------------             --------------------
     Charles A. Fiumefreddo                Edward R. Telling

<PAGE>

                             DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

24.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
25.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

26. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
27. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
28. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
29. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
30. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
31. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
32. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
33. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
34. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

35. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
36. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
37. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
38. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
40. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
41. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

42. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
43. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

44. High Income Advantage Trust
45. High Income Advantage Trust II
46. High Income Advantage Trust III
47. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
48. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
49. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
50. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
51. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
52. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
53. Municipal Income Trust
54. Municipal Income Trust II
55. Municipal Income Trust III
56. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
57. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
59. Municipal Premium Income Trust
60. Prime Income Trust
61. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
62. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
63. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
64. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
65. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY




     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that PHILIP J. PURCELL, whose signature
appears below, constitutes and appoints Sheldon Curtis, Marilyn K. Cranney and
Barry Fink, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents,
with full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons appointed
herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to
sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER
FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 8, 1994






 /S/ Philip J. Purcell
- -----------------------
     Philip J. Purcell

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY



     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that JOHN L. SCHROEDER, whose signature
appears below, constitutes and appoints David M. Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and
Stuart Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and
agents, with full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons
appointed herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all
capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE
DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same,
with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 13, 1994




/S/ John L. Schroeder
- ----------------------
    John L. Schroeder

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities




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