INTL-RUS
SUPPLEMENT DATED MAY 24, 1996
TO THE
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
FRANKLIN TEMPLETON INTERNATIONAL TRUST
Dated March 1, 1996
The following risk disclosure regarding foreign investing, particularly in
developing markets, is added to the section "What Are the Funds' Potential
Risks?" immediately following "Foreign Securities."
Brokerage commissions, custodial services, and other costs relating to
investment in foreign countries are generally more expensive than in the United
States. Foreign securities markets also have different clearance and settlement
procedures, and in certain markets there have been times when settlements have
been unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions, making it
difficult to conduct such transactions. Delays in settlement could result in
temporary periods when assets of the Fund are uninvested and no return is earned
thereon. The inability of the Fund to make intended security purchases due to
settlement problems could cause the Fund to miss attractive investment
opportunities. Inability to dispose of portfolio securities due to settlement
problems could result either in losses to the Fund due to subsequent declines in
value of the portfolio security or, if the Fund has entered into a contract to
sell the security, in possible liability to the purchaser.
Depositary Receipts (such as American Depositary Receipts and European
Depositary Receipts) may not necessarily be denominated in the same currency as
the underlying securities into which they may be converted. In addition, the
issuers of the securities underlying unsponsored depositary receipts are not
obligated to disclose material information in the United States and, therefore,
there may be less information available regarding such issuers and there may not
be a correlation between such information and the market value of the Depositary
Receipts. depositary receipts also involve the risks of other investments in
foreign securities, as discussed above.
DEVELOPING MARKETS. Investments in companies domiciled in developing countries
may be subject to potentially higher risks than investments in companies in
developed countries. These risks include (i) less social, political and economic
stability; (ii) the smaller size of the markets for these securities and the
currently low or nonexistent volume of trading, which result in a lack of
liquidity and in greater price volatility; (iii)the lack of publicly available
information, including reports of payments of dividends or interest on
outstanding securities; (iv) certain national policies that may restrict a
Fund's investment opportunities, including restrictions on investment in issuers
or industries deemed sensitive to national interests; (v) foreign taxation; (vi)
the absence of developed structures governing private or foreign investment or
allowing for judicial redress for injury to private property; (vii) the absence,
until recently in certain Eastern European countries and Russia, of a capital
market structure or market-oriented economy; (viii) the possibility that recent
favorable economic developments in Eastern Europe and Russia may be slowed or
reversed by unanticipated political or social events in such countries; (ix)
restrictions which may make it difficult or impossible for the Fund to vote
proxies, exercise shareholder rights, pursue legal remedies, and obtain
judgments in foreign courts; (x)the risk of uninsured loss due to lost, stolen,
or counterfeit stock certificates; and (xi) possible losses through the holding
of securities in domestic and foreign custodial banks and depositories.
In addition, many countries in which a Fund may invest have experienced
substantial, and in some periods extremely high, rates of inflation for many
years. Inflation and rapid fluctuations in inflation rates have had and may
continue to have negative effects on the economies and securities markets of
certain countries. Moreover, the economies of some developing countries may
differ favorably or unfavorably from the United States economy in such respects
as growth of gross domestic product, rate of inflation, currency depreciation,
capital reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency and balance of payments
position.
Repatriation of investment income, capital and proceeds of sales by foreign
investors may require governmental registration and/or approval in some
developing countries. The Fund could be adversely affected by delays in or a
refusal to grant any required governmental registration or approval for such
repatriation.
Further, the economies of developing countries generally are heavily dependent
upon international trade and, accordingly, have been and may continue to be
adversely affected by trade barriers, exchange controls, managed adjustments in
relative currency values and other protectionist measures imposed or negotiated
by the countries with which they trade.
Investments in Eastern European countries may involve risks of nationalization,
expropriation and confiscatory taxation. The communist governments of a number
of Eastern European countries expropriated large amounts of private property in
the past, in many cases without adequate compensation, and there can be no
assurance that such expropriation will not occur in the future. In the event of
such expropriation, the International Fund could lose a substantial portion of
any investments it has made in the affected countries. Further, no accounting
standards exist in Eastern European countries. Finally, even though certain
Eastern European currencies may be convertible into U.S. dollars, the conversion
rates may be artificial relative to the actual market values and may be
unfavorable to Fund investors.
Certain Eastern European countries, which do not have market economies, are
characterized by an absence of developed legal structures governing private and
foreign investments and private property. Certain countries require governmental
approval prior to investments by foreign persons, or limit the amount of
investment by foreign persons in a particular company, or limit the investment
of foreign persons to only a specific class of securities of a company that may
have less advantageous terms than securities of the company available for
purchase by nationals.
Authoritarian governments in certain Eastern European countries may require that
a governmental or quasi-governmental authority act as custodian of the
International Fund's assets invested in such country. To the extent such
governmental or quasi-governmental authorities do not satisfy the requirements
of the 1940 Act to act as foreign custodians of the International Fund's cash
and securities, the Fund's investment in such countries may be limited or may be
required to be effected through intermediaries. The risk of loss through
governmental confiscation may be increased in such countries.
Investing in Russian securities involves a high degree of risk and special
considerations not typically associated with investing in the United States
securities markets, and should be considered highly speculative. These risks
include: (a) delays in settling portfolio transactions and risk of loss arising
out of Russia's unique system of share registration and custody; (b) the risk
that it may be impossible or more difficult than in other countries to obtain
and/or enforce a judgment; (c) pervasiveness of corruption and crime in the
Russian economic system; (d) currency exchange rate volatility and the lack of
available currency hedging instruments; (e) higher rates of inflation (including
the risk of social unrest associated with periods of hyperinflation); (f)
controls on foreign investment and local practices disfavoring foreign investors
and limitations on repatriation of invested capital, profits and dividends, and
on the International Fund's ability to exchange local currencies for U.S.
dollars; (g) the risk that the Russian government or other executive or
legislative bodies may decide not to continue to support the economic reform
programs implemented since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and could follow
radically different political and/or economic policies to the detriment of
investors, including non-market oriented policies such as the support of certain
industries at the expense of other sectors or investors, or a return to the
centrally planned economy that existed prior to the dissolution of the Soviet
Union; (h) the financial condition of Russian companies, including large amounts
of inter-company debt that may create a payments crisis on a national scale; (i)
dependency on exports and the corresponding importance of international trade;
(j) the risk that the Russian tax system will not be reformed to prevent
inconsistent, retroactive and/or exorbitant taxation; and (k) possible
difficulty in identifying a purchaser of securities held by the International
Fund due to the underdeveloped nature of the securities markets.
There is little historical data on Russian securities markets because they are
relatively new and a substantial proportion of securities transactions in Russia
are privately negotiated outside of stock exchanges. Because of the recent
formation of the securities markets, as well as the underdeveloped state of the
banking and telecommunications systems, settlement, clearing and registration of
securities transactions are subject to significant risks. Ownership of shares
(except where shares are held through depositories that meet the requirements of
the 1940 Act) is defined according to entries in the company's share register
and normally evidenced by extracts from the register or by formal share
certificates. However, there is no central registration system for shareholders
and these services are carried out by the companies themselves or by registrars
located throughout Russia. These registrars are not necessarily subject to
effective state supervision and it is possible for the Fund to lose its
registration through fraud, negligence or even mere oversight. While the Fund
will endeavor to ensure that its interest continues to be appropriately recorded
either itself or through a custodian or other agent inspecting the share
register and by obtaining extracts of share registers through regular
confirmations, these extracts have no legal enforceability and it is possible
that subsequent illegal amendment or other fraudulent act may deprive the Fund
of its ownership rights or improperly dilute its interests. In addition, while
applicable Russian regulations impose liability on registrars for losses
resulting from their errors, it may be difficult for the Fund to enforce any
rights it may have against the registrar or issuer of the securities in the
event of loss of share registration. Furthermore, although a Russian public
enterprise with more than 1,000 shareholders is required by law to contract out
the maintenance of its shareholder register to an independent entity that meets
certain criteria, in practice this regulation has not always been strictly
enforced. Because of this lack of independence, management of a company may be
able to exert considerable influence over who can purchase and sell the
company's shares by illegally instructing the registrar to refuse to record
transactions in the share register. This practice may prevent the Fund from
investing in the securities of certain Russian issuers deemed suitable by the
Manager. Further, this could cause a delay in the sale of Russian securities by
the Fund if a potential purchaser is deemed unsuitable, which may expose the
Fund to potential loss on the investment.