MORGAN STANLEY FUND INC
497, 1996-05-08
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<PAGE>
                               FOR OHIO INVESTORS
 
                          SUPPLEMENT DATED MAY 1, 1996
                      TO PROSPECTUSES DATED MAY 1, 1996 OF
 
                           MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                                 P.O. BOX 2798
                             BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
                                   02208-2798
                                 -------------
 
    The  Prospectuses dated May  1, 1996 of  the MORGAN STANLEY  FUND, INC. (the
"Fund") are hereby amended and supplemented by the following:
 
    DUE TO ITS RESTRICTION WHICH PROHIBITS ITS PURCHASE, WITH RESPECT TO 50%
    OF ITS TOTAL ASSETS, OF MORE THAN TEN PER CENT OF THE OUTSTANDING VOTING
    SECURITIES OF ANY ISSUER, EACH OF THE
 
        MORGAN STANLEY AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND,
       MORGAN STANLEY U.S. REAL ESTATE FUND,
       MORGAN STANLEY EMERGING MARKETS FUND,
       MORGAN STANLEY LATIN AMERICAN FUND,
       MORGAN STANLEY INTERNATIONAL MAGNUM FUND AND
       MORGAN STANLEY GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
    MAY  EXCEED  LIMITATIONS  IMPOSED  BY  OHIO  ADMINISTRATIVE  CODE  1301:
    6-3-09(E)(8)  WHICH  PROHIBITS A  FUND'S PURCHASE  OF SECURITIES  OF ANY
    ISSUER IF, AS  TO 75%  OF THE  ASSETS OF  THE FUND  AT THE  TIME OF  THE
    PURCHASE,  MORE THAN TEN PER CENT OF THE VOTING SECURITIES OF ANY ISSUER
    WOULD BE HELD BY THE FUND.
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              P R O S P E C T U S
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    MORGAN STANLEY GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
                   MORGAN STANLEY WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
                         MORGAN STANLEY HIGH YIELD FUND
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                           MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02208-2798
                      FOR INFORMATION CALL 1-800-282-4404
                               ------------------
 
    Morgan  Stanley Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end management investment
company,  or   mutual  fund,   which  consists   of  fifteen   diversified   and
non-diversified   investment  portfolios.  This  prospectus  (the  "Prospectus")
describes the  Class A,  Class B  and Class  C shares  of the  three  investment
portfolios  listed  above (each,  an "Investment  Fund").  (The current  Class C
shares were named Class B shares until May 1, 1995 when such shares were renamed
Class C shares  and thereafter new  Class B  shares were created).  The Fund  is
designed  to make available to retail  investors the expertise of Morgan Stanley
Asset Management  Inc., the  Investment Adviser  and Administrator.  Shares  are
available  through  Morgan Stanley  & Co.  Incorporated ("Morgan  Stanley"), the
Distributor, and investment  dealers, banks  and financial  services firms  that
provide  distribution,  administrative or  shareholder  services ("Participating
Dealers").
 
    The Investment  Funds  are subject  to  certain special  risk  factors.  For
information about these risk factors, see "Prospectus Summary -- Risk Factors."
 
    THE  MORGAN STANLEY WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND AND MORGAN STANLEY HIGH YIELD
FUND NORMALLY INVEST BETWEEN  80% AND 100%  OF THE TOTAL  ASSETS OF SUCH  FUNDS,
RESPECTIVELY,  IN LOWER RATED  AND UNRATED BONDS, COMMONLY  REFERRED TO AS "JUNK
BONDS." BONDS OF THIS TYPE ARE SUBJECT  TO GREATER RISKS, INCLUDING THE RISK  OF
DEFAULT,  THAN THOSE INVOLVED IN HIGHER  RATED BONDS. INVESTORS SHOULD CAREFULLY
ASSESS THE RISKS ASSOCIATED  WITH AN INVESTMENT IN  THESE INVESTMENT FUNDS.  SEE
"ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION -- LOWER RATED AND UNRATED DEBT SECURITIES."
 
    INVESTORS  SHOULD NOTE THAT EACH INVESTMENT FUND MAY INVEST UP TO 15% OF ITS
NET ASSETS IN ILLIQUID ASSETS, INCLUDING RESTRICTED SECURITIES (OTHER THAN  RULE
144A  SECURITIES THAT ARE  DETERMINED TO BE  LIQUID). SEE "ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT
INFORMATION -- NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED
SECURITIES." INVESTMENTS  IN  RESTRICTED  SECURITIES  IN  EXCESS  OF  5%  OF  AN
INVESTMENT  FUND'S TOTAL  ASSETS MAY BE  CONSIDERED A  SPECULATIVE ACTIVITY, MAY
INVOLVE GREATER RISK AND MAY INCREASE THE INVESTMENT FUND'S EXPENSES.
 
    INVESTMENTS IN THE INVESTMENT  FUNDS ARE NEITHER  INSURED NOR GUARANTEED  BY
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
 
    This Prospectus is designed to set forth concisely the information about the
Investment Funds that a prospective investor should know before investing and it
should  be retained for future reference.  The Fund offers additional portfolios
which are described in other prospectuses and under "Prospectus Summary"  below.
The Fund currently offers the following portfolios: (i) GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY  - Morgan Stanley Global Equity  Allocation, Morgan Stanley Asian Growth,
Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets, Morgan  Stanley Latin American, Morgan  Stanley
International  Magnum, Morgan Stanley Japanese Equity, Morgan Stanley Growth and
Income and  Morgan  Stanley European  Equity  Funds; (ii)  U.S.  EQUITY-  Morgan
Stanley American Value, Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity and Morgan Stanley U.S.
Real  Estate  Funds; (iii)  GLOBAL FIXED  INCOME -  Morgan Stanley  Global Fixed
Income, Morgan  Stanley Worldwide  High  Income and  Morgan Stanley  High  Yield
Funds;  and (iv)  MONEY MARKET --  Morgan Stanley Money  Market Fund. Additional
information  about  the  Fund  is  contained  in  a  "Statement  of   Additional
Information,"  dated May 1, 1996, which is incorporated herein by reference. The
Statement of Additional Information and the prospectuses pertaining to the other
portfolios of the Fund are available upon request and without charge by  writing
or calling the Fund at the address and telephone number set forth above.
 
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.
 
                  THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS MAY 1, 1996.
<PAGE>
                                 FUND EXPENSES
 
    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
an Investment Fund may incur:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 GLOBAL     WORLDWIDE
                                                 FIXED         HIGH
                                                 INCOME       INCOME     HIGH YIELD
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES                  FUND         FUND         FUND
- ---------------------------------------------  ----------   ----------   ----------
<S>                                            <C>          <C>          <C>
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases
    Class A..................................    4.75%(1)     4.75%(1)     4.75%(1)
    Class B..................................     None         None         None
    Class C..................................     None         None         None
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested
 Dividends
    Class A..................................     None         None         None
    Class B..................................     None         None         None
    Class C..................................     None         None         None
Deferred Sales Load
  For Purchases up to $999,999
    Class A..................................     None         None         None
    Class B..................................    5.00%(2)     5.00%(2)     5.00%(2)
    Class C..................................    1.00%(3)     1.00%(3)     1.00%(3)
  For Purchases of $1,000,000 or more
    Class A..................................    1.00%(1)     1.00%(1)     1.00%(1)
    Class B..................................    5.00%(2)     5.00%(2)     5.00%(2)
    Class C..................................    1.00%(3)     1.00%(3)     1.00%(3)
Redemption Fees (4)
    Class A..................................     None         None         None
    Class B..................................     None         None         None
    Class C..................................     None         None         None
Exchange Fees
    Class A..................................     None         None         None
    Class B..................................     None         None         None
    Class C..................................     None         None         None
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(1) Percentage shown is the maximum sales  load. Certain large purchases may  be
    subject  to  a  reduced sales  load.  Purchases  of Class  A  shares  of the
    Investment Funds  which, when  combined  with the  net  asset value  of  the
    purchaser's  existing investment in Class A shares of these Funds, aggregate
    $1 million  or more  are not  subject to  a sales  load (an  "initial  sales
    charge").  A  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC")  of 1.00%  will be
    imposed, however, on shares from any such purchase that are redeemed  within
    one  year  following  such purchase.  Any  such  CDSC will  be  paid  to the
    Distributor. Certain other  purchases are  not subject to  an initial  sales
    charge. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
(2) Percentage  shown is the  maximum CDSC. Purchases  of Class B  shares of the
    Investment Funds are subject to a  maximum CDSC of 5.00% which decreases  in
    steps to 0% after six years. See "Purchase of Class B Shares." Any such CDSC
    will be paid to the Distributor.
 
(3) Purchases of Class C shares of the Investment Funds are subject to a CDSC of
    1.00%  for redemptions made within one year  of purchase. Any such CDSC will
    be paid to the Distributor.
 
(4) A charge of  $8.00 may be  imposed on redemptions  by wire which  is not  an
    expense of the Fund.
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE      GLOBAL FIXED      WORLDWIDE HIGH     HIGH YIELD
NET ASSETS)                       INCOME FUND       INCOME FUND          FUND
                                ---------------  ------------------  -------------
<S>                             <C>              <C>                 <C>
Investment Advisory Fee (after
 expense reimbursement and/or
 fee waiver) (5)
    Class A...................         0.00%              0.33%            0.42%
    Class B...................         0.00%              0.33%            0.42%
    Class C...................         0.00%              0.33%            0.42%
12b-1 Fees
    Class A...................         0.25%              0.25%            0.25%
    Class B (6)...............         1.00%              1.00%            1.00%
    Class C (6)...............         1.00%              1.00%            1.00%
Other Expenses (after expense
 reimbursement and/or fee
 waiver) (5)
    Class A...................         1.20%              0.97%            0.58%
    Class B...................         1.20%              0.97%            0.58%
    Class C...................         1.20%              0.97%            0.58%
Total Operating Expenses
 (after expense reimbursement
 and/or fee waiver) (5)
    Class A...................         1.45%              1.55%            1.25%
    Class B...................         2.20%              2.30%            2.00%
    Class C...................         2.20%              2.30%            2.00%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(5) The  Adviser  has agreed  to  waive its  advisory  fees and/or  to reimburse
    expenses of the Investment Funds, if necessary, if such fees would cause the
    total annual operating expenses of the Investment Funds, as a percentage  of
    average  daily net assets, to exceed the  percentages set forth in the table
    above. The following sets  forth, for each  Investment Fund, (i)  investment
    advisory  fees absent advisory fee waivers and (ii) expected total operating
    expenses absent fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        INVESTMENT                      TOTAL
                                       ADVISORY FEES             OPERATING EXPENSES
                                     -----------------  -------------------------------------
                                       (ALL CLASSES)      CLASS A      CLASS B      CLASS C
                                     -----------------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                  <C>                <C>          <C>          <C>
Global Fixed Income Fund...........           0.75%           2.22%        2.97%        2.97%
Worldwide High Income Fund.........           0.75%           1.97%        2.74%        2.74%
High Yield Fund....................           0.75%           1.58%        2.33%        2.33%
</TABLE>
 
   As a result of  these reductions, the Investment  Advisory Fees stated  above
   are  lower than contractual  fees stated under "Management  of the Fund." The
   Adviser reserves the right to terminate any of its fee waivers at any time in
   its  sole  discretion.  For  further   information  on  Fund  expenses,   see
   "Management of the Fund."
(6) Of  the 12b-1  fees for  the Class B  shares and  the Class  C shares, 0.75%
    represents a distribution  fee and 0.25%  represents a shareholder  services
    fee.
 
    The  purpose of the above  table is to assist  the investor in understanding
the various expenses that an investor in  any of the Investment Funds will  bear
directly or indirectly. The Class A and Class C expenses and fees for the Global
Fixed Income and Worldwide High Income Funds are based on actual figures for the
period  ended June 30, 1995. The Class A,  Class B and Class C expenses and fees
for the High Yield Fund and the Class  B expenses and fees for the Global  Fixed
Income  and Worldwide High Income Funds are  based on estimates. For purposes of
calculating the estimated expenses and fees  set forth above, the table  assumes
that each Investment Fund's average daily net assets will be $50,000,000. "Other
Expenses"  include, among others, Directors'  fees and expenses, amortization of
organizational costs, filing fees, professional fees, and the costs for  reports
to  shareholders. Due  to the  continuous nature  of Rule  12b-1 fees, long-term
shareholders may pay  more than the  equivalent of the  maximum front-end  sales
charges  otherwise  permitted by  the  Rules of  Fair  Practice of  the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD").
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
    The following  example illustrates  the expenses  that you  would pay  on  a
$1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual rate of return and redemption at the end
of each time period as indicated, in (i) Class A shares of each Investment Fund,
including the maximum 4.75% sales charge, (ii) Class B shares of each Investment
Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge and (iii) Class C shares of
each Investment Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              GLOBAL   WORLDWIDE
                                                              FIXED       HIGH       HIGH
                                                              INCOME     INCOME     YIELD
                                                               FUND       FUND       FUND
                                                            ---------- ---------- ----------
<S>                                                         <C>        <C>        <C>
Class A shares
 (If it is assumed there are no redemptions, the expenses
 are the same.)
    1 Year.................................................. $   62(1) $   63(1)  $   60(1)
    3 Years.................................................     91        94         85
    5 Years.................................................    123       128          *
    10 Years................................................    213       223          *
Class B shares
 (Assuming complete redemption at end of period)
    1 Year..................................................     72        73         70
    3 Years.................................................     99       102         93
    5 Years.................................................    138       143          *
    10 Years................................................    253       264          *
(Assuming no redemption)
    1 Year..................................................     22        23         20
    3 Years.................................................     69        72         63
    5 Years.................................................    118       123          *
    10 Years................................................    253       264          *
Class C shares
(Whether or not complete redemption occurs at end of period)
    1 Year..................................................     22(2)     23(2)      20(2)
    3 Years.................................................     69        72         63
    5 Years.................................................    118       123          *
    10 Years................................................    253       264          *
</TABLE>
 
- --------------
 *   Because  the High Yield Fund had just  become operational as of the date of
     this Prospectus, the Fund has not projected expenses beyond the  three-year
     period shown.
 
1)   Reduced sales charges apply to purchases of $100,000 or more of the Class A
     shares  of  the Investment  Funds. See  "Purchase of  Shares." For  Class A
     shares of the Investment Funds, generally  purchases of $1 million or  more
     may be accomplished at net asset value without an initial sales charge, but
     may be subject to a 1.00% CDSC if liquidated within one year of purchase.
 
(2)  If  Class C shares of the Investment  Funds are redeemed within one year of
     purchase, the expense figures in the  first year increase to the  following
     amounts  for each Investment Fund: Global Fixed Income Fund, $32; Worldwide
     High Income Fund, $33; and High Yield Fund, $30.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
    THIS EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE CONSIDERED  A REPRESENTATION OF  PAST OR  FUTURE
EXPENSES  OR  PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL  EXPENSES MAY  BE GREATER  OR LESS  THAN THOSE
SHOWN. The Adviser in its discretion may terminate voluntary fee waivers  and/or
reimbursements  at  any time.  Absent  the waiver  of  fees or  reimbursement of
expenses, the amounts in the example above would be greater.
 
    The Fund intends  to comply  with all  state laws  that restrict  investment
company  expenses. Currently, the  most restrictive state  law requires that the
aggregate annual expenses  of an  investment company  shall not  exceed two  and
one-half  percent (2 1/2%) of  the first $30 million  of average net assets, two
percent (2%) of the next $70 million of average net assets, and one and one-half
percent (1 1/2%)  of the remaining  net assets of  such investment company.  The
Adviser has agreed to a reduction in the amounts payable to it, and to reimburse
the  Investment  Funds, if  necessary,  if in  any fiscal  year  the sum  of the
Investment Funds' expenses exceeds the limit set by applicable state law.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
    The following tables provide financial highlights  for the Class A, Class  B
and  Class C shares of  the Global Fixed Income  and Worldwide High Income Funds
for each of  the respective periods  presented. (The Class  C Shares were  named
Class  B Shares  until May  1, 1995.) The  audited financial  highlights for the
periods ended June 30, 1993 and 1994, and for the years ended June 30, 1994  and
1995  are part of  the Fund's financial  statements, which appear  in the Fund's
June 30,  1995  Annual  Report  to  Shareholders  and  the  unaudited  financial
highlights  for  the period  ended  December 31,  1995  are part  of  the Fund's
unaudited financial  statements which  appear in  the Fund's  December 31,  1995
Semi-Annual  Report  to  Shareholders.  Both of  such  financial  statements are
included in the Funds' Statement of Additional Information. The Funds' financial
highlights for  the  year  ended  June  30, 1995  have  been  audited  by  Price
Waterhouse LLP, whose report thereon (which was unqualified) is also included in
the  Statement  of  Additional Information.  Additional  performance information
about the Fund is contained in the Fund's Annual Report and Semi-Annual  Report.
The  Annual Report,  Semi-Annual Report  and the  financial statements contained
therein, along with the Statement of Additional Information, are available at no
cost from the Fund at the address  and telephone number noted on the cover  page
of  this Prospectus. The High  Yield Fund was not operational  as of the date of
the Annual Report or  as of the  date of the  Semi-Annual Report. The  following
information  should be  read in  conjunction with  the financial  statements and
notes thereto.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                  CLASS B+
                                                                  CLASS A                                     ----------------
                                  ------------------------------------------------------------------------     AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                                          SIX MONTHS ENDED                  TO
                                                                                              DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND       JANUARY 4, 1993*        YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED                1995                1995
 RATIOS                           TO JUNE 30, 1993     JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                               <C>                 <C>               <C>               <C>                 <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD                           $          10.00    $        10.55    $         9.53    $          10.23    $          10.24
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                       0.25              0.52              0.56                0.30                0.61
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                0.55             (0.42)             0.50                0.27               (0.15)
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                 0.80              0.10              1.06                0.57                0.46
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      (0.25)            (0.50)            (0.36)              (0.62)              (0.55)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                       --             (0.12)               --                  --                  --
  Net Realized Gain                             --             (0.47)               --                  --                  --
  In Excess of Realized Gain                    --             (0.03)               --                  --                  --
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
  Total Distributions                        (0.25)            (1.12)            (0.36)              (0.62)              (0.55)
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD    $          10.55    $         9.53    $        10.23    $          10.18    $          10.15
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               8.02%             0.41%            11.41%               5.71%               4.58%
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
                                            ------    --------------    --------------            --------              ------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Asets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,633    $       10,369    $       11,092    $         10,090    $            279
Ratio of Expenses to Average
 Net Assets (2)                               1.45%**           1.45%             1.45%               1.45%**             2.20%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets (2)                    5.00%**           4.70%             5.84%               5.36%**             4.61%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                         55%              168%              169%                 81%                 81%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income              $           0.07    $         0.11    $         0.07    $           0.03    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                     2.88%**           2.48%             2.22%               2.00%**             2.75%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                         3.57%**           3.67%             5.07%               4.81%**             4.06%**
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                    CLASS C
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                  DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND       JANUARY 4, 1993*          YEAR ENDED          YEAR ENDED                1995
 RATIOS                           TO JUNE 30, 1993       JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                               <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- -------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD                           $          10.00    $          10.56    $           9.54    $          10.20
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                       0.21                0.43                0.49                0.26
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                0.55               (0.40)               0.47                0.27
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                 0.76                0.03                0.96                0.53
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      (0.20)              (0.44)              (0.30)              (0.59)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                       --               (0.11)                 --                  --
  Net Realized Gain                             --               (0.47)                 --                  --
  In Excess of Realized Gain                    --               (0.03)                 --                  --
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
  Total Distributions                        (0.20)              (1.05)              (0.30)              (0.59)
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD    $          10.56    $           9.54    $          10.20    $          10.14
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               7.61%              (0.25)%             10.24%               5.30%
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
                                            ------              ------              ------              ------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Asets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,120    $          5,407    $          5,965    $          5,612
Ratio of Expenses to Average
 Net Assets (2)                               2.20%**             2.20%               2.20%               2.20%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets (2)                    4.25%**             3.95%               5.09%               4.61%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                         55%                168%                169%                 81%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income              $           0.07    $           0.12    $           0.08    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                     3.63%**             3.29%               2.97%               2.75%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                         2.82%**             2.86%               4.32%               4.06%**
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
</TABLE>
 
 * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
 + The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
   shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
(1) Total Return  is calculated  exclusive of  sales charges  or deferred  sales
    charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
 
(2) Under the terms of an Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser is entitled
    to  receive an investment advisory fee calculated at an annual rate of 0.75%
    of the average daily net assets of the Global Fixed Income Fund. The Adviser
    has agreed to waive a portion of  this fee and/or reimburse expenses of  the
    Investment  Fund  to the  extent that  the total  operating expenses  of the
    Investment Fund exceed 1.45% of the average daily net assets relating to the
    Class A shares and  2.20% of the  average daily net  assets relating to  the
    Class  C shares. For the fiscal periods  ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994,
    June 30, 1995 and December 31, 1995, the Adviser waived advisory fees and/or
    reimbursed expenses totaling approximately  $77,000, $150,000, $121,000  and
    $44,000, respectively, for the Global Fixed Income Fund.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          CLASS A                              CLASS B+
                                   -----------------------------------------------------    ---------------        CLASS C
                                                                           SIX MONTHS       AUGUST 1, 1995*    ----------------
                                                                              ENDED               TO
                                                                          DECEMBER 31,       DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND        APRIL 21, 1994*       YEAR ENDED           1995               1995          APRIL 21, 1994*
 RATIOS                            TO JUNE 30, 1994    JUNE 30, 1995       (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)      TO JUNE 30, 1994
- --------------------------------   ----------------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------    ----------------
<S>                                <C>                 <C>               <C>                <C>                <C>
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          12.00    $        12.17    $         11.57    $         11.63    $          12.00
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income.........               0.18              1.26               0.60               0.46                0.17
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)..................               0.16             (0.52)              0.56               0.49                0.15
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations...................               0.34              0.74               1.16               0.95                0.32
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income.........              (0.17)            (1.22)             (0.66)             (0.52)              (0.16)
  Net Realized Gain.............                 --             (0.12)                --                 --                  --
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
  Total Distributions...........              (0.17)            (1.34)             (0.66)             (0.52)              (0.16)
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          12.17    $        11.57    $         12.07    $         12.06    $          12.16
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
TOTAL RETURN (1)................               2.86%             6.87%             10.30%              8.38%               2.62%
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s).........................   $          6,857    $       14,819    $        38,728    $        10,620    $          6,081
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets (2).....................               1.55%**           1.55%              1.55%**            2.30%**             2.30%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets (2)......               8.29%**          11.53%             10.94%**           10.19%**             7.54%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate.........                 19%              178%                60%                60%                 19%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income............   $           0.02    $         0.05    $          0.01    $          0.01    $           0.06
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets.......................               3.23%**           1.97%              1.70%**            2.45%**             4.00%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets...........               6.61%**          11.11%             10.79%**           10.04%**             5.84%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                       SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                         DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND           YEAR ENDED             1995
 RATIOS                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
- --------------------------------   ----------------    ----------------
<S>                                <C>                 <C>
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          12.16    $          11.58
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income.........               1.17                0.55
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)..................              (0.50)               0.56
                                           --------            --------
  Total From Investment
   Operations...................               0.67                1.11
                                           --------            --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income.........              (1.13)              (0.63)
  Net Realized Gain.............              (0.12)                 --
                                           --------            --------
  Total Distributions...........              (1.25)              (0.63)
                                           --------            --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          11.58    $          12.06
                                           --------            --------
                                           --------            --------
TOTAL RETURN (1)................               6.20%               9.82%
                                           --------            --------
                                           --------            --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s).........................   $         11,880    $         23,768
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets (2).....................               2.30%               2.30%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets (2)......              10.72%              10.19%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate.........                178%                 60%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income............   $           0.05    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets.......................               2.74%               2.45%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets...........              10.28%              10.04%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
</TABLE>
 
    *   Commencement of operations.
 
     ** Annualized
 
      + The  Fund began offering the  current Class B shares  on August 1, 1995.
        Class B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
     (1) Total Return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
         charges. Total  returns for  periods  of less  than  one year  are  not
         annualized.
 
     (2) Under  the terms  of an Investment  Advisory Agreement,  the Adviser is
         entitled to receive an investment advisory fee calculated at an  annual
         rate  of 0.75% of  the average daily  net assets of  the Worldwide High
         Income Fund. The  Adviser has  agreed to waive  a portion  of this  fee
         and/or reimburse expenses of the Investment Fund to the extent that the
         total  operating expenses  of the Investment  Fund exceed  1.55% of the
         average daily net assets  relating to the Class  A shares and 2.30%  of
         the  average daily net assets  relating to the Class  C shares. For the
         fiscal periods ended  June 30,  1994, June  30, 1995  and December  31,
         1995,  the  Adviser  waived advisory  fees  and/or  reimbursed expenses
         totaling approximately $39,000, $88,000 and $43,000, respectively,  for
         the Worldwide High Income Fund.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
THE FUND
 
    The  Fund  currently consists  of  fifteen investment  portfolios  which are
designed to offer investors  a range of investment  choices with Morgan  Stanley
providing  services as  Adviser, Administrator and  Distributor. Each investment
portfolio has its  own investment objective  and policies designed  to meet  its
specific goals.
 
    - The  GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND seeks to  produce an attractive real rate of
      return while preserving capital by investing in fixed income securities of
      issuers throughout the world, including U.S. issuers.
 
    - The WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND  seeks high current income consistent  with
      relative stability of principal and, secondarily, capital appreciation, by
      investing   primarily  in  a  portfolio  of  high  yielding  fixed  income
      securities of issuers throughout the world.
 
    - The HIGH  YIELD FUND  seeks to  maximize total  return by  investing in  a
      diversified  portfolio of high yield income  securities that offer a yield
      above that generally  available on  debt securities in  the three  highest
      rating categories of the recognized rating services.
 
    The  other  investment  portfolios  of  the  Fund  are  described  in  other
prospectuses which may be  obtained from the Fund  at the address and  telephone
number noted on the cover page of this Prospectus. The objectives of these other
investment portfolios are listed below:
 
GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUNDS:
 
    - The  GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by
      investing in equity securities of U.S. and non-U.S. issuers in  accordance
      with country weightings determined by the Adviser and with stock selection
      within each country designed to replicate a broad market index.
 
    - The  ASIAN GROWTH FUND  seeks long-term capital  appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Asian issuers, excluding Japan.
 
    - The  EMERGING  MARKETS  FUND  seeks  long-term  capital  appreciation   by
      investing primarily in equity securities of emerging country issuers.
 
    - The  LATIN AMERICAN FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Latin American issuers and investing  in
      debt  securities  issued or  guaranteed by  Latin American  governments or
      governmental entities.
 
    - The INTERNATIONAL  MAGNUM FUND  seeks  long-term capital  appreciation  by
      investing primarily in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers in accordance
      with  EAFE  country (as  defined  in "Investment  Objective  and Policies"
      below) weightings determined by the Adviser.
 
    - The JAPANESE EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Japanese issuers.
 
    - The GROWTH AND INCOME FUND  seeks capital appreciation and current  income
      by investing primarily in equity and equity-linked securities.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    - The EUROPEAN EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of European issuers.
 
U.S. EQUITY FUNDS:
 
    - The  AMERICAN VALUE FUND seeks high long-term total return by investing in
      undervalued equity securities of small- to medium-sized corporations.
 
    - The  AGGRESSIVE  EQUITY  FUND  seeks  capital  appreciation  by  investing
      primarily   in  a  non-diversified  portfolio   of  corporate  equity  and
      equity-linked securities.
 
    - The U.S. REAL ESTATE  FUND seeks to  provide above-average current  income
      and  long-term  capital  appreciation  by  investing  primarily  in equity
      securities of companies in the  U.S. real estate industry, including  real
      estate investment trusts.
 
MONEY MARKET FUND:
 
    - The  MONEY  MARKET  FUND seeks  to  maximize current  income  and preserve
      capital while maintaining  high levels of  liquidity through investing  in
      high  quality money  market instruments  with remaining  maturities of 397
      days or less.
 
    The Growth and Income, European Equity and Money Market Funds are  currently
not being offered.
 
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
 
    Morgan    Stanley   Asset   Management   Inc.   (the   "Adviser"   and   the
"Administrator"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group Inc., which,
together with its affiliated asset management companies, had approximately $57.4
billion in assets under  management as an investment  manager or as a  fiduciary
adviser  at December 31, 1995 acts as investment adviser to the Fund and each of
its Investment Funds. See "Management of the Fund -- Investment Adviser" and "--
Administrator."
 
RISK FACTORS
 
    The investment policies  of each  Investment Fund entail  certain risks  and
considerations  of which an investor should  be aware. The Investment Funds will
invest in  securities of  foreign  issuers. Securities  of foreign  issuers  are
subject  to  certain risks  not typically  associated with  domestic securities,
including, among other risks, changes in currency rates and in exchange  control
regulations,  costs in  connection with conversions  between various currencies,
limited publicly  available  information  regarding  foreign  issuers,  lack  of
uniformity  in accounting,  auditing and  financial standards  and requirements,
potential price volatility and lesser  liquidity of shares traded on  securities
markets,  less  government  supervision and  regulation  of  securities markets,
changes in taxes on income  on securities, possible seizure, nationalization  or
expropriation  of the foreign  issuer or foreign  deposits, the risk  of war and
potentially greater difficulty in  obtaining a judgment in  a court outside  the
U.S.  The Worldwide High Income Fund invests in securities of issuers located in
developing countries and emerging markets.  These securities may impose  greater
liquidity  risks and other risks not typically associated with investing in more
established markets. The  Worldwide High Income  Fund's investments in  emerging
markets  may be  in small- to  medium-sized companies. The  Investment Funds may
invest in sovereign  debt. The Worldwide  High Income and  High Yield Funds  may
invest    in   lower   rated    and   unrated   debt    securities   which   are
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
considered speculative with  regard to  the payment  of interest  and return  of
principal.   In  addition,  each  Investment   Fund  may  invest  in  repurchase
agreements, borrow money, lend its portfolio securities, and purchase securities
on a when-issued or delayed delivery  basis. The Worldwide High Income Fund  may
invest  in reverse  repurchase agreements.  The Investment  Funds may  invest in
forward foreign currency exchange contracts, and the Worldwide High Income  Fund
may  invest  in foreign  currency  exchange futures  and  options, to  hedge the
currency  risks  associated  with  investment  in  non-U.S.  dollar  denominated
securities.  The Worldwide High Income Fund may invest in options and structured
investments. The Worldwide High Income Fund may engage in short selling. Each of
these investment strategies  involves specific risks  which are described  under
"Investment  Objectives  and Policies"  and "Additional  Investment Information"
herein and  under  "Investment Objectives  and  Policies" in  the  Statement  of
Additional  Information. See "Investment  Limitations" for a  description of the
risks associated  with the  non-diversified status  of the  Global Fixed  Income
Fund.
 
HOW TO INVEST
 
    The Class A, Class B and Class C shares of the Investment Funds are designed
to  provide investors a choice of three  ways to pay distribution costs. Class A
shares of the Investment Funds  are offered at net  asset value plus an  initial
sales  charge of up  to 4.75% in  graduated percentages based  on the investor's
aggregate investments in the Investment Funds. Shares of the Class B shares  and
Class  C shares of the Investment Funds are  offered at net asset value. Class B
shares  are  subject  to  a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  ("CDSC")   for
redemptions    within   six   years   and   are   subject   to   higher   annual
distribution-related expenses  than  the Class  A  shares. Class  C  shares  are
subject  to a  CDSC for redemptions  within one  year and are  subject to higher
annual distribution-related expenses  than the Class  A shares. Share  purchases
may  be made through Morgan Stanley, through Participating Dealers or by sending
payments directly  to the  Transfer Agent  on behalf  of the  Fund. The  minimum
initial  investment is $1,000 for each  Investment Fund, except that the minimum
initial investment amount for individual  retirement accounts ("IRAs") is  $250.
The  minimum for  subsequent investments  is $100,  except that  the minimum for
subsequent investments for  IRAs is $50  and there is  no minimum for  automatic
reinvestment of dividends and distributions. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
HOW TO REDEEM
 
    Shares  of each Investment Fund may be redeemed at any time at the net asset
value per share  of the  Investment Fund next  determined after  receipt of  the
redemption  request. The redemption price may be  more or less than the purchase
price. A Class A shareholder  of an Investment Fund who  did not pay an  initial
sales  charge due to the size of the purchase and redeems shares within one year
of purchase will  be subject to  a CDSC of  1.00% on the  lesser of the  current
market  value of the shares  redeemed or the total  cost of such shares. Certain
Class B shares that are redeemed within  six years of purchase are subject to  a
maximum  CDSC of 5.00% which  decreases in steps to  0% after six years. Certain
Class C shares that are  redeemed within one year of  purchase are subject to  a
CDSC  of 1.00%. The CDSC in each case is applicable to the lesser of the current
market value  of the  shares  redeemed or  the total  cost  of such  shares.  In
determining  whether either of such CDSCs is  payable, and, if so, the amount of
the charge, it is assumed that shares  not subject to such charge are the  first
redeemed  followed by  other shares held  for the  longest period of  time. If a
shareholder reduces his/her total investment in shares of an Investment Fund  to
less   than  $1,000,  the  entire  investment  may  be  subject  to  involuntary
redemption. See "Redemption of Shares."
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
 
    The investment  objectives  of each  Investment  Fund are  described  below,
together  with the  policies the  Fund employs in  its efforts  to achieve these
objectives.  Each  Investment  Fund's  investment  objectives  are   fundamental
policies  which may not be changed by an Investment Fund without the approval of
a majority of the Investment Fund's  outstanding voting securities. There is  no
assurance  that an  Investment Fund will  attain its  objectives. The investment
policies described below are not fundamental policies and may be changed without
shareholder approval.
 
THE GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
    The investment objective of  the Global Fixed Income  Fund is to produce  an
attractive  real rate of  return while preserving capital  by investing in fixed
income securities of U.S. and foreign issuers denominated in U.S. Dollars and in
other currencies.  The Investment  Fund will,  under normal  market  conditions,
invest  at least 65% of the value of its total assets in fixed income securities
of issuers in at least three  different countries. The Investment Fund seeks  to
achieve  its  objectives by  investing in  United States  government securities,
foreign government securities, securities of supranational entities,  Eurobonds,
and  corporate bonds with varying  maturities denominated in various currencies.
In selecting portfolio securities, the  Adviser evaluates the currency,  market,
and individual features of the securities being considered for investment. For a
description   of  special  considerations  and  certain  risks  associated  with
investments in foreign issuers, see "Additional Investment Information."
 
    The Adviser seeks to minimize investment risk by investing in a high quality
portfolio of debt securities, the majority of which will be rated in one of  the
two  highest rating categories by an NRSRO or, if unrated, will be of comparable
quality as  determined by  the Adviser  under the  supervision of  the Board  of
Directors.  U.S. Government securities  in which the  Investment Fund may invest
include obligations issued or  guaranteed by the U.S.  Government, such as  U.S.
Treasury securities, as well as those backed by the full faith and credit of the
United   States,  such  as  obligations  of  the  Government  National  Mortgage
Association and The Export-Import Bank. The  Investment Fund may also invest  in
obligations    issued   or   guaranteed   by   U.S.   Government   agencies   or
instrumentalities where the Investment Fund must look principally to the issuing
or guaranteeing agency for ultimate repayment. The Investment Fund may invest in
obligations issued  or guaranteed  by foreign  governments and  their  political
subdivisions,  authorities, agencies or  instrumentalities, and by supranational
entities (such as  the World Bank,  The European Economic  Community, The  Asian
Development  Bank  and the  European Coal  and  Steel Community).  Investment in
foreign government  securities will  be limited  to those  of developed  nations
which  the  Adviser  believes  to  pose  limited  credit  risk.  These countries
currently include Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Ireland,  Italy,  Japan,  Luxembourg,  the  Netherlands,  New  Zealand,
Norway,  Spain,  Sweden,  Switzerland  and  The  United  Kingdom.  Corporate and
supranational obligations  in which  the  Investment Fund  will invest  will  be
limited  to  those  rated  "A"  or better  by  Moody's  Investors  Service, Inc.
("Moody's"), Standard  & Poor's  Ratings  Group ("Standard  & Poor's")  or  IBCA
Ltd.,  or if unrated, of  comparable quality as determined  by the Adviser under
the supervision of the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
    The  Adviser's  approach  to  multi-currency,  fixed-income  management   is
strategic  and value-based  and designed to  produce an attractive  real rate of
return. The Adviser's assessment of the bond markets and
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
currencies is  based on  an analysis  of real  interest rates.  Current  nominal
yields  of securities  are adjusted  for inflation  prevailing in  each currency
sector using an analysis of past  and projected inflation rates. The  Investment
Fund's  aim is to  invest in bond  markets which offer  the most attractive real
returns relative to inflation.
 
    Under  normal  circumstances,  the  Investment  Fund  will  have  a  neutral
investment  position  in medium-term  securities (i.e.,  those with  a remaining
maturity of between three and seven years) and will respond to changing interest
rate levels by shortening or  lengthening portfolio maturity through  investment
in  longer- or shorter-term  instruments. For example,  the Investment Fund will
respond to high levels of real interest rates through a lengthening in portfolio
maturity. Current  and historical  yield  spreads among  the three  main  market
segments  -- the  Government, Foreign  and Euro  markets --  guide the Adviser's
selection of  markets  and  particular  securities  within  those  markets.  The
analysis  of currencies is made independent of the analysis of markets. Value in
foreign exchange is determined  by relative purchasing power  parity of a  given
currency.   The  Investment  Fund  seeks   to  invest  in  currencies  currently
undervalued based  on  purchasing power  parity.  The Adviser  analyzes  current
account  and capital account  performance and real interest  rates to adjust for
shorter-term currency flows.
 
    For temporary defensive purposes, the Investment Fund may invest part or all
of its total assets in cash or in short-term securities, including  certificates
of  deposit, commercial  paper, notes, obligations  issued or  guaranteed by the
U.S. Government  or any  of its  agencies or  instrumentalities, and  repurchase
agreements involving such government securities.
 
    The  Investment Fund may, to a limited extent, invest in non-publicly traded
securities,  private  placements  and  restricted  securities.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and
Restricted Securities."
 
    The  Investment Fund will  occasionally enter into  forward foreign currency
exchange contracts. These are used to hedge foreign currency exchange  exposures
when  required.  See  "Additional  Investment  Information  --  Forward  Foreign
Currency Exchange  Contracts  and  Futures Contracts"  in  this  Prospectus  and
"Investment  Objectives and Policies  -- Forward Foreign  Currency Contracts" in
the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may  be  invested in  certain  securities or  obligations,  including derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
    The investment objective of the Worldwide  High Income Fund is high  current
income consistent with relative stability of principal and, secondarily, capital
appreciation,  by  investing primarily  in a  portfolio  of high  yielding fixed
income securities of issuers located  throughout the world. The Investment  Fund
seeks  to achieve its investment objective by allocating its assets among any or
all of three  investment sectors: U.S.  corporate lower rated  and unrated  debt
securities,  emerging country debt securities and global fixed income securities
offering high real yields. The types  of securities in each of these  investment
sectors  in  which  the  Investment  Fund may  invest  are  described  below. In
selecting U.S.  corporate  lower  rated  and unrated  debt  securities  for  the
Investment  Fund's portfolio, the Adviser will consider, among other things, the
price of  the security,  and  the financial  history, condition,  prospects  and
management  of  an  issuer. The  Adviser  intends  to invest  a  portion  of the
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
Investment Fund's assets in emerging country debt securities that provide a high
level of  current income,  while at  the  same time  holding the  potential  for
capital  appreciation if the  perceived creditworthiness of  the issuer improves
due to improving economic, financial,  political, social or other conditions  in
the  country  in which  the issuer  is  located. In  addition, the  Adviser will
attempt to invest  a portion  of the Investment  Fund's assets  in fixed  income
securities  of  issuers  in global  fixed  income markets  displaying  high real
(inflation adjusted)  yields.  Under  normal  conditions,  the  Investment  Fund
invests  between  80% and  100% of  its total  assets  in some  or all  of three
categories of higher  yielding securities,  some of which  may entail  increased
credit  and market risk. Some or all  of such higher yielding securities will be
lower rated or unrated  debt securities, commonly referred  to as "junk  bonds."
See  "Additional Investment Information -- Risk Factors Relating to Investing in
Lower Rated  and  Unrated  Debt  Securities" and  "--  Foreign  Investment  Risk
Factors."
 
    The   Adviser's  approach  to   multi-currency  fixed-income  management  is
strategic and value-based  and designed to  produce an attractive  real rate  of
return.  The Adviser's assessment of the bond markets and currencies is based on
an analysis of  real interest rates.  Current nominal yields  of securities  are
adjusted  for inflation prevailing in each  currency sector using an analysis of
past and projected inflation  rates. The Investment Fund's  aim is to invest  in
bond markets which offer the most attractive real returns relative to inflation.
 
    From time to time, a portion of the Investment Fund's investments, which may
be  up to 100% of  the Investment Fund's investments,  may be considered to have
credit  quality  below  investment   grade  as  determined  by   internationally
recognized  credit rating agency  organizations, such as  Moody's and Standard &
Poor's, or be unrated but determined to be of comparable quality by the Adviser.
Such lower rated bonds are commonly  referred to as "junk bonds." Securities  in
such  lower rating categories may have predominantly speculative characteristics
or may be in default. Appendix A to this Prospectus sets forth a description  of
Moody's  and Standard  & Poor's  corporate bond  ratings. Ratings  represent the
opinions of rating agencies as to the quality of bonds and other debt securities
they undertake  to  rate at  the  time of  issuance.  However, ratings  are  not
absolute  standards  of  quality and  may  not  reflect changes  in  an issuer's
creditworthiness. Accordingly, while the Adviser will consider ratings, it  will
perform  its own  analysis and  will not  rely principally  on ratings. Emerging
country debt securities in which the Investment Fund may invest will be  subject
to  high risk and will not be required to meet a minimum rating standard and may
not be  rated  for creditworthiness  by  any internationally  recognized  credit
rating  organization. The Investment Fund's  investments in U.S. corporate lower
rated and  unrated debt  securities  and emerging  country debt  securities  are
expected   to  be   rated  in  the   lower  and  lowest   rating  categories  of
internationally  recognized  credit  rating  organizations  or  to  be   unrated
securities  of comparable quality. Ratings of a non-U.S. debt instrument, to the
extent that those  ratings are  undertaken, are  related to  evaluations of  the
country in which the issuer of the instrument is located. Ratings generally take
into  account the currency  in which a non-U.S.  debt instrument is denominated;
instruments issued by a foreign government in other than the local currency, for
example, typically have a  lower rating than local  currency instruments due  to
the existence of an additional risk that the government will be unable to obtain
the  required foreign currency to service its foreign currency-denominated debt.
In general, the ratings of debt  securities or obligations issued by a  non-U.S.
public  or private entity will not be higher  than the rating of the currency or
the foreign currency debt of the central government of the country in which  the
issuer  is located, regardless of the  intrinsic creditworthiness of the issuer.
To  mitigate  the  risks  associated  with  investments  in  such  lower   rated
securities, the
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
Investment  Fund will  diversify its  holdings by  market, issuer,  industry and
credit quality. Investors  should carefully  review the  section below  entitled
"Additional  Investment  Information --  Risk Factors  Relating to  Investing in
Lower Rated Debt Securities."
 
    The chart below indicates the Investment Fund's weighted average composition
of debt securities graded by  Standard & Poor's for  the period from the  Fund's
inception (April 21, 1994) through March 31, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            PERCENTAGE
                  DEBT SECURITIES RATINGS                       OF
                    (STANDARD & POOR'S)                     NET ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                         <C>
AA..........................................................   0.04%
A...........................................................  11.88%
BBB.........................................................   0.09%
BB..........................................................  18.40%
B...........................................................  14.30%
CCC.........................................................   0.84%
Unrated.....................................................  38.95%
</TABLE>
 
    The  weighted average  indicated above was  calculated on  a dollar weighted
basis and was computed as at the end  of each month through March 31, 1996.  The
chart  does  not necessarily  indicate what  the  composition of  the Investment
Fund's portfolio  will be  in the  current and  subsequent fiscal  years. For  a
description  of  Standard  &  Poor's ratings  of  fixed  income  securities, see
Appendix A to this Prospectus.
 
    The Investment Fund may invest in or own securities of companies in  various
stages  of financial restructuring,  bankruptcy or reorganization  which are not
currently paying interest or  dividends, provided that the  total value, at  the
time of purchase, of all such securities will not exceed 10% of the value of the
Investment Fund's total assets. The Investment Fund may have limited recourse in
the event of default on such debt instruments. The Investment Fund may invest in
loans,  assignments  of  loans  and  participation  in  loans.  See  "Additional
Investment Information --  Loan Participation and  Assignments." The  Investment
Fund  may also invest in depositary receipts issued by U.S. or foreign financial
institutions. See "Additional Investment Information -- Depositary Receipts."
 
    The Investment Fund is not restricted in the portion of its assets which may
be invested in securities denominated in a particular currency and a substantial
portion  of  the  Investment   Fund's  assets  may   be  invested  in   non-U.S.
dollar-denominated  securities.  The  portion of  the  Investment  Fund's assets
invested in securities denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar will
vary depending  on  market  conditions.  The  analysis  of  currencies  is  made
independent  of the analysis of markets. Value in foreign exchange is determined
by relative purchasing  power parity of  a given currency.  The Investment  Fund
seeks  to invest in  currencies currently undervalued  based on purchasing power
parity. The Adviser analyzes current account and capital account performance and
real interest  rates to  adjust for  shorter-term currency  flows. Although  the
Investment Fund is permitted to engage in a wide variety of investment practices
designed  to  hedge against  currency exchange  rate risks  with respect  to its
holdings of non-U.S. dollar-denominated debt securities, the Investment Fund may
be limited  in  its  ability  to hedge  against  these  risks.  See  "Additional
Investment  Information -- Foreign Currency  Hedging Transactions" and "-- Short
Sales." The Investment Fund may also write (i.e., sell) covered call options and
may enter  into  futures contracts  and  options  on futures  and  sell  indexed
financial  futures contracts. See "Additional  Investment Information -- Options
Transactions" and "-- Futures and Options on Futures."
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
    The Investment  Fund may  invest  in zero  coupon, pay-in-kind  or  deferred
payment  securities, and in securities that may be collateralized by zero coupon
securities (such as Brady Bonds). Zero coupon securities are sold at a  discount
to  par value and are  not entitled to interest payments  during the life of the
security. Upon maturity, the holder is entitled to receive the par value of  the
security.  While interest payments  are not made on  such securities, holders of
such securities are  deemed to  receive "phantom income,"  which the  Investment
Fund  will  accrue  prior to  the  receipt  of any  cash  payments.  Because the
Investment Fund will distribute its  "phantom income" to shareholders  annually,
and  to the extent that  shareholders elect to receive  dividends in cash rather
than reinvesting such dividends in  additional shares, the Investment Fund  will
have  fewer  assets  with  which to  purchase  income  producing  securities. In
addition, in order to pay these  cash distributions, the Investment Fund may  be
required  to sell portfolio securities when it  might not otherwise choose to do
so, and the Investment Fund may incur capital losses on such sales.  Pay-in-kind
securities  are securities that have interest  payable by delivery of additional
securities. Upon maturity, the holder is  entitled to receive the aggregate  par
value  of the securities. Deferred payment securities are securities that remain
zero coupon securities  until a  predetermined date,  at which  time the  stated
coupon rate becomes effective and interest becomes payable at regular intervals.
Zero  coupon,  pay-in-kind and  deferred payment  securities  may be  subject to
greater fluctuation in value and lesser liquidity in the event of adverse market
conditions than  comparably rated  securities paying  cash interest  at  regular
interest payment periods.
 
    The  Investment Fund  is authorized  to borrow  up to  33 1/3%  of its total
assets (including the  amount borrowed), less  all liabilities and  indebtedness
other  than the borrowing,  for investment purposes  to increase the opportunity
for  greater  return  and  for  payment  of  dividends.  Such  borrowings  would
constitute  leverage,  which is  a  speculative characteristic.  Leveraging will
magnify declines as well as increases in  the net asset value of the  Investment
Fund's  shares  and  in the  yield  on  the Investment  Fund's  investments. See
"Additional Investment Information -- Borrowing and Other Forms of Leverage."
 
    The average time to maturity of  the Investment Fund's securities will  vary
depending  upon  the  Adviser's  perception of  market  conditions.  The Adviser
invests in  medium-term securities  (i.e., those  with a  remaining maturity  of
approximately  five years)  in a  market neutral  environment. When  the Adviser
believes that  real  yields  are  high,  the  Adviser  lengthens  the  remaining
maturities  of securities held by the  Investment Fund and, conversely, when the
Adviser believes  real yields  are low,  it shortens  the remaining  maturities.
Thus,  the Investment Fund is not subject  to any restrictions on the maturities
of the debt securities it holds, and  the Adviser may vary the average  maturity
of the securities held in the Investment Fund's portfolio without limit.
 
    The  Investment Fund may, to a limited extent, invest in non-publicly traded
securities,  private  placements  and  restricted  securities.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and
Restricted Securities."
 
    For temporary defensive purposes, the Investment Fund may invest part or all
of  its total assets in cash or in short-term securities, including certificates
of deposit, commercial  paper, notes,  obligations issued or  guaranteed by  the
U.S.  Government or  any of  its agencies  or instrumentalities,  and repurchase
agreements involving such government securities.
 
    U.S. CORPORATE  HIGH  YIELD FIXED  INCOME  SECURITIES.   A  portion  of  the
Worldwide  High Income  Fund's assets  will be  invested in  U.S. corporate high
yield   fixed   income   securities,   which   offer   a   yield   above    that
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
generally available on U.S. corporate debt securities in the four highest rating
categories  of the  recognized rating services  and are commonly  referred to as
"junk bonds." The Investment  Fund may buy unrated  securities that the  Adviser
believes  are  comparable  to  rated securities  that  are  consistent  with the
Investment Fund's objective and policies. The Investment Fund may acquire  fixed
income  securities  of U.S.  issuers, including  debt obligations  (e.g., bonds,
debentures, notes, equipment lease  certificates, equipment trust  certificates,
conditional   sales  contracts,  commercial  paper  and  obligations  issued  or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of its political subdivisions, agencies
or instrumentalities) and  preferred stock.  These fixed  income securities  may
have  equity features, such as conversion  rights or warrants and the Investment
Fund may invest up to  10% of its total assets  in equity securities other  than
preferred   stock  (e.g.,  common  stocks,   warrants  and  rights  and  limited
partnership interests). The Investment Fund may  not invest more than 5% of  its
total  assets  at the  time  of acquisition  in  either of  (1)  equipment lease
certificates, equipment trust  certificates and conditional  sales contracts  or
(2) limited partnership interests.
 
    EMERGING  COUNTRY FIXED INCOME SECURITIES.   A portion of the Worldwide High
Income  Fund's  assets  will  be  invested  in  emerging  country  fixed  income
securities,  which  are  debt securities  of  government  and government-related
issuers located in emerging countries (including participation in loans  between
governments   and  financial   institutions),  and  of   entities  organized  to
restructure outstanding debt of  such issuers and  debt securities of  corporate
issuers located in or organized under the laws of emerging countries. As used in
this  Prospectus, an emerging country is any country that the International Bank
for Reconstruction and Development (more commonly  known as the World Bank)  has
determined  to have a low or middle income economy. There are currently over 130
countries which are  considered to  be emerging countries,  approximately 40  of
which  currently have established securities  markets. These countries generally
include every  nation in  the world  except the  United States,  Canada,  Japan,
Australia, New Zealand and most nations located in Western Europe.
 
    In  selecting  emerging  country  debt  securities  for  investment  by  the
Investment Fund, the  Adviser will  apply a market  risk analysis  contemplating
assessment  of factors such as liquidity, volatility, tax implications, interest
rate  sensitivity,  counterparty  risks  and  technical  market  considerations.
Currently,  investing in many emerging country securities is not feasible or may
involve unacceptable  political risks.  Initially, the  Investment Fund  expects
that  its investments in emerging country debt securities will be made primarily
in some or all of the following emerging countries:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                     <C>                     <C>                     <C>
Algeria                 Egypt                   Nigeria                 Thailand
Argentina               Greece                  Hungary                 Pakistan
Trinidad                Brazil                  India                   Panama
Tobago                  Bulgaria                Indonesia               Paraguay
Tunisia                 Chile                   Peru                    Uruguay
Turkey                  Ivory Coast             Philippines             Venezuela
Colombia                Jamaica                 Poland                  Zaire
Costa Rica              Jordan                  Malaysia                Portugal
Czech Republic          Mexico                  Russia
Dominican Republic      Morocco                 Slovakia
Ecuador                 Nicaragua               South Africa
</TABLE>
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
    As  opportunities to invest  in debt securities  in other emerging countries
develop, the  Investment  Fund  expects  to expand  and  further  diversify  the
emerging  countries in which it invests.  While the Investment Fund generally is
not restricted in the portion  of its assets which may  be invested in a  single
country  or  region, it  is anticipated  that,  under normal  circumstances, the
Investment Fund's assets will be invested in at least three countries.
 
    The Investment Fund's investments  in government and government-related  and
restructured  debt securities will consist of (i) debt securities or obligations
issued or guaranteed by governments, governmental agencies or  instrumentalities
and   political   subdivisions   located   in   emerging   countries  (including
participation in  loans between  governments and  financial institutions),  (ii)
debt  securities  or  obligations  issued  by  government  owned,  controlled or
sponsored entities located in emerging countries, and (iii) interests in issuers
organized  and  operated  for  the  purpose  of  restructuring  the   investment
characteristics  of instruments issued  by any of  the entities described above.
Such type of restructuring involves the deposit with or purchase by an entity of
specific instruments and the issuance by that  entity of one or more classes  of
securities  backed by, or representing interests in, the underlying instruments.
Certain issuers of such  structured securities may be  deemed to be  "investment
companies" as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"). As
a  result, the Investment Fund's investment in such securities may be limited by
certain investment  restrictions  contained in  the  1940 Act.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Structured Investments."
 
    The Investment Fund's investments in debt securities of corporate issuers in
emerging  countries may  include debt  securities or  obligations issued  (i) by
banks located in  emerging countries or  by branches of  emerging country  banks
located  outside the country or (ii) by companies organized under the laws of an
emerging country. Determinations as to eligibility  will be made by the  Adviser
based  on publicly available  information and inquiries made  to the issuer. See
"Additional Investment Information  -- Foreign  Investment Risk  Factors" for  a
discussion of the nature of information publicly available for non-U.S. issuers.
The  Investment Fund  may also  invest in  certain debt  obligations customarily
referred to as "Brady Bonds," which are created through the exchange of existing
commercial bank loans to foreign entities for new obligations in connection with
debt restructuring  under a  plan introduced  by former  U.S. Secretary  of  the
Treasury  Nicholas  F.  Brady. See  "Description  of Securities  and  Ratings --
Emerging Country Debt Securities" in the Statement of Additional Information for
further information  about Brady  Bonds. The  Investment Fund's  investments  in
government  and government-related and restructured debt instruments are subject
to special risks, including  the inability or  unwillingness to repay  principal
and  interest,  requests  to  reschedule  or  restructure  outstanding  debt and
requests to extend additional loan amounts.
 
    Emerging country debt securities held by  the Investment Fund will take  the
form  of bonds, notes, bills, debentures, convertible securities, warrants, bank
debt obligations, short-term paper, mortgage- and other asset-backed securities,
loan participation, loan assignments and interests issued by entities  organized
and  operated for the purpose of restructuring the investment characteristics of
instruments issued  by emerging  country issuers.  The Investment  Fund may  buy
unrated  securities that the Adviser believes are comparable to rated securities
that are consistent  with the  Investment Fund's objectives  and policies.  U.S.
dollar-denominated  emerging country debt securities held by the Investment Fund
will generally be listed but not  traded on a securities exchange, and  non-U.S.
dollar-denominated  securities held  by the  Investment Fund  may or  may not be
listed or traded  on a securities  exchange. The Investment  Fund may invest  in
mortgage-backed securities and
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
in  other asset-backed  securities issued  by non-governmental  entities such as
banks and  other  financial  institutions.  Mortgage-backed  securities  include
mortgage  pass  through  securities  and  collateralized  mortgage  obligations.
Asset-backed securities  are  collateralized by  such  assets as  automobile  or
credit  card receivables and are securitized  either in a pass-through structure
or in a pay-through structure similar to a CMO. Investments in emerging  country
debt  securities  entail special  investment  risks. See  "Additional Investment
Information -- Foreign Investment Risk Factors."
 
    GLOBAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES.  The global fixed income securities in which
a portion of the Worldwide  High Income Fund's assets  may be invested are  debt
securities  denominated in currencies of  countries displaying high real yields.
Such securities include government obligations  issued or guaranteed by U.S.  or
foreign  governments and their political  subdivisions, authorities, agencies or
instrumentalities, and by supranational  entities (such as  the World Bank,  The
European  Economic Community, The  Asian Development Bank  and the European Coal
and Steel Community),  Eurobonds, and  corporate bonds  with varying  maturities
denominated  in various  currencies. In  this portion  of the  Investment Fund's
portfolio, the Adviser seeks to minimize investment risk by investing in a  high
quality portfolio of debt securities, the majority of which will be rated in one
of  the two  highest rating categories  by an NRSRO  or, if unrated,  will be of
comparable quality, as determined  by the Adviser under  the supervision of  the
Board  of Directors. U.S. Government securities in which the Investment Fund may
invest include obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, such  as
U.S.  Treasury securities, as well as those  backed by the full faith and credit
of the United States,  such as obligations of  the Government National  Mortgage
Association  and The Export-Import Bank. The  Investment Fund may also invest in
obligations   issued   or   guaranteed   by   U.S.   Government   agencies    or
instrumentalities where the Investment Fund must look principally to the issuing
or guaranteeing agency for ultimate repayment. The Investment Fund may invest in
obligations  issued  or guaranteed  by foreign  governments and  their political
subdivisions, authorities, agencies or  instrumentalities, and by  supranational
entities  (such as  the World Bank,  The European Economic  Community, The Asian
Development Bank  and the  European  Coal and  Steel Community).  Investment  in
foreign  government  securities  for  this  portion  of  the  Investment  Fund's
portfolio will  be limited  to  those of  developed  nations which  the  Adviser
believes  to  pose  limited  credit  risk.  These  countries  currently  include
Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland,
Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain,
Sweden,  Switzerland  and  The  United  Kingdom.  Corporate  and   supranational
obligations  in which the  Investment Fund will  invest for this  portion of its
portfolio will be limited to  those rated "A" or  better by Moody's, Standard  &
Poor's  or IBCA Ltd. or,  if unrated, determined to  be of comparable quality by
the Adviser under the supervision of the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
    In selecting securities for this portion of the Investment Fund's portfolio,
the Adviser  evaluates  the currency,  market  and individual  features  of  the
securities  being considered for investment. The Adviser believes that countries
displaying the highest real yields will over time generate a high total  return,
and  accordingly, the Adviser's focus for  this portion of the Investment Fund's
portfolio will be to analyze the relative  rates of real yield of twenty  global
fixed  income markets. In selecting securities,  the Adviser will first identify
the global markets  in which the  Investment Fund's assets  will be invested  by
ranking  such countries in order  of highest real yield.  In this portion of its
portfolio, the Investment Fund will invest its assets primarily in fixed  income
securities denominated in the currencies of countries within the top quartile of
the Adviser's ranking.
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
    The  Adviser's assessment of the global fixed  income markets is based on an
analysis of real  interest rates.  The Adviser  calculates real  yield for  each
global  market by  adjusting current nominal  yields of securities  in each such
market for inflation prevailing  in each country using  an analysis of past  and
projected  (one-year) inflation rates  for that country.  The Adviser expects to
review and update on  a regular basis  its real yield  ranking of countries  and
market  sectors and to  alter the allocation  of this portion  of the Investment
Fund's investments among markets  as necessary when changes  to real yields  and
inflation  estimates significantly alter the  relative rankings of the countries
and market sectors.
 
    The Investment Fund  seeks to maintain  portfolio turnover at  a low  level.
Although the Investment Fund's primary objective is not to invest for short-term
trading,   the  Investment  Fund   will  seek  to   take  advantage  of  trading
opportunities as they  arise to  the extent that  they are  consistent with  the
Investment  Fund's  objectives. It  is  anticipated that  the  Investment Fund's
annual turnover rate will not exceed 100% in normal circumstances.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may  be  invested in  certain  securities or  obligations,  including derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE HIGH YIELD FUND
 
    The Investment  Fund  seeks to  maximize  total  return by  investing  in  a
diversified  portfolio of high yield fixed  income securities that offer a yield
above that generally  available on debt  securities in the  four highest  rating
categories  of  the recognized  rating  services. The  Investment  Fund normally
invests between  80% and  100% of  its  total assets  in these  higher  yielding
securities,  (commonly  referred to  as high  yield bonds  or junk  bonds) which
generally entails increased credit and market risk. To mitigate these risks  the
Investment  Fund  will diversify  its holdings  by  issuer, industry  and credit
quality, but  investors  should  carefully review  the  section  below  entitled
"Additional Investment Information -- Lower Rated and Unrated Debt Securities."
 
    Appendix A to this Prospectus sets forth a description of the corporate bond
rating categories of Moody's and S&P. Corporate bonds rated below Baa by Moody's
or  BBB  by S&P  are  considered speculative.  Securities  in the  lowest rating
categories may  have  predominantly speculative  characteristics  or may  be  in
default.  Ratings of S&P and Moody's represent  their opinions of the quality of
bonds and other debt securities they undertake to rate at the time of  issuance.
However,  ratings  are not  absolute standards  of quality  and may  not reflect
changes in an issuer's creditworthiness. Accordingly, although the Adviser  will
consider ratings, it will perform its own analysis and will not rely principally
on  ratings. The  Adviser will  consider, among other  things, the  price of the
security, and  the  financial  history  and condition,  the  prospects  and  the
management  of an  issuer in selecting  securities for the  Investment Fund. The
Investment Fund  may  buy  unrated  securities that  the  Adviser  believes  are
comparable  to rated  securities and are  consistent with  the Investment Fund's
objective and  policies.  The Adviser  may  vary  the average  maturity  of  the
securities  in the Investment Fund without limit  and there is no restriction on
the maturity of any individual security.
 
    The Investment Fund  may acquire fixed  income securities of  both U.S.  and
foreign  issuers, including  debt obligations  (e.g., bonds,  debentures, notes,
equipment lease certificates,  equipment trust  certificates, conditional  sales
contracts,  commercial paper  and obligations issued  or guaranteed  by the U.S.
Government, any  foreign  government  with which  the  United  States  maintains
relations  or  any  of  their  respective  political  subdivisions,  agencies or
instrumentalities) and preferred stock. The Investment Fund may not invest  more
than 5% of its total assets at time of acquisition in either (1) equipment lease
certificates, equipment trust certificates
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
and  conditional  sales  contracts  or (2)  limited  partnership  interests. The
Investment Fund may neither invest more than 20% of its total assets in  foreign
securities  nor invest more than 5% of  its total assets in foreign governmental
issuers in any one  country. The Investment Fund's  fixed income securities  may
have  equity features, such as conversion rights or warrants, and the Investment
Fund may invest up to  10% of its total assets  in equity securities other  than
preferred  stock  (common stocks,  warrants and  rights and  limited partnership
interests). The Investment  Fund may invest  up to  20% of its  total assets  in
fixed income securities that are investment grade (i.e., rated in one of the top
four  categories or  comparable) and  have maturities of  one year  or less. For
temporary defensive purposes, the Investment Fund may invest part or all of  its
total  assets in  cash or  in short-term  securities, including  certificates of
deposit, commercial paper, notes, obligations  issued or guaranteed by the  U.S.
Government   or  any  of  its  agencies  or  instrumentalities,  and  repurchase
agreements involving such government securities. The Investment Fund may  invest
in  or own securities of companies in various stages of financial restructuring,
bankruptcy  or  reorganization  which  are  not  currently  paying  interest  or
dividends.  Such securities  may be rated  C by  Moody's or D  by S&P  or may be
unrated but determined  to be of  comparable quality by  the Adviser. The  total
value,  at time of purchase,  of the sum of all  such securities will not exceed
10% of the  value of  the Investment Fund's  total assets.  Securities that  are
rated  above C by Moody's or above D by S&P (or are unrated but determined to be
of comparable quality by the Adviser) when purchased by the Investment Fund that
are later downgraded  may continue  to be  held by  the Investment  Fund at  the
discretion of the Adviser.
 
    The  Investment Fund may also invest in zero coupon, pay-in-kind or deferred
payment securities. Zero  coupon securities are  securities that are  sold at  a
discount  to par value  and securities on  which interest payments  are not made
during the  life of  the security.  Upon  maturity, the  holder is  entitled  to
receive  the par value of the security.  While interest payments are not made on
such securities, holders of such securities are deemed to have received "phantom
income" annually.  Because  the Investment  Fund  will distribute  its  "phantom
income"  to  shareholders,  to the  extent  that shareholders  elect  to receive
dividends in cash rather than reinvesting such dividends in additional shares of
the Investment Fund,  it will have  fewer assets with  which to purchase  income
producing  securities. The Investment Fund accrues  income with respect to these
securities prior to  the receipt  of cash payments.  Pay-in-kind securities  are
securities that have interest payable by delivery of additional securities. Upon
maturity,  the holder  is entitled  to receive  the aggregate  par value  of the
securities. Deferred payment securities are  securities that remain zero  coupon
securities  until a  predetermined date,  at which  time the  stated coupon rate
becomes effective  and  interest  becomes payable  at  regular  intervals.  Zero
coupon,  pay-in-kind and deferred  payment securities may  be subject to greater
fluctuation in  value  and lesser  liquidity  in  the event  of  adverse  market
conditions  than  comparably rated  securities paying  cash interest  at regular
interest payment periods.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may be invested in certain securities or obligations as set forth in "Additional
Investment Information" below.
 
                       ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION
 
BORROWING AND OTHER FORMS OF LEVERAGE
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund is authorized to borrow money from banks and
other entities  in  an amount  equal  to  up to  33  1/3% of  its  total  assets
(including  the amount  borrowed), less  all liabilities  and indebtedness other
than the borrowing,  and may use  the proceeds of  the borrowing for  investment
purposes or
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
to   pay  dividends.   Borrowing  creates   leverage  which   is  a  speculative
characteristic. Although the Investment Fund is authorized to borrow, it will do
so only when  the Adviser believes  that borrowing will  benefit the  Investment
Fund after taking into account considerations such as the costs of borrowing and
the  likely  investment returns  on securities  purchased with  borrowed monies.
Borrowing by the Investment Fund will  create the opportunity for increased  net
income  but,  at  the  same  time,  will  involve  special  risk considerations.
Leveraging resulting from borrowing will  magnify declines as well as  increases
in the Investment Fund's net asset value per share and net yield.
 
    The  Worldwide High Income  Fund expects that  all of its  borrowing will be
made on a secured basis. The  Investment Fund's Custodian will either  segregate
the assets securing the borrowing for the benefit of the lenders or arrangements
will  be  made with  a  suitable sub-custodian.  If  assets used  to  secure the
borrowing decrease  in value,  the Investment  Fund may  be required  to  pledge
additional  collateral to the lender in the  form of cash or securities to avoid
liquidation of those assets.
 
    The Worldwide  High  Income Fund  may  also enter  into  reverse  repurchase
agreements.   See  "Additional  Investment  Information  --  Reverse  Repurchase
Agreements" below.
 
DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS
 
    The Worldwide High Income Fund may on occasion invest in American Depositary
Receipts ("ADRs").  The Worldwide  High Income  Fund may  also invest  in  other
Depositary  Receipts,  including Global  Depositary Receipts  ("GDRs"), European
Depositary Receipts ("EDRs") and other Depositary Receipts (which, together with
ADRs, GDRs and  EDRs, are  hereinafter collectively referred  to as  "Depositary
Receipts"),  to the extent that such  Depositary Receipts become available. ADRs
are  securities,  typically   issued  by   a  U.S.   financial  institution   (a
"depositary"),  that evidence  ownership interests  in a  security or  a pool of
securities issued by a  foreign issuer (the  "underlying issuer") and  deposited
with the depositary. ADRs include American Depositary Shares and New York Shares
and  may be "sponsored" or "unsponsored." Sponsored ADRs are established jointly
by a  depositary and  the underlying  issuer, whereas  unsponsored ADRs  may  be
established  by  a depositary  without participation  by the  underlying issuer.
GDRs, EDRs  and other  types  of Depositary  Receipts  are typically  issued  by
foreign depositories, although they may also be issued by U.S. depositories, and
evidence  ownership  interests in  a security  or pool  of securities  issued by
either a foreign or a U.S. corporation.
 
    Holders of  unsponsored Depositary  Receipts generally  bear all  the  costs
associated  with establishing the unsponsored Depositary Receipt. The depositary
of an  unsponsored  Depositary Receipt  is  under no  obligation  to  distribute
shareholder  communications  received  from  the underlying  issuer  or  to pass
through to the holders of the unsponsored Depositary Receipt voting rights  with
respect  to the deposited securities or  pool of securities. Depositary Receipts
are  not  necessarily  denominated  in  the  same  currency  as  the  underlying
securities  to which  they may be  connected. Generally,  Depositary Receipts in
registered form  are  designed  for  use  in  the  U.S.  securities  market  and
Depositary  Receipts in bearer  form are designed for  use in securities markets
outside the U.S.  The Worldwide  High Income Fund  may invest  in sponsored  and
unsponsored  Depositary  Receipts. For  purposes  of the  Worldwide  High Income
investment policies, the  Investment Fund's investments  in Depositary  Receipts
will be deemed to be investments in the underlying securities.
 
DERIVATIVES
 
    Certain  of  the  Investment  Funds may  invest  in  derivatives,  which are
financial products or instruments that derive  their value from the value of  an
underlying  asset,  reference  rate  or index.  The  following  are derivatives:
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
forward foreign currency  exchange contracts,  options (e.g.,  puts and  calls),
futures   contracts,  options  on  futures  contracts,  convertible  securities,
warrants, structured securities, when-issued and delayed delivery securities and
depositary receipts. See elsewhere  in this "Additional Investment  Information"
section  for  descriptions of  these  various instruments,  and  see "Investment
Objectives and Policies" for more information regarding any investment  policies
or limitations applicable to their use.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY HEDGING TRANSACTIONS
 
    Each  Investment  Fund  may  enter into  forward  foreign  currency exchange
contracts ("forward contracts"). Forward contracts  provide for the purchase  or
sale of an amount of a specified foreign currency at a future date. Purposes for
which  such contracts  may be  used include  protecting against  a decline  in a
foreign currency against the U.S. dollar  between the trade date and  settlement
date  when such Investment  Funds purchases or sells  securities, locking in the
U.S. dollar value  of dividends declared  on securities held  by the  Investment
Fund  and generally protecting the  U.S. dollar value of  securities held by the
Investment Fund against exchange rate fluctuations. While such forward contracts
may  limit  losses  to  the  Investment  Fund  as  a  result  of  exchange  rate
fluctuations,  they will also limit any exchange rate gains that might otherwise
have been  realized.  The  Worldwide  High Income  Fund  will  enter  into  such
contracts  only to protect against the  effects of fluctuating rates of currency
exchange and exchange control regulations.
 
    The Worldwide High Income Fund may also enter into foreign currency  futures
contracts.  A foreign currency  futures contract is  a standardized contract for
the future delivery of a specified amount of a foreign currency at a future date
at a price set at the time  of the contract. Foreign currency futures  contracts
traded  in the  U.S. are  traded on  regulated exchanges.  Parties to  a futures
contract must  make  initial "margin"  deposits  to secure  performance  of  the
contract,  which generally range from 2% to 5% of the contract price. There also
are requirements to make "variation" margin deposits as the value of the futures
contract fluctuates. Such Worldwide High Income Fund may not enter into  foreign
currency futures contracts if the aggregate amount of initial margin deposits on
the Investment Fund's futures positions, including stock index futures contracts
(which  are discussed  below), would  exceed 5% of  the value  of the Investment
Fund's total assets.  The Investment  Fund also  will be  required to  segregate
assets to cover its futures contracts obligations.
 
    At  the maturity of a forward or futures contract, the Worldwide High Income
Fund may  either  accept or  make  delivery of  the  currency specified  in  the
contract  or,  prior  to maturity,  enter  into a  closing  purchase transaction
involving the  purchase or  sale  of an  offsetting contract.  Closing  purchase
transactions  with respect  to forward contracts  are usually  effected with the
currency trader  who  is a  party  to  the original  forward  contract.  Closing
purchase  transactions  with respect  to futures  contracts  are effected  on an
exchange. The Investment  Fund will only  enter into such  a forward or  futures
contract  if it is expected that there will be a liquid market in which to close
out such contract. There can, however, be no assurance that such a liquid market
will exist in which to  close a forward or futures  contract, in which case  the
Investment Fund may suffer a loss.
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund may attempt to accomplish objectives similar
to those  described above  with respect  to forward  and futures  contracts  for
currency  by means of  purchasing put or  call options on  foreign currencies on
exchanges. A put option gives the Investment  Fund the right to sell a  currency
at  the exercise price until  the expiration of the  option. A call option gives
the Investment Fund the right to purchase a currency at the exercise price until
the expiration of the option.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
    The Custodian  of each  Investment  Fund will  place cash,  U.S.  government
securities, or liquid high-grade debt securities into a segregated account of an
Investment  Fund in an amount equal to the value of such Investment Fund's total
assets committed  to  the  consummation of  forward  foreign  currency  exchange
contracts.  If  the value  of the  securities placed  in the  segregated account
declines, additional cash or securities will be placed in the account on a daily
basis so that the value of the account  will be at least equal to the amount  of
such   Investment  Fund's  commitments  with  respect  to  such  contracts.  See
"Investment  Objectives  and  Policies  --  Forward  Foreign  Currency  Exchange
Contracts" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
 
    Each Investment Fund may invest in securities of foreign issuers. Investment
in  securities  of  foreign  issuers, especially  in  securities  of  issuers in
emerging countries, and in foreign branches of domestic banks involves  somewhat
different  investment  risks from  those affecting  securities of  U.S. issuers.
There may  be limited  publicly available  information with  respect to  foreign
issuers,  and foreign issuers  are not generally  subject to uniform accounting,
auditing,  and  financial  and   other  reporting  standards  and   requirements
comparable  to those applicable to  domestic companies. Therefore, disclosure of
certain material  information  may not  be  made  and less  information  may  be
available to investors investing in foreign countries than in the U.S. There may
also  be  less  government  supervision  and  regulation  of  foreign securities
exchanges, brokers and listed companies than in the U.S. Many foreign securities
markets have substantially less volume than U.S. national securities  exchanges,
and  securities of some foreign  issuers are less liquid  and subject to greater
price volatility  than  securities  of comparable  domestic  issuers.  Brokerage
commissions  and  other transaction  costs on  foreign securities  exchanges are
generally higher than in the U.S. Dividends and interest paid by foreign issuers
may be subject to  withholding and other foreign  taxes, which may decrease  the
net  return on foreign investments as compared to dividends and interest paid to
the Investment  Funds  by  domestic companies.  See  "Taxes."  Additional  risks
include future adverse political and economic developments, the possibility that
a  foreign  jurisdiction  might impose  or  change withholding  taxes  on income
payable with respect to foreign securities, possible seizure, nationalization or
expropriation of  the  foreign issuer  or  foreign deposits,  and  the  possible
adoption  of  foreign  governmental  restrictions  such  as  exchange  controls.
Emerging countries  may  have  less  stable  political  environments  than  more
developed  countries. Also, it may  be more difficult to  obtain a judgment in a
court outside the U.S.
 
    Investments in securities of foreign  issuers are frequently denominated  in
foreign   currencies,  and  each  Investment  Fund  may  also  temporarily  hold
uninvested reserves in bank deposits in foreign currencies. Therefore, the value
of an Investment Fund's assets measured in United States Dollars may be affected
favorably or  unfavorably by  changes in  currency exchange  rates and  exchange
control  regulations.  Each Investment  Fund will  also  incur certain  costs in
connection with conversions between various currencies.
 
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
 
    In order  to remain  fully invested  and to  reduce transaction  costs,  the
Global  Fixed Income,  Worldwide High  Income and  High Yield  Funds may utilize
appropriate securities index futures contracts  and options on securities  index
futures contracts to a limited extent. Because transaction costs associated with
futures  and options  may be  lower than  the costs  of investing  in securities
directly, it is expected that the use of index futures and options to facilitate
cash flows may reduce  an Investment Fund's overall  transaction costs. Each  of
these   Investment  Funds  may  sell  indexed  financial  futures  contracts  in
anticipation of or during a market decline to attempt to offset the decrease  in
market  value of securities  in its portfolio that  might otherwise result. When
the
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
Investment Fund is not fully invested and the Adviser anticipates a  significant
market  advance, it  may purchase  stock index  futures in  order to  gain rapid
market exposure that may  in part or  entirely offset increases  in the cost  of
securities  that  it intends  to purchase.  In a  substantial majority  of these
transactions, the Investment Fund will purchase such securities upon termination
of the futures position but, under unusual market conditions, a futures position
may  be  terminated  without  the  corresponding  purchase  of  securities.  The
Investment Funds will engage in futures and options on futures transactions only
for hedging purposes.
 
    The  Worldwide  High  Income  and  High  Yield  Funds  will  engage  only in
transactions in  securities  index  futures  contracts,  interest  rate  futures
contracts  and options  thereon which are  traded on a  recognized securities or
futures exchange. There currently are limited securities index futures, interest
rate futures and options on such futures markets in many countries, particularly
emerging countries  such as  Latin American  countries, and  the nature  of  the
strategies  adopted by the Adviser, and the extent to which those strategies are
used, will depend on the development of such markets.
 
    The Worldwide  High Income  and  High Yield  Funds  may enter  into  futures
contracts  and  options thereon  provided that  not  more than  5% of  each such
Investment Fund's  total assets  at the  time of  entering the  transaction  are
required  as deposit  to secure obligations  under such  contracts, and provided
further that not more than  20% of each Investment  Fund's total assets, in  the
aggregate, are invested in futures contracts and options on futures.
 
    The  primary risks associated  with the use  of futures and  options are (i)
imperfect correlation between the change in  market value of the stocks held  by
the Investment Fund and the prices of futures and options relating to the stocks
purchased  or sold by  the Investment Fund,  and (ii) possible  lack of a liquid
secondary market for a futures contract  and the resulting inability to close  a
futures  position which  could have an  adverse impact on  the Investment Fund's
ability to hedge.  The risk  of loss  in trading  on futures  contracts in  some
strategies  can be substantial, due both to the low margin deposits required and
the extremely high  degree of leverage  involved in futures  pricing. Gains  and
losses  on  futures  and options  depend  on  the Adviser's  ability  to predict
correctly the  direction of  stock prices,  interest rates,  and other  economic
factors. In the opinion of the Directors, the risk that the Investment Fund will
be  unable to close out a futures position or options contract will be minimized
by only entering into futures contracts or options transactions for which  there
appears  to be  a liquid secondary  market. For more  detailed information about
futures transactions see "Investment Objectives  and Policies" in the  Statement
of Additional Information.
 
LOANS OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
    Each  Investment Fund may lend its  securities to brokers, dealers, domestic
and foreign banks or other financial institutions for the purpose of  increasing
its  net investment income. These loans must  be secured continuously by cash or
equivalent collateral or  by a letter  of credit  at least equal  to the  market
value  of the securities loaned plus accrued interest. The Investment Funds will
not enter into securities loan transactions  exceeding in the aggregate 33  1/3%
of  the  market  value of  an  Investment  Fund's total  assets.  As  with other
extensions of credit,  there are  risks of  delay in  recovery or  even loss  of
rights  in  collateral  should the  borrower  of the  portfolio  securities fail
financially.  For  more  detailed  information  about  securities  lending,  see
"Investment Objectives and Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
LOAN PARTICIPATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund may invest  in fixed and floating rate loans
("Loans") arranged through private negotiations  between an issuer of  sovereign
or   corporate  debt  obligations   and  one  or   more  financial  institutions
("Lenders"). Such Investment Fund's  investments in Loans  are expected in  most
instances  to be  in the  form of  participation in  Loans ("Participation") and
assignments of all or a portion of Loans ("Assignments") from third parties.  In
the  case of Participation, the  Investment Fund will have  the right to receive
payments of principal, interest and any fees  to which it is entitled only  from
the  Lender selling the Participation and only upon receipt by the Lender of the
payments from the borrower. In the event of the insolvency of the Lender selling
a Participation, the Investment Fund may be treated as a general creditor of the
Lender and may not benefit from any set-off between the Lender and the borrower.
The  Investment   Fund   will  acquire   Participation   only  if   the   Lender
interpositioned  between the Investment  Fund and the  borrower is determined by
the Adviser to be creditworthy.  When the Investment Fund purchases  Assignments
from  Lenders it will  acquire direct rights  against the borrower  on the Loan.
Because Assignments are arranged through private negotiations between  potential
assignees  and potential assignors, however, the rights and obligations acquired
by the Investment Fund as the purchaser of an Assignment may differ from, and be
more limited  than, those  held by  the assigning  Lender. Because  there is  no
liquid  market for  such securities, the  Investment Fund  anticipates that such
securities could be sold  only to a limited  number of institutional  investors.
The lack of a liquid secondary market may have an adverse impact on the value of
such  securities  and the  Investment Fund's  ability  to dispose  of particular
Assignments or  Participation  when  necessary to  meet  the  Investment  Fund's
liquidity  needs  or  in  response  to  a  specific  economic  event  such  as a
deterioration in the  creditworthiness of  the borrower.  The lack  of a  liquid
secondary  market  for  Assignments  and Participation  also  may  make  it more
difficult for the  Investment Fund  to assign a  value to  these securities  for
purposes  of valuing  the Investment  Fund's portfolio  and calculating  its net
asset value.
 
LOWER RATED AND UNRATED DEBT SECURITIES
 
    The Worldwide High Income and High Yield Funds may invest in lower rated  or
unrated  debt securities, commonly referred to as "junk bonds." In addition, the
emerging country debt securities in which  such Investment Funds may invest  are
subject  to risk and will not be required  to meet a minimum rating standard and
may not be rated. Fixed income securities are subject to the risk of an issuer's
inability to meet  principal and  interest payments on  the obligations  (credit
risk)  and  may also  be  subject to  price volatility  due  to such  factors as
interest rate  sensitivity, market  perception of  the creditworthiness  of  the
issuer  and  general  market liquidity  (market  risk). Lower  rated  or unrated
securities are more likely to react to developments affecting market and  credit
risk  than are more highly rated  securities, which react primarily to movements
in the  general level  of  interest rates.  The  market values  of  fixed-income
securities  tend to vary inversely with the  level of interest rates. Yields and
market values of  lower rated and  unrated debt securities  will fluctuate  over
time, reflecting not only changing interest rates but the market's perception of
credit  quality and  the outlook for  economic growth.  When economic conditions
appear to be  deteriorating, medium  to lower  rated securities  may decline  in
value  due to heightened  concern over credit  quality, regardless of prevailing
interest rates. Fluctuations in the  value of the Investment Fund's  investments
will  be  reflected in  the Investment  Fund's  net asset  value per  share. The
Adviser considers  both  credit  risk  and  market  risk  in  making  investment
decisions  for  the Investment  Fund.  Investors should  carefully  consider the
relative risks  of investing  in lower  rated and  unrated debt  securities  and
understand   that  such  securities  are  not  generally  meant  for  short-term
investing.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
    The U.S.  corporate  lower  rated  and unrated  debt  securities  market  is
relatively  new  and its  recent  growth paralleled  a  long period  of economic
expansion and an increase in merger, acquisition and leveraged buyout  activity.
Adverse  economic developments may  disrupt the market  for U.S. corporate lower
rated and unrated debt securities and for emerging country debt securities. Such
disruptions may  severely  affect  the ability  of  issuers,  especially  highly
leveraged  issuers,  to  service  their  debt  obligations  or  to  repay  their
obligations upon maturity. In addition, the secondary market for lower rated and
unrated debt securities, which is concentrated in relatively few market  makers,
may  not be as liquid as the  secondary market for more highly rated securities.
As a result, the Adviser could find  it more difficult to sell these  securities
or  may  be able  to  sell the  securities  only at  prices  lower than  if such
securities were widely traded. In addition, there may be limited trading markets
for debt securities of  issuers located in  emerging countries. Prices  realized
upon   the  sale  of  such  lower  rated  or  unrated  securities,  under  these
circumstances, may be less  than the prices used  in calculating the  Investment
Fund's net asset value.
 
    Prices  for  lower rated  and  unrated debt  securities  may be  affected by
legislative and regulatory developments. These  laws could adversely affect  the
Investment Fund's net asset value and investment practices, the secondary market
for  lower rated and unrated debt securities, the financial condition of issuers
of such securities  and the value  of outstanding lower  rated and unrated  debt
securities.  For example, U.S. federal  legislation requiring the divestiture by
federally insured savings and  loan associations of  their investments in  lower
rated  and unrated debt securities and limiting the deductibility of interest by
certain corporate issuers of lower  rated and unrated debt securities  adversely
affected the market in recent years.
 
    Lower  rated or unrated debt obligations also present risks based on payment
expectations. If an issuer calls the obligations for redemption, the  Investment
Fund  may have to replace the security with a lower yielding security, resulting
in a  decreased  return  for  investors.  If  the  Investment  Fund  experiences
unexpected  net  redemptions,  it  may  be  forced  to  sell  its  higher  rated
securities, resulting  in  a  decline  in the  overall  credit  quality  of  the
Investment  Fund's  investment  portfolio  and increasing  the  exposure  of the
Investment Fund to the risks of lower rated and unrated debt securities.
 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS
 
    The Investment Funds are  permitted to invest  in money market  instruments,
although  the Investment Funds intend to  stay invested in securities satisfying
their primary investment objective to the extent practical. The Investment Funds
may make money  market investments  pending other investment  or settlement  for
liquidity  or  in  adverse  market  conditions.  The  money  market  investments
permitted for the Investment  Funds include obligations  of the U.S.  Government
and  its agencies  and instrumentalities, obligations  of foreign sovereignties,
other debt securities, commercial paper including bank obligations, certificates
of  deposit  (including  Eurodollar  certificates  of  deposit)  and  repurchase
agreements.  For more detailed information about these money market investments,
see "Description  of Securities  and  Ratings" in  the Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES
 
    Each  Investment Fund may invest in securities  that are neither listed on a
stock exchange nor traded over the counter. Such unlisted equity securities  may
involve  a  higher degree  of business  and  financial risk  that can  result in
substantial losses. As a result  of the absence of  a public trading market  for
these  securities,  they may  be less  liquid  than publicly  traded securities.
Although   these   securities   may   be   resold   in   privately    negotiated
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
transactions,  the prices  realized from  these sales  could be  less than those
originally paid by such Investment Funds or less than what may be considered the
fair value  of such  securities.  Further, companies  whose securities  are  not
publicly  traded  may  not  be  subject to  the  disclosure  and  other investor
protection requirements  which  might be  applicable  if their  securities  were
publicly  traded. If  such securities  are required  to be  registered under the
securities laws of one or more jurisdictions before being resold, the Investment
Fund may be required to bear the expenses of registration. As a general  matter,
each  Investment Fund may not invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid
securities, including  securities  for  which  there  is  no  readily  available
secondary  market nor, for the  Morgan Stanley High Yield  Fund more than 10% of
its total  assets in  securities that  are restricted  from sale  to the  public
without registration ("Restricted Securities") under the Securities Act of 1933,
as  amended, (the  "1933 Act")  except that, subject  to the  foregoing limit on
illiquid securities, the Morgan Stanley High Yield Fund may invest up to 20%  of
its  total  assets in  Restricted Securities  that  can be  offered and  sold to
qualified  institutional  buyers   under  Rule  144A   under  that  Act   ("144A
Securities").  144A Securities  will not  be included  within the  foregoing 15%
limit on illiquid securities if the securities are determined to be liquid.  The
Board  of Directors has adopted guidelines and delegated to the Adviser, subject
to the supervision of the Board of Directors, the daily function of  determining
and  monitoring the liquidity of Rule  144A securities. Rule 144A securities may
become  illiquid  if  qualified  institutional  buyers  are  not  interested  in
acquiring the securities.
 
OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund may seek to increase its return or may hedge
all or a portion  of its portfolio investments  through options with respect  to
securities  in which  the Investment Fund  may invest. The  Investment Fund will
engage only  in  transactions  in  options which  are  traded  on  a  recognized
securities  or futures exchange. There currently  are limited options markets in
many  countries,  particularly  emerging   countries  such  as  Latin   American
countries,  and the  nature of  the strategies  adopted by  the Adviser  and the
extent to which those strategies are used will depend on the development of such
option markets.
 
    The Investment Fund may write (i.e.,  sell) covered call options which  give
the  purchaser the right  to buy the  underlying security covered  by the option
from the Investment Fund at the  stated exercise price. A "covered" call  option
means  that so  long as the  Investment Fund is  obligated as the  writer of the
option, it will own (i) the underlying securities subject to the option, or (ii)
securities convertible or exchangeable without the payment of any  consideration
into  the securities subject to the option. As a matter of operating policy, the
value of the underlying securities on which  options will be written at any  one
time will not exceed 5% of the total assets of the Investment Fund.
 
    The  Investment Fund will receive a premium from writing call options, which
increases the Investment Fund's return on  the underlying security in the  event
the  option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit. By writing a call,
the Investment Fund will limit its opportunity to profit from an increase in the
market value of the underlying security  above the exercise price of the  option
for  as  long  as the  Investment  Fund's  obligation as  writer  of  the option
continues. Thus, in  some periods the  Investment Fund will  receive less  total
return  and  in other  periods greater  total return  from writing  covered call
options than it would  have received from its  underlying securities had it  not
written call options.
 
    The  Investment Fund  may also  write (i.e.,  sell) covered  put options. By
selling a covered put  option, the Investment Fund  incurs an obligation to  buy
the security underlying the option from the purchaser of the put at the option's
exercise price at any time during the option period, at the purchaser's election
(certain options
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
written  by the Investment Fund  will be exercisable by  the purchaser only on a
specific date). Generally,  a put  option is  "covered" if  the Investment  Fund
maintains  cash, U.S. Government securities or other high grade debt obligations
equal to the exercise price of the option or if the Investment Fund holds a  put
option  on the same underlying security with a similar or higher exercise price.
The Investment  Fund  may sell  put  options to  receive  the premiums  paid  by
purchasers  and to close out  a long put option  position. In addition, when the
Adviser wishes to purchase a security at  a price lower than its current  market
price,  the  Investment  Fund may  write  a  covered put  at  an  exercise price
reflecting the lower purchase price sought.
 
    The Investment Fund  may also  purchase put  or call  options on  individual
securities  or baskets of securities. When  the Investment Fund purchases a call
option it acquires the right to buy a designated security at a designated  price
(the  "exercise price"), and when the Investment  Fund purchases a put option it
acquires the right to sell a designated security at the exercise price, in  each
case  on or before a  specified date (the "termination  date"), usually not more
than nine months from  the date the  option is issued.  The Investment Fund  may
purchase call options to close out a covered call position or to protect against
an increase in the price of a security it anticipates purchasing. The Investment
Fund  may purchase put options on securities  which it holds in its portfolio 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
Investment  Fund would  incur no additional  loss. The Investment  Fund may also
purchase put options to close out written  put positions in a manner similar  to
call  option closing  purchase transactions.  There are  no other  limits on the
Investment Fund's ability to purchase call and put options.
 
    The primary  risks associated  with the  use of  options are  (i)  imperfect
correlation  between the change  in market value  of the securities  held by the
Investment Fund and the prices of  options relating to the securities  purchased
or  sold by the  Investment Fund; and  (ii) possible lack  of a liquid secondary
market for  an  option.  In the  opinion  of  the Adviser,  the  risk  that  the
Investment  Fund  will  be unable  to  close  out an  options  contract  will be
minimized by only entering into options transactions for which there appears  to
be a liquid secondary market.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
    Each  Investment  Fund may  enter into  repurchase agreements  with brokers,
dealers or  banks  that  meet the  credit  guidelines  of the  Fund's  Board  of
Directors.  In a repurchase agreement, an Investment Fund buys a security from a
seller that has  agreed to  repurchase it  at a  mutually agreed  upon date  and
price, reflecting the interest rate effective for the term of the agreement. The
term of these agreements is usually from overnight to one week and never exceeds
one year. A repurchase agreement may be viewed as a fully collateralized loan of
money  by an Investment Fund to the  seller. The Investment Funds always receive
securities as collateral  with a  market value at  least equal  to the  purchase
price,  including accrued interest, and this value is maintained during the term
of the agreement. If the seller  defaults and the collateral value declines,  an
Investment Fund might incur a loss. If bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with
respect to the seller, the Investment Fund's realization upon the collateral may
be  delayed  or  limited. The  aggregate  of certain  repurchase  agreements and
certain  other  investments   is  limited   as  set   forth  under   "Investment
Limitations."
 
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund may enter into reverse repurchase agreements
with  brokers,  dealers,   domestic  and  foreign   banks  or  other   financial
institutions  that have been determined by the  Adviser to be creditworthy. In a
reverse repurchase agreement, the Investment Fund sell a security and agrees  to
repurchase
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
it  at  a mutually  agreed upon  date  and price,  reflecting the  interest rate
effective for the term of the agreement. It may also be viewed as the  borrowing
of  money  by  the Investment  Fund.  The  Investment Fund's  investment  of the
proceeds of a reverse  repurchase agreement is the  speculative factor known  as
leverage.  The Investment  Fund will enter  into a  reverse repurchase agreement
only if the interest income  from investment of the  proceeds is expected to  be
greater  than  the interest  expense  of the  transaction  and the  proceeds are
invested for a period no longer than  the term of the agreement. The  Investment
Fund  will  maintain with  the Custodian  a separate  account with  a segregated
portfolio of cash, U.S.  Government securities or other  liquid high grade  debt
obligations  in an amount at least equal to its purchase obligations under these
agreements (including accrued interest). If interest rates rise during a reverse
repurchase agreement, it may adversely  affect the Investment Fund's ability  to
maintain  a stable net  asset value. In  the event that  the buyer of securities
under a reverse repurchase agreement files for bankruptcy or becomes  insolvent,
the  buyer  or its  trustee  or receiver  may receive  an  extension of  time to
determine whether to  enforce the Investment  Fund's repurchase obligation,  and
the  Investment  Fund's use  of  proceeds of  the  agreement may  effectively be
restricted pending such decision. The  aggregate of these agreements is  limited
as  set forth under "Investment  Limitations." Reverse repurchase agreements are
considered to be  borrowings and are  subject to the  percentage limitations  on
borrowings set forth in "Investment Limitations."
 
SHORT SALES
 
    The  Worldwide High Income Fund may from  time to time sell securities short
without limitation,  although none  of  such Investment  Funds intends  to  sell
securities  short on a regular basis. A short sale is a transaction in which the
Investment Fund would  sell securities  it does not  own (but  has borrowed)  in
anticipation  of  a decline  in the  market  price of  the securities.  When the
Investment Fund makes a short sale, the proceeds it receives from the sale  will
be  held on behalf of  a broker until the  Investment Fund replaces the borrowed
securities. To deliver  the securities to  the buyer, the  Investment Fund  will
need  to arrange through a broker to borrow the securities and, in so doing, the
Investment Fund  will become  obligated to  replace the  securities borrowed  at
their  market price at the time of  replacement, whatever that price may be. The
Investment Fund may have to pay a premium to borrow the securities and must  pay
any dividends or interest payable on the securities until they are replaced.
 
    The  Investment  Fund's obligation  to  replace the  securities  borrowed in
connection with a short  sale will be secured  by collateral deposited with  the
broker  that consists of cash, U.S.  Government securities or other liquid, high
grade debt  obligations.  In addition,  the  Investment  Fund will  place  in  a
segregated  account  with  its  Custodian an  amount  of  cash,  U.S. Government
securities or other liquid high grade debt obligations equal to the  difference,
if  any, between (1)  the market value of  the securities sold  at the time they
were sold short  and (2) any  cash, U.S. Government  securities or other  liquid
high  grade  debt  obligations  deposited  as  collateral  with  the  broker  in
connection with the short sale (not  including the proceeds of the short  sale).
Short   sales  by  the  Investment  Fund   involve  certain  risks  and  special
considerations. Possible losses from short  sales differ from losses that  could
be  incurred from a purchase of a  security, because losses from short sales may
be unlimited, whereas  losses from  purchases can  equal only  the total  amount
invested.
 
STRUCTURED INVESTMENTS
 
    The  Worldwide  High Income  Fund  may invest  a  portion of  its  assets in
entities organized  and operated  solely for  the purpose  of restructuring  the
investment   characteristics  of  sovereign  debt   obligations.  This  type  of
restructuring involves the  deposit with  or purchase by  an entity,  such as  a
corporation or trust, of specified
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
instruments  (such as commercial bank loans or  Brady Bonds) and the issuance by
that entity  of one  or  more classes  of securities  ("Structured  Securities")
backed  by, or representing  interests in, the  underlying instruments. The cash
flow on the  underlying instruments may  be apportioned among  the newly  issued
Structured   Securities   to   create  securities   with   different  investment
characteristics, such  as varying  maturities, payment  priorities and  interest
rate  provisions, and the extent of the payments made with respect to Structured
Securities is  dependent  on the  extent  of the  cash  flow on  the  underlying
instruments.  Because Structured Securities of the  type in which the Investment
Fund anticipates it will invest  typically involve no credit enhancement,  their
credit  risk generally will be equivalent to that of the underlying instruments.
The Investment Fund is permitted to  invest in a class of Structured  Securities
that is either subordinated or unsubordinated to the right of payment of another
class.  Subordinated  Structured  Securities typically  have  higher  yields and
present greater  risks  than unsubordinated  Structured  Securities.  Structured
Securities  are  typically sold  in  private placement  transactions,  and there
currently is no active trading market for Structured Securities.
 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES
 
    Each Investment Fund  may purchase  securities on a  when-issued or  delayed
delivery  basis. In such  transactions, instruments are  bought with payment and
delivery taking place in the future in order to secure what is considered to  be
an  advantageous yield or price at the  time of the transaction. Delivery of and
payment for these securities may take as long as a month or more after the  date
of  the purchase commitment but will take place  no more than 120 days after the
trade date. Each  Investment Fund will  maintain with the  Custodian a  separate
account with a segregated portfolio of cash, U.S. Government securities or other
liquid,  high  grade debt  obligations  in an  amount  at least  equal  to these
commitments. The payment obligation and the interest rates that will be received
are each fixed at the time an Investment Fund enters into the commitment, and no
interest accrues to the Investment Fund  until settlement. Thus, it is  possible
that  the market value at  the time of settlement could  be higher or lower than
the purchase price if the general level  of interest rates has changed. It is  a
current policy of the Investment Funds not to enter into when-issued commitments
or  delayed  delivery  securities  exceeding,  in  the  aggregate,  15%  of  the
Investment Fund's  net  assets  other  than the  obligations  created  by  these
commitments.
 
                             INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
 
    Each  Investment Fund, except the Global  Fixed Income Fund is a diversified
investment company  under  the  1940  Act,  and  is  subject  to  the  following
limitations:  (a) as  to 75% of  its total  assets, the Investment  Fund may not
invest more than 5%  of its total  assets in the securities  of any one  issuer,
except   obligations   of   the   U.S.   Government   and   its   agencies   and
instrumentalities, and (b) the Investment Fund may not own more than 10% of  the
outstanding voting securities of any one issuer. The Global Fixed Income Fund is
a  non-diversified investment company under the  1940 Act, which means that such
Investment Fund is not limited  by the 1940 Act in  the proportion of its  total
assets  that may be  invested in the  obligations of a  single issuer. Thus, the
Global Fixed Income Fund may invest a greater proportion of its total assets  in
the  securities of a smaller number of issuers and, as a result, will be subject
to greater  risk with  respect to  its portfolio  securities. The  Global  Fixed
Income  Fund, however, intends  to comply with  the diversification requirements
imposed by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, for qualification as a
regulated investment company. See "Taxes."
 
    The Investment Funds also operate under certain investment restrictions that
are deemed fundamental policies  and may be changed  by an Investment Fund  only
with    the    approval    of   the    holders    of   a    majority    of   the
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
Investment Fund's outstanding shares. In  addition to other restrictions  listed
in the Statement of Additional Information, an Investment Fund may not (i) enter
into  repurchase  agreements with  more than  seven  days to  maturity if,  as a
result, more than 15% of  the market value of  the Investment Fund's net  assets
would  be invested  in these agreements  and other investments  for which market
quotations are  not readily  available  or which  are otherwise  illiquid;  (ii)
borrow  money except from banks for extraordinary or emergency purposes and then
only in amounts up to  10% of the value of  the Investment Fund's total  assets,
taken  at market value  at the time  of borrowing, or  purchase securities while
borrowings exceed 5% of its total assets, or mortgage, pledge or hypothecate any
assets except in connection with any such borrowing in amounts up to 10% of  the
value  of the Investment  Fund's total assets  at the time  of borrowing; except
that the  Worldwide  High  Income  Fund may  borrow,  and  mortgage,  pledge  or
hypothecate  its assets  to secure  such borrowings, in  amounts equal  to up to
33  1/3%  of  its  total  assets  (including  the  amount  borrowed),  less  all
liabilities  and  indebtedness other  than the  borrowing;  and except  that the
Worldwide High  Income Fund  may  enter into  reverse repurchase  agreements  in
accordance  with their investment objectives and policies; (iii) invest in fixed
time deposits with a duration of over seven calendar days; (iv) invest in  fixed
time  deposits with a duration of from  two business days to seven calendar days
if more than  10% of the  Investment Fund's  total assets would  be invested  in
these  deposits; or  (v) invest  more than  25% of  the Investment  Fund's total
assets in securities of companies in any one industry.
 
                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
 
    INVESTMENT ADVISER.  Morgan Stanley Asset Management Inc. (the "Adviser") is
the Investment Adviser and Administrator of the Fund and each of its  Investment
Funds.  The Adviser provides investment advice and portfolio management services
pursuant to an Investment Advisory Agreement and, subject to the supervision  of
the  Fund's Board of  Directors, makes each of  the Investment Fund's investment
decisions, arranges for  the execution of  portfolio transactions and  generally
manages  each of the Investment Fund's investments. Set forth below as an annual
percentage of average daily net assets are the advisory fees paid to the Adviser
quarterly by  each Investment  Fund.  The investment  advisory fees  of  certain
Investment  Funds  are  higher  than  those  of  most  investment  companies but
comparable to those of investment companies with similar objectives.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                         <C>
Global Fixed Income Fund       0.75 %
Worldwide High Income Fund     0.75 %
High Yield Fund                0.75 %
</TABLE>
 
    The Adviser, with  principal offices  at 1221  Avenue of  the Americas,  New
York,  NY 10020, conducts a worldwide portfolio management business. It provides
a broad range of portfolio management services to customers in the United States
and abroad. At December 31, 1995, the Adviser together with its affiliated asset
management companies managed investments  totaling approximately $57.4  billion,
including  approximately $41.9 billion under active management and $15.5 billion
as Named  Fiduciary  or  Fiduciary  Adviser. See  "Management  of  the  Fund  --
Investment   Advisory  and  Administrative  Agreements"   in  the  Statement  of
Additional Information.
 
    Each  class  of  the  Investment  Funds  have  adopted  separate  Plans   of
Distribution  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the  1940 Act (each, a "Plan"). Under
the applicable  Plan, which  is  described in  more detail  under  "Distributor"
below,  the Distributor is entitled to receive from each of the Investment Funds
with respect to the  Class A shares,  payments of 0.25%  of such class's  annual
average    net   assets    and,   with    respect   to    the   Class    B   and
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
Class C  shares, payments  of 0.75%  of  each such  class's annual  average  net
assets. Each Plan recognizes that, in addition to such payments, the Adviser may
use  its  advisory  fees or  other  resources  to pay  expenses  associated with
activities which might be construed to be financing the sale of these Investment
Funds' shares. Each Plan provides that the Adviser may make payments from  these
sources  to third  parties, such as  consultants that provide  assistance in the
distribution effort (in  addition to  selling shares  and providing  shareholder
services).  As part  of such  distribution fees  for the  Class A  shares of the
Investment Funds, up to 0.25%  of the net assets of  such class will be used  to
compensate  the Distributor  for shareholder  services provided.  In addition to
such distribution fees for the Class B shares and Class C shares, the Rule 12b-1
plan of each class of  each Investment Fund authorizes  the payment of 0.25%  of
the  net assets of each such class to compensate the Distributor for shareholder
services provided.
 
    PORTFOLIO MANAGERS  --  The  following individuals  have  primary  portfolio
management responsibility for the Investment Funds noted below:
 
    GLOBAL  FIXED INCOME FUND --  MICHAEL J. SMITH AND  ROBERT M. SMITH. Michael
Smith joined the Adviser  as a fixed-income  manager in 1990  and became a  Vice
President   of  Morgan   Stanley  in  1992.   He  has   had  primary  management
responsibility for the Investment  Fund since its  inception. He was  previously
employed   by   Gartmore  Investment   Management,   where  he   had  day-to-day
responsibility for the management of global and European fixed-income and  money
market  funds. Prior to his three years  at Gartmore, Mr. Smith spent four years
with Legal & General Investment as  an analyst and fund manager responsible  for
the  fixed-income  portion of  several large  segregated funds.  Mr. Smith  is a
graduate of Exeter University, England. Robert Smith joined the Adviser as  Vice
President  in  June 1994  and has  been primarily  responsible for  managing the
Investment Fund's assets since July 1994. Prior to joining the Adviser he  spent
eight  years as Senior Portfolio Manager -- Fixed Income at the State of Florida
Pension Fund. Mr. Smith's responsibilities included active  total-rate-of-return
management  of  long  term  portfolios and  supervision  of  other  fixed income
managers. A graduate of  Florida State University with  a B.S. in Business.  Mr.
Smith  also  received  an M.B.A.  --  finance  from Florida  State  and  holds a
Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.
 
    WORLDWIDE HIGH  INCOME FUND  -- ROBERT  ANGEVINE AND  PAUL GHAFFARI.  Robert
Angevine  is a Principal of the Adviser and the portfolio manager for high yield
investments. He has  had primary  management responsibility  for the  Investment
Fund since its inception. Prior to joining the Adviser in October 1988, he spent
over  eight  years at  Prudential Insurance,  where he  was responsible  for the
largest open-end  high yield  mutual  fund in  the  country. Mr.  Angevine  also
manages  high yield assets for one of the largest corporate pension funds in the
country. His other  experience includes international  treasury operations at  a
major  pharmaceutical company and  commercial banking. Mr.  Angevine received an
M.B.A. from  Fairleigh  Dickinson  University  and  a  B.A.  in  Economics  from
Lafayette  College. He served two  years as a Lieutenant  in the U.S. Army. Paul
Ghaffari is a Principal of Morgan  Stanley and portfolio manager for the  Morgan
Stanley Emerging Markets Debt Fund, Inc. (a closed-end investment company listed
on  the NYSE). He  has had primary management  responsibility for the Investment
Fund since its inception. Prior to joining the Adviser, he was a Vice  President
in  the  Fixed  Income  Division  of  the  Emerging  Markets  Sales  and Trading
Department at Morgan Stanley. From 1983 to 1992, Mr. Ghaffari worked in the  LDC
Sales  and Trading Department  and the Mortgage-Backed  Securities Department at
J.P. Morgan &  Co., Inc. and  worked in  the Treasury Department  at the  Morgan
Guaranty  Trust  Co. He  holds  a B.A.  in  International Relations  from Pomona
College and a M.S. in Foreign Service from Georgetown University.
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
    HIGH YIELD FUND  -- ROBERT  ANGEVINE. Information about  Robert Angevine  is
included under Worldwide High Income Fund above.
 
    ADMINISTRATOR.    The Adviser  also  provides the  Fund  with administrative
services pursuant to a separate Administration Agreement. The services  provided
under  the  Administration  Agreement  are subject  to  the  supervision  of the
officers  and  Board   of  Directors   of  the  Fund   and  include   day-to-day
administration  of  matters  related to  the  corporate existence  of  the Fund,
maintenance of its records,  preparation of reports,  supervision of the  Fund's
arrangements  with its custodian and assistance in the preparation of the Fund's
registration  statements  under  federal  and  state  laws.  The  Administration
Agreement  also provides  that the Adviser  through its agents  will provide the
Fund dividend disbursing and transfer agent services. For its services under the
Administration Agreement, the Fund  pays the Adviser a  monthly fee which on  an
annual  basis equals 0.25%  of the average  daily net assets  of each Investment
Fund.
 
    In a merger completed on September  1, 1995, The Chase Manhattan Bank,  N.A.
("Chase") succeeded to all of the rights and obligations under the United States
Trust  Administration Agreement between the Adviser  and the United States Trust
Company of New York ("U.S. Trust"), pursuant  to which U.S. Trust had agreed  to
provide  certain administrative services  to the Fund.  Pursuant to a delegation
clause in  the U.S.  Trust Administration  Agreement, U.S.  Trust delegated  its
administration   responsibilities  to   Chase  Global   Funds  Services  Company
("CGFSC"), formerly Mutual Funds  Service Company, which  after the merger  with
Chase   is  a  subsidiary  of  Chase   and  will  continue  to  provide  certain
administrative services to the  Fund. The Adviser  supervises and monitors  such
administrative  services  provided by  CGFSC.  The services  provided  under the
Administration Agreement and  the U.S. Trust  Administration Agreement are  also
subject  to the supervision of the Board of  Directors of the Fund. The Board of
Directors of the  Fund has approved  the provision of  services described  above
pursuant  to  the Administration  Agreement  and the  U.S.  Trust Administration
Agreement as being in the best  interests of the Fund. CGFSC's business  address
is   73  Tremont  Street,  Boston,   Massachusetts  02108-3913.  For  additional
information on the  Administration Agreement and  the U.S. Trust  Administration
Agreement,  see  "Management  of  the  Fund"  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
    DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.  Pursuant  to the Fund's Articles of  Incorporation,
the  Board of Directors  decides upon matters  of general policy  and review the
actions of the Fund's Adviser,  administrators and Distributor. The Officers  of
the Fund conduct and supervise its daily business operations.
 
    DISTRIBUTOR.   Morgan Stanley serves as the Distributor of the shares of the
Fund. Under  its Distribution  Agreement  with the  Fund, Morgan  Stanley  sells
shares of the Fund upon the terms and at the current offering price described in
this  Prospectus. Morgan Stanley is not obligated to sell any specific number of
shares of the Fund.
 
    The Fund  currently  offers only  the  classes  of shares  offered  by  this
Prospectus.  The Fund may in the future offer  one or more classes of shares for
each Investment Fund that may have  different CDSCs or initial sales charges  or
other  distribution charges or a combination  thereof than the classes currently
offered.
 
    The Board of Directors of the Fund has approved and adopted the Distribution
Agreement for  the Fund  and  a Plan  for each  class  of the  Investment  Funds
pursuant  to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940  Act. Under each Plan, the Distributor is
entitled to receive  from these Investment  Funds a distribution  fee, which  is
accrued  daily  and paid  quarterly, of  0.25% for  the Class  A shares  of each
Investment Fund, and  0.75% of the  Class B shares  and Class C  shares of  each
Investment  Fund, on an annualized basis of the average daily net assets of such
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
Investment Fund or classes.  The Distributor expects to  reallocate most of  its
fee  to  investment  dealers, banks  or  financial services  firms  that provide
distribution, administrative or  shareholder services ("Participating  Dealer").
The  actual amount of  such compensation is  agreed upon by  the Fund's Board of
Directors and  by  the Distributor.  The  Distributor may,  in  its  discretion,
voluntarily  waive from time to time all  or any portion of its distribution fee
and the Distributor is free to make additional payments out of its own assets to
promote the sale  of Fund shares.  Class B shares  and Class C  shares are  also
subject  to a service fee at  an annual rate of 0.25%  on an annualized basis of
the average daily net assets of such class of shares of an Investment Fund.
 
    In addition to  the distribution  and shareholder  servicing fees  described
above,  Morgan Stanley also receives a sales charge  of up to 4.75% of the sales
price of Class A shares of each  Investment Fund. Morgan Stanley may reallow  up
to  the full  applicable sales  charge, as  shown in  the table  in "Purchase of
Shares"  below,  to  certain  Participating  Dealers  during  periods  and   for
transactions  specified in  "Purchase of  Shares" and  such reallowances  may be
based upon attainment of minimum sales  levels. During periods when 90% or  more
of the sales charge is reallowed, certain Participating Dealers may be deemed to
be  underwriters  as that  term is  defined in  the Securities  Act of  1933, as
amended. Morgan Stanley may receive a CDSC of up to 1.00% of the sales price  of
the  Class A  shares and Class  C shares  of the Investment  Funds, as described
below under "Purchase of Shares." Morgan Stanley  may also receive a CDSC of  up
to  5.00% of the sales price  of shares of the Class  B shares of the Investment
Funds, as described below under "Purchase  of Shares." In addition to the  sales
charges  described above, Morgan Stanley may from  time to time and from its own
resources pay or allow  additional discounts or  promotional incentives, in  the
form of cash or other compensation, to Participating Dealers. In some instances,
such  discounts or other incentives may be offered only to certain Participating
Dealers that sell or are expected to sell during specified time periods  certain
minimum  amounts of shares  of the Fund,  or other funds  underwritten by Morgan
Stanley. In some  instances, these  incentives may  be offered  only to  certain
Participating  Dealers that have sold or may sell significant amounts of shares.
In addition,  Morgan Stanley  pays ongoing  trail commissions  to  Participating
Dealers.  At  the option  of  the Participating  Dealer,  such bonuses  or other
incentives may take the form of  payment for travel expenses, including  lodging
incurred  in  connection  with  trips  taken  by  persons  associated  with  the
Participating Dealer and members of their  families to places within or  outside
of  the  United  States.  The Distributor  or  Participating  Dealers  and their
investment  representatives  may  receive   different  levels  of   compensation
depending on which class of shares they sell.
 
    The Plans obligate the Investment Funds to accrue and pay to the Distributor
the  fee agreed to under  its Distribution Agreement. The  Plans do not obligate
the Investment Funds to reimburse Morgan Stanley for the actual expenses  Morgan
Stanley may incur in fulfilling its obligations under the Plan. Thus, under each
Plan,  even if  Morgan Stanley's  actual expenses exceed  the fee  payable to it
thereunder at any given time, the Investment Funds will not be obligated to  pay
more than that fee. If Morgan Stanley's actual expenses are less than the fee it
receives, Morgan Stanley will retain the full amount of the fee.
 
    Each  Plan of Distribution  for a class  of Fund shares,  under the terms of
Rule 12b-1, will  remain in effect  only if  approved at least  annually by  the
Fund's  Board of  Directors, including those  directors who  are not "interested
persons" of the Fund  as that term is  defined in the 1940  Act and who have  no
direct  or indirect  financial interest  in the  operation of  a Plan  or in any
agreements related thereto ("12b-1 Directors").  Each Plan may be terminated  at
any  time by  a vote  of a majority  of the  12b-1 Directors or  by a  vote of a
majority of the  outstanding voting  securities of  the applicable  class of  an
Investment Fund. The fee set forth above will be paid
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
by  the Investment Fund  or class thereof  to Morgan Stanley  unless and until a
Plan is terminated  or not renewed.  The Fund  intends to operate  each Plan  in
accordance with its terms and the NASD Rules concerning sales charges.
 
    PAYMENTS  TO  FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.   The  Adviser  or its  affiliates may
compensate certain financial institutions for the continued investment of  their
customers'  assets  in  the Investment  Funds  pursuant  to the  advice  of such
financial institutions. These payments will be  made directly by the Adviser  or
its  affiliates from their assets,  and will not be made  from the assets of the
Fund or  by  the  assessment  of  a  sales  charge  on  shares.  Such  financial
institutions may also perform certain shareholder or recordkeeping services that
would  otherwise be performed  by CGFSC. The  Adviser may elect  to enter into a
contract to pay the financial institutions for such services.
 
    EXPENSES.  The Investment Funds are responsible for payment of certain other
fees and expenses (including professional fees, custodial fees and printing  and
mailing costs) specified in the Administration and Distribution Agreements.
 
                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Investment  Advisory Agreement  authorizes  the Adviser  to  select the
brokers or  dealers that  will execute  the purchases  and sales  of  investment
securities  for each of the Investment Funds  and directs the Adviser to use its
best efforts to  obtain the best  available price and  most favorable  execution
with  respect  to  all  transactions  for the  Investment  Funds.  The  Fund has
authorized the Adviser  to pay  higher commissions in  recognition of  brokerage
services which, in the opinion of the Adviser, are necessary for the achievement
of  better  execution, provided  the Adviser  believes  this to  be in  the best
interest of the Fund.
 
    Shares of the  Investment Funds are  marketed through Participating  Dealers
and  the Fund may allocate brokerage or principal business on the basis of sales
of shares of  the Investment Funds  which may  be made through  such firms.  The
Adviser  may place portfolio orders  with qualified broker-dealers who recommend
the Investment Funds  or who  act as  agents in the  purchase of  shares of  the
Investment Funds for their clients.
 
    In purchasing and selling securities for each of the Investment Funds, it is
the  Fund's policy  to seek  to obtain quality  execution at  the most favorable
prices, through  responsible  broker-dealers.  In  selecting  broker-dealers  to
execute the securities transactions for the Investment Funds, consideration will
be  given  to  such factors  as  the price  of  the  security, the  rate  of the
commission, the size and  difficulty of the  order, the reliability,  integrity,
financial condition, general execution and operational capabilities of competing
broker-dealers,  and the brokerage  and research services  which they provide to
the Fund. Some securities  considered for investment by  each of the  Investment
Funds  may  also be  appropriate for  other  clients served  by the  Adviser. If
purchase or sale  of securities consistent  with the investment  policies of  an
Investment  Fund and one or more of such  other clients served by the Adviser is
considered at or about  the same time, transactions  in such securities will  be
allocated  among the Investment Fund  and other clients in  a manner deemed fair
and reasonable  by the  Adviser.  Although there  is  no specified  formula  for
allocating  such  transactions,  the  various  allocation  methods  used  by the
Adviser, and the results of such allocations, are subject to periodic review  by
the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
    Subject to the overriding objective of obtaining the best possible execution
of  orders, the Adviser may allocate a portion of the Fund's portfolio brokerage
transactions to Morgan Stanley or broker affiliates of Morgan Stanley. In  order
for  Morgan Stanley or  its affiliates to effect  any portfolio transactions for
the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration received by Morgan Stanley
or such affiliates must be reasonable and
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
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 a  securities exchange during a comparable period  of
time.  Furthermore, the Board of Directors of  the Fund, including a majority of
the Directors who are  not "interested persons"  of the Fund  as defined in  the
1940  Act, have adopted procedures which are reasonably designed to provide that
any commissions,  fees or  other remuneration  paid to  Morgan Stanley  or  such
affiliates are consistent with the foregoing standard.
 
    Portfolio  securities will not be purchased from,  or through, or sold to or
through, the Adviser or Morgan Stanley  or any "affiliated persons," as  defined
in  the 1940 Act, of Morgan Stanley when such entities are acting as principals,
except to the extent permitted by law.
 
    Although the primary  objective of each  of the Investment  Funds is not  to
invest  for short-term trading, each  of the Investment Funds  will seek to take
advantage of  trading  opportunities  as  they arise  to  the  extent  they  are
consistent  with  the  Investment  Fund's  objectives.  Accordingly,  investment
securities may be sold from  time to time without regard  to the length of  time
they  have been held. Each Investment Fund anticipates that its annual portfolio
turnover rate will not exceed 100% under normal circumstances. Market conditions
could result in portfolio activity at a greater or lesser rate than anticipated.
High portfolio turnover involves correspondingly greater transaction costs which
will be  borne directly  by the  Investment Fund.  In addition,  high  portfolio
turnover  may  result  in more  capital  gains  which would  be  taxable  to the
shareholders of the Investment Fund.
 
                               PURCHASE OF SHARES
 
    Shares of  the  Investment  Funds may  be  purchased  through  Participating
Dealers or directly from the Fund. Class A shares of the Investment Funds may be
purchased  at the net asset value per share plus the applicable sales charge, if
any, next determined after receipt  of the purchase order  by the Fund. Class  B
shares  and Class C shares  of the Investment Funds may  be purchased at the net
asset value per share next determined after receipt of the purchase order by the
Fund. Participating Dealers are responsible  for forwarding orders they  receive
to  the Fund by  the applicable times described  below on the  same day as their
receipt of the orders to  permit purchase of shares  as described above and  the
failure  to do so will result in the investors being unable to obtain that day's
net asset value. See "Valuation of Shares."
 
    The Class A, Class B and Class  C alternatives permit an investor to  choose
the  method of purchasing shares that is most beneficial given the amount of the
purchase, the length of time the investor expects to hold the shares, and  other
circumstances. Investors should consider whether, during the anticipated life of
their  investment in the Fund, the combination of sales charge, distribution fee
and  CDSC  on  Class  A  shares  is  more  favorable  than  the  combination  of
distribution/service  fees and CDSC on Class B shares or Class C shares. In some
cases, investors planning to  purchase $100,000 or more  of Fund shares may  pay
lower  aggregate charges  and expenses by  purchasing Class A  shares. (See "Fee
Table.")
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
OFFERING PRICE OF CLASS A SHARES
 
    Class A shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net  asset
value per share plus a sales charge (the "Offering Price") which is a percentage
of  the Offering Price that decreases as the amount of the purchase increases as
shown below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              SALES CHARGE       SALES CHARGE
                              AS PERCENTAGE    AS PERCENTAGE OF    DEALER RETENTION
      CLASS A SHARES               OF             NET AMOUNT       AS PERCENTAGE OF
    AMOUNT OF PURCHASE       OFFERING PRICE        INVESTED        OFFERING PRICE**
- ---------------------------  ---------------   -----------------   ----------------
<S>                          <C>               <C>                 <C>
Less than $100,000                4.75%              4.99%               4.25%
$100,000 - $249,999               3.50%              3.63%               3.00%
$250,000 - $499,999               2.50%              2.56%               2.00%
$500,000 - $999,999               2.00%              2.04%               1.50%
$1,000,000 and over               None*              None**                  *++
</TABLE>
 
- --------------
 * Purchases of $1  million or more  may be  subject to a  redemption fee.  (See
   below.)  Morgan Stanley may make payments to Participating Dealers in amounts
   up to 1.00% of the Offering Price.
 
** The Distributor  may,  in its  discretion,  permit Participating  Dealers  to
   retain the full amount of the sales charge in connection with certain sales.
 
 + The  amount of  purchase includes  net asset value  of the  purchase plus the
   sales charge.
 
++ Commission is payable by Morgan Stanley as discussed below.
 
    Morgan Stanley may  in its  discretion compensate  Participating Dealers  in
connection  with  the sale  of  Class A  shares of  the  Investment Funds  in an
aggregate amount of $1 million or more up to the following amounts: 1.00% of the
net asset value of shares sold on amounts up to $3 million, .50% on the next  $2
million  and .25% on  amounts over $5  million. For purposes  of determining the
appropriate commission percentage to be applied  to a particular sale under  the
foregoing  schedule, Morgan Stanley will consider the cumulative amount invested
by the purchaser in Class A shares of the Investment Funds.
 
    REDUCTION  OR  WAIVER  OF  SALES  CHARGES.    A  shareholder  who  purchases
additional Class A shares of an Investment Fund may obtain reduced sales charges
through  a right of  accumulation of current  purchases of Class  A shares of an
Investment Fund  with  concurrent purchases  of  Class  A shares  of  the  other
Investment  Fund and with  existing Class A share  investments in all Investment
Funds. The applicable sales charge will be determined based on the total of  (a)
the  shareholder's current purchases of Class  A shares of Investment Funds plus
(b) an amount equal to the greater of  the then current net asset value, or  the
total  purchase price of the investor's prior purchases of all Class A shares of
Investment Funds held  by the shareholder.  To obtain the  reduced sales  charge
through  a right of accumulation, the shareholder must provide Morgan Stanley at
the time  of purchase,  either directly  or through  a Participating  Dealer  or
shareholder  servicing  agent,  as applicable,  with  sufficient  information to
verify that the shareholder has  such a right. The  Fund may amend or  terminate
this right of accumulation at any time as to subsequent purchases.
 
    For  purposes of reduced sales charges based on amount of purchase, the term
"purchase" refers  to purchases  made  at one  time  by any  "purchaser,"  which
includes  an individual; a group composed of an individual and his or her spouse
and children under the age of 21; a trustee or other fiduciary of a single trust
estate or single fiduciary account;  an organization exempt from federal  income
tax under Section 501(c)(3) or (13)
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
of  the  Internal Revenue  Code of  1986,  as amended  (the "Code");  a pension,
profit-sharing or other employee  benefit plan, whether  or not qualified  under
Section  401  of  the  Code;  or  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. In order to qualify
for a lower sales charge on purchases of the Class A shares, all orders from  an
organized group will have to be placed through a single Participating Dealer and
identified as originating from a qualifying purchaser.
 
    An  investor may also obtain reduced  sales charges shown above on purchases
of the Class A shares by executing  a written letter of intent which states  the
investor's  intention to invest not less  than $100,000 within a 13-month period
in Class A shares of the Investment  Funds ("Letter"). Each purchase of Class  A
shares  of an Investment Fund under a Letter  will be made at the Offering Price
applicable at the time of such purchase  to single purchases of the full  amount
indicated  on the  Letter. (See  Terms and  Conditions included  in the  form of
Letter in the New Account Application attached to this Prospectus.) An  investor
who  wishes to enter into  a Letter in connection with  an investment in Class A
shares of an Investment Fund should use the form in the New Account  Application
attached to this Prospectus. The Letter, which imposes no obligation to purchase
or  sell additional  Class A shares,  provides for a  price adjustment depending
upon the actual amount  purchased within such period.  The Letter provides  that
the  first purchase following execution of the Letter must be at least 5% of the
amount of the  intended purchase,  and that  5% of  the amount  of the  intended
purchase  normally  will  be  held  in escrow  in  the  form  of  shares pending
completion of the intended purchase. If  the total investments under the  Letter
are  less than the intended  amount and thereby qualify  only for a higher sales
charge than actually  paid, the appropriate  number of escrowed  Class A  shares
will  be redeemed and the proceeds used toward satisfaction of the obligation to
pay the increased sales charge. A shareholder may include the value of all Class
A shares of the Investment Funds held of record as of the initial purchase  date
under  the Letter as an "accumulation credit" toward the completion of the terms
of the Letter, but no price adjustment will be made on such shares.
 
    Class A shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset  value
without  a sales charge by employee benefit plans, retirement plans and deferred
compensation plans  and trusts  used  to fund  such  plans, including,  but  not
limited  to, those  defined in  Section 401(a),  403(b) or  457 of  the Code and
"rabbi trusts." Morgan Stanley may, in its discretion, compensate  Participating
Dealers  up  to 1.00%  in  connection with  the  sale of  Class  A shares  of an
Investment  Fund  to  401(k),  403(b)  or  457  participant-directed   qualified
retirement  plans.  Such  shareholders  would  not be  subject  to  a  CDSC upon
liquidation.
 
    As disclosed above, no sales charge will be payable at the time of  purchase
of  Class A  shares on  investments of  $1 million  or more.  However, except as
described above, a CDSC will  be imposed on such investments  in the event of  a
redemption  of  such Class  A shares  of  the Investment  Fund within  12 months
following the purchase, at the rate of 1.00% of the lesser of the current market
value of the shares redeemed  or the total cost  of such shares. In  determining
whether  a CDSC is payable, and,  if so, the amount of  the fee or charge, it is
assumed that shares not subject  to such fee or  charge are the first  redeemed,
followed  by other shares held for the longest period of time. The Fund may also
sell Class A shares of the Investment Funds at net asset value (without a  sales
charge)  to Directors  of the Fund,  directors and employees  of Morgan Stanley,
Participating Dealers, their respective affiliates and their immediate  families
and  employees of agents  of the Fund. In  addition, Class A  shares may be sold
without a sales charge when purchased  (i) through bank trust departments;  (ii)
for investors
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
whose  account is  managed by certain  investment advisers  registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended; (iii) for investors through certain
broker/dealers and other financial services firms that have entered into certain
agreements with the  Fund which may  include a requirement  that such shares  be
sold  for the benefit of clients participating  in a "wrap account" or a similar
program under which such clients pay a fee to such broker/dealer or other  firm;
(iv)  with  redemption proceeds  from other  investment  companies on  which the
investor had  paid a  front-end  or contingent  deferred  sales charge;  or  (v)
through  a  broker that  maintains an  omnibus  account with  the Fund  and such
purchases are  made  by the  following:  (1) investment  advisers  or  financial
planners  who  place trades  for their  own  accounts or  the accounts  of their
clients and who charge a management, consulting or other fee for their services,
(2) clients of such investment advisers  or financial planners who place  trades
for  their own accounts if the accounts are linked to the master account of such
investment adviser or financial planner on  the books and records of the  broker
or  agent, or (3) retirement and deferred  compensation plans and trusts used to
fund such plans, including, but not limited to, those defined in Section 401(a),
403(b) or 457 of the Code and  "rabbi trusts." Investors who purchase or  redeem
shares  through a  trust department,  broker, dealer,  agent, financial planner,
financial services  firm, or  investment adviser  may be  charged an  additional
service or transaction fee by that institution.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS B SHARES
    Class  B shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset value
without an initial  sales charge.  However, a CDSC  will be  imposed on  certain
Class  B shares redeemed within six years of purchase. The charge is assessed on
an amount equal to the  lesser of the then-current market  value of the Class  B
shares redeemed or the total cost of such shares. Accordingly, the CDSC will not
be  applied to dollar amounts  representing an increase in  the net asset values
above the initial purchase price of  the shares being redeemed. In addition,  no
charge is assessed on redemptions of Class B shares derived from reinvestment of
dividends or capital gains distributions.
 
    In  determining  whether  the  CDSC  is  applicable  to  a  redemption,  the
calculation is made  in the  manner that results  in the  lowest possible  rate.
Therefore,  it is assumed that the redemption is  first of any Class B shares in
the  shareholder's   account   that  represent   reinvested   dividends   and/or
distributions,  and/or  of  Class B  shares  held  longer than  six  years after
purchase, and  next  of Class  B  shares held  the  longest during  the  initial
six-year  period after  purchase. The  amount of  the contingent  deferred sales
charge, if any,  will vary depending  on the number  of years from  the time  of
purchase  of Class B  shares until the  redemption of such  shares (the "holding
period"). The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC.
 
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              SALES CHARGE AS
                                                               PERCENTAGE OF
                                                                    THE
                                                               DOLLAR AMOUNT
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE                                              SUBJECT TO
PAYMENT WAS MADE                                                   CHARGE
- ------------------------------------------------------------  ----------------
<S>                                                           <C>
First.......................................................        5.0%
Second......................................................        4.0%
Third.......................................................        3.0%
Fourth......................................................        3.0%
Fifth.......................................................        2.0%
Sixth.......................................................        1.0%
Thereafter..................................................       None*
</TABLE>
 
- --------------
* As described more fully below, Class B shares automatically convert to Class A
  shares after the seventh year following purchase.
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
    Proceeds from the CDSC  are paid to  Morgan Stanley and  are used by  Morgan
Stanley   to  defray  the  expenses  of  Morgan  Stanley  related  to  providing
distribution-related services to  the Fund in  connection with the  sale of  the
Class  B shares. Morgan Stanley will  make payments to the Participating Dealers
that handle the purchases of  such shares at the rate  of 4.00% of the  purchase
price of such shares at the time of purchase and expects to reallocate a portion
of  its distribution fee, with respect to such shares, under the Rule 12b-1 Plan
for such  class  of  shares, as  described  under  "Management --  of  the  Fund
Distributor"  above. The combination  of the CDSC  and the distribution services
fee facilitates the ability  of the Fund  to sell the Class  B shares without  a
sales charge being deducted at the time of purchase.
 
    WAIVER OF CDSC.  The CDSC will be waived on the redemption of Class B shares
(i)  following the death  or initial determination of  disability (as defined in
the Code) of a shareholder; (ii) to the extent that the redemption represents  a
minimum  required distribution  from an  individual retirement  account or other
retirement plan to a shareholder who has attained the age of 70 1/2; or (iii) to
the extent that shares redeemed have been withdrawn from a Systematic Withdrawal
Plan, up to a maximum amount of 12% per year from a shareholder account based on
the value of the account at the  time the Plan is established, provided  however
that  all  dividends and  distributions are  reinvested in  Class B  Shares. The
waiver with  respect  to  (i)  above  is only  applicable  in  cases  where  the
shareholder  account is registered (a) in the  name of an individual person, (b)
as a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship, (c) as community property or (d)
in the name of  a minor child  under the Uniform Gifts  or Uniform Transfers  to
Minors  Act. A shareholder, or his or her representative, must notify the Fund's
Transfer Agent prior to the time  of redemption if such circumstances exist  and
the  shareholder is eligible for this waiver. The shareholder is responsible for
providing sufficient documentation to the Transfer Agent to verify the existence
of such circumstances. For information on the imposition and waiver of the CDSC,
contact the Transfer Agent at 1-800-282-4404.
 
    AUTOMATIC CONVERSION TO CLASS  A SHARES.  After  the seventh year  following
purchase,  Class B shares will automatically convert  to Class A shares and will
no longer  be  subject  to  the  higher  distribution  and  service  fees.  Such
conversion  will be  on the basis  of the relative  net asset values  of the two
classes, without the imposition  of any sales load,  fee or other charge.  Under
current tax law, the conversion is not a taxable event to the shareholder.
 
    Class B shares may also be purchased through an Automatic Investment Plan as
described below.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS C SHARES
 
    Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net asset
value per share and such shares  are subject to a CDSC  at the rate of 1.00%  of
the  lesser of the current market value of the shares redeemed or the total cost
of such shares for shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase.  Morgan
Stanley  will  make  payments  to  the  Participating  Dealers  that  handle the
purchases of such  shares at the  rate of 1.00%  of the purchase  price of  such
shares  at  the  time  of  purchase  and  expects  to  reallocate  most  of  its
distribution fee, with  respect to such  shares, under the  Rule 12b-1 Plan  for
such class of shares, as described under "Management of the Fund -- Distributor"
above.  In determining whether a CDSC is payable,  and, if so, the amount of the
fee or charge, it is assumed that shares  not subject to such fee or charge  are
the  first redeemed,  followed by  other shares held  for the  longest period of
time.
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
AUTOMATIC REINVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    No initial  sales charge  or  CDSC will  be payable  on  the shares  of  any
Investment Fund or class thereof purchased through the automatic reinvestment of
dividends and distributions on shares of the Investment Funds.
 
REINVESTMENT PRIVILEGE OF EACH CLASS
 
    A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class A shares  of an  Investment Fund may
reinvest up to the full  amount redeemed (less any  CDSC, if applicable) at  net
asset  value at the time of the reinvestment  in Class A shares of an Investment
Fund without payment of a sales charge.  A shareholder who has redeemed Class  B
shares  of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may reinvest
up to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  A shares at net  asset
value  with no  initial sales  charge. A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class C
Shares of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may  reinvest
up  to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  C shares at net asset
value and not be subject to a CDSC. Purchases through the reinvestment privilege
are subject to the minimum applicable investment requirements. The  reinvestment
privilege as to any specific Class A, Class B or Class C shares must be effected
within  180 days  of the  redemption. The Transfer  Agent must  receive from the
shareholder or the shareholder's Participating Dealer both a written request for
reinvestment and a check or wire which does not exceed the redemption  proceeds.
The  written request must state  that the reinvestment is  made pursuant to this
reinvestment privilege.  If a  loss is  realized on  the redemption  of Class  A
shares,  the reinvestment may be subject to the "wash sale" rules if made within
30 days of  the redemption, resulting  in a postponement  of the recognition  of
such  loss for  federal income tax  purposes. The reinvestment  privilege may be
terminated or modified at any time.
 
RETIREMENT PLANS
 
    Qualified  retirement  plans,  IRAs,  banks,  bank  trust  departments   and
registered  investment  advisory companies,  acting in  a fiduciary  or advisory
capacity for individual, institutional or  trust accounts, may purchase Class  A
shares  of one  or more of  the Investment Funds  at net asset  value (without a
sales charge) provided that the initial order for such purchases is in an amount
of $1 million or more or  is part of a series of  orders covered by a Letter  to
invest  $1 million or  more in Class  A shares of  the Investment Funds. Certain
employee benefit plans,  retirement plans  and deferred  compensation plans  and
trusts  used to fund  such plans may  purchase Class A  shares of the Investment
Funds at net  asset value without  imposition of a  sales charge. See  "Offering
Price of Class A Shares."
 
    Morgan  Stanley  provides retirement  plan  services and  documents  and can
establish investor accounts in IRAs trusteed by Chase. This includes  Simplified
Employee  Pension Plan ("SEP")  IRA accounts and  prototype documents. Brochures
describing such plans  and materials  for establishing them  are available  from
Morgan  Stanley upon request. The brochures for plans trusteed by Chase describe
the current fees payable to Chase for its services as trustee. Investors  should
consult with their own tax advisers before establishing a retirement plan.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
INITIAL PURCHASES DIRECTLY FROM THE FUND
 
1) BY  CHECK.  An account may be opened  by completing and signing a New Account
   Application and mailing it,  together with a check  ($1,000 minimum for  each
   Investment Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250) made
   payable to "Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]," to:
 
    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
    P.O. Box 2798
    Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798
 
  Payment  will be accepted only by check  payable in U.S. Dollars, unless prior
  approval for payment by other currencies is given by the Fund. The  Investment
  Fund(s)  and the  class(es) to  be purchased should  be designated  on the New
  Account Application. For purchases by  check, the Fund is ordinarily  credited
  with  Federal Funds within one  business day. Thus your  purchase of shares by
  check is ordinarily credited to your account at the net asset value per  share
  of the Investment Fund next determined on the day of receipt.
 
2) BY  FEDERAL  FUNDS WIRE.   Purchases  may be  made by  having your  bank wire
   Federal Funds to the Fund's bank account ($1,000 minimum for each  Investment
   Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250). To help ensure
   prompt  receipt of your Federal  Funds Wire, it is  important that you follow
   these steps:
 
  A.  Telephone  the Fund  (toll free:  1-800-282-4404) and  provide your  name,
     address,  telephone number,  Social Security or  Tax Identification Number,
     the Investment Fund(s) and the class(es) selected, the amount being  wired,
     and  by which bank. The Fund will then provide you with a bank wire control
     number. (Investors with existing accounts  must also notify the Fund  prior
     to wiring funds.)
 
  B.    Instruct your  bank  to wire  the specified  amount  to the  Fund's Wire
     Concentration Bank Account (be sure to  have your bank include the name  of
     the  Investment Fund(s) selected and the  bank wire control number assigned
     to you):
 
          Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
         One Chase Manhattan Plaza
         New York, NY 10081-1000
         ABA# 021000021
         DDA# 910-2-732907
         Attn: Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
         Ref: (Investment Fund name, your account number, your account name)
 
      Please call the Fund at 1-800-282-4404 prior to wiring funds.
 
  C.  Complete and sign the New  Account Application and mail it to the  address
     shown thereon.
 
      Purchase  orders for  shares of  the Investment  Funds which  are received
     prior to the regular close of  the NYSE (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern  Time)
     will  be executed at the  price computed on the date  of receipt as long as
     the Transfer Agent receives payment by  check or in Federal Funds prior  to
     the regular close of the NYSE on such day.
 
      Federal  Funds purchase orders will be accepted only on a day on which the
     Fund and Chase (the "Custodian Bank") are open for business. Your bank  may
     charge a service fee for wiring funds.
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
3) BY  BANK WIRE.   The  same procedure outlined  under "By  Federal Funds Wire"
   above must be  followed in  purchasing shares  by bank  wire. However,  money
   transferred  by bank wire may or may  not be converted into Federal Funds the
   same day, depending on the time the  money is received and the bank  handling
   the  wire. The timing of  effectiveness of purchase of  shares and receipt of
   dividends is subject  to the  same timing considerations  as described  above
   with respect to purchase by Federal Funds wire and depends on when payment in
   Federal  Funds is  received. Your  bank may charge  a service  fee for wiring
   funds.
 
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENTS
 
    You may add to your account at any time (minimum additional investment $100,
except for  IRAs,  for which  the  minimum  additional investment  is  $50,  and
automatic  reinvestment of dividends and  capital gains distributions, for which
there is  no minimum  and no  sales charge)  by purchasing  shares through  your
Participating Dealer, by mailing a check to the Fund (payable to "Morgan Stanley
Fund,  Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]") at the above address or by wiring monies
to the Custodian Bank as outlined above. It is very important that your  account
number  or wire  control number  be specified  in the  letter or  wire to better
assure proper  crediting to  your account.  In order  to ensure  that your  wire
orders  are invested  promptly, you  are requested to  notify one  of the Fund's
representatives (toll-free 1-800-282-4404) prior to the wire.
 
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN
 
    After establishing an account with  the Fund, investors may purchase  shares
of  the  Fund  through  an  Automatic Investment  Plan,  under  which  an amount
specified by the  shareholder equal to  at least the  applicable minimum for  an
investment amount on a monthly basis will be sent to the Transfer Agent from the
investor's  bank for investment  in the Fund. Investors  who are participants in
the Fund's Systematic Withdrawal Plan should not at the same time participate in
the Automatic Investment Plan. Investors interested in the Automatic  Investment
Plan  or seeking  further information should  contact a  Participating Dealer or
fund representative.  Shares  to  be held  in  broker  street name  may  not  be
purchased through the Automatic Investment Plan.
 
OTHER PURCHASE INFORMATION
 
    The  purchase price for the Class A  shares of the Investment Funds is based
upon the net asset  value per share  plus the applicable  sales charge, if  any,
next  determined after  the order is  received by the  Fund and for  the Class B
shares and Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  is based on  the net  asset
value  per  share next  determined  after the  order  is received  by  the Fund.
Participating Dealers are responsible for forwarding orders they receive to  the
Fund by the applicable times described below on the same day as their receipt of
the orders to permit purchase of shares as described above and the failure to do
so  will result  in the investors  being unable  to obtain that  day's net asset
value. See "Valuation of Shares." An  order received prior to the regular  close
of  the NYSE, which is  currently 4:00 p.m. (Eastern  Time), will be executed at
the price computed on the date of receipt as long as the Transfer Agent receives
payment by check or in Federal Funds prior  to the regular close of the NYSE  on
such day. An order received after the regular close of the NYSE will be executed
at  the price computed on the next day the  NYSE is open as long as the Transfer
Agent receives payment by check or in  Federal Funds prior to the regular  close
of  the NYSE on such day. If you purchase shares of an Investment Fund directly,
you must make payment by check or  Federal Funds to effect your purchase of  the
shares and obtain the price for the shares as described above. Purchasing shares
of  an Investment  Fund is different  from placing  a trade for  securities at a
given price and having a certain number  of days in which to make settlement  or
payment for the securities.
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
    In  the interest  of economy  and convenience  and because  of the operating
procedures of the Fund, certificates representing shares of the Investment Funds
will normally  not  be issued.  Such  certificates  will be  made  available  to
investors,  however, upon written request to  the Fund. All shares purchased are
confirmed to you and credited to your account on the Fund's books maintained  by
the  Adviser or  its agents. You  will have  the same rights  and ownership with
respect to such shares as if certificates had been issued.
 
    To ensure that checks are collected by the Fund, withdrawals of  investments
made  by check are not presently permitted  until the Fund's depository bank has
made fully  available for  withdrawal the  check amount  used to  purchase  Fund
shares, which generally will be within 15 days. As a condition of this offering,
if  a purchase  is canceled  due to  nonpayment or  because your  check does not
clear, you will be responsible for any loss the Fund and/or its agents incur. If
you are already a shareholder, the  Fund may redeem shares from your  account(s)
to  reimburse the Fund and/or  its agents for any loss.  In addition, you may be
prohibited or restricted from making future purchases in the Fund.
 
    Investors who purchase Class A shares of an Investment Fund directly  rather
than through a Participating Dealer will pay the public offering price including
the  sales charge,  and the  sales charge  will be  payable, as  described under
"Purchase of  Shares  -- Offering  Price"  above,  to Morgan  Stanley  unless  a
Participating  Dealer is  designated on  the account  application. Investors may
also invest in the Investment  Funds by purchasing shares through  Participating
Dealers.
 
                              REDEMPTION OF SHARES
 
    You  may  withdraw all  or  any portion  of the  amount  in your  account by
redeeming shares at any time. Please note  that purchases made by check are  not
permitted  to  be  redeemed until  the  Fund's  depository bank  has  made fully
available for withdrawal the  check amount used to  purchase Fund shares,  which
generally  will be within  15 days. The Fund  will redeem shares  of each of the
Investment Funds at its next determined net asset value. A CDSC of 1.00% will be
imposed on certain Class  A shares of the  Investment Funds that were  purchased
without  payment of the initial sales charge due to the size of the purchase and
are redeemed  within  one  year of  purchase.  A  maximum CDSC  of  5.00%  which
decreases  in steps to  0% after six years,  will be imposed  on certain Class B
shares of the Investment Funds that are redeemed within six years of purchase. A
CDSC of 1.00% will be imposed on certain Class C shares of the Investment  Funds
that  are redeemed within  one year of  purchase. See "Purchase  of Shares." The
CDSC will be imposed on the lesser of the current market value or the total cost
of the shares  being redeemed. In  determining whether either  of such CDSCs  is
payable,  and, if so,  the amount of the  charge, it is  assumed that shares not
subject to such charge are the first redeemed followed by other shares held  for
the  longest period of time.  On days that both the  NYSE and the Custodian Bank
are open for business, the net asset value per share of the Investment Funds  is
determined  at the  regular close  of trading of  the NYSE  (currently 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time).  Shares  of  an  Investment  Fund may  be  redeemed  by  mail  or
telephone.  Any redemption may be  more or less than  the purchase price of your
shares depending on the  market value of the  investment securities held by  the
Investment Fund at the time of purchase and of redemption, among other factors.
 
    The  CDSC may be waived on redemptions  of shares in connection with certain
post-retirement withdrawals from IRA or other retirement plans or following  the
death  or  disability (as  defined  in the  Internal  Revenue Code  of  1986, as
amended) of a shareholder of the Fund.
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
    Redemption of shares held in broker  street name may not be accomplished  by
mail  or telephone as described below. Shares  held in broker street name may be
redeemed only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    The Investment Funds will  redeem their shares at  the net asset value  next
determined  after your request is received, if your request is received in "good
order" by  the Transfer  Agent. If  applicable, a  CDSC will  be deducted.  Your
request  should be  addressed to Chase  Global Funds Services  Company, P.O. Box
2798, Boston,  Massachusetts 02208-2798,  except  that deliveries  by  overnight
courier  should be addressed to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. c/o Chase Global Funds
Services Company, 73 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108-3913.
 
    "Good order"  means that  the  request to  redeem  shares must  include  the
following documentation:
 
        (a)  A letter of instruction or a stock assignment specifying the number
    of  shares or dollar amount to be  redeemed, signed by all registered owners
    of the shares in the exact names in which they are registered;
 
        (b)  Any  required   signature  guarantees   (see  "Further   Redemption
    Information" below); and
 
        (c)    Other supporting  legal documents,  if required,  in the  case of
    estates, trusts,  guardianships, custodianships,  corporations, pension  and
    profit-sharing plans and other organizations.
 
    Shareholders who are uncertain of requirements for redemption should consult
with their Participating Dealers or with a Fund representative.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    Unless you have elected on the New Account Application or on a separate form
supplied  by  the Transfer  Agent not  to utilize  the telephone  redemption and
exchange privileges, you or your  Participating Dealer can request a  redemption
of  your shares by  calling the Fund  and requesting the  redemption proceeds be
mailed to  you  or  wired  to  your bank.  Please  contact  one  of  the  Fund's
representatives  for further details. In times of drastic market conditions, the
telephone redemption option  may be  difficult to implement.  If you  experience
difficulty in making a telephone redemption, your request may be made by mail or
overnight  courier,  and it  will be  implemented  at the  net asset  value next
determined after it is received minus the CDSC, if any. The Fund and the  Fund's
Transfer  Agent will employ  reasonable procedures to  confirm that instructions
communicated by telephone  are genuine. These  procedures include requiring  the
investor  to provide certain personal identification  information at the time an
account  is  opened  and  prior  to  effecting  each  transaction  requested  by
telephone.  In addition, all telephone transaction requests will be recorded and
investors may be required to provide additional telecopied written  instructions
of  such transaction requests. The Fund or the Transfer Agent may be responsible
for  losses,  liabilities,   costs  or  expenses   for  acting  upon   telephone
transactions  if procedures are  not followed to  confirm that such transactions
are genuine.
 
    For shares  that  are  held  in  broker  street  name,  you  cannot  request
redemption  by  telephone  or by  mail;  such  shares may  be  redeemed  only by
contacting your Participating Dealer. The  Fund may impose a  fee of $8.00 on  a
wire  redemption of shares of the Fund that will be deducted from the redemption
proceeds.
 
    To change the name of the  commercial bank or account designated to  receive
redemption proceeds, a written request must be sent to the Transfer Agent at the
address  above. Requests to  change the bank  or account must  be signed by each
shareholder and each signature must be guaranteed.
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN
 
    A shareholder of $5,000 or more of  the Fund's shares at the Offering  Price
(net asset value plus the sales charge, if any) may provide for the payment from
the  owner's account of any requested dollar amount to be paid to the owner or a
designated payee  monthly,  quarterly,  semiannually or  annually.  The  minimum
periodic  payment is $100.  Shares are redeemed  so that the  payee will receive
payment on approximately  the first of  the month. Any  income and capital  gain
dividends   will  be  automatically  reinvested  at   net  asset  value  on  the
reinvestment date. A  sufficient number of  full and fractional  shares will  be
redeemed to make the designated payment. Depending upon the size of the payments
requested  and  fluctuations in  the  net asset  value  of the  shares redeemed,
redemptions for the purpose of making such payments may result in a gain or loss
for tax purposes and may reduce or even exhaust the shareholder's Fund  account.
To  protect shareholders and the Funds, if the Systematic Withdrawal Plan is not
established when an  account is  opened, a  signature guarantee  is required  to
establish  a Systematic Withdrawal Plan  subsequently if withdrawal payments are
directed to an  address other  than the  address of record,  or if  a change  of
address  request has  been submitted  in the  last 30  days. See  "Redemption of
Shares" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    The purchase of Class A shares of an Investment Fund while participating  in
a  systematic withdrawal plan ordinarily will be disadvantageous to the investor
because the investor will be paying a sales charge on the purchase of shares  at
the  same time that the  investor is redeeming shares  upon which a sales charge
may already have been paid.  The purchase of certain Class  B shares or Class  C
shares  of an Investment  Fund while participating  in the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan may be disadvantageous because  the new shares will be  subject to up to  a
5.00%  CDSC for up  to six years after  purchase, or a 1.00%  CDSC for the first
year after purchase, respectively. Therefore, the Fund will not knowingly permit
additional investments of less than $2,000 in an Investment Fund if the investor
is at the  same time  making systematic withdrawals.  The right  is reserved  to
amend  the Systematic Withdrawal  Plan on thirty  days' notice. The  plan may be
terminated at any time by the investor or the Fund.
 
    The CDSC on Class  B shares is waived  for withdrawals under the  Systematic
Withdrawal Plan of a
maximum  of 1% per month, 3% per quarter,  6% semiannually or 12% annually, of a
shareholder's investment  in, and  any dividends  or distributions  on, Class  B
shares  of a Fund at the time the Systematic Withdrawal Plan commences, provided
that the  shareholder elects  to have  all dividends  and distributions  on  the
shareholder's  Class  B shares  automatically reinvested  in additional  Class B
shares. Under this CDSC waiver policy, amounts withdrawn each month will be paid
by redeeming first Class B shares not subject to a CDSC because the shares  were
purchased  by the reinvestment of dividends  or capital gains distributions, the
CDSC period has elapsed or some other waiver of the CDSC applies. If no Class  B
shares  not subject  to the CDSC  are available,  or not enough  such shares are
available, Class B shares  having a CDSC will  be redeemed next, beginning  with
such  shares held for the longest period of time (having the lowest CDSC payable
upon redemption) and continuing with shares held the next longest period of time
until shares held the shortest period  of time are redeemed. Under this  policy,
the  least amount  of CDSC  will be waived  by withdrawals  under the Systematic
Withdrawal Plan.
 
    See "Purchase of Shares" for a description of the circumstances under  which
a  CDSC on Class A shares, Class B  shares and Class C shares, respectively, may
be assessed on redemptions of such shares made through the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan as described above.
 
                                       47
<PAGE>
FURTHER REDEMPTION INFORMATION
 
    The  Fund  will  pay  for  shares  redeemed  through  broker-dealers   using
electronic  purchase and redemption systems within seven days after receipt of a
redemption request through such system.  In other situations, the Fund  normally
will  make  payment for  all  shares redeemed  under  this procedure  within one
business day of receipt  of the request,  but in no event  will payment be  made
more  than  seven days  after receipt  of  a redemption  request in  good order.
Payment for redeemed shares  will be sent to  the shareholder within seven  days
after  receipt of the request in proper form, except that the Fund may delay the
mailing of  the  redemption  check,  or a  portion  thereof,  until  the  Fund's
depository bank has made fully available for withdrawal the check amount used to
purchase  Fund shares,  which generally  will be  within 15  days. The  Fund may
suspend the right of redemption or postpone  the date at times when the NYSE  is
closed, or under any emergency circumstances as determined by the SEC.
 
    If  the Board of  Directors determines that  it would be  detrimental to the
best interests of  the remaining  shareholders of  the Investment  Fund to  make
payment  wholly or partly in  cash, the Fund may  pay the redemption proceeds in
whole or in part by a distribution-in-kind of readily marketable securities held
by the Investment Funds in lieu of  cash in conformity with applicable rules  of
the  SEC. Shareholders  may incur brokerage  charges upon the  sale of portfolio
securities so received  in payment of  redemptions. Due to  the relatively  high
cost  of maintaining  smaller accounts,  the Fund  reserves the  right to redeem
shares in any account invested in an Investment Fund having a value of less than
$1,000. The  Fund, however,  will not  redeem shares  based solely  upon  market
reductions  in net asset  value. If at  any time your  total investment does not
equal or exceed the stated minimum value,  you may be notified of this fact  and
you will be allowed at least 60 days to make an additional investment before the
redemption is processed.
 
    To  protect  your account,  the Fund  and its  agents from  fraud, signature
guarantees are required for  certain redemptions to verify  the identity of  the
person  who has  authorized a redemption  from your account.  Please contact the
Transfer Agent  for  further information.  See  "Redemption of  Shares"  in  the
Statement of Additional Information.
 
                              SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    You may exchange shares that you own in an Investment Fund for shares of the
same  class of another  Investment Fund. Shares  of the Investment  Funds may be
exchanged by  mail or  telephone, except  that  no shares  may be  exchanged  by
telephone  if you have elected  on the New Account  Application or on a separate
form supplied by the Transfer Agent  not to accept the telephone redemption  and
exchange  privilege. Before you make an exchange, you should read the Prospectus
of the new  Investment Fund in  which you  seek to invest.  Because an  exchange
transaction is treated as a redemption followed by a purchase, an exchange would
be  considered a  taxable event  for shareholders  subject to  tax. The exchange
privilege is only available with respect to Investment Funds that are registered
for sale in a  shareholder's state of residence.  The exchange privilege may  be
modified  or  terminated  by  the Fund  at  any  time upon  60  days'  notice to
shareholders.
 
    No CDSC, if one is otherwise applicable, will be assessed at the time of the
exchange if the shareholder exchanges from one class of an Investment Fund  into
the same class of another Investment Fund. For purposes of determining whether a
shareholder's  redemption will be  subject to a  CDSC, the shareholder's holding
period
 
                                       48
<PAGE>
of shares acquired  through an exchange  will be  related back to  the time  the
shareholder  initially purchased the Fund shares  that were exchanged so long as
the shares are held in  the same class of the  Investment Funds. As an  example,
Class  A share purchases  of $1,000,000 or  more, purchased at  net asset value,
will not be assessed the 1.00% CDSC if exchanged into Class A shares of  another
Investment  Fund during  the first  year after  purchase. Class  B shares  of an
Investment Fund will not be assessed the Class B CDSC if exchanged into Class  B
shares  of another  Investment Fund during  the first six  years after purchase.
Class C shares of an Investment Fund will not be subject to a CDSC for the first
year if exchanged into Class C shares of another Investment Fund. If the initial
shares of an Investment Fund purchased by  the investor were not subject to  any
sales  load or CDSC on such shares, then no sales load or CDSC for shares of the
same class will be imposed on any subsequent exchanges involving such shares. No
initial sales charge will be assessed, however, and any applicable CDSC will not
be imposed when  shares of an  Investment Fund  are exchanged for  shares of  an
Investment  Fund where the purchase of shares of the Investment Fund through the
exchange is of any of the types that benefit from a waiver of such initial sales
charge or CDSC.
 
    CLASS A SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class A shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class A shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class A shares  purchased pursuant  to such exchange  will not  be assessed  the
initial sales charges described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS  B SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender their Class B shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the  number
of Class B shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have  a value equal to the total  redemption proceeds of shares tendered divided
by the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is  received.
Class  B shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS C SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class C shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class C shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class C shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the  CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    Morgan Stanley will tender the shares offered for exchange for redemption by
the  Fund  and  will use  the  proceeds  to purchase  shares  of  the designated
Investment Fund on the shareholder's behalf. Under normal circumstances,  Morgan
Stanley will use the proceeds from shares redeemed on any day to purchase shares
on the same Business Day.
 
    Exchanges may also be subject to limitations as to amounts or frequency, and
to  other restrictions established by the Board of Directors to assure that such
exchanges do not disadvantage the Fund and its shareholders.
 
                                       49
<PAGE>
    Exchange of Fund shares held in  broker street name may not be  accomplished
by  mail or telephone as described below.  Shares held in broker street name may
be exchanged only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    In order to  exchange shares  by mail, you  should include  in the  exchange
request the name and account number of your current Investment Fund, the name of
the  Investment Fund and class of such  Fund, if applicable, from which and into
which you  intend to  exchange  shares, and  the  signatures of  all  registered
account  holders. Send the exchange request  to the Transfer Agent, Chase Global
Funds Services Company, P.O. Box 2798, Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    When exchanging shares by  telephone, have ready the  name and your  account
number of the Investment Fund, the name of the Investment Fund and class of such
Fund,  if applicable, from which  and into which you  intend to exchange shares,
your Social  Security number  or  Tax I.D.  number,  and your  account  address.
Requests  for telephone exchanges received prior to 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time) are
processed at the close of business that same day based on the net asset value of
the applicable Investment Funds at such time. Requests received after 4:00  p.m.
(Eastern  Time) are processed the next Business Day based on the net asset value
determined at the close  of business on  such day. For shares  that are held  in
broker  street name, you cannot  request exchange by telephone  or by mail; such
shares may  be  exchanged only  by  contacting your  Participating  Dealer.  For
additional   information  regarding  responsibility   for  the  authenticity  of
telephoned instructions, see "Redemption of Shares -- By Telephone" above.
 
TRANSFER OF REGISTRATION
 
    You may transfer  the registration  of any of  your Fund  shares to  another
person  by writing to  the Transfer Agent, Chase  Global Funds Services Company,
P.O. Box 2798, Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798. As in the case of  redemptions,
the  written request must be received in "good order" before any transfer can be
made. Shares held in  broker street name may  be transferred only by  contacting
your Participating Dealer.
 
                              VALUATION OF SHARES
 
    The  net asset  value per  share of  each Investment  Fund is  determined by
dividing the total fair  market value of the  Investment Fund's investments  and
other assets, less all liabilities, by the total number of outstanding shares of
the  Investment Fund. Net asset value is calculated separately for each class of
the Investment  Funds. Net  asset value  per share  of the  Investment Funds  is
determined as of the regular close of the NYSE on each day that the NYSE is open
for  business.  Securities  listed on  a  securities exchange  for  which market
quotations are available are valued at their closing price. If no closing  price
is  available, such securities will  be valued at the  last quoted sale price on
the day the valuation is made.  Price information on listed securities is  taken
from  the exchange where  the security is  primarily traded. Unlisted securities
and listed  securities  not  traded  on the  valuation  date  for  which  market
quotations  are not readily available  are valued at a  price within a range not
exceeding the  current asked  price nor  less than  the current  bid price.  The
current  bid and asked prices are determined either based on the average bid and
asked prices quoted on such valuation  date by reputable brokers or as  provided
by a reputable pricing service.
 
                                       50
<PAGE>
    Bonds and other fixed income securities are valued according to the broadest
and  most representative market,  which will ordinarily  be the over-the-counter
market. Net asset value includes interest  on fixed income securities, which  is
accrued  daily.  In addition,  bonds and  other fixed  income securities  may be
valued on the basis of prices provided by a pricing service when such prices are
believed to  reflect  the fair  market  value  of such  securities.  The  prices
provided  by a pricing service are determined without regard to bid or last sale
prices but take  into account institutional  size trading in  similar groups  of
securities  and any developments related  to the specific securities. Securities
not priced in this manner  are valued at the most  recent quoted bid price,  or,
when  stock exchange valuations are used, at the latest quoted sale price on the
day of valuation. If there is no such reported sale, the latest quoted bid price
will be used. Debt securities purchased with remaining maturities of 60 days  or
less are valued at amortized cost, if it approximates market value. In the event
that  amortized  cost  does  not  approximate  market  value,  market  prices as
determined above will be used.
 
    For the purpose of  calculating each Investment Fund's  net asset value  per
share,  certain  securities  are  valued  by  the  "amortized  cost"  method  of
valuation, which does  not take into  account unrealized gains  or losses.  This
involves  valuing an instrument  at its cost and  thereafter assuming a constant
amortization to maturity of any discount or premium, regardless of the impact of
fluctuating interest rates  on the market  value of the  instrument. While  this
method  provides certainty in  valuation, it may result  in periods during which
value, as determined by amortized cost, is  higher or lower than the price  each
Investment Fund would receive if it sold the instrument.
 
    The value of other assets and securities for which no quotations are readily
available  (including  restricted  and unlisted  foreign  securities)  and those
securities for which it is inappropriate to determine prices in accordance  with
the  above procedures are determined  in good faith at  fair value using methods
determined by the  Board of  Directors. For  purposes of  calculating net  asset
value  per  share, all  assets and  liabilities  initially expressed  in foreign
currencies will be converted into U.S. Dollars at the mean of the bid price  and
asked  price of  such currencies against  the U.S.  Dollar as quoted  by a major
bank.
 
    Although the legal rights  of Class A,  Class B and Class  C shares will  be
identical,  the different expenses borne by  each class will result in different
net asset  values and  dividends.  Dividends will  differ by  approximately  the
amount  of the distribution expense accrual  differential among the classes. The
respective net asset values of Class B shares and Class C shares will  generally
be  lower than the net asset  value of Class A shares  as a result of the larger
distribution fee charged to Class B and Class C shares.
 
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
    The Fund may  from time  to time advertise  total return  of the  Investment
Funds.  THESE FIGURES ARE BASED  ON HISTORICAL EARNINGS AND  ARE NOT INTENDED TO
INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return"  shows what an investment in  an
Investment  Fund would have earned over a specified period of time (such as one,
three, five or ten  years) assuming that all  distributions and dividends by  an
Investment  Fund were  reinvested on the  reinvestment dates  during the period.
Total return does not take into account  any federal or state income taxes  that
may be payable upon redemption by shareholders subject to tax. The Fund may also
include  comparative  performance  information in  advertising  or  marketing an
Investment Fund's shares.  Such performance  information may  include data  from
Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. and/or Morgan Stanley Capital International.
 
    From  time to time the Investment Funds may advertise "yield." Yield figures
are based on  historical performance  and are  not intended  to indicate  future
performance. The "yield" of such Investment Funds refers
 
                                       51
<PAGE>
to  the income generated by an investment  in the Investment Funds over a 30-day
period (which period will be stated  in the advertisement). The 30-day yield  is
further described under "Performance Information" in the Statement of Additional
Information. The Fund may also use comparative performance information from time
to  time  in  marketing  Fund  shares,  including  data  from  Lipper Analytical
Services, Inc. and/or Donoghue's Money Fund Report.
 
    The respective performance figures for Class B shares and Class C shares  of
each  Fund will generally  be lower than those  for Class A  shares of such Fund
because of the larger  distribution fee charged  to Class B  shares and Class  C
shares.
 
                          DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    Shareholders   will  automatically  be  credited   with  all  dividends  and
distributions in additional shares  at net asset value,  without payment of  any
initial  sales charge for Class A shares  of any of the Investment Funds, except
that, upon written notice to the Fund or by checking off the appropriate box  in
the  Distribution Option Section  on the New  Account Application, a shareholder
may elect to  receive dividends  and/or distributions in  cash. Shares  received
through  reinvestment of dividends  and/or distributions will  not be subject to
any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    Each of the Global Fixed Income, Worldwide High Income and High Yield  Funds
expects  to distribute net investment income monthly and will distribute any net
realized gains at least annually.
 
    Any undistributed  net investment  income and  undistributed realized  gains
increase  an Investment  Fund's net  assets for  the purpose  of calculating net
asset value  per share.  Therefore, on  the "ex-dividend"  or  "ex-distribution"
date, the net asset value per share excludes the dividend or distribution (i.e.,
is  reduced by the per share amount  of the dividend or distribution). Dividends
and distributions paid  shortly after  the purchase  of shares  by an  investor,
although  in effect a return of capital,  are taxable to shareholders subject to
tax.
 
    Because of  the  higher  distribution fee,  potentially  higher  shareholder
servicing  fee, and any other  expenses that may be  attributable to the Class B
shares and Class C shares of  the Investment Funds, the net income  attributable
to  and  the dividends  payable  on Class  B  shares and  Class  C shares  of an
Investment Fund  will be  lower than  the  net income  attributable to  and  the
dividends  payable on Class A  shares of the Investment  Funds. As a result, the
net asset value per share  of the classes of an  Investment Fund will differ  at
times.  Expenses  of a  Fund allocated  to a  particular class  of shares  of an
Investment Fund will be borne on a  pro rata basis by each outstanding share  of
that class.
 
                                     TAXES
 
TAX STATUS OF THE INVESTMENT FUND
 
    The following summary of certain federal income tax consequences is based on
current tax laws and regulations, which may be changed by legislative, judicial,
or  administrative  action.  See  also  the tax  sections  in  the  Statement of
Additional Information.
 
    No attempt has been made to  present a detailed explanation of the  federal,
state,  or local income tax treatment of an Investment Fund or its shareholders.
Accordingly, shareholders  are urged  to consult  their tax  advisors  regarding
specific questions as to federal, state and local income taxes.
 
                                       52
<PAGE>
    Each  Investment Fund is generally treated  as a separate entity for federal
income tax purposes,  and thus the  provisions of the  Internal Revenue Code  of
1986, as amended (the "Code"), generally will be applied to each Investment Fund
separately,  rather than to  the Fund as  a whole. Net  long-term and short-term
capital gains, net income, and  operating expenses therefore will be  determined
separately for each Investment Fund.
 
    Each  Investment  Fund  intends to  qualify  for the  special  tax treatment
afforded "regulated investment  companies" ("RICs")  under Subchapter  M of  the
Code  so that it will be relieved of federal  income tax on that part of its net
investment income and net capital gain (the excess of net long-term capital gain
over net short-term capital loss) which is distributed to its shareholders.
 
TAX STATUS OF DISTRIBUTIONS
    Each Investment Fund  distributes substantially  all of  its net  investment
income  (including,  for  this purpose,  net  short-term capital  gain),  to its
shareholders. Dividends  paid by  an  Investment Fund  from its  net  investment
income  will be taxable to the shareholders  of such Investment Fund as ordinary
income, whether received in cash or in additional shares, if the shareholder  is
subject  to tax. Such  dividends paid by  an Investment Fund  generally will not
qualify for the dividends-received deduction to corporations.
 
    Distributions of net  capital gains  (i.e., net long-term  capital gains  in
excess  of  net  short-term  capital  losses  and  any  available  capital  loss
carryforward) are taxable to  shareholders subject to  tax as long-term  capital
gains,  regardless of  how long the  shareholder has held  the Investment Fund's
shares.  Capital  gains  distributions  are  not  eligible  for  the   corporate
dividends-received  deduction. Each Investment Fund  will make annual reports to
shareholders of the Federal income tax status of all distributions.
 
    Shareholders may also be subject to  state and local taxes on  distributions
from  the Fund. Shareholders are advised to  consult their own tax advisers with
respect to tax consequences to them of an investment in the Fund.
 
    Dividends declared in October, November  and December by an Investment  Fund
payable as of a record date in such month and paid at any time during January of
the  following year are  treated as having  been paid by  an Investment Fund and
received by the shareholders on December 31 of the year declared.
 
    A sale, exchange or  redemption of shares  held as a  capital asset will  be
capital  gain or  loss and  such gain  or loss  will be  a taxable  event to the
shareholder.
 
    THE  TAX  DISCUSSION  SET  FORTH  ABOVE  IS  INCLUDED  HEREIN  FOR   GENERAL
INFORMATION  ONLY. PROSPECTIVE  INVESTORS AND SHAREHOLDERS  SHOULD CONSULT THEIR
OWN TAX ADVISERS WITH RESPECT TO THE  TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF AN  INVESTMENT
IN AN INVESTMENT FUND.
 
                              GENERAL INFORMATION
 
DESCRIPTION OF COMMON STOCK
    The  Fund was organized  as a Maryland  corporation on August  14, 1992. The
Amended Articles  of Incorporation  currently permit  the Fund  to issue  13.375
billion  shares of  common stock,  par value  $.001 per  share. Pursuant  to the
Fund's By-Laws, the  Board of Directors  may increase the  number of shares  the
Fund  is authorized  to issue  without the approval  of the  shareholders of the
Fund. The Board of Directors has the  power to designate one or more classes  of
shares  of common stock and to classify  and reclassify any unissued shares with
respect to such classes. The current Class C shares of the Investment Funds were
named Class B shares  until May 1,  1995 when such shares  were renamed Class  C
shares and thereafter new Class B shares were created.
 
                                       53
<PAGE>
    The  shares  of  the Investment  Funds,  when  issued, will  be  fully paid,
nonassessable, fully transferable and  redeemable at the  option of the  holder.
The  shares have no preference as to conversion, exchange, dividends, retirement
or other features and  have no preemptive rights.  The shares of the  Investment
Funds  have non-cumulative voting  rights, which means that  the holders of more
than 50% of the shares  voting for the election of  Directors can elect 100%  of
the  Directors if  they choose  to do so.  Under Maryland  law, the  Fund is not
required to hold an annual meeting of its shareholders unless required to do  so
under  the 1940  Act. A  Director may  be removed  by shareholders  at a special
meeting called upon written request of  shareholders owning at least 10% of  the
outstanding shares of the Fund. Any person or organization owning 25% or more of
the  outstanding shares of an  Investment Fund may be  presumed to "control" (as
that term is  defined in the  1940 Act) such  Investment Fund. As  of March  31,
1996, The Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New
York  10020, was presumed  to "control" the  Class C shares  of the Global Fixed
Income Fund based  solely on its  ownership of  25% or more  of the  outstanding
voting shares of such funds.
 
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
 
    The  Fund will send  to its shareholders annual  and semiannual reports; the
financial statements  appearing in  annual reports  are audited  by  independent
accountants.
 
    In  addition, the Fund or the Transfer  Agent, will send to each shareholder
having  an  account  directly  with  the  Fund  a  quarterly  statement  showing
transactions in the account, the total number of shares owned, and any dividends
or distributions paid. In addition, when a transaction occurs in a shareholder's
account, the Fund or the Transfer Agent will send the shareholder a confirmation
statement showing the same information.
 
CUSTODIAN
 
    As  of September 1,  1995, domestic securities  and cash are  held by Chase,
which replaced U.S.  Trust, as the  Fund's domestic custodian.  Chase is not  an
affiliate  of  the Adviser  or the  Distributor.  Morgan Stanley  Trust Company,
Brooklyn, New York ("Morgan  Stanley Trust"), acts as  the Fund's custodian  for
foreign assets held outside the United States and employs subcustodians who were
approved  by the Directors of the Fund in accordance with regulations of the SEC
for the purpose of providing custodial services for such assets. Morgan  Stanley
Trust  may also hold certain domestic assets  for the Fund. Morgan Stanley Trust
is an affiliate of the Adviser and the Distributor. For more information on  the
custodians,  see "General Information --  Custody Arrangements" in the Statement
of Additional Information.
 
DIVIDEND DISBURSING AND TRANSFER AGENT
 
    Chase  Global   Funds  Services   Company,   73  Tremont   Street,   Boston,
Massachusetts 02108-3913, acts as Dividend Disbursing and Transfer Agent for the
Fund.
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
    Price  Waterhouse  LLP, 1177  Avenue of  the Americas,  New York,  NY 10036,
serves as independent accountants for the  Fund and audits its annual  financial
statements.
 
                                       54
<PAGE>
                                   APPENDIX A
                     DESCRIPTION OF CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
 
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    Aaa  -- Bonds which  are rated Aaa are  judged to be  the best quality. They
carry the smallest degree  of investment risk and  are generally referred to  as
"gilt-edge."  Interest payments are protected by  a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin, and principal  is secure. While  the various protective  elements
are  likely to change,  such changes as  can be visualized  are most unlikely to
impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
 
    Aa -- Bonds  which are  rated Aa are  judged to  be of high  quality by  all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high  grade bonds. They are  rated lower than the  best bonds because margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements may be  of greater  amplitude or there  may be  other elements  present
which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.
 
    Moody's  applies  numerical modifiers  1, 2  and 3  in the  Aa and  A rating
categories. The modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks at a higher end  of
the  rating category, modifier 2 indicates a mid-range rating and the modifier 3
indicates that the issue ranks at the lower end of the rating category.
 
    A -- Bonds which  are rated A possess  many favorable investment  attributes
and  are  to be  considered as  upper medium  grade obligations.  Factors giving
security to principal and interest are  considered adequate but elements may  be
present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.
 
    Baa -- Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium grade obligations,
i.e.,  they are neither  highly protected nor  poorly secured. Interest payments
and principal security appear  adequate for the  present but certain  protective
elements  may be lacking or may  be characteristically unreliable over any great
length of time. Such  bonds lack outstanding  investment characteristics and  in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.
 
    Ba  -- Bonds  which are  rated Ba are  judged to  have speculative elements;
their future  cannot be  considered as  well assured.  Often the  protection  of
interest  and  principal payments  may be  very moderate,  and thereby  not well
safeguarded during  both good  and bad  times over  the future.  Uncertainty  of
position characterizes bonds in this class.
 
    B -- Bonds which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest  and principal payments  or of maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
 
    Caa -- Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal  or
interest.
 
    Ca  -- Bonds which are rated  Ca represent obligations which are speculative
in a  high  degree. Such  issues  are often  in  default or  have  other  marked
shortcomings.
 
    C -- Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues
so  rated can be regarded  as having extremely poor  prospects of ever attaining
any real investment standing.
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    AAA -- Bonds rated AAA have the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's
to a debt obligation and indicate an extremely strong capacity to pay  principal
and interest.
 
    AA  -- Bonds rated AA have a very  strong capacity to pay interest and repay
principal and differ from the highest rated issues only to a small degree.
 
    A --  Bonds  rated A  have  a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and  repay
principal  although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in  circumstances and  economic conditions  than bonds  in higher  rated
categories.
 
    BBB  -- Debt  rated BBB is  regarded as  having an adequate  capacity to pay
interest and repay principal. Whereas  it normally exhibits adequate  protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions or  changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a  weakened capacity to pay  interest and repay principal  for
debt in this category than for debt in higher rated categories.
 
    BB,  B, CCC, CC -- Debt rated BB, B,  CCC and CC is regarded, on balance, as
predominantly speculative with  respect to  capacity to pay  interest and  repay
principal  in  accordance with  the terms  of the  obligation. BB  indicates the
lowest degree of  speculation and CC  the highest degree  of speculation.  While
such  debt will likely  have some quality  and protective characteristics, these
are outweighed  by  large  uncertainties  or major  risk  exposures  to  adverse
conditions.
 
    C -- The rating C is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is being
paid.
 
    D -- Debt rated D is in default, and payment of interest and/or repayment of
principal is in arrears.
 
                                      A-2
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
          GLOBAL FIXED INCOME, WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME AND HIGH YIELD FUNDS
            P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MA 02208-2798 (800-282-4404)      NEW ACCOUNT
APPLICATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              ACCOUNT REGISTRATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    / /  Individual    / /  Joint Tenants    / /  Trust    / /  Gift/Transfer to
Minor                       / /  Other____________________
 
NOTE:  Joint  tenant  registration  will  be as  "joint  tenants  with  right of
survivorship"  and  not   as  "tenants  in   common"  unless  specified.   Trust
registrations  should specify  name of the  trust, trustee(s), beneficiary(ies),
and date of trust instrument. Registration for Uniform Gifts/Transfers to Minors
should be in the name of one custodian and one minor and include the state under
which the custodianship  is created  (using the minor's  Social Security  Number
("SSN")).  For an Individual Retirement  Account ("IRA") a different application
is required.  Please  call Chase  Global  Funds Services  Company  ("CGFSC")  at
800-282-4404 or your investment dealer to obtain the IRA application.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
- ---------------------------------------------    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name(s) (PLEASE PRINT)                           Social Security Number(s) or Taxpayer Identification Number(s) ("TIN(s)")
 
- ---------------------------------------------    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name                                             Telephone Number
 
- ---------------------------------------------
Address
 
- ---------------------------------------------    / /  U.S. Citizen         / /  Other (specify citizenship) --------------------
City/State/Zip
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSOLIDATED  MAILINGS: If you  or your family members  own multiple accounts in
the Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc.,  you can  prevent  duplicate mailings  to  your
address by completing this section.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                                 NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 FUND SELECTION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The  minimum initial and subsequent investment is $1,000 and $100, respectively,
except for IRAs, for which the  minimum amounts are $250 and $50,  respectively.
Attach a check payable to MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC. -- Investment Fund name.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>
Morgan Stanley Global Fixed                    Class A (601)   $           Class B (626)   $           Class C (651)   $
 Income Fund                                                   ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Worldwide High                  Class A (604)   $           Class B (629)   $           Class C (654)   $
 Income Fund                                                   ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley High Yield                      Class A (607)   $           Class B (631)   $           Class C (657)   $
 Fund                                                          ----------                  ----------                  ----------
                                                                           Total Initial Investment:                           $
                                                                           ----------------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                          <C>
 
NOTE: IF INVESTING BY WIRE, YOU MUST OBTAIN A A.  By Mail: Enclosed is a check in the amount of $
BANK WIRE CONTROL NUMBER. TO DO SO, PLEASE   ----------------------- payable to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
CALL 800-282-4404.                           B.  By Wire: A bank wire in the amount of $
                                             ----------------------- has been sent to Morgan Stanley Fund,
                                             Inc.from -------------------------------------------
                                             -------------------------------------------
                                                 Control Number Name of Bank                              Wire
</TABLE>
 
CAPITAL   GAIN  AND  DIVIDEND  DISTRIBUTIONS:  All  capital  gain  and  dividend
distributions will be reinvested in additional  shares of the same class  unless
appropriate boxes below are checked:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                             <C>               <C>
All Dividends are to be                         / /  reinvested   / /  paid in cash
All Capital Gains are to be                     / /  reinvested   / /  paid in cash
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               ACCOUNT PRIVILEGES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE AND REDEMPTION                                 AUTHORITY  TO TRANSMIT  REDEMPTION PROCEEDS  TO PRE-DESIGNATED
You will automatically have telephone exchange and  redemption    ACCOUNT.
privileges for yourself and your investment dealer and appoint    I/We  hereby authorize CGFSC to act upon instructions received
CGFSC to act as your  agent to act upon instructions  received    by telephone to withdraw $1,000 or more from my/our account in
by  telephone in  order to  effect such  privileges unless you    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. and wire the amount withdrawn to the
mark one or more of the boxes below:                              following commercial bank account. I/ We understand that CGFSC
                                                                  charges an $8.00 fee for  each wire redemption, which will  be
                                                                  deducted from the proceeds of the redemption.
                No, I/we do not want:                             Title on Bank Account
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------------
 
                    /   /     telephone   exchange  privileges    Name of Bank
                    /  /    telephone  redemption   privileges    -------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Bank  A.B.A.  Number  -----------------        Account  Number
                                                                  -----------------
      for myself/ourselves or my/our investment dealer.
                                                                  City/State/Zip
                                                                  ------------------------------------------------------------
I/We further acknowledge that  it is my/our responsibility  to
read  the Prospectus  of any  Investment Fund  into which I/we
exchange.
Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. will mail redemption proceeds to the
name and address  in which my/our  fund account is  registered                      ATTACH A VOIDED CHECK HERE
unless  I check the following box and complete the information
at right.  / /
A corporation or partnership must also submit a "Corporate Resolution" or "Certificate of Partnership" indicating the names  and
titles of officers authorized to act on its behalf.
The  Fund and the Fund's Transfer Agent will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by telephone
are genuine. These procedures include requiring the investor to provide certain personal identification information at the  time
an  account is opened  and prior to  effecting each transaction requested  by telephone. In  addition, all telephone transaction
requests will be recorded and investors  may be required to provide  additional telecopying written instructions of  transaction
requests.  Neither the Fund nor the Transfer  Agent will be responsible for any  loss, liability, cost or expenses for following
instructions received by telephone that it reasonably believes to be genuine.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Fund shareholders together with  members of their families,  may be entitled  to
reduced sales charges with respect to their purchases of Class A shares of Funds
of  Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc.  sold with  an  initial sales  load ("Investment
Funds"). You may also receive a reduced sales charge by completing the Letter of
Intent as set forth below  as provided in the  Prospectus of the Morgan  Stanley
Fund, Inc. (the "Prospectus"). See the Prospectus for details.
 
To  qualify,  you  must complete  this  section,  listing all  of  your accounts
including those in your spouse's name, joint accounts and accounts held for your
minor children. If you need more space, please attach a separate sheet.
 
I/We qualify  for  the Rights  of  Accumulation initial  sales  charge  discount
described  in the Prospectus  and Statement of  Additional Information of Morgan
Stanley Fund, Inc.
/ /  I/We own Class A shares of more than one Investment Fund of Morgan  Stanley
     Fund, Inc.
/ /  The  registration of some of my/our Class  A shares differs from that shown
     on this  application.  Listed below  are  the account  number(s)  and  full
     registration(s) in each case.
 
LIST OF OTHER ACCOUNTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                   NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          LETTER OF INTENT (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/we agree to the Letter of Intent Conditions on the last page of this
application.
I/we  intend to invest,  within a 13-month  period beginning on  the date hereof
(initial purchase  date) in  Class A  shares of  the Investment  Fund  purchased
hereunder  and the  other Investment Fund,  an aggregate  amount which, together
with the value of Class  A shares of any of  the Investment Funds then owned  by
me/us, will equal or exceed the amount indicated below:
 
      / /  $100,000     / /  $250,000     / /  $500,000     / /  $1,000,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN (OPTIONAL)   / /  Yes   / /  No     Not Available for
IRAs
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Available to shareholders with account balances of $5,000 or more.
I/We  hereby  authorize CGFSC  to  redeem the  necessary  number of  shares from
my/our Morgan Stanley  Fund, Inc. Account  on the designated  dates in order  to
make the following periodic payments:
 
     / /  Monthly     / /  Quarterly     / /  Semiannually     / /  Annually
 
(This  request  for  participation in  the  Systematic Withdrawal  Plan  must be
received by the 18th day  of the month in which  you wish withdrawals to  begin.
Redemptions  of shares to make the payments elected above will occur on the 25th
day of the month prior to  payment, or if such day  is not a business day,  then
the next preceding business day.)
 
Withdrawal ($100 minimum) from:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                          Amount of
Fund Name                                                                                                 Each Check         Or
 
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>                 <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
                                                                 Recipient
Please make check payable to:                                    ---------------------------------------------------------
 (to be completed only if redemption proceeds to be              Street Address ---------------------------------------------------
 paid to other than account holder of record or                  City, State, Zip Code
 mailed to address other than address of record)
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------
 
*With the systematic withdrawal plan, a maximum of 12% per year may be withdrawn from Class B accounts without being
 subject to a CDSC.
 
<CAPTION>
Fund Name                                                 %*
<S>                                                   <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
Please make check payable to:
 (to be completed only if redemption proceeds to be
 paid to other than account holder of record or
 mailed to address other than address of record)
*With the systematic withdrawal plan, a maximum of 1
 subject to a CDSC.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/We  hereby authorize  CGFSC to debit  my/our personal checking  account on the
designated dates in order to purchase shares in the Funds indicated below at the
applicable public offering price determined on that day.
 
         / /  Monthly on the 5th day        / /  Monthly on the 20th day
 
Amount of each debit (minimum $100) to be invested as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund Name
 
<S>                                       <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE:  A  completed Bank Authorization  Form (see below)  and a voided  personal
check MUST accompany this Automatic Investment Plan application.
 
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN--BANK AUTHORIZATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>                                         <C>
- -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------
Bank Name                                   Bank Address                                Bank Account Number
</TABLE>
 
I/We  authorize you, the above  named bank, to debit  my/our account for amounts
drawn by Chase  Global Funds Services  Company, acting as  my/our agent for  the
purchase  of Shares of Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc. I/We agree that your rights in
respect to each withdrawal shall  be the same as if  it were a check drawn  upon
you  and signed by me/us. This authority shall remain in effect until revoked in
writing and received by you. I/We agree  that you shall incur no liability  when
honoring debits, except a loss due to payments drawn against insufficient funds.
I/We  further agree that you  will incur no liability to  me if you dishonor any
such withdrawal.  This will  be so  even  though such  dishonor results  in  the
cancellation of that purchase.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------   ---------------------------------------------------------------
Account Holder's Name                                             Joint Account Holder's Name
 
X -----------------------------------------      -------------    X -----------------------------------------      -------------
                       Signature                       Date       Signature                       Date
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           AGREEMENTS AND SIGNATURES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
By signing this application, I/we hereby certify under penalties of perjury that
the information on this application is complete and correct and that as required
by federal law:
 
/ /  I/We  certify that (1)  the number(s) shown  above on this  form is/are the
     correct SSN(s)  or  TIN(s) and  (2)  I/we are  not  subject to  any  backup
     withholding  either because  I/we have  not been  notified by  the Internal
     Revenue Service ("IRS") that I/we are subject to backup withholding, or the
     IRS has  notified  me/us that  I  am/we are  no  longer subject  to  backup
     withholding.  (NOTE: IF ANY  OR ALL OF  CLAUSE (2) IS  NOT TRUE, STRIKE OUT
     THAT PART BEFORE SIGNING).
 
/ /  If no TIN(s) or SSN(s) has/have been provided above, I/we have applied,  or
     intend to apply, to the IRS or the Social Security Administration for a TIN
     or  a SSN, and I/we understand that if I/we do not provide either number to
     CGFSC within 60 days  of the date  of this application or  if I/we fail  to
     furnish  my/our correct SSN or TIN, I/we may  be subject to a penalty and a
     31% backup withholding  on distributions and  redemption proceeds.  (Please
     provide  either  number on  IRS Form  W-9).  You may  request such  form by
     calling CGFSC at 800-282-4404.
 
I/We represent that I am/we are of legal age and capacity to purchase shares  of
the Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. I/We understand that unless otherwise indicated in
this  application, my/our investment dealer  and I/we will automatically receive
telephone exchange and redemption privileges and that Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc.
and CGFSC and their directors, officers and employees will not be liable for any
loss,  liability, cost or expense incurred for acting upon instructions believed
to be  authentic  and  in  accordance  with the  procedures  set  forth  in  the
Prospectus. I/We have received, read and carefully reviewed a copy of the Fund's
current  Prospectus and agree to its terms and by signing below I/we acknowledge
that neither the Fund nor the Distributor is a bank and that Fund shares are not
backed or guaranteed by any bank or insured by the FDIC.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                  <C>
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
</TABLE>
 
Sign exactly as name(s) of registered owner(s) appear(s) above (including  legal
title if signing for a corporation, trust custodial account, etc.)
 
NOTE: THE FOLLOWING SECTION SHOULD BE COMPLETED ONLY IF YOU ARE INVESTING IN THE
      MORGAN  STANLEY FUND, INC.  THROUGH A PARTICIPATING  DEALER (AN INVESTMENT
      DEALER).
 
FOR USE BY AUTHORIZED AGENT (PARTICIPATING DEALER) ONLY
 
We hereby submit this application for the purchase of shares in accordance  with
the  terms of our selling  agreement with Morgan Stanley  & Co. Incorporated and
with the Prospectus  and Statement  of Additional  Information of  the Fund.  We
agree to notify CGFSC of any purchases made under the Letter of Intent or Rights
of Accumulation.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                       <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Investment Dealer's Name                                  Representative's Name
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Number                                             Representative's Telephone Number
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Address
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
City/State/Zip Code
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Telephone Number                                   Investment Dealer's Authorized Signature
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
 
  NO  DEALER, SALES  REPRESENTATIVE OR ANY  OTHER PERSON HAS  BEEN AUTHORIZED TO
GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS, OTHER THAN THOSE  CONTAINED
IN THIS PROSPECTUS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFER MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF
GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH OTHER INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON
AS  HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE FUND  OR THE DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES
NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER BY THE FUND OR THE DISTRIBUTOR TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION
OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY OF  THE SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY IN ANY JURISDICTION  TO
ANY  PERSON TO WHOM  IT IS UNLAWFUL TO  MAKE SUCH OFFER  OR SOLICITATION IN SUCH
JURISDICTION.
 
                           --------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                   <C>
                                                                      PAGE
                                                                      -----
Fund Expenses.........................................................    2
Financial Highlights..................................................    6
Prospectus Summary....................................................    9
Investment Objectives and Policies....................................   12
Additional Investment Information.....................................   21
Investment Limitations................................................   31
Management of the Fund................................................   32
Portfolio Transactions................................................   36
Purchase of Shares....................................................   37
Redemption of Shares..................................................   45
Shareholder Services..................................................   48
Valuation of Shares...................................................   50
Performance Information...............................................   51
Dividends and Distributions...........................................   52
Taxes.................................................................   52
General Information...................................................   53
Appendix A............................................................  A-1
New Account Application
</TABLE>
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                                HIGH YIELD FUND
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                                   FUND, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
                               ($.001 PAR VALUE)
 
                                ---------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                                ---------------
 
                               INVESTMENT ADVISER
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             ASSET MANAGEMENT INC.
 
                                  DISTRIBUTOR
 
                              MORGAN STANLEY & CO.
 
                                  INCORPORATED
 
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              P R O S P E C T U S
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                       MORGAN STANLEY AMERICAN VALUE FUND
                     MORGAN STANLEY AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                      MORGAN STANLEY U.S. REAL ESTATE FUND
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                           MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02208-2798
                      FOR INFORMATION CALL 1-800-282-4404
                               ------------------
 
    Morgan  Stanley Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end management investment
company,  or   mutual  fund,   which  consists   of  fifteen   diversified   and
non-diversified   investment  portfolios.  This  prospectus  (the  "Prospectus")
describes the  Class A,  Class B  and Class  C shares  of the  three  investment
portfolios  listed  above (each,  an "Investment  Fund").  (The current  Class C
shares were named Class B shares until May 1, 1995 when such shares were renamed
Class C shares  and thereafter new  Class B  shares were created).  The Fund  is
designed  to make available to retail  investors the expertise of Morgan Stanley
Asset Management  Inc., the  Investment Adviser  and Administrator.  Shares  are
available  through  Morgan Stanley  & Co.  Incorporated ("Morgan  Stanley"), the
Distributor, and investment  dealers, banks  and financial  services firms  that
provide  distribution,  administrative or  shareholder  services ("Participating
Dealers").
 
    The Investment  Funds  are subject  to  certain special  risk  factors.  For
information about these risk factors, see "Prospectus Summary -- Risk Factors."
 
    INVESTORS  SHOULD NOTE THAT EACH INVESTMENT FUND MAY INVEST UP TO 15% OF ITS
NET ASSETS IN ILLIQUID ASSETS, INCLUDING RESTRICTED SECURITIES (OTHER THAN  RULE
144A  SECURITIES THAT ARE  DETERMINED TO BE  LIQUID). SEE "ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT
INFORMATION -- NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED
SECURITIES." INVESTMENTS  IN  RESTRICTED  SECURITIES  IN  EXCESS  OF  5%  OF  AN
INVESTMENT  FUND'S TOTAL  ASSETS MAY BE  CONSIDERED A  SPECULATIVE ACTIVITY, MAY
INVOLVE GREATER RISK AND MAY INCREASE THE INVESTMENT FUND'S EXPENSES.
 
    INVESTMENTS IN THE INVESTMENT  FUNDS ARE NEITHER  INSURED NOR GUARANTEED  BY
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
 
    This Prospectus is designed to set forth concisely the information about the
Investment Funds that a prospective investor should know before investing and it
should  be retained for future reference.  The Fund offers additional portfolios
which are described in other prospectuses and under "Prospectus Summary"  below.
The Fund currently offers the following portfolios: (i) GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY  -- Morgan Stanley Global Equity Allocation, Morgan Stanley Asian Growth,
Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets, Morgan  Stanley Latin American, Morgan  Stanley
International  Magnum, Morgan Stanley Japanese Equity, Morgan Stanley Growth and
Income and Morgan  Stanley European  Equity Funds;  (ii) U.S.  EQUITY --  Morgan
Stanley American Value, Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity and Morgan Stanley U.S.
Real  Estate Funds; and (iii) GLOBAL FIXED INCOME -- Morgan Stanley Global Fixed
Income, Morgan  Stanley Worldwide  High  Income and  Morgan Stanley  High  Yield
Funds;  and (iv)  MONEY MARKET --  Morgan Stanley Money  Market Fund. Additional
information  about  the  Fund  is  contained  in  a  "Statement  of   Additional
Information,"  dated May 1, 1996, which is incorporated herein by reference. The
Statement of Additional Information and the prospectuses pertaining to the other
portfolios of the Fund are available upon request and without charge by  writing
or calling the Fund at the address and telephone number set forth above.
 
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.
 
                  THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS MAY 1, 1996.
<PAGE>
                                 FUND EXPENSES
 
    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
an Investment Fund may incur:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              U.S.
                                                                 AGGRESSIVE   REAL
                                                     AMERICAN     EQUITY     ESTATE
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES                    VALUE FUND     FUND       FUND
- --------------------------------------------------  ----------   --------   --------
<S>                                                 <C>          <C>        <C>
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases
    Class A.......................................   4.75%(1)    4.75%(1)   4.75%(1)
    Class B.......................................     None        None       None
    Class C.......................................     None        None       None
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested Dividends
    Class A.......................................     None        None       None
    Class B.......................................     None        None       None
    Class C.......................................     None        None       None
Deferred Sales Load
  For Purchases up to $999,999
    Class A.......................................     None        None       None
    Class B.......................................   5.00%(2)    5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)
    Class C.......................................   1.00%(3)    1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)
  For Purchases of $1,000,000 or more
    Class A.......................................   1.00%(1)    1.00%(1)   1.00%(1)
    Class B.......................................   5.00%(2)    5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)
    Class C.......................................   1.00%(3)    1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)
Redemption Fees (4)
    Class A.......................................     None        None       None
    Class B.......................................     None        None       None
    Class C.......................................     None        None       None
Exchange Fees
    Class A.......................................     None        None       None
    Class B.......................................     None        None       None
    Class C.......................................     None        None       None
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(1) Percentage shown is the maximum sales  load. Certain large purchases may  be
    subject  to  a  reduced sales  load.  Purchases  of Class  A  shares  of the
    Investment Funds  which, when  combined  with the  net  asset value  of  the
    purchaser's  existing investment in Class A shares of these Funds, aggregate
    $1 million  or more  are not  subject to  a sales  load (an  "initial  sales
    charge").  A  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC")  of 1.00%  will be
    imposed, however, on shares from any such purchase that are redeemed  within
    one  year  following  such purchase.  Any  such  CDSC will  be  paid  to the
    Distributor. Certain other  purchases are  not subject to  an initial  sales
    charge. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
(2) Percentage  shown is the  maximum CDSC. Purchases  of Class B  shares of the
    Investment Funds are subject to a  maximum CDSC of 5.00% which decreases  in
    steps to 0% after six years. See "Purchase of Class B Shares." Any such CDSC
    will be paid to the Distributor.
 
(3) Purchases of Class C shares of the Investment Funds are subject to a CDSC of
    1.00%  for redemptions made within one year  of purchase. Any such CDSC will
    be paid to the Distributor.
 
(4) A charge of  $8.00 may be  imposed on redemptions  by wire which  is not  an
    expense of the Fund.
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          U.S.
                                               AMERICAN     AGGRESSIVE    REAL
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES                   VALUE       EQUITY      ESTATE
(AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)          FUND         FUND        FUND
                                               ---------    ---------    -------
Investment Advisory Fee (after expense
 reimbursement and/or fee waiver) (5)
<S>                                            <C>          <C>          <C>
    Class A..................................     0.39%          0.50%      0.70%
    Class B..................................     0.39%          0.50%      0.70%
    Class C..................................     0.39%          0.50%      0.70%
12b-1 Fees
    Class A..................................     0.25%          0.25%      0.25%
    Class B (6)..............................     1.00%          1.00%      1.00%
    Class C (6)..............................     1.00%          1.00%      1.00%
Other Expenses (after expense reimbursement
 and/or fee waiver) (5)
    Class A..................................     0.86%          0.75%      0.60%
    Class B..................................     0.86%          0.75%      0.60%
    Class C..................................     0.86%          0.75%      0.60%
Total Operating Expenses (after expense
 reimbursement and/or fee waiver) (5)
    Class A..................................     1.50%          1.50%      1.55%
    Class B..................................     2.25%          2.25%      2.30%
    Class C..................................     2.25%          2.25%      2.30%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(5) The  Adviser  has agreed  to  waive its  advisory  fees and/or  to reimburse
    expenses of the Investment Funds, if necessary, if such fees would cause the
    total annual operating expenses of the Investment Funds, as a percentage  of
    average  daily net assets, to exceed the  percentages set forth in the table
    above. The following sets  forth, for each  Investment Fund, (i)  investment
    advisory  fees absent advisory fee waivers and (ii) expected total operating
    expenses absent fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      INVESTMENT                   TOTAL
                                     ADVISORY FEES          OPERATING EXPENSES
                                     -------------   ---------------------------------
                                     (ALL CLASSES)   CLASS A    CLASS B      CLASS C
                                     -------------   -------   ----------   ----------
<S>                                  <C>             <C>       <C>          <C>
American Value Fund................      0.85%        1.96%     2.71%        2.71%
Aggressive Equity Fund.............      0.90%        1.90%     2.65%        2.65%
U.S. Real Estate Fund..............      1.00%        1.85%     2.60%        2.60%
                                          ---        -------     ---          ---
</TABLE>
 
   As a result of  these reductions, the Investment  Advisory Fees stated  above
   are  lower than contractual  fees stated under "Management  of the Fund." The
   Adviser reserves the right to terminate any of its fee waivers at any time in
   its  sole  discretion.  For  further   information  on  Fund  expenses,   see
   "Management of the Fund."
 
(6) Of  the 12b-1  fees for  the Class B  shares and  the Class  C shares, 0.75%
    represents a distribution  fee and 0.25%  represents a shareholder  services
    fee.
 
    The  purpose of the above  table is to assist  the investor in understanding
the various expenses that an investor in  any of the Investment Funds will  bear
directly  or  indirectly. The  Class A  and Class  C expenses  and fees  for the
American Value Fund is  based on actual  figures for the  period ended June  30,
1995.  The Class  A, Class B  and Class C  expenses and fees  for the Aggressive
Equity Fund and the U.S.  Real Estate Fund are based  on estimates. The Class  B
expenses  and  fees for  the American  Value  Fund are  based on  estimates. For
purposes of calculating  the estimated expenses  and fees set  forth above,  the
table  assumes  that each  Investment Fund's  average daily  net assets  will be
$50,000,000.  "Other  Expenses"  include,  among  others,  Directors'  fees  and
expenses,  amortization of organizational costs, filing fees, professional fees,
and the costs for reports to shareholders. Due to the continuous nature of  Rule
12b-1  fees,  long-term shareholders  may pay  more than  the equivalent  of the
maximum front-end  sales  charges  otherwise  permitted by  the  Rules  of  Fair
Practice of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD").
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
    The  following  example illustrates  the expenses  that you  would pay  on a
$1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual rate of return and redemption at the end
of each time period as indicated, in (i) Class A shares of each Investment Fund,
including the maximum 4.75% sales charge, (ii) Class B shares of each Investment
Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge and (iii) Class C shares of
each Investment Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                U.S.
                                                                                    AGGRESSIVE  REAL
                                                                        AMERICAN     EQUITY    ESTATE
                                                                       VALUE FUND     FUND      FUND
                                                                       ----------   --------   -------
<S>                                                                    <C>          <C>        <C>
Class A shares
 (If it is assumed there are no redemptions, the expenses are the
 same.)
    1 Year...........................................................   $ 62(1)     $  62(1)   $ 63(1)
    3 Years..........................................................     93           93        94
    5 Years..........................................................    125            *         *
    10 Years.........................................................    218            *         *
Class B shares
 (Assuming complete redemption at end of period)
    1 Year...........................................................     73           73        73
    3 Years..........................................................    100          100       102
    5 Years..........................................................    140            *         *
    10 Years.........................................................    258            *         *
(Assuming no redemption)
    1 Year...........................................................     23           23        23
    3 Years..........................................................     70           70        72
    5 Years..........................................................    120            *         *
    10 Years.........................................................    258            *         *
Class C shares
 (Whether or not complete redemption occurs at end of period)
    1 Year...........................................................     23(2)        23(2)     23(2)
    3 Years..........................................................     70           70        72
    5 Years..........................................................    120            *         *
    10 Years.........................................................    258            *         *
</TABLE>
 
- --------------
 * Because the Aggressive  Equity and  U.S. Real  Estate Funds  had just  become
   operational  as of the  date of this  Prospectus, the Fund  has not projected
   expenses beyond the three-year period shown.
 
(1) Reduced sales charges apply to purchases of $100,000 or more of the Class  A
    shares of the Investment Funds. See "Purchase of Shares." For Class A shares
    of  the Investment Funds, generally  purchases of $1 million  or more may be
    accomplished at net asset value without an initial sales charge, but may  be
    subject to a 1.00% CDSC if liquidated within one year of purchase.
 
(2) If  Class C shares of  the Investment Funds are  redeemed within one year of
    purchase, the expense figures  in the first year  increase to the  following
    amounts  for  each Investment  Fund:  American Value  Fund,  $33; Aggressive
    Equity Fund, $33 and U.S. Real Estate Fund, $33.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
    THIS EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE CONSIDERED  A REPRESENTATION OF  PAST OR  FUTURE
EXPENSES  OR  PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL  EXPENSES MAY  BE GREATER  OR LESS  THAN THOSE
SHOWN. The Adviser in its discretion may terminate voluntary fee waivers  and/or
reimbursements  at  any time.  Absent  the waiver  of  fees or  reimbursement of
expenses, the amounts in the example above would be greater.
 
    The Fund intends  to comply  with all  state laws  that restrict  investment
company  expenses. Currently, the  most restrictive state  law requires that the
aggregate annual expenses  of an  investment company  shall not  exceed two  and
one-half  percent (2 1/2%) of  the first $30 million  of average net assets, two
percent (2%) of the next $70 million of average net assets, and one and one-half
percent (1 1/2%)  of the remaining  net assets of  such investment company.  The
Adviser has agreed to a reduction in the amounts payable to it, and to reimburse
the  Investment  Funds, if  necessary,  if in  any fiscal  year  the sum  of the
Investment Funds' expenses exceeds the limit set by applicable state law.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
    The following tables provide financial highlights  for the Class A, Class  B
and  Class C shares  of the American  Value Fund and  Aggressive Equity Fund for
each of the respective periods presented. (The Class C shares were named Class B
shares until May 1,  1995). For the American  Value Fund, the audited  financial
highlights  for the period ended  June 30, 1994 and for  the year ended June 30,
1995 are part  of the Fund's  financial statements, which  appear in the  Fund's
June  30,  1995  Annual  Report to  Shareholders,  and  the  unaudited financial
highlights for  the  period ended  December  31, 1995  are  part of  the  Fund's
unaudited  financial statements,  which appear in  the Fund's  December 31, 1995
Semi-Annual Report to Shareholders.  Both of such  financial statements and  the
unaudited  financial statements  for the Aggressive  Equity Fund  for the period
ended March  31,  1996  are  included in  the  Fund's  Statement  of  Additional
Information.  The American Value Fund's financial  highlights for the year ended
June 30, 1995 have  been audited by Price  Waterhouse LLP, whose report  thereon
(which  was  unqualified)  is  also  included  in  the  Statement  of Additional
Information. The Aggressive  Equity Fund's financial  highlights for the  period
ended March 31, 1996 are unaudited. Additional performance information about the
American  Value Fund is  contained in the Annual  Report and Semi-Annual Report.
The Annual Report,  Semi-Annual Report  and the  financial statements  contained
therein, along with the Statement of Additional Information, are available at no
cost  from the Funds at the address and telephone number noted on the cover page
of this Prospectus. The  Aggressive Equity and U.S.  Real Estate Funds were  not
operational  as  of the  date of  the Annual  Report or  as of  the date  of the
Semi-Annual Report. The following information should be read in conjunction with
the financial statements and notes thereto.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   CLASS B+
                                                           CLASS A                             ----------------
                                   --------------------------------------------------------    AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED           TO
                                     OCTOBER 18,                             DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND             1993*             YEAR ENDED             1995                1995
 RATIOS                            TO JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)
- --------------------------------   ----------------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          12.00    $          11.70    $          12.89    $          13.37
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income.........               0.17                0.27                0.13                0.06
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)..................              (0.30)               1.44                0.81                0.34
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
  Total from Investment
   Operations...................              (0.13)               1.71                0.94                0.40
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income.........              (0.17)              (0.28)              (0.13)              (0.08)
  Net Realized Gain.............                 --               (0.24)              (0.19)              (0.19)
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
  Total Distributions...........              (0.17)              (0.52)              (0.32)              (0.27)
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          11.70    $          12.89    $          13.51    $          13.50
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
TOTAL RETURN (1)................              (1.12)%             15.01%               7.28%               3.02%
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
                                            -------             -------             -------              ------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s).........................   $         10,717    $         20,675    $         23,975    $          1,467
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets(2)......................               1.50%**             1.50%               1.50%**             2.25%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets(2).......               2.14%**             2.29%               1.90%**             1.15%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate.........                 17%                 23%                 15%                 15%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income............   $           0.08    $           0.05    $           0.02    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets.......................               2.48%**             1.96%               1.79%**             2.54%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets...........               1.16%**             1.83%               1.61%**             0.86%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                           CLASS C
                                                  (CLASS B UNTIL MAY 1, 1995
                                   --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                     OCTOBER 18,                             DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND             1993*             YEAR ENDED             1995
 RATIOS                            TO JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
- --------------------------------   ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          12.00    $          11.69    $          12.89
                                             ------             -------             -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income.........               0.11                0.17                0.07
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)..................              (0.31)               1.44                0.81
                                             ------             -------             -------
  Total from Investment
   Operations...................              (0.20)               1.61                0.88
                                             ------             -------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income.........              (0.11)              (0.17)              (0.08)
  Net Realized Gain.............                 --               (0.24)              (0.19)
                                             ------             -------             -------
  Total Distributions...........              (0.11)              (0.41)              (0.27)
                                             ------             -------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD.........................   $          11.69    $          12.89    $          13.50
                                             ------             -------             -------
                                             ------             -------             -------
TOTAL RETURN (1)................              (1.70)%             14.13%               6.83%
                                             ------             -------             -------
                                             ------             -------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s).........................   $          7,237    $         13,867    $         18,033
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets(2)......................               2.25%**             2.25%               2.25%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets(2).......               1.39%**             1.54%               1.15%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate.........                 17%                 23%                 15%
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income............   $           0.08    $           0.05    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets.......................               3.28%**             2.71%               2.54%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets...........               0.36%**             1.08%               0.86%**
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  *  Commencement of operations
 
 **  Annualized
 
  + The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995.  Class
    B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
 (1) Total  Return is  calculated exclusive of  sales charges  or deferred sales
     charges.
 
 (2) Under the  terms  of  an  Investment Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser  is
     entitled to receive an investment advisory fee calculated at an annual rate
     of  0.85% of the average  daily net assets of  the American Value Fund. The
     Adviser has  agreed  to waive  a  portion of  this  fee and/  or  reimburse
     expenses  of the  Investment Fund  to the  extent that  the total operating
     expenses of  the Investment  Fund exceed  1.50% of  the average  daily  net
     assets  relating to the Class  A shares and 2.25%  of the average daily net
     assets relating to the  Class C shares. For  the fiscal periods ended  June
     30,  1994, June 30, 1995 and December 31, 1995, the Adviser waived advisory
     fees and/or reimbursed expenses  totaling approximately $102,000,  $110,000
     and $59,000, respectively, for the American Value Fund.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                             AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       CLASS A            CLASS B            CLASS C
                                   ---------------    ---------------    ---------------
                                     JANUARY 2,         JANUARY 2,         JANUARY 2,
                                      1996* TO           1996* TO           1996* TO
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND        MARCH 31, 1996     MARCH 31, 1996     MARCH 31, 1996
 RATIOS                              (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------------    ---------------    ---------------    ---------------
<S>                                <C>                <C>                <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD........................    $         12.00    $         12.00    $         12.00
                                           -------             ------            -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income........               0.06               0.05               0.04
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain........................               1.20               1.20               1.20
                                           -------             ------            -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations..................               1.26               1.25               1.24
                                           -------             ------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income........              (0.03)             (0.02)             (0.02)
 
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD........................    $         13.23    $         13.23    $         13.22
                                           -------             ------            -------
                                           -------             ------            -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)................              10.50%             10.42%             10.33%
                                           -------             ------            -------
                                           -------             ------            -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)........................    $         2,714    $         1,906    $         2,107
Ratio of Expenses to Average
 Net Assets....................               1.50%**            2.25%**            2.25%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets.........               1.85%**            1.10%**            1.10%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate........                 95%                95%                95%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
 Per Share Benefit to Net
 Investment Income.............    $          0.02    $          0.02    $          0.02
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets......................               2.23%**            2.98%**            2.98%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets..........               1.12%**            0.37%**            0.37%**
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  *  Commencement of operations.
 
 **  Annualized.
 
 (1)  Total  return is calculated  exclusive of sales  charges or deferred sales
      charges. Total  returns  for  periods  of  less  than  one  year  are  not
      annualized.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
THE FUND
 
    The  Fund  currently consists  of  fifteen investment  portfolios  which are
designed to offer investors  a range of investment  choices with Morgan  Stanley
providing  services as  Adviser, Administrator and  Distributor. Each investment
portfolio has its  own investment objective  and policies designed  to meet  its
specific  goals. The investment  objective of each  Investment Fund described in
this Prospectus is as follows:
 
    - The AMERICAN VALUE FUND seeks high long-term total return by investing  in
      undervalued equity securities of small- to medium-sized corporations.
 
    - The  AGGRESSIVE  EQUITY  FUND  seeks  capital  appreciation  by  investing
      primarily  in  a  non-diversified   portfolio  of  corporate  equity   and
      equity-linked securities.
 
    - The  U.S. REAL ESTATE  FUND seeks to  provide above-average current income
      and long-term  capital  appreciation  by  investing  primarily  in  equity
      securities  of companies in the U.S.  real estate industry, including real
      estate investment trusts.
 
    The  other  investment  portfolios  of  the  Fund  are  described  in  other
prospectuses  which may be obtained  from the Fund at  the address and telephone
number noted on the cover page of this Prospectus. The objectives of these other
investment portfolios are listed below:
 
GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUNDS:
 
    - The GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation  by
      investing  in equity securities of U.S. and non-U.S. issuers in accordance
      with country weightings determined by the Adviser and with stock selection
      within each country designed to replicate a broad market index.
 
    - The ASIAN GROWTH  FUND seeks long-term  capital appreciation by  investing
      primarily in equity securities of Asian issuers, excluding Japan.
 
    - The   EMERGING  MARKETS  FUND  seeks  long-term  capital  appreciation  by
      investing primarily in equity securities of emerging country issuers.
 
    - The LATIN AMERICAN FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by  investing
      primarily  in equity securities of Latin American issuers and investing in
      debt securities  issued or  guaranteed by  Latin American  governments  or
      governmental entities.
 
    - The  INTERNATIONAL  MAGNUM FUND  seeks  long-term capital  appreciation by
      investing primarily in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers in accordance
      with EAFE  country  (as defined  in  "Investment Objective  and  Policies"
      below) weightings determined by the Adviser.
 
    - The JAPANESE EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Japanese issuers.
 
    - The EUROPEAN EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of European issuers.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    - The  GROWTH AND INCOME FUND seeks  capital appreciation and current income
      by investing primarily in equity and equity-linked securities.
 
GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUNDS:
 
    - The GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND seeks  to produce an attractive real rate  of
      return while preserving capital by investing in fixed income securities of
      issuers throughout the world, including U.S. issuers.
 
    - The  WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND seeks  high current income consistent with
      relative stability of principal and, secondarily, capital appreciation, by
      investing  primarily  in  a  portfolio  of  high  yielding  fixed   income
      securities of issuers throughout the world.
 
    - The  HIGH YIELD  FUND seeks  to maximize  total return  by investing  in a
      diversified portfolio of high yield  fixed income securities that offer  a
      yield  above  that generally  available on  debt  securities in  the three
      highest rating categories of the recognized rating services.
 
MONEY MARKET FUND:
 
    - The MONEY  MARKET  FUND seeks  to  maximize current  income  and  preserve
      capital  while maintaining high  levels of liquidity  through investing in
      high quality money  market instruments  with remaining  maturities of  397
      days or less.
 
    The  Growth and Income, European Equity and Money Market Funds are currently
not being offered.
 
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
 
    Morgan   Stanley   Asset   Management   Inc.   (the   "Adviser"   and    the
"Administrator"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group Inc., which,
together with its affiliated asset management companies, had approximately $51.4
billion  in assets under management  as an investment manager  or as a fiduciary
adviser at December 31, 1995, acts as investment adviser to the Fund and each of
its Investment Funds. See "Management of the Fund -- Investment Adviser" and "--
Administrator."
 
RISK FACTORS
 
    The investment policies  of each  Investment Fund entail  certain risks  and
considerations  of which  an investor  should be  aware. The  American Value and
Aggressive Equity Funds may invest in securities of foreign issuers.  Securities
of  foreign issuers are  subject to certain risks  not typically associated with
domestic securities, including, among other risks, changes in currency rates and
in exchange control  regulations, costs in  connection with conversions  between
various  currencies,  limited publicly  available information  regarding foreign
issuers, lack of uniformity in accounting, auditing and financial standards  and
requirements,  potential price volatility and  lesser liquidity of shares traded
on securities markets, less government supervision and regulation of  securities
markets,   changes  in  taxes   on  income  on   securities,  possible  seizure,
nationalization or expropriation of the foreign issuer or foreign deposits,  the
risk  of war  and potentially  greater difficulty in  obtaining a  judgment in a
court outside the U.S. The American Value and Aggressive Equity Funds invest  in
small-  to  medium-sized corporations,  which are  more vulnerable  to financial
risks and other  risks than  larger corporations,  and therefore  may involve  a
higher degree of risk and price volatility than investments in the securities of
larger  corporations. In addition, each Investment Fund may invest in repurchase
agreements, borrow money, lend its portfolio
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
securities, and purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery  basis.
The  American Value  and Aggressive Equity  Funds may invest  in forward foreign
currency exchange contracts, and the American  Value Fund may invest in  foreign
currency  exchange futures and  options, to hedge  the currency risks associated
with investment in non-U.S. dollar denominated securities. The Aggressive Equity
Fund may  invest  in  PERCS,  ELKS,  LYONs  and  similar  securities  which  are
convertible  upon various terms  and conditions into  equity securities. Because
the U.S.  Real Estate  Fund invests  primarily in  the securities  of  companies
principally  engaged in the real estate industry, its investments may be subject
to the risks associated with the direct ownership of real estate. The U.S.  Real
Estate  Fund's share price and investment  return fluctuate, and a shareholder's
investment when  redeemed may  be worth  more or  less than  his original  cost.
Because  it is expected that the U.S. Real Estate Fund will invest a substantial
portion of its assets in real estate investment trusts ("REITs"), the Investment
Fund may also be subject to certain risks associated with the direct investments
of REITs. Because the U.S. Real Estate Fund is a non-diversified portfolio,  the
Portfolio  the Investment Fund may invest a  greater proportion of its assets in
the securities of a smaller number of issuers and, as a result, will be  subject
to  a  greater risk  with respect  to  its portfolio  securities. Each  of these
investment  strategies  involves  specific  risks  which  are  described   under
"Investment  Objectives  and Policies"  and "Additional  Investment Information"
herein and  under  "Investment Objectives  and  Policies" in  the  Statement  of
Additional  Information. See "Investment  Limitations" for a  description of the
risks associated with the non-diversified status of the Aggressive Equity Fund.
 
HOW TO INVEST
 
    The Class A, Class B and Class C shares of the Investment Funds are designed
to provide investors a choice of three  ways to pay distribution costs. Class  A
shares  of the Investment Funds  are offered at net  asset value plus an initial
sales charge of  up to 4.75%  in graduated percentages  based on the  investor's
aggregate  investments in the Investment Funds. Shares of the Class B shares and
Class C shares of the Investment Funds  are offered at net asset value. Class  B
shares   are  subject  to  a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  ("CDSC")  for
redemptions   within   six   years   and   are   subject   to   higher    annual
distribution-related  expenses  than  the Class  A  shares. Class  C  shares are
subject to a  CDSC for redemptions  within one  year and are  subject to  higher
annual  distribution-related expenses than  the Class A  shares. Share purchases
may be made through Morgan Stanley, through Participating Dealers or by  sending
payments  directly to  the Transfer  Agent on  behalf of  the Fund.  The minimum
initial investment is $1,000 for each  Investment Fund, except that the  minimum
initial  investment amount for individual  retirement accounts ("IRAs") is $250.
The minimum for  subsequent investments  is $100,  except that  the minimum  for
subsequent  investments for IRAs  is $50 and  there is no  minimum for automatic
reinvestment of dividends and distributions. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
HOW TO REDEEM
 
    Shares of each Investment Fund may be redeemed at any time at the net  asset
value  per share  of the  Investment Fund next  determined after  receipt of the
redemption request. The redemption price may  be more or less than the  purchase
price.  A Class A shareholder  of an Investment Fund who  did not pay an initial
sales charge due to the size of the purchase and redeems shares within one  year
of  purchase will be  subject to a  CDSC of 1.00%  on the lesser  of the current
market value of the shares  redeemed or the total  cost of such shares.  Certain
Class  B shares that are redeemed within six  years of purchase are subject to a
maximum CDSC of 5.00% which  decreases in steps to  0% after six years.  Certain
Class   C   shares   that   are   redeemed   within   one   year   of   purchase
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
are subject to  a CDSC  of 1.00%. The  CDSC in  each case is  applicable to  the
lesser  of the current market value of the  shares redeemed or the total cost of
such shares. In determining whether either of such CDSCs is payable, and, if so,
the amount of the charge, it is  assumed that shares not subject to such  charge
are  the first redeemed followed by other  shares held for the longest period of
time. If  a  shareholder  reduces  his/her total  investment  in  shares  of  an
Investment  Fund to less  than $1,000, the  entire investment may  be subject to
involuntary redemption. See "Redemption of Shares."
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
 
    The investment  objectives  of each  Investment  Fund are  described  below,
together  with the  policies the  Fund employs in  its efforts  to achieve these
objectives.  Each  Investment  Fund's  investment  objectives  are   fundamental
policies  which may not be changed by an Investment Fund without the approval of
a majority of the Investment Fund's  outstanding voting securities. There is  no
assurance  that an  Investment Fund will  attain its  objectives. The investment
policies described below are not fundamental policies and may be changed without
shareholder approval.
 
THE AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
    The American  Value Fund's  investment objective  is to  provide high  total
return  by investing in equity securities of small- to medium-sized corporations
that the Adviser  believes to  be undervalued relative  to the  stock market  in
general  at  the time  of  purchase. The  Investment  Fund invests  primarily in
corporations domiciled in the United  States with equity market  capitalizations
which  range generally from $70  million up to $1 billion,  but may from time to
time invest in  similar size foreign  corporations. Under normal  circumstances,
the Investment Fund will invest at least 65% of the value of its total assets in
equity securities of corporations whose equity market capitalization is up to $1
billion.  The Investment  Fund may invest  up to 35%  of the value  of its total
assets in equity securities of corporations which are generally smaller than the
500 largest corporations in  the United States. With  respect to the  Investment
Fund,  equity  securities  include  common  and  preferred  stocks,  convertible
securities, and  rights and  warrants  to purchase  common stocks,  and  similar
equity  interests,  such as  trusts  or partnership  interests.  Debt securities
convertible into common  stocks will be  investment grade (rated  in one of  the
four highest rating categories by a NRSRO) or, if unrated, will be of comparable
quality  as determined  by the  Adviser under  the supervision  of the  Board of
Directors. These investments  may or may  not carry voting  rights. The  Adviser
invests  with the philosophy that a diversified portfolio of undervalued, small-
to medium-sized companies will provide high total return in the long run.
 
    Companies considered attractive will have the following characteristics:
 
    1. Stocks  will most  often  have yields  distinctly  above the  average  of
companies with similar capitalizations.
 
    2.  The market  prices of  the stocks  will be  undervalued relative  to the
normal earning power of the companies.
 
    3. Stock  prices  will  be  low  relative to  the  intrinsic  value  of  the
companies' assets.
 
    4.  Stocks will be of high quality,  in the Adviser's judgment, as evaluated
by the  companies' balance  sheets, income  statements, franchises  and  product
competitiveness.
 
    The  thrust of  this approach  is to  seek investments  in stocks  for which
investor enthusiasm is currently low, as reflected in their valuation, but which
have the financial and  fundamental features which,  according to the  Adviser's
assessment,  will  allow the  stocks  to achieve  a  higher valuation.  Value is
achieved and exposure  is reduced for  the Investment Fund  when the  investment
community's  perceptions  improve  and  the  stocks  approach  what  the Adviser
believes is fair valuation. The Investment Fund will invest in equity securities
of
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
smaller capitalized companies, which are more vulnerable to financial and  other
risks  than larger companies. Investment in  securities of smaller companies may
involve a  higher degree  of risk  and price  volatility than  in securities  of
larger companies.
 
    The  Adviser takes a long-term approach by  placing a strong emphasis on its
ability to identify attractive values. The Adviser does not intend to respond to
short-term market  fluctuations or  to  acquire securities  for the  purpose  of
short-term  trading. The Adviser may take advantage of short-term opportunities,
however, that  are consistent  with  its objective  of  high total  return.  The
Investment  Fund will maintain diversity among industries and does not expect to
invest more than 25%  of its total assets  in the stocks of  issuers in any  one
industry.
 
    For temporary defensive purposes, the Investment Fund may invest part or all
of  its total assets in cash or in short-term securities, including certificates
of deposit, commercial  paper, notes,  obligations issued or  guaranteed by  the
U.S.  Government or  any of  its agencies  or instrumentalities,  and repurchase
agreements involving such government securities.
 
    The Investment Fund  invests primarily in  small- to medium-sized  companies
domiciled  in the United States.  The Investment Fund may,  to a limited extent,
invest in  non-publicly traded  securities,  private placements  and  restricted
securities.  See  "Additional  Investment  Information  --  Non-Publicly  Traded
Securities, Private Placements and  Restricted Securities." The Investment  Fund
may  on occasion invest in equity securities  of foreign issuers that trade on a
United States exchange or  over-the-counter in the  form of American  Depositary
Receipts or common stocks. See "Additional Investment Information."
 
    Any  remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described above
may be  invested  in certain  securities  or obligations,  including  derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
 
    The  Aggressive  Equity Fund's  investment objective  is to  provide capital
appreciation by investing primarily in a non-diversified portfolio of  corporate
equity and equity-linked securities. With respect to the Investment Fund, equity
and  equity-linked securities  include common  and preferred  stock, convertible
securities, rights and warrants to purchase common stock, options, futures,  and
specialty  securities, such as ELKS,  LYONs and PERCS of  U.S., and to a limited
extent, as described below, foreign issuers. As a non-diversified portfolio, the
Investment Fund can be more heavily weighted in fewer stocks than a  diversified
portfolio.   See  "Investment  Limitations."  Under  normal  circumstances,  the
Investment Fund will invest  at least 65%  of the value of  its total assets  in
equity and equity-linked securities.
 
    The Adviser employs a flexible and eclectic investment process in pursuit of
the  Investment  Fund's investment  objective. In  selecting securities  for the
Investment Fund, the Adviser concentrates on a universe of rapidly growing, high
quality companies and lower, but  accelerating, earnings growth situations.  The
Adviser's  universe of potential investments  generally comprises companies with
market capitalizations of $500 million or more but smaller market capitalization
securities may  be purchased  from time  to  time. The  Investment Fund  is  not
restricted  to investments  in specific  markets sectors.  The Adviser  uses its
research capabilities,  analytical resources  and judgment  to assess  economic,
industry    and    market    trends,    as    well    as    individual   company
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
developments, to  select  promising investments  for  the Investment  Fund.  The
Adviser  concentrates on  companies with  strong, communicative  managements and
clearly defined  strategies  for growth.  In  addition, the  Adviser  rigorously
assesses  earnings  results.  The  Adviser seeks  companies  which  will deliver
surprisingly strong earnings growth. Valuation is of secondary importance to the
Adviser and  is viewed  in the  context of  prospects for  sustainable  earnings
growth  and  the  potential  for  positive  earnings  surprises  in  relation to
consensus expectations. The Investment Fund is  free to invest in any equity  or
equity-linked  security that, in the  Adviser's judgment, provides above-average
potential for capital appreciation.
 
    The Investment Fund  may from time  to time and  consistent with  applicable
legal  requirements sell securities short that it owns (i.e., "against the box")
or borrows. See "Additional Investment Information".
 
    In selecting investments  for the  Investment Fund,  the Adviser  emphasizes
individual   security  selection.  Overweighted   sector  positions  and  issuer
positions may result from the investment process. See "Investment  Limitations."
The Investment Fund has a long-term investment perspective; however, the Adviser
may  take advantage  of short-term  opportunities that  are consistent  with the
Investment Fund's objective by selling recently purchased securities which  have
increased in value.
 
    The  Investment Fund  may invest in  equity and  equity-linked securities of
domestic and foreign corporations. However, the Investment Fund does not  expect
to  invest  more  than 25%  of  its total  assets  at  the time  of  purchase in
securities of foreign companies. The Investment Fund may invest in securities of
foreign issuers directly or in the form of ADRs. Investors should recognize that
investing in foreign companies involves certain special considerations which are
not typically  associated  with investing  in  U.S. companies.  See  "Additional
Investment Information" herein and "Investment Objective and Policies -- Forward
Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    The  Investment Fund  is authorized  to borrow  up to  33 1/3%  of its total
assets (including the  amount borrowed), less  all liabilities and  indebtedness
other  than the borrowing,  for investment purposes  to increase the opportunity
for  greater  return  and  for  payment  of  dividends.  Such  borrowings  would
constitute  leverage,  which is  a  speculative characteristic.  Leveraging will
magnify declines as well as increases in  the net asset value of the  Investment
Fund's  shares  and  in the  yield  on  the Investment  Fund's  investments. See
"Additional Investment Information -- Borrowing and Other Forms of Leverage."
 
    The Investment Fund may, to a limited extent, invest in non-publicly  traded
securities,  private  placements  and  restricted  securities.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and
Restricted Securities."
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may  be  invested in  certain  securities or  obligations,  including derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION FOR THE AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
 
    The Aggressive Equity Fund has identical investment objectives and  policies
and  substantially similar  investment restrictions  as those  of the Aggressive
Equity Portfolio (the "Portfolio") of  Morgan Stanley Institutional Fund,  Inc.,
an  investment portfolio  currently managed by  the Adviser. Set  forth below is
representative
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
performance data which an investor may  find relevant in considering whether  to
invest  in the Aggressive  Equity Fund. The performance  data is not necessarily
indicative of the future performance of the Aggressive Equity Fund. Although the
Adviser expects  that the  Aggressive  Equity Fund  initially will  be  somewhat
smaller  in  asset size  to the  Portfolio, it  anticipates that  the Aggressive
Equity Fund will be comparable in asset size to the Portfolio before the end  of
the  Aggressive Equity Fund's first full year  of operation and will continue to
grow in size thereafter. (Investment in the Portfolio is subject to considerably
larger minimum investments and account sizes, with certain exceptions.)
 
    The Portfolio incurred expenses during the periods shown that are  different
from  the  estimated  advisory,  administrative  and  other  fees  to  which the
Aggressive Equity Fund will be  subject. Accordingly, the following  performance
information  has been adjusted by applying  the anticipated total expense ratios
for the Aggressive Equity Fund rather than the total expense ratios  experienced
by  the Portfolio. The data set forth below under the heading "Return With Sales
Charge" is  adjusted, (i)  with respect  to the  Class A  shares, to  take  into
account  a 4.75% sales charge  applicable to purchases of  Class A shares of the
Aggressive Equity  Fund, (ii)  with respect  to  Class B  shares, to  take  into
account  a 5.00%  contingent deferred  sales charge that  is imposed  if Class B
shares are redeemed within one year of their purchase and (iii) with respect  to
the  Class C  shares, to  take into  account a  1.00% contingent  deferred sales
charge that is imposed if Class C  shares are redeemed within one year of  their
purchase.  The  data set  forth below  under the  heading "Return  Without Sales
Charge"  is  not  adjusted  to  take  into  account  such  sales  charges.   See
"Performance Information" below and in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
                TOTAL RETURN FOR THE AGGRESSIVE EQUITY PORTFOLIO
                   FROM INCEPTION ON 3/18/95 THROUGH 12/31/95
        (ADJUSTED TO REFLECT ESTIMATED AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND EXPENSES)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
RETURN WITH                                                                             SINCE
SALES CHARGE                                                                          INCEPTION
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------
<S>                                                                                  <C>
Class A (of 4.75%).................................................................       36.00%
Class B (of 5.00%).................................................................       35.75%
Class C (of 1.00%).................................................................       39.75%
 
<CAPTION>
 
RETURN WITHOUT
SALES CHARGE
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                  <C>
Class A............................................................................       40.75%
Class B............................................................................       40.00%
Class C............................................................................       40.00%
</TABLE>
 
    The  past  performance  of  the  Portfolio is  no  guarantee  of  the future
performance of the Investment Fund.
 
THE U.S. REAL ESTATE FUND
 
    The investment objective of the Investment Fund is to provide above  average
current  income  and long-term  capital appreciation  by investing  primarily in
equity  securities   of   companies   in  the   U.S.   real   estate   industry,
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
including  real estate  investment trusts  ("REITs"). Equity  securities include
common stocks,  shares  or  units  of  beneficial  interest  of  REITs,  limited
partnership  interests  in master  limited partnerships,  rights or  warrants to
purchase common stocks, securities convertible into common stocks, and preferred
stock.
 
    Under normal  circumstances, at  least 65%  of the  Investment Fund's  total
assets  will  be invested  in income  producing  equity securities  of companies
principally engaged  in the  U.S.  real estate  industry.  For purposes  of  the
Investment Fund's investment policies, a company is "principally engaged" in the
real  estate industry if, as determined by  the Adviser, (i) it derives at least
50% of its  revenues or  profits from the  ownership, construction,  management,
financing  or sale of residential, commercial  or industrial real estate or (ii)
it has  at  least 50%  of  the  fair market  value  of its  assets  invested  in
residential,  commercial or industrial real estate. Companies in the real estate
industry may  include  among others:  REITs,  master limited  partnerships  that
invest  in  interests  in  real estate,  real  estate  operating  companies, and
companies with  substantial  real  estate holdings,  such  as  hotel  companies,
residential  builders  and land-rich  companies.  The Investment  Fund  seeks to
invest in equity  securities of  companies that  provide a  dividend yield  that
exceeds  the composite  dividend yield of  securities comprising  the Standard &
Poor's Stock Price Index ("S&P 500").
 
    A substantial portion of the Investment Fund's total assets will be invested
in securities of REITs. REITs pool investors' funds for investment primarily  in
income  producing real estate or real estate  related loans or interests. A REIT
is not taxed  on income  distributed to its  shareholders or  unitholders if  it
complies  with regulatory requirements relating  to its organization, ownership,
assets and income, and with a  regulatory requirement that it distribute to  its
shareholders  or unitholders at least 95% of its taxable income for each taxable
year. Generally, REITs  can be  classified as  Equity REITs,  Mortgage REITs  or
Hybrid  REITs. Equity REITs invest the majority of their assets directly in real
property and derive  their income primarily  from rents and  capital gains  from
appreciation   realized  through  property  sales.   Equity  REITs  are  further
categorized according to  the types of  real estate securities  they own,  e.g.,
apartment properties, retail shopping centers, office and industrial properties,
hotels,  health-care facilities, manufactured  housing and mixed-property types.
Mortgage REITs invest the majority of their assets in real estate mortgages  and
derive  their income primarily from interest  payments. Hybrid REITs combine the
characteristics of  both Equity  and Mortgage  REITs. The  Investment Fund  will
invest  primarily in Equity  REITs. A shareholder in  the Investment Fund should
realize that by investing  in REITs indirectly through  the Investment Fund,  he
will  bear not only  his proportionate share  of the expenses  of the Investment
Fund, but also indirectly, the management expenses of underlying REITs.
 
    Under normal circumstances, the Investment Fund may invest up to 35% of  its
total assets in debt securities issued or guaranteed by real estate companies or
secured by real estate assets and rated, at time of purchase, in one of the four
highest   rating  categories  by  a  nationally  recognized  statistical  rating
organization ("NRSRO") or determined by the Adviser to be of comparable  quality
at  the time of purchase, high quality  money market instruments, such as notes,
certificates of deposit or  bankers' acceptances issued  by domestic or  foreign
insures,  or high-grade debt securities, consisting of corporate debt securities
and United States Government securities. Securities rated in the lowest category
of investment  grade  securities have  speculative  characteristics.  Investment
grade securities are securities that are rated in one of the four highest rating
categories by an NRSRO.
 
    Any  remaining assets  not invested  as described  above may  be invested in
certain securities or obligations, including derivative securities, as set forth
in   "Additional   Investment   Information"   below.   The   Investment    Fund
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
may  concentrate in the U.S. real estate  industry, but may not invest more than
25% of its total  assets in securities  of companies in  any one other  industry
(for  these purposes the U.S. Government  and its agencies and instrumentalities
are not considered an industry).
 
    RISK FACTORS RELATING TO U.S. REAL ESTATE PORTFOLIO. The investment policies
of the  Investment Fund  entail certain  risks and  considerations of  which  an
investor  should be aware. Because the  Investment Fund invests primarily in the
securities of companies  principally engaged  in the real  estate industry,  its
investments  may be subject to the risks associated with the direct ownership of
real estate. These  risks include: the  cyclical nature of  real estate  values,
risks  related  to  general  and  local  economic  conditions,  overbuilding and
increased competition,  increases  in  property taxes  and  operating  expenses,
demographic  trends and  variations in  rental income,  changes in  zoning laws,
casualty or condemnation losses, environmental risks, regulatory limitations  on
rents,  changes  in neighborhood  values, related  party  risks, changes  in the
appeal of properties  to tenants,  increases in  interest rates  and other  real
estate  capital market influences.  Generally, increases in  interest rates will
increase the costs of obtaining  financing, which could directly and  indirectly
decrease  the value of the Investment  Fund's investments. The Investment Fund's
share price and investment return fluctuate, and a shareholder's investment when
redeemed may be worth more or less than his original cost.
 
    Because the Investment Fund may invest  a substantial portion of its  assets
in  REITs, the Investment Fund  may also be subject  to certain risks associated
with the direct investments of  REITs. REITs may be  affected by changes in  the
value  of their underlying  properties and by defaults  by borrowers or tenants.
Mortgage  REITs  may  be  affected  by  the  quality  of  the  credit  extended.
Furthermore,  REITs are dependent  on specialized management  skills. Some REITs
may have  limited  diversification and  may  be  subject to  risks  inherent  in
investments  in a limited number of properties,  in a narrow geographic area, or
in a single property type. REITs  depend generally on their ability to  generate
cash  flow  to make  distributions to  shareholders or  unitholders, and  may be
subject to  defaults by  borrowers and  to self-liquidations.  In addition,  the
performance  of a REIT  may be affected  by its failure  to qualify for tax-free
pass-through of income under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended  (the
"Code"),  or  its  failure to  maintain  exemption from  registration  under the
Investment Company  Act  of  1940,  as amended  (the  "1940  Act").  Changes  in
prevailing  interest rates may inversely affect the value of the debt securities
in which the  Investment Fund  will invest. Changes  in the  value of  portfolio
securities will not necessarily affect cash income derived from these securities
but will affect the Investment Fund's net asset value.
 
    Because  the Investment Fund is a non-diversified portfolio, the Fund is not
limited by the 1940 Act in the proportion of its assets that may be invested  in
the  obligations of  a single  issuer. Thus,  the Investment  Fund may  invest a
greater proportion  of its  assets in  the  securities of  a smaller  number  of
issuers  and, as a result, will be subject to a greater risk with respect to its
portfolio  securities.  Any  economic,  political,  or  regulatory  developments
affecting  the value of  the securities the  Investment Fund holds  could have a
greater impact on the total value  of the Investment Fund's holdings than  would
be  the case  if the  Investment Fund's  securities were  diversified among more
issuers.  The   Investment   Fund,  however,   intends   to  comply   with   the
diversification  requirements  imposed  by  the  Code  for  qualification  as  a
regulated investment company. See "Taxes" and "Investment Limitations."
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
                       ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION
 
BORROWING AND OTHER FORMS OF LEVERAGE
 
    The Aggressive Equity  Fund is  authorized to  borrow money  from banks  and
other  entities  in  an amount  equal  to up  to  33  1/3% of  its  total assets
(including the amount  borrowed), less  all liabilities  and indebtedness  other
than  the borrowing, and  may use the  proceeds of the  borrowing for investment
purposes or to pay dividends. Borrowing creates leverage which is a  speculative
characteristic. Although the Investment Fund is authorized to borrow, it will do
so  only when  the Adviser believes  that borrowing will  benefit the Investment
Fund after taking into account considerations such as the costs of borrowing and
the likely  investment returns  on securities  purchased with  borrowed  monies.
Borrowing  by the Investment Fund will  create the opportunity for increased net
income but,  at  the  same  time,  will  involve  special  risk  considerations.
Leveraging  resulting from borrowing will magnify  declines as well as increases
in the Investment Fund's net asset value per share and net yield.
 
    The Investment Fund  expects that all  of its  borrowing will be  made on  a
secured  basis. The Investment Fund's Custodian will either segregate the assets
securing the borrowing for  the benefit of the  lenders or arrangements will  be
made  with  a suitable  sub-custodian. If  assets used  to secure  the borrowing
decrease in value,  the Investment  Fund may  be required  to pledge  additional
collateral  to the lender in the form of cash or securities to avoid liquidation
of those assets.
 
    The Investment Fund may also  enter into reverse repurchase agreements.  See
"Additional Investment Information -- Reverse Repurchase Agreements" below.
 
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES, WARRANTS AND EQUITY-LINKED SECURITIES
 
    The  Aggressive Equity Fund may  invest in convertible securities, preferred
stock, warrants or other securities exchangeable under certain circumstances for
shares of common stock. Warrants are  instruments giving holders the right,  but
not  the  obligation, to  buy shares  of a  company  at a  given price  during a
specified period.
 
    The  Aggressive  Equity  Fund   may  invest  in  equity-linked   securities,
including,  among others,  PERCS, ELKS or  LYONs, which are  securities that are
convertible into, or  the value  of which  is based  upon the  value of,  equity
securities upon certain terms and conditions. The amount received by an investor
at  maturity of such  securities is not fixed  but is based on  the price of the
underlying common stock. It  is impossible to predict  whether the price of  the
underlying  common stock  will rise  or fall.  Trading prices  of the underlying
common stock will be influenced by the issuer's operational results, by complex,
interrelated political,  economic,  financial  or other  factors  affecting  the
capital  markets, the  stock exchanges on  which the underlying  common stock is
traded and the market segment of which the issuer is a part. In addition, it  is
not possible to predict how equity-linked securities will trade in the secondary
market  which is fairly developed and liquid. The market for such securities may
be  shallow,  however,  and  high  volume  trades  may  be  possible  only  with
discounting.  In addition to the foregoing  risks, the return on such securities
depends on the creditworthiness  of the issuer of  the securities, which may  be
the  issuer of the underlying  securities or a third  party investment banker or
other lender. The creditworthiness of  such third party issuer of  equity-linked
securities may, and often does, exceed the creditworthiness of the issuer of the
underlying   securities.  The   advantage  of   using  equity-linked  securities
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
over traditional  equity and  debt  securities is  that  the former  are  income
producing  vehicles that may provide a higher income than the dividend income on
the underlying  equity  securities  while allowing  some  participation  in  the
capital  appreciation of the underlying  equity securities. Another advantage of
using equity-linked securities is  that they may be  used for hedging to  reduce
the  risk  of  investing  in  the  generally  more  volatile  underlying  equity
securities.
 
    The following are three examples of equity-linked securities. The Investment
Fund may invest in the securities described below or other similar equity-linked
securities.
 
    PERCS.  Preferred Equity  Redemption Cumulative Stock ("PERCS")  technically
is  preferred  stock  with  some  characteristics  of  common  stock.  PERCS are
mandatory convertible into common  stock after a period  of time, usually  three
years,  during which  the investors' capital  gains are capped,  usually at 30%.
Commonly, PERCS may be  redeemed by the  issuer at any time  or if the  issuer's
common  stock is trading  at a specified  price level or  better. The redemption
price starts at the beginning  of the PERCS duration period  at a price that  is
above  the cap by the amount of the extra dividends the PERCS holder is entitled
to receive relative  to the  common stock  over the  duration of  the PERCS  and
declines  to the cap price shortly before maturity of the PERCS. In exchange for
having the cap on capital gains and  giving the issuer the option to redeem  the
PERCS  at any time or at the  specified common stock price level, the Investment
Fund may be compensated with a substantially higher dividend yield than that  on
the underlying common stock.
 
    ELKS.     Equity-Linked  Securities  ("ELKS")   differ  from  ordinary  debt
securities, in that the principal amount  received at maturity is not fixed  but
is  based on the  price of the  issuer's common stock.  ELKS are debt securities
commonly issued in  fully registered form  for a  term of three  years under  an
indenture  trust. At maturity, the holder of  ELKS will be entitled to receive a
principal amount equal to the lesser of  a cap amount, commonly in the range  of
30%  to 55% greater than the current price  of the issuer's common stock, or the
average closing  price  per share  of  the  issuer's common  stock,  subject  to
adjustment  as a  result of  certain dilution  events, for  the 10  trading days
immediately prior to maturity.  Unlike PERCS, ELKS are  commonly not subject  to
redemption  prior to maturity. ELKS usually  bear interest during the three-year
term at a substantially  higher rate than the  dividend yield on the  underlying
common  stock. In exchange for having the cap on the return that might have been
received as capital gains  on the underlying common  stock, the Investment  Fund
may  be compensated with the higher yield, contingent on how well the underlying
common stock does.
 
    LYONS.   Liquid  Yield Option  Notes  ("LYONs") differ  from  ordinary  debt
securities,  in that the amount  received prior to maturity  is not fixed but is
based on the  price of the  issuer's common stock.  LYONs are zero-coupon  notes
that  sell at a large discount from face  value. For an investment in LYONs, the
Investment Fund will not receive any  interest payments until the notes  mature,
typically in 15 to 20 years, when the notes are redeemed at face, or par, value.
The  yield on LYONs, typically, is lower-than-market rate for debt securities of
the same maturity, due in part to  the fact that the LYONs are convertible  into
common stock of the issuer at any time at the option of the holder of the LYONs.
Commonly,  the LYONs are redeemable  by the issuer at  any time after an initial
period or if the issuer's common stock is trading at a specified price level  or
better,  or,  at  the  option  of the  holder,  upon  certain  fixed  dates. The
redemption price  typically is  the purchase  price of  the LYONs  plus  accrued
original  issue  discount  to  the  date of  redemption,  which  amounts  to the
lower-than-market yield. The
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
Investment Fund  will  receive  only  the  lower-than-market  yield  unless  the
underlying  common stock  increases in  value at  a substantial  rate. LYONs are
attractive to investors,  like the Investment  Fund, when it  appears that  they
will increase in value due to the rise in value of the underlying common stock.
 
DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS
 
    The  American Value  and Aggressive Equity  Funds may on  occasion invest in
American Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs"). The  Aggressive  Equity Fund  may  also
invest  in  other  Depositary  Receipts,  including  Global  Depositary Receipts
("GDRs"), European Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs") and  other Depositary  Receipts
(which, together with ADRs, GDRs and EDRs, are hereinafter collectively referred
to as "Depositary Receipts"), to the extent that such Depositary Receipts become
available. ADRs are securities, typically issued by a U.S. financial institution
(a  "depositary"), that evidence ownership interests in  a security or a pool of
securities issued by a  foreign issuer (the  "underlying issuer") and  deposited
with the depositary. ADRs include American Depositary Shares and New York Shares
and  may be "sponsored" or "unsponsored." Sponsored ADRs are established jointly
by a  depositary and  the underlying  issuer, whereas  unsponsored ADRs  may  be
established  by  a depositary  without participation  by the  underlying issuer.
GDRs, EDRs  and other  types  of Depositary  Receipts  are typically  issued  by
foreign depositories, although they may also be issued by U.S. depositories, and
evidence  ownership  interests in  a security  or pool  of securities  issued by
either a foreign or a U.S. corporation.
 
    Holders of  unsponsored Depositary  Receipts generally  bear all  the  costs
associated  with establishing the unsponsored Depositary Receipt. The depositary
of an  unsponsored  Depositary Receipt  is  under no  obligation  to  distribute
shareholder  communications  received  from  the underlying  issuer  or  to pass
through to the holders of the unsponsored Depositary Receipt voting rights  with
respect  to the deposited securities or  pool of securities. Depositary Receipts
are  not  necessarily  denominated  in  the  same  currency  as  the  underlying
securities  to which  they may be  connected. Generally,  Depositary Receipts in
registered form  are  designed  for  use  in  the  U.S.  securities  market  and
Depositary  Receipts in bearer  form are designed for  use in securities markets
outside the U.S. The  Investment Funds may invest  in sponsored and  unsponsored
Depositary  Receipts. For purposes of the Investment Fund's investment policies,
the Investment Fund's investments  in Depositary Receipts will  be deemed to  be
investments in the underlying securities.
 
DERIVATIVES
 
    Certain  of  the  Investment  Funds may  invest  in  derivatives,  which are
financial products or instruments that derive  their value from the value of  an
underlying  asset,  reference  rate  or index.  The  following  are derivatives:
forward foreign currency  exchange contracts,  options (e.g.,  puts and  calls),
futures   contracts,  options  on  futures  contracts,  convertible  securities,
warrants, equity-linked  securities (e.g.,  PERCS, ELKS  and LYONS),  structured
securities, when-issued and delayed delivery securities and depositary receipts.
See   elsewhere  in   this  "Additional  Investment   Information"  section  for
descriptions of these  various instruments, and  see "Investment Objectives  and
Policies"  for more information regarding any investment policies or limitations
applicable to their use.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY HEDGING TRANSACTIONS
 
    The American  Value  and Aggressive  Equity  Funds may  enter  into  forward
foreign  currency  exchange contracts  ("forward contracts").  Forward contracts
provide for the purchase or sale of an amount of a specified foreign currency at
a future date. Purposes for which such contracts may be used include  protecting
against a
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
decline in a foreign currency against the U.S. dollar between the trade date and
settlement  date when such Investment Funds purchase or sell securities, locking
in the  U.S.  dollar value  of  dividends declared  on  securities held  by  the
Investment  Fund and  generally protecting the  U.S. dollar  value of securities
held by  the Investment  Fund  against exchange  rate fluctuations.  While  such
forward  contracts  may limit  losses  to the  Investment  Fund as  a  result of
exchange rate fluctuations, they  will also limit any  exchange rate gains  that
might otherwise have been realized. The American Value Fund will enter into such
contracts  only to protect against the  effects of fluctuating rates of currency
exchange and exchange control regulations.
 
    The American  Value Fund  may attempt  to accomplish  objectives similar  to
those described above with respect to forward contracts for currency by means of
purchasing  put or call options on foreign currencies on exchanges. A put option
gives such Investment Fund the  right to sell a  currency at the exercise  price
until  the expiration of the option. A call option gives the Investment Fund the
right to purchase a currency at the  exercise price until the expiration of  the
option.
 
    The  Custodian of the American Value  and Aggressive Equity Funds will place
cash, U.S. government securities,  or liquid high-grade  debt securities into  a
segregated account of an Investment Fund in an amount equal to the value of such
Investment  Fund's total assets committed to the consummation of forward foreign
currency exchange  contracts. If  the  value of  the  securities placed  in  the
segregated account declines, additional cash or securities will be placed in the
account on a daily basis so that the value of the account will be at least equal
to  the  amount  of such  Investment  Fund's  commitments with  respect  to such
contracts. See "Investment Objectives and  Policies -- Forward Foreign  Currency
Exchange Contracts" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
 
    The  American Value and Aggressive Equity  Funds may invest in securities of
foreign issuers.  Investment in  securities of  foreign issuers,  especially  in
securities of issuers in emerging countries, and in foreign branches of domestic
banks   involves  somewhat  different  investment  risks  from  those  affecting
securities of U.S. issuers. There may be limited publicly available  information
with  respect to foreign issuers, and  foreign issuers are not generally subject
to uniform accounting, auditing, and financial and other reporting standards and
requirements comparable to  those applicable to  domestic companies.  Therefore,
disclosure  of certain material information may not be made and less information
may be available to investors investing in foreign countries than in the  United
States.  There may also be less government supervision and regulation of foreign
securities exchanges, brokers and  listed companies than  in the United  States.
Many  foreign  securities markets  have  substantially less  volume  than United
States national securities exchanges, and securities of some foreign issuers are
less  liquid  and  subject  to  greater  price  volatility  than  securities  of
comparable  domestic issuers. Brokerage commissions  and other transaction costs
on foreign securities exchanges are generally higher than in the United  States.
Dividends and interest paid by foreign issuers may be subject to withholding and
other foreign taxes, which may decrease the net return on foreign investments as
compared  to dividends  and interest  paid to  the Investment  Funds by domestic
companies. See "Taxes."  Additional risks include  future adverse political  and
economic  developments, the possibility that a foreign jurisdiction might impose
or  change  withholding  taxes  on  income  payable  with  respect  to   foreign
securities,  possible seizure,  nationalization or expropriation  of the foreign
issuer
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
or  foreign  deposits,  and  the  possible  adoption  of  foreign   governmental
restrictions  such as exchange controls. Emerging countries may have less stable
political environments  than more  developed  countries. Also,  it may  be  more
difficult to obtain a judgment in a court outside the United States.
 
    Investments  in securities of foreign  issuers are frequently denominated in
foreign currencies, and each of these Investment Funds may also temporarily hold
uninvested reserves in bank deposits in foreign currencies. Therefore, the value
of an  Investment  Fund's  assets  measured in  U.S.  Dollars  may  be  affected
favorably  or unfavorably  by changes  in currency  exchange rates  and exchange
control regulations.  Each Investment  Fund  will also  incur certain  costs  in
connection with conversions between various currencies.
 
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
 
    In  order  to remain  fully invested  and to  reduce transaction  costs, the
American Value,  Aggressive  Equity  and  U.S. Real  Estate  Funds  may  utilize
appropriate  securities index futures contracts  and options on securities index
futures contracts to a limited extent. Because transaction costs associated with
futures and  options may  be lower  than the  costs of  investing in  securities
directly, it is expected that the use of index futures and options to facilitate
cash  flows may reduce  an Investment Fund's overall  transaction costs. Each of
these  Investment  Funds  may  sell  indexed  financial  futures  contracts   in
anticipation  of or during a market decline to attempt to offset the decrease in
market value of securities  in its portfolio that  might otherwise result.  When
the  Investment  Fund  is  not  fully invested  and  the  Adviser  anticipates a
significant market advance, it may purchase stock index futures in order to gain
rapid market exposure that may in part or entirely offset increases in the  cost
of  securities that it intends  to purchase. In a  substantial majority of these
transactions, the Investment Fund will purchase such securities upon termination
of the futures position but, under unusual market conditions, a futures position
may  be  terminated  without  the  corresponding  purchase  of  securities.  The
Investment Funds will engage in futures and options on futures transactions only
for hedging purposes.
 
    The American Value Fund will engage only in transactions in securities index
futures contracts, interest rate futures contracts and options thereon which are
traded  on  a recognized  securities or  futures  exchange. There  currently are
limited securities  index futures,  interest rate  futures and  options on  such
futures markets in many countries, particularly emerging countries such as Latin
American countries, and the nature of the strategies adopted by the Adviser, and
the extent to which those strategies are used, will depend on the development of
such markets.
 
    The  Investment Funds may  enter into futures  contracts and options thereon
provided that not more than  5% of each such  Investment Fund's total assets  at
the  time  of  entering  the  transaction  are  required  as  deposit  to secure
obligations under such contracts, and provided further that not more than 20% of
each Investment Fund's total assets, in  the aggregate, are invested in  futures
contracts and options on futures contracts.
 
    The  primary risks associated  with the use  of futures and  options are (i)
imperfect correlation between the change in  market value of the stocks held  by
the Investment Fund and the prices of futures and options relating to the stocks
purchased  or sold by  the Investment Fund,  and (ii) possible  lack of a liquid
secondary market for a futures contract  and the resulting inability to close  a
futures  position which  could have an  adverse impact on  the Investment Fund's
ability to hedge.  The risk  of loss  in trading  on futures  contracts in  some
strategies  can be substantial, due both to the low margin deposits required and
the extremely high degree of leverage involved in
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
futures pricing. Gains and losses on futures and options depend on the Adviser's
ability to predict correctly the direction of stock prices, interest rates,  and
other  economic factors.  In the  opinion of  the Directors,  the risk  that the
Investment Fund  will be  unable to  close  out a  futures position  or  options
contract  will be minimized  by only entering into  futures contracts or options
transactions for which there appears to  be a liquid secondary market. For  more
detailed  information about futures transactions  see "Investment Objectives and
Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
LOANS OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
    Each of the Investment Funds may lend their securities to brokers,  dealers,
domestic  and foreign banks  or other financial institutions  for the purpose of
increasing its net investment income.  These loans must be secured  continuously
by  cash or equivalent collateral or by a letter of credit at least equal to the
market value  of the  securities loaned  plus accrued  interest. The  Investment
Funds  will  not  enter  into  securities  loan  transactions  exceeding  in the
aggregate 33 1/3% of the market value  of an Investment Fund's total assets.  As
with  other extensions of credit,  there are risks of  delay in recovery or even
loss of rights  in collateral should  the borrower of  the portfolio  securities
fail  financially. For more  detailed information about  securities lending, see
"Investment Objectives and Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS
 
    Each Investment Fund  is permitted  to invest in  money market  instruments,
although  the Investment Funds intend to  stay invested in securities satisfying
their primary investment objective to the extent practical. The Investment Funds
may make money  market investments  pending other investment  or settlement  for
liquidity  or  in  adverse  market  conditions.  The  money  market  investments
permitted for the Investment  Funds include obligations  of the U.S.  Government
and  its agencies  and instrumentalities, obligations  of foreign sovereignties,
other debt securities, commercial paper including bank obligations, certificates
of  deposit  (including  Eurodollar  certificates  of  deposit)  and  repurchase
agreements.  For more detailed information about these money market investments,
see "Description  of Securities  and  Ratings" in  the Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES
 
    Each  Investment Fund may invest in securities  that are neither listed on a
stock exchange nor traded over the counter. Such unlisted equity securities  may
involve  a  higher degree  of business  and  financial risk  that can  result in
substantial losses. As a result  of the absence of  a public trading market  for
these  securities,  they may  be less  liquid  than publicly  traded securities.
Although these securities  may be resold  in privately negotiated  transactions,
the prices realized from these sales could be less than those originally paid by
such Investment Funds or less than what may be considered the fair value of such
securities.  Further, companies whose securities are not publicly traded may not
be subject to the  disclosure and other  investor protection requirements  which
might be applicable if their securities were publicly traded. If such securities
are  required  to  be  registered  under the  securities  laws  of  one  or more
jurisdictions before being resold, the Investment  Fund may be required to  bear
the  expenses of registration. As a general  matter, the Investment Fund may not
invest more  than  15% of  its  net  assets in  illiquid  securities,  including
securities for which there is no readily available secondary market nor, for the
Morgan  Stanley U.S.  Real Estate  Fund, more  than 10%  of its  total assets in
securities that  are restricted  from sale  to the  public without  registration
("Restricted  Securities"  under  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended).
Restricted Securities that can  be offered and  sold to qualified  institutional
buyers under Rule 144A
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
under that Act ("144A Securities") will not be included within the foregoing 15%
restriction  if  the  securities  are  determined to  be  liquid.  The  Board of
Directors has adopted guidelines  and delegated to the  Adviser, subject to  the
supervision  of the  Board of Directors,  the daily function  of determining and
monitoring the liquidity of 144A Securities. 144A Securities may become illiquid
if  qualified  institutional  buyers  are   not  interested  in  acquiring   the
securities.
 
OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Aggressive Equity and U.S.  Real Estate Funds may  seek to increase its
return or  may hedge  all or  a  portion of  its portfolio  investments  through
options  with respect to  securities in which such  Investment Funds may invest.
The Investment Fund will engage only in transactions in options which are traded
on a  recognized securities  or futures  exchange. There  currently are  limited
options markets in many countries, particularly emerging countries such as Latin
American  countries, and the nature of the strategies adopted by the Adviser and
the extent to which those strategies are used will depend on the development  of
such option markets.
 
    The  Investment Fund may write (i.e.,  sell) covered call options which give
the purchaser the  right to buy  the underlying security  covered by the  option
from  the Investment Fund at the stated  exercise price. A "covered" call option
means that so  long as the  Investment Fund is  obligated as the  writer of  the
option, it will own (i) the underlying securities subject to the option, or (ii)
securities  convertible or exchangeable without the payment of any consideration
into the securities subject to the option. As a matter of operating policy,  the
value  of the underlying securities on which  options will be written at any one
time will not exceed 5% of the total assets of the Investment Fund.
 
    The Investment Fund will receive a premium from writing call options,  which
increases  the Investment Fund's return on  the underlying security in the event
the option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit. By writing a  call,
the Investment Fund will limit its opportunity to profit from an increase in the
market  value of the underlying security above  the exercise price of the option
for as  long  as  the Investment  Fund's  obligation  as writer  of  the  option
continues.  Thus, in  some periods the  Investment Fund will  receive less total
return and  in other  periods greater  total return  from writing  covered  call
options  than it would have  received from its underlying  securities had it not
written call options.
 
    The Investment Fund  may also  write (i.e.,  sell) covered  put options.  By
selling  a covered put option,  the Investment Fund incurs  an obligation to buy
the security underlying the option from the purchaser of the put at the option's
exercise price at any time during the option period, at the purchaser's election
(certain options  written by  the Investment  Fund will  be exercisable  by  the
purchaser  only on a specific date). Generally, a put option is "covered" if the
Investment Fund maintains cash, U.S.  Government securities or other high  grade
debt  obligations equal to the exercise price of the option or if the Investment
Fund holds a put option on the same underlying security with a similar or higher
exercise price. The Investment Fund may sell put options to receive the premiums
paid by purchasers and  to close out  a long put  option position. In  addition,
when the Adviser wishes to purchase a security at a price lower than its current
market  price, the Investment Fund may write  a covered put at an exercise price
reflecting the lower purchase price sought.
 
    The Investment Fund  may also  purchase put  or call  options on  individual
securities  or baskets of securities. When  the Investment Fund purchases a call
option  it   acquires  the   right   to  buy   a   designated  security   at   a
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
designated  price (the "exercise price"), and when the Investment Fund purchases
a put option it acquires the right to sell a designated security at the exercise
price, in each  case on  or before a  specified date  (the "termination  date"),
usually  not  more than  nine months  from the  date the  option is  issued. The
Investment Fund may purchase call options  to close out a covered call  position
or  to protect  against an increase  in the  price of a  security it anticipates
purchasing. The Investment Fund may purchase put options on securities which  it
holds  in its portfolio 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  Investment  Fund would  incur  no  additional  loss.  The
Investment Fund may also purchase put options to close out written put positions
in  a manner similar to call option  closing purchase transactions. There are no
other limits on the Investment Fund's ability to purchase call and put options.
 
    The primary  risks associated  with the  use of  options are  (i)  imperfect
correlation  between the change  in market value  of the securities  held by the
Investment Fund and the prices of  options relating to the securities  purchased
or  sold by the  Investment Fund; and  (ii) possible lack  of a liquid secondary
market for  an  option.  In the  opinion  of  the Adviser,  the  risk  that  the
Investment  Fund  will  be unable  to  close  out an  options  contract  will be
minimized by only entering into options transactions for which there appears  to
be a liquid secondary market.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
    Each  Investment  Fund may  enter into  repurchase agreements  with brokers,
dealers or  banks  that  meet the  credit  guidelines  of the  Fund's  Board  of
Directors.  In a repurchase agreement, an Investment Fund buys a security from a
seller that has  agreed to  repurchase it  at a  mutually agreed  upon date  and
price, reflecting the interest rate effective for the term of the agreement. The
term of these agreements is usually from overnight to one week and never exceeds
one year. A repurchase agreement may be viewed as a fully collateralized loan of
money  by an Investment Fund to the  seller. The Investment Funds always receive
securities as collateral  with a  market value at  least equal  to the  purchase
price,  including accrued interest, and this value is maintained during the term
of the agreement. If the seller  defaults and the collateral value declines,  an
Investment Fund might incur a loss. If bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with
respect to the seller, the Investment Fund's realization upon the collateral may
be  delayed  or  limited. The  aggregate  of certain  repurchase  agreements and
certain  other  investments   is  limited   as  set   forth  under   "Investment
Limitations."
 
SHORT SALES
 
    The  Aggressive  Equity Fund  may from  time to  time sell  securities short
without limitation,  although  the  Investment  Fund does  not  intend  to  sell
securities  short on a regular basis. A short sale is a transaction in which the
Investment Fund would  sell securities  it does not  own (but  has borrowed)  in
anticipation  of  a decline  in the  market  price of  the securities.  When the
Investment Fund makes a short sale, the proceeds it receives from the sale  will
be  held on behalf of  a broker until the  Investment Fund replaces the borrowed
securities. To deliver  the securities to  the buyer, the  Investment Fund  will
need  to arrange through a broker to borrow the securities and, in so doing, the
Investment Fund  will become  obligated to  replace the  securities borrowed  at
their  market price at the time of  replacement, whatever that price may be. The
Investment Fund may have to pay a premium to borrow the securities and must  pay
any dividends or interest payable on the securities until they are replaced.
 
    The  Investment  Fund's obligation  to  replace the  securities  borrowed in
connection with a short  sale will be secured  by collateral deposited with  the
broker  that  consists  of cash,  U.S.  Government securities  or  other liquid,
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
high grade debt obligations.  In addition, the Investment  Fund will place in  a
segregated  account  with  its  Custodian an  amount  of  cash,  U.S. Government
securities or other liquid high grade debt obligations equal to the  difference,
if  any, between (1)  the market value of  the securities sold  at the time they
were sold short  and (2) any  cash, U.S. Government  securities or other  liquid
high  grade  debt  obligations  deposited  as  collateral  with  the  broker  in
connection with the short sale (not  including the proceeds of the short  sale).
Short   sales  by  the  Investment  Fund   involve  certain  risks  and  special
considerations. Possible losses from short  sales differ from losses that  could
be  incurred from a purchase of a  security, because losses from short sales may
be unlimited, whereas  losses from  purchases can  equal only  the total  amount
invested.
 
TEMPORARY INVESTMENTS
 
    For  temporary defensive purposes,  when the Adviser  determines that market
conditions warrant, the  U.S. Real  Estate Fund  may invest  up to  100% of  its
assets in money market instruments consisting of securities issued or guaranteed
by  the United States Government,  its agencies or instrumentalities, repurchase
agreements, certificates of deposit and bankers' acceptances issued by banks  or
savings  and loan associations having net assets  of at least $500 million as of
the end of their most recent fiscal year, high-grade commercial paper rated,  at
time  of purchase,  in the  top two  categories by  a national  rating agency or
determined to be of comparable  quality by the Adviser  at the time of  purchase
and  other long- and short-term debt instruments  which are rated A or higher by
Standard &  Poor's Ratings  Group  ("S&P") or  Moody's Investors  Service,  Inc.
("Moody's")  at the time  of purchase, and may  hold a portion  of its assets in
cash.
 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES
 
    Each Investment Fund  may purchase  securities on a  when-issued or  delayed
delivery  basis. In such  transactions, instruments are  bought with payment and
delivery taking place in the future in order to secure what is considered to  be
an  advantageous yield or price at the  time of the transaction. Delivery of and
payment for these securities may take as long as a month or more after the  date
of  the purchase commitment but will take place  no more than 120 days after the
trade date. Each  Investment Fund will  maintain with the  Custodian a  separate
account with a segregated portfolio of cash, U.S. Government securities or other
liquid,  high  grade debt  obligations  in an  amount  at least  equal  to these
commitments. The payment obligation and the interest rates that will be received
are each fixed at the time an Investment Fund enters into the commitment, and no
interest accrues to the Investment Fund  until settlement. Thus, it is  possible
that  the market value at  the time of settlement could  be higher or lower than
the purchase price if the general level  of interest rates has changed. It is  a
current policy of the Investment Funds not to enter into when-issued commitments
or  delayed  delivery  securities  exceeding,  in  the  aggregate,  15%  of  the
Investment Fund's  net  assets  other  than the  obligations  created  by  these
commitments.
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
                             INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
 
    The  American Value Fund is a  diversified investment company under the 1940
Act, and is subject  to the following  limitations: (a) as to  75% of its  total
assets,  the Investment Fund may not invest more  than 5% of its total assets in
the securities of any one issuer, except obligations of the U.S. Government  and
its agencies and instrumentalities, and (b) the Investment Fund may not own more
than  10% of the outstanding voting securities of any one issuer. The Aggressive
Equity and U.S. Real Estate Funds are non-diversified investment companies under
the 1940 Act, which means that each  such Investment Fund is not limited by  the
1940  Act in  the proportion  of its total  assets that  may be  invested in the
obligations of a  single issuer. Thus,  each such Investment  Fund may invest  a
greater  proportion of its total assets in the securities of a smaller number of
issuers and, as a result,  will be subject to greater  risk with respect to  its
portfolio securities. Each such Investment Fund, however, intends to comply with
the  diversification requirements imposed by the  Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, for qualification as a regulated investment company. See "Taxes."
 
    The Investment Funds also operate under certain investment restrictions that
are deemed fundamental policies  and may be changed  by an Investment Fund  only
with  the  approval  of the  holders  of  a majority  of  the  Investment Fund's
outstanding shares. In addition to other restrictions listed in the Statement of
Additional Information, an  Investment Fund  may not (i)  enter into  repurchase
agreements  with more than seven days to maturity if, as a result, more than 15%
of the market value  of the Investment  Fund's net assets  would be invested  in
these  agreements  and other  investments for  which  market quotations  are not
readily available or which are otherwise illiquid; (ii) borrow money except from
banks for extraordinary or emergency purposes and then only in amounts up to 10%
of the value of the Investment Fund's total assets, taken at market value at the
time of borrowing,  or purchase  securities while  borrowings exceed  5% of  its
total  assets;  (iii)  mortgage,  pledge or  hypothecate  any  assets  except in
connection with any  such borrowing in  amounts up to  10% of the  value of  the
Investment  Fund's  total  assets at  the  time  of borrowing;  except  that the
Aggressive Equity  Fund may  borrow,  and mortgage,  pledge or  hypothecate  its
assets to secure such borrowings, in amounts equal to up to 33 1/3% of its total
assets  (including the amount  borrowed), less all  liabilities and indebtedness
other than the borrowing; (iv) invest in fixed time deposits with a duration  of
over  seven calendar days; (v) invest in  fixed time deposits with a duration of
from two business days to seven calendar days if more than 10% of the Investment
Fund's total assets  would be invested  in these deposits;  or (vi) invest  more
than 25% of the Investment Fund's total assets in securities of companies in any
one industry, except for the U.S. Real Estate Fund.
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
 
    INVESTMENT ADVISER.  Morgan Stanley Asset Management Inc. (the "Adviser") is
the  Investment Adviser and Administrator of the Fund and each of its Investment
Funds. The Adviser provides investment advice and portfolio management  services
pursuant  to an Investment Advisory Agreement and, subject to the supervision of
the Fund's Board of  Directors, makes each of  the Investment Fund's  investment
decisions,  arranges for the  execution of portfolio  transactions and generally
manages each of the Investment Fund's investments. Set forth below as an  annual
percentage of average daily net assets are the advisory fees paid to the Adviser
quarterly  by  each Investment  Fund. The  investment  advisory fees  of certain
Investment Funds  are  higher  than  those  of  most  investment  companies  but
comparable to those of investment companies with similar objectives.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                         <C>
American Value Fund             0.85%
Aggressive Equity Fund          0.90%
U.S. Real Estate Fund           1.00%
</TABLE>
 
    The  Adviser, with  principal offices  at 1221  Avenue of  the Americas, New
York, NY 10020, conducts a worldwide portfolio management business. It  provides
a broad range of portfolio management services to customers in the United States
and abroad. At December 31, 1995, the Adviser together with its affiliated asset
management  companies managed investments  totaling approximately $57.4 billion,
including approximately $41.9 billion under active management and $15.5  billion
as  Named  Fiduciary  or  Fiduciary  Adviser. See  "Management  of  the  Fund --
Investment  Advisory  and  Administrative   Agreements"  in  the  Statement   of
Additional Information.
 
    Each   class  of  the  Investment  Funds  have  adopted  separate  Plans  of
Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under  the 1940 Act (each, a "Plan").  Under
the  applicable  Plan, which  is described  in  more detail  under "Distributor"
below, the Distributor is entitled to receive from each of the Investment  Funds
with  respect to the  Class A shares,  payments of 0.25%  of such class's annual
average net assets and, with respect to the Class B and Class C shares, payments
of 0.75% of each  such class's annual average  net assets. Each Plan  recognizes
that,  in addition to  such payments, the  Adviser may use  its advisory fees or
other resources  to  pay expenses  associated  with activities  which  might  be
construed  to be financing the sale of these Investment Funds' shares. Each Plan
provides that the Adviser may make payments from these sources to third parties,
such as  consultants that  provide  assistance in  the distribution  effort  (in
addition  to selling shares and providing shareholder services). As part of such
distribution fees for the Class A shares of the Investment Funds, up to 0.25% of
the net assets  of such class  will be  used to compensate  the Distributor  for
shareholder  services provided.  In addition to  such distribution  fees for the
Class B shares and  Class C shares, the  Rule 12b-1 plan of  each class of  each
Investment  Fund authorizes the payment of 0.25%  of the net assets of each such
class to compensate the Distributor for shareholder services provided.
 
    PORTFOLIO MANAGERS  --  The  following individuals  have  primary  portfolio
management responsibility for the Investment Funds noted below:
 
    AMERICAN VALUE FUND -- CHRISTIAN K. STADLINGER. Christian K. Stadlinger is a
Vice  President of the Adviser and manages the small-cap value equity product of
the Adviser's Chicago affiliate.  He is also a  member of the Adviser's  Chicago
large  cap  value portfolio  management team,  specializing in  quantitative and
fundamental research.  He  has had  primary  management responsibility  for  the
Investment Fund since its inception. Upon
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
completion  of his Ph.D., Mr. Stadlinger was  the catalyst in the development of
the small-cap value product, and he continues to research and develop structured
valuation techniques in  small cap  investing. Mr.  Stadlinger has  a degree  in
Computer  Science and  Economics from the  University of Vienna,  Austria, and a
Ph.D. in Economics from Northwestern University, where he also taught statistics
and economics.
 
    AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND  -- KURT  A. FEUERMAN.  Kurt Feuerman  is a  Managing
Director  of the Adviser  and has had primary  management responsibility for the
Aggressive Equity Fund since its inception. Prior to joining the Adviser in July
1993, he spent over three years in Morgan Stanley's Research Department where he
was responsible  for  restaurant,  gaming and  emerging  growth  stocks.  Before
joining  Morgan Stanley, Mr. Feuerman was  a Managing Director at Drexel Burnham
Lambert, where he had been an equity analyst since 1984. From 1982 to 1984,  Mr.
Feuerman  was  at  the Bank  of  New York,  following  the auto  and  auto parts
industries. Mr. Feuerman earned  a B.A. degree from  McGill University, an  M.A.
from Syracuse University, and an M.B.A. from Columbia University.
 
    U.S.  REAL ESTATE FUND  -- RUSSELL PLATT  AND THEODORE R.  BIGMAN. Mr. Platt
joined Morgan Stanley in 1982 and currently is a Principal of the Firm.  Russell
Platt  has  primary  responsibility  for  managing  the  real  estate securities
investment business for the  Advisers and serves as  a member of the  Investment
Committee  of The  Morgan Stanley  Real Estate  Fund ("MSREF").  Previously, Mr.
Platt served as a Director of MSREF,  where he was involved in capital  raising,
acquisitions,  oversight  of  investments  and investor  relations.  MSREF  is a
privately held limited  partnership engaged  in the acquisition  of real  estate
assets,  portfolios and  real estate  operating companies  with gross  assets of
approximately $3.5 billion as of December 1994. From 1991 to 1993, Mr. Platt was
head of Morgan  Stanley's Transaction Development  Group, which was  responsible
for  identifying and  structuring real  estate investment  opportunities for the
Firm and its  clients worldwide. As  part of those  responsibilities, Mr.  Platt
directed  Morgan Stanley Realty's activities in Latin America and served as U.S.
liasion for Morgan Stanley Realty's Japanese  real estate clients. From 1990  to
1991, Mr. Platt was based in Morgan Stanley Realty's London office, where he was
responsible  for  European  transaction  development.  Prior  to  this,  he  had
extensive transaction  responsibilities  involving  portfolio,  retail,  office,
hotel  and apartment  sales and  financings. Mr.  Platt graduated  from Williams
College in 1982 with a  B.A. in Economics and  received his M.B.A. from  Harvard
Business  School in 1986. Mr. Platt is a  member of the Board of Trustees of The
National Multi Housing Council and The Wharton Real Estate Center, and a  member
of The Urban Land Institute (International Council), the National Association of
Real  Estate  Investment Trusts  and the  Pension  Real Estate  Association. Mr.
Bigman joined the  Adviser in 1995  as a Vice  President. Together with  Russell
Platt,  he is  responsible for  the Adviser's  real estate  securities research.
Prior to joining the  Adviser, he was  a Director at CS  First Boston, where  he
worked  for  eight  years in  the  Real  Estate Group.  Since  1992,  Mr. Bigman
established and managed  the REIT effort  at CS First  Boston including  primary
responsibility  for  $2.5 billion  of initial  public  offerings by  real estate
investment trusts. Previously, Mr. Bigman  had extensive real estate  experience
in  a wide  variety of  transactions involving  the financing  and sale  of both
individual  assets  and  portfolios  of  real  estate  assets  as  well  as  the
acquisition and sale of several real estate companies. Mr. Bigman graduated from
Brandeis  University in 1983  with a B.A.  in Economics and  received his M.B.A.
from Harvard University in 1987. He is  a member of the National Association  of
Real Estate Investment Trusts and International Council of Shopping Centers.
 
    ADMINISTRATOR.  The  Adviser  also  provides  the  Fund  with administrative
services pursuant to a separate Administration Agreement. The services  provided
under  the  Administration  Agreement  are subject  to  the  supervision  of the
officers  and  Board   of  Directors   of  the  Fund   and  include   day-to-day
administration of matters
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
related  to the  corporate existence  of the  Fund, maintenance  of its records,
preparation  of  reports,  supervision  of  the  Fund's  arrangements  with  its
custodian   and  assistance  in  the  preparation  of  the  Fund's  registration
statements under  federal  and state  laws.  The Administration  Agreement  also
provides  that the  Adviser through  its agents  will provide  the Fund dividend
disbursing  and   transfer  agent   services.  For   its  services   under   the
Administration  Agreement, the Fund pays  the Adviser a monthly  fee which on an
annual basis equals  0.25% of the  average daily net  assets of each  Investment
Fund.
 
    In  a merger completed on September 1,  1995, The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
("Chase") succeeded to all of the rights and obligations under the United States
Trust Administration Agreement between the  Adviser and the United States  Trust
Company  of New York ("U.S. Trust"), pursuant  to which U.S. Trust had agreed to
provide certain administrative services  to the Fund.  Pursuant to a  delegation
clause  in the  U.S. Trust  Administration Agreement,  U.S. Trust  delegated its
administration  responsibilities  to   Chase  Global   Funds  Services   Company
("CGFSC"),  formerly Mutual Funds  Service Company, which  after the merger with
Chase  is  a  subsidiary  of  Chase   and  will  continue  to  provide   certain
administrative  services to the  Fund. The Adviser  supervises and monitors such
administrative services  provided  by CGFSC.  The  services provided  under  the
Administration  Agreement and the  U.S. Trust Administration  Agreement are also
subject to the supervision of the Board  of Directors of the Fund. The Board  of
Directors  of the  Fund has approved  the provision of  services described above
pursuant to  the  Administration Agreement  and  the U.S.  Trust  Administration
Agreement  as being in the best interests  of the Fund. CGFSC's business address
is  73  Tremont  Street,   Boston,  Massachusetts  02108-3913.  For   additional
information  on the Administration  Agreement and the  U.S. Trust Administration
Agreement,  see  "Management  of  the  Fund"  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
    DIRECTORS  AND OFFICERS.  Pursuant to  the Fund's Articles of Incorporation,
the Board of Directors  decides upon matters of  general policy and reviews  the
actions  of the Fund's  Adviser, administrator and  Distributor. The Officers of
the Fund conduct and supervise its daily business operations.
 
    DISTRIBUTOR.  Morgan Stanley serves as the Distributor of the shares of  the
Fund.  Under  its Distribution  Agreement with  the  Fund, Morgan  Stanley sells
shares of the Fund upon the terms and at the current offering price described in
this Prospectus. Morgan Stanley is not obligated to sell any specific number  of
shares of the Fund.
 
    The  Fund  currently  offers only  the  classes  of shares  offered  by this
Prospectus. The Fund may in the future  offer one or more classes of shares  for
each  Investment Fund that may have different  CDSCs or initial sales charges or
other distribution charges or a  combination thereof than the classes  currently
offered.
 
    The Board of Directors of the Fund has approved and adopted the Distribution
Agreement  for  the Fund  and  a Plan  for each  class  of the  Investment Funds
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940  Act. Under each Plan, the Distributor  is
entitled  to receive  from these Investment  Funds a distribution  fee, which is
accrued daily  and paid  quarterly, of  0.25% for  the Class  A shares  of  each
Investment  Fund, and  0.75% of the  Class B shares  and Class C  shares of each
Investment Fund, on an annualized basis of the average daily net assets of  such
Investment  Fund or classes.  The Distributor expects to  reallocate most of its
fee to  investment  dealers, banks  or  financial services  firms  that  provide
distribution,  administrative or shareholder  services ("Participating Dealer").
The actual amount of  such compensation is  agreed upon by  the Fund's Board  of
Directors  and  by  the Distributor.  The  Distributor may,  in  its discretion,
voluntarily  waive   from   time  to   time   all   or  any   portion   of   its
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
distribution  fee and the Distributor is free to make additional payments out of
its own assets to promote  the sale of Fund shares.  Class B shares and Class  C
shares  are also  subject to  a service  fee at  an annual  rate of  0.25% on an
annualized basis of the average daily net  assets of such class of shares of  an
Investment Fund.
 
    In  addition to  the distribution  and shareholder  servicing fees described
above, Morgan Stanley also receives a sales  charge of up to 4.75% of the  sales
price  of Class A shares of each  Investment Fund. Morgan Stanley may reallow up
to the full  applicable sales  charge, as  shown in  the table  in "Purchase  of
Shares"   below,  to  certain  Participating  Dealers  during  periods  and  for
transactions specified  in "Purchase  of Shares"  and such  reallowances may  be
based  upon attainment of minimum sales levels.  During periods when 90% or more
of the sales charge is reallowed, certain Participating Dealers may be deemed to
be underwriters  as that  term is  defined in  the Securities  Act of  1933,  as
amended.  Morgan Stanley may receive a CDSC of up to 1.00% of the sales price of
the Class A  shares and Class  C shares  of the Investment  Funds, as  described
below  under "Purchase of Shares." Morgan Stanley  may also receive a CDSC of up
to 5.00% of the sales  price of shares of the  Class B shares of the  Investment
Funds,  as described below under "Purchase of  Shares." In addition to the sales
charges described above, Morgan Stanley may from  time to time and from its  own
resources  pay or allow  additional discounts or  promotional incentives, in the
form of cash or other compensation, to Participating Dealers. In some instances,
such discounts or other incentives may be offered only to certain  Participating
Dealers  that sell or are expected to sell during specified time periods certain
minimum amounts of  shares of the  Fund, or other  funds underwritten by  Morgan
Stanley.  In some  instances, these  incentives may  be offered  only to certain
Participating Dealers that have sold or may sell significant amounts of  shares.
In  addition,  Morgan Stanley  pays ongoing  trail commissions  to Participating
Dealers. At  the option  of  the Participating  Dealer,  such bonuses  or  other
incentives  may take the form of  payment for travel expenses, including lodging
incurred  in  connection  with  trips  taken  by  persons  associated  with  the
Participating  Dealer and members of their  families to places within or outside
of the  United  States.  The  Distributor or  Participating  Dealers  and  their
investment   representatives  may  receive   different  levels  of  compensation
depending on which class of shares they sell.
 
    The Plans obligate the Investment Funds to accrue and pay to the Distributor
the fee agreed to  under its Distribution Agreement.  The Plans do not  obligate
the  Investment Funds to reimburse Morgan Stanley for the actual expenses Morgan
Stanley may incur in fulfilling its obligations under the Plan. Thus, under each
Plan, even if  Morgan Stanley's  actual expenses exceed  the fee  payable to  it
thereunder  at any given time, the Investment Funds will not be obligated to pay
more than that fee. If Morgan Stanley's actual expenses are less than the fee it
receives, Morgan Stanley will retain the full amount of the fee.
 
    Each Plan of Distribution  for a class  of Fund shares,  under the terms  of
Rule  12b-1, will  remain in effect  only if  approved at least  annually by the
Fund's Board of  Directors, including  those directors who  are not  "interested
persons"  of the Fund as  that term is defined  in the 1940 Act  and who have no
direct or indirect  financial interest  in the  operation of  a Plan  or in  any
agreements  related thereto ("12b-1 Directors"). Each  Plan may be terminated at
any time by  a vote  of a majority  of the  12b-1 Directors or  by a  vote of  a
majority  of the  outstanding voting  securities of  the applicable  class of an
Investment Fund. The fee set forth above will be paid by the Investment Fund  or
class  thereof to Morgan  Stanley unless and  until a Plan  is terminated or not
renewed. The Fund intends to operate each Plan in accordance with its terms  and
the NASD Rules concerning sales charges.
 
    PAYMENTS  TO  FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.   The  Adviser  or its  affiliates may
compensate certain financial institutions for the continued investment of  their
customers'   assets  in  the   Investment  Funds  pursuant   to  the  advice  of
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
such financial institutions. These payments will be made directly by the Adviser
or its affiliates from their assets, and will not be made from the assets of the
Fund or  by  the  assessment  of  a  sales  charge  on  shares.  Such  financial
institutions may also perform certain shareholder or recordkeeping services that
would  otherwise be performed  by CGFSC. The  Adviser may elect  to enter into a
contract to pay the financial institutions for such services.
 
    EXPENSES.  The Investment Funds are responsible for payment of certain other
fees and expenses (including professional fees, custodial fees and printing  and
mailing costs) specified in the Administration and Distribution Agreements.
 
                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Investment  Advisory Agreement  authorizes  the Adviser  to  select the
brokers or  dealers that  will execute  the purchases  and sales  of  investment
securities  for each of the Investment Funds  and directs the Adviser to use its
best efforts to  obtain the best  available price and  most favorable  execution
with  respect  to  all  transactions  for the  Investment  Funds.  The  Fund has
authorized the Adviser  to pay  higher commissions in  recognition of  brokerage
services which, in the opinion of the Adviser, are necessary for the achievement
of  better  execution, provided  the Adviser  believes  this to  be in  the best
interest of the Fund.
 
    Shares of the  Investment Funds are  marketed through Participating  Dealers
and  the Fund may allocate brokerage or principal business on the basis of sales
of shares of  the Investment Funds  which may  be made through  such firms.  The
Adviser  may place portfolio orders  with qualified broker-dealers who recommend
the Investment Funds  or who  act as  agents in the  purchase of  shares of  the
Investment Funds for their clients.
 
    In purchasing and selling securities for each of the Investment Funds, it is
the  Fund's policy  to seek  to obtain quality  execution at  the most favorable
prices, through  responsible  broker-dealers.  In  selecting  broker-dealers  to
execute the securities transactions for the Investment Funds, consideration will
be  given  to  such factors  as  the price  of  the  security, the  rate  of the
commission, the size and  difficulty of the  order, the reliability,  integrity,
financial condition, general execution and operational capabilities of competing
broker-dealers,  and the brokerage  and research services  which they provide to
the Fund. Some securities  considered for investment by  each of the  Investment
Funds  may  also be  appropriate for  other  clients served  by the  Adviser. If
purchase or sale  of securities consistent  with the investment  policies of  an
Investment  Fund and one or more of such  other clients served by the Adviser is
considered at or about  the same time, transactions  in such securities will  be
allocated  among the Investment Fund  and other clients in  a manner deemed fair
and reasonable  by the  Adviser.  Although there  is  no specified  formula  for
allocating  such  transactions,  the  various  allocation  methods  used  by the
Adviser, and the results of such allocations, are subject to periodic review  by
the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
    Subject to the overriding objective of obtaining the best possible execution
of  orders, the Adviser may allocate a portion of the Fund's portfolio brokerage
transactions to Morgan Stanley or broker affiliates of Morgan Stanley. In  order
for  Morgan Stanley or  its affiliates to effect  any portfolio transactions for
the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration received by Morgan Stanley
or such affiliates 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  a
securities exchange during a comparable  period of time. Furthermore, the  Board
of Directors of the Fund, including a majority of the
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
Directors  who are not "interested  persons" of the Fund  as defined in the 1940
Act, have adopted procedures which are  reasonably designed to provide that  any
commissions,  fees  or  other  remuneration  paid  to  Morgan  Stanley  or  such
affiliates are consistent with the foregoing standard.
 
    Portfolio securities will not be purchased  from, or through, or sold to  or
through,  the Adviser or Morgan Stanley  or any "affiliated persons," as defined
in the 1940 Act, of Morgan Stanley when such entities are acting as  principals,
except to the extent permitted by law.
 
    Although  the primary objective  of each of  the Investment Funds  is not to
invest for short-term trading,  each of the Investment  Funds will seek to  take
advantage  of  trading  opportunities  as  they arise  to  the  extent  they are
consistent  with  the  Investment  Fund's  objectives.  Accordingly,  investment
securities  may be sold from  time to time without regard  to the length of time
they have been held.  Each Investment Fund, except  the Aggressive Equity  Fund,
anticipates  that its annual portfolio turnover  rate will not exceed 100% under
normal circumstances. Market conditions could result in portfolio activity at  a
greater or lesser rate than anticipated. It is expected that the annual turnover
rate  of  the Aggressive  Equity Fund  may exceed  100%, which  will accordingly
result  in  higher  brokerage  commissions.  High  portfolio  turnover  involves
correspondingly  greater transaction costs  which will be  borne directly by the
Investment Fund. In addition, high portfolio turnover may result in more capital
gains which would be taxable to the shareholders of the Investment Fund.
 
                               PURCHASE OF SHARES
 
    Shares of  the  Investment  Funds may  be  purchased  through  Participating
Dealers or directly from the Fund. Class A shares of the Investment Funds may be
purchased  at the net asset value per share plus the applicable sales charge, if
any, next determined after receipt  of the purchase order  by the Fund. Class  B
shares  and Class C shares  of the Investment Funds may  be purchased at the net
asset value per share next determined after receipt of the purchase order by the
Fund. Participating Dealers are responsible  for forwarding orders they  receive
to  the Fund by  the applicable times described  below on the  same day as their
receipt of the orders to  permit purchase of shares  as described above and  the
failure  to do so will result in the investors being unable to obtain that day's
net asset value. See "Valuation of Shares."
 
    The Class A, Class B and Class  C alternatives permit an investor to  choose
the  method of purchasing shares that is most beneficial given the amount of the
purchase, the length of time the investor expects to hold the shares, and  other
circumstances. Investors should consider whether, during the anticipated life of
their  investment in the Fund, the combination of sales charge, distribution fee
and  CDSC  on  Class  A  shares  is  more  favorable  than  the  combination  of
distribution/service  fees and CDSC on Class B shares or Class C shares. In some
cases, investors planning to  purchase $100,000 or more  of Fund shares may  pay
lower  aggregate charges  and expenses by  purchasing Class A  shares. (See "Fee
Table.")
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
OFFERING PRICE OF CLASS A SHARES
 
    Class A shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net  asset
value per share plus a sales charge (the "Offering Price") which is a percentage
of  the Offering Price that decreases as the amount of the purchase increases as
shown below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             SALES CHARGE AS    SALES CHARGE AS    DEALER RETENTION
      CLASS A SHARES          PERCENTAGE OF    PERCENTAGE OF NET   AS PERCENTAGE OF
    AMOUNT OF PURCHASE       OFFERING PRICE     AMOUNT INVESTED    OFFERING PRICE**
- ---------------------------  ---------------   -----------------   ----------------
<S>                          <C>               <C>                 <C>
Less than $100,000                4.75%              4.99%               4.25%
$100,000 - $249,999               3.50%              3.63%               3.00%
$250,000 - $499,999               2.50%              2.56%               2.00%
$500,000 - $999,999               2.00%              2.04%               1.50%
$1,000,000 and over               None*              None**                  *++
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
 * Purchases of $1  million or more  may be  subject to a  redemption fee.  (See
   below.)  Morgan Stanley may make payments to Participating Dealers in amounts
   up to 1.00% of the Offering Price.
 
** The Distributor  may,  in its  discretion,  permit Participating  Dealers  to
   retain the full amount of the sales charge in connection with certain sales.
 
 + The  amount of  purchase includes  net asset value  of the  purchase plus the
   sales charge.
 
++ Commission is payable by Morgan Stanley as discussed below.
 
    Morgan Stanley may  in its  discretion compensate  Participating Dealers  in
connection  with  the sale  of  Class A  shares of  the  Investment Funds  in an
aggregate amount of $1 million or more up to the following amounts: 1.00% of the
net asset value of shares sold on amounts up to $3 million, .50% on the next  $2
million  and .25% on  amounts over $5  million. For purposes  of determining the
appropriate commission percentage to be applied  to a particular sale under  the
foregoing  schedule, Morgan Stanley will consider the cumulative amount invested
by the purchaser in Class A shares of the Investment Funds.
 
    REDUCTION  OR  WAIVER  OF  SALES  CHARGES.    A  shareholder  who  purchases
additional Class A shares of an Investment Fund may obtain reduced sales charges
through  a right of  accumulation of current  purchases of Class  A shares of an
Investment Fund  with  concurrent purchases  of  Class  A shares  of  the  other
Investment  Fund and with  existing Class A share  investments in all Investment
Funds. The applicable sales charge will be determined based on the total of  (a)
the  shareholder's current purchases of Class  A shares of Investment Funds plus
(b) an amount equal to the greater of  the then current net asset value, or  the
total  purchase price of the investor's prior purchases of all Class A shares of
Investment Funds held  by the shareholder.  To obtain the  reduced sales  charge
through  a right of accumulation, the shareholder must provide Morgan Stanley at
the time  of purchase,  either directly  or through  a Participating  Dealer  or
shareholder  servicing  agent,  as applicable,  with  sufficient  information to
verify that the shareholder has  such a right. The  Fund may amend or  terminate
this right of accumulation at any time as to subsequent purchases.
 
    For  purposes of reduced sales charges based on amount of purchase, the term
"purchase" refers  to purchases  made  at one  time  by any  "purchaser,"  which
includes  an individual; a group composed of an individual and his or her spouse
and children under the age of 21; a trustee or other fiduciary of a single trust
estate or single fiduciary account;  an organization exempt from federal  income
tax  under Section 501(c)(3)  or (13) of  the Internal Revenue  Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code"); a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit  plan,
whether or not qualified under Section 401 of the Code; or other organized group
of persons,
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
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. In order  to qualify for a lower sales  charge
on purchases of the Class A shares, all orders from an organized group will have
to be placed through a single Participating Dealer and identified as originating
from a qualifying purchaser.
 
    An  investor may also obtain reduced  sales charges shown above on purchases
of the Class A shares by executing  a written letter of intent which states  the
investor's  intention to invest not less  than $100,000 within a 13-month period
in Class A shares of the Investment  Funds ("Letter"). Each purchase of Class  A
shares  of an Investment Fund under a Letter  will be made at the Offering Price
applicable at the time of such purchase  to single purchases of the full  amount
indicated  on the  Letter. (See  Terms and  Conditions included  in the  form of
Letter in the New Account Application attached to this Prospectus.) An  investor
who  wishes to enter into  a Letter in connection with  an investment in Class A
shares of an Investment Fund should use the form in the New Account  Application
attached to this Prospectus. The Letter, which imposes no obligation to purchase
or  sell additional  Class A shares,  provides for a  price adjustment depending
upon the actual amount  purchased within such period.  The Letter provides  that
the  first purchase following execution of the Letter must be at least 5% of the
amount of the  intended purchase,  and that  5% of  the amount  of the  intended
purchase  normally  will  be  held  in escrow  in  the  form  of  shares pending
completion of the intended purchase. If  the total investments under the  Letter
are  less than the intended  amount and thereby qualify  only for a higher sales
charge than actually  paid, the appropriate  number of escrowed  Class A  shares
will  be redeemed and the proceeds used toward satisfaction of the obligation to
pay the increased sales charge. A shareholder may include the value of all Class
A shares of the Investment Funds held of record as of the initial purchase  date
under  the Letter as an "accumulation credit" toward the completion of the terms
of the Letter, but no price adjustment will be made on such shares.
 
    Class A shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset  value
without  a sales charge by employee benefit plans, retirement plans and deferred
compensation plans  and trusts  used  to fund  such  plans, including,  but  not
limited  to, those  defined in  Section 401(a),  403(b) or  457 of  the Code and
"rabbi trusts." Morgan Stanley may, in its discretion, compensate  Participating
Dealers  up  to 1.00%  in  connection with  the  sale of  Class  A shares  of an
Investment  Fund  to  401(k),  403(b)  or  457  participant-directed   qualified
retirement  plans.  Such  shareholders  would  not be  subject  to  a  CDSC upon
liquidation.
 
    As disclosed above, no sales charge will be payable at the time of  purchase
of  Class A  shares on  investments of  $1 million  or more.  However, except as
described above, a CDSC will  be imposed on such investments  in the event of  a
redemption  of  such Class  A shares  of  the Investment  Fund within  12 months
following the purchase, at the rate of 1.00% of the lesser of the current market
value of the shares redeemed  or the total cost  of such shares. In  determining
whether  a CDSC is payable, and,  if so, the amount of  the fee or charge, it is
assumed that shares not subject  to such fee or  charge are the first  redeemed,
followed  by other shares held for the longest period of time. The Fund may also
sell Class A shares of the Investment Funds at net asset value (without a  sales
charge)  to Directors  of the Fund,  directors and employees  of Morgan Stanley,
Participating Dealers, their respective affiliates and their immediate  families
and  employees of agents  of the Fund. In  addition, Class A  shares may be sold
without a sales charge when purchased  (i) through bank trust departments;  (ii)
for investors whose account is managed by certain investment advisers registered
under  the  Investment Advisers  Act of  1940, as  amended; (iii)  for investors
through certain  broker/dealers and  other financial  services firms  that  have
entered
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
into  certain agreements with the Fund which may include a requirement that such
shares be sold for the benefit of clients participating in a "wrap account" or a
similar program under  which such  clients pay a  fee to  such broker/dealer  or
other  firm; (iv)  with redemption proceeds  from other  investment companies on
which the investor had paid a front-end or contingent deferred sales charge;  or
(v)  through a broker that  maintains an omnibus account  with the Fund and such
purchases are  made  by the  following:  (1) investment  advisers  or  financial
planners  who  place trades  for their  own  accounts or  the accounts  of their
clients and who charge a management, consulting or other fee for their services,
(2) clients of such investment advisers  or financial planners who place  trades
for  their own accounts if the accounts are linked to the master account of such
investment adviser or financial planner on  the books and records of the  broker
or  agent, or (3) retirement and deferred  compensation plans and trusts used to
fund such plans, including, but not limited to, those defined in Section 401(a),
403(b) or 457 of the Code and  "rabbi trusts." Investors who purchase or  redeem
shares  through a  trust department,  broker, dealer,  agent, financial planner,
financial services  firm, or  investment adviser  may be  charged an  additional
service or transaction fee by that institution.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS B SHARES
 
    Class  B shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset value
without an initial  sales charge.  However, a CDSC  will be  imposed on  certain
Class  B shares redeemed within six years of purchase. The charge is assessed on
an amount equal to the  lesser of the then-current market  value of the Class  B
shares redeemed or the total cost of such shares. Accordingly, the CDSC will not
be  applied to dollar amounts  representing an increase in  the net asset values
above the initial purchase price of  the shares being redeemed. In addition,  no
charge is assessed on redemptions of Class B shares derived from reinvestment of
dividends or capital gains distributions.
 
    In  determining  whether  the  CDSC  is  applicable  to  a  redemption,  the
calculation is made  in the  manner that results  in the  lowest possible  rate.
Therefore,  it is assumed that the redemption is  first of any Class B shares in
the  shareholder's   account   that  represent   reinvested   dividends   and/or
distributions,  and/or  of  Class B  shares  held  longer than  six  years after
purchase, and  next  of Class  B  shares held  the  longest during  the  initial
six-year  period after  purchase. The  amount of  the contingent  deferred sales
charge, if any,  will vary depending  on the number  of years from  the time  of
purchase  of Class B  shares until the  redemption of such  shares (the "holding
period"). The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC.
 
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               SALES CHARGE AS
                                                PERCENTAGE OF
                                                     THE
                                                DOLLAR AMOUNT
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE                               SUBJECT TO
PAYMENT WAS MADE                                    CHARGE
- ---------------------------------------------  ----------------
<S>                                            <C>
First........................................        5.0%
Second.......................................        4.0%
Third........................................        3.0%
Fourth.......................................        3.0%
Fifth........................................        2.0%
Sixth........................................        1.0%
Thereafter...................................       None*
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
* As described more fully below, Class B shares automatically convert to Class A
  shares after the seventh year following purchase.
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
    Proceeds from the CDSC  are paid to  Morgan Stanley and  are used by  Morgan
Stanley   to  defray  the  expenses  of  Morgan  Stanley  related  to  providing
distribution-related services to  the Fund in  connection with the  sale of  the
Class  B shares. Morgan Stanley will  make payments to the Participating Dealers
that handle the purchases of  such shares at the rate  of 4.00% of the  purchase
price of such shares at the time of purchase and expects to reallocate a portion
of  its distribution fee, with respect to such shares, under the Rule 12b-1 Plan
for  such  class  of  shares,  as  described  under  "Management  of  the   Fund
- --Distributor"  above. The combination of the CDSC and the distribution services
fee facilitates the ability  of the Fund  to sell the Class  B shares without  a
sales charge being deducted at the time of purchase.
 
    WAIVER OF CDSC.  The CDSC will be waived on the redemption of Class B shares
(i)  following the death  or initial determination of  disability (as defined in
the Code) of a shareholder; (ii) to the extent that the redemption represents  a
minimum  required distribution  from an  individual retirement  account or other
retirement plan to a shareholder who has attained the age of 70 1/2; or (iii) to
the extent that shares redeemed have been withdrawn from a Systematic Withdrawal
Plan, up to a maximum amount of 12% per year from a shareholder account based on
the value of the account at the  time the Plan is established, provided  however
that  all  dividends and  distributions are  reinvested in  Class B  Shares. The
waiver with  respect  to  (i)  above  is only  applicable  in  cases  where  the
shareholder  account is registered (a) in the  name of an individual person, (b)
as a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship, (c) as community property or (d)
in the name of  a minor child  under the Uniform Gifts  or Uniform Transfers  to
Minors  Act. A shareholder, or his or her representative, must notify the Fund's
Transfer Agent prior to the time  of redemption if such circumstances exist  and
the  shareholder is eligible for this waiver. The shareholder is responsible for
providing sufficient documentation to the Transfer Agent to verify the existence
of such circumstances. For information on the imposition and waiver of the CDSC,
contact the Transfer Agent at 1-800-282-4404.
 
    AUTOMATIC CONVERSION TO CLASS  A SHARES.  After  the seventh year  following
purchase,  Class B shares will automatically convert  to Class A shares and will
no longer  be  subject  to  the  higher  distribution  and  service  fees.  Such
conversion  will be  on the basis  of the relative  net asset values  of the two
classes, without the imposition  of any sales load,  fee or other charge.  Under
current tax law, the conversion is not a taxable event to the shareholder.
 
    Class B shares may also be purchased through an Automatic Investment Plan as
described below.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS C SHARES
 
    Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net asset
value per share and such shares  are subject to a CDSC  at the rate of 1.00%  of
the  lesser of the current market value of the shares redeemed or the total cost
of such shares for shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase.  Morgan
Stanley  will  make  payments  to  the  Participating  Dealers  that  handle the
purchases of such  shares at the  rate of 1.00%  of the purchase  price of  such
shares  at  the  time  of  purchase  and  expects  to  reallocate  most  of  its
distribution fee, with  respect to such  shares, under the  Rule 12b-1 Plan  for
such class of shares, as described under "Management of the Fund -- Distributor"
above.  In determining whether a CDSC is payable,  and, if so, the amount of the
fee or charge, it is assumed that shares  not subject to such fee or charge  are
the  first redeemed,  followed by  other shares held  for the  longest period of
time.
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
AUTOMATIC REINVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    No initial  sales charge  or  CDSC will  be payable  on  the shares  of  any
Investment Fund or class thereof purchased through the automatic reinvestment of
dividends and distributions on shares of the Investment Funds.
 
REINVESTMENT PRIVILEGE OF EACH CLASS
 
    A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class A shares  of an  Investment Fund may
reinvest up to the full  amount redeemed (less any  CDSC, if applicable) at  net
asset  value at the time of the reinvestment  in Class A shares of an Investment
Fund without payment of a sales charge.  A shareholder who has redeemed Class  B
shares  of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may reinvest
up to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  A shares at net  asset
value  with no  initial sales  charge. A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class C
Shares of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may  reinvest
up  to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  C shares at net asset
value and not be subject to a CDSC. Purchases through the reinvestment privilege
are subject to the minimum applicable investment requirements. The  reinvestment
privilege as to any specific Class A, Class B or Class C shares must be effected
within  180 days  of the  redemption. The Transfer  Agent must  receive from the
shareholder or the shareholder's Participating Dealer both a written request for
reinvestment and a check or wire which does not exceed the redemption  proceeds.
The  written request must state  that the reinvestment is  made pursuant to this
reinvestment privilege.  If a  loss is  realized on  the redemption  of Class  A
shares,  the reinvestment may be subject to the "wash sale" rules if made within
30 days of  the redemption, resulting  in a postponement  of the recognition  of
such  loss for  federal income tax  purposes. The reinvestment  privilege may be
terminated or modified at any time.
 
RETIREMENT PLANS
 
    Qualified  retirement  plans,  IRAs,  banks,  bank  trust  departments   and
registered  investment  advisory companies,  acting in  a fiduciary  or advisory
capacity for individual, institutional or  trust accounts, may purchase Class  A
shares  of one  or more of  the Investment Funds  at net asset  value (without a
sales charge) provided that the initial order for such purchases is in an amount
of $1 million or more or  is part of a series of  orders covered by a Letter  to
invest  $1 million or  more in Class  A shares of  the Investment Funds. Certain
employee benefit plans,  retirement plans  and deferred  compensation plans  and
trusts  used to fund  such plans may  purchase Class A  shares of the Investment
Funds at net  asset value without  imposition of a  sales charge. See  "Offering
Price of Class A Shares."
 
    Morgan  Stanley  provides retirement  plan  services and  documents  and can
establish investor accounts in IRAs trusteed by Chase. This includes  Simplified
Employee  Pension Plan ("SEP")  IRA accounts and  prototype documents. Brochures
describing such plans  and materials  for establishing them  are available  from
Morgan  Stanley upon request. The brochures for plans trusteed by Chase describe
the current fees payable to Chase for its services as trustee. Investors  should
consult with their own tax advisers before establishing a retirement plan.
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
INITIAL PURCHASES DIRECTLY FROM THE FUND
 
1) BY  CHECK.  An account may be opened  by completing and signing a New Account
   Application and mailing it,  together with a check  ($1,000 minimum for  each
   Investment Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250) made
   payable to "Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]," to:
 
    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
    P.O. Box 2798
    Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798
 
  Payment  will be accepted only by check  payable in U.S. Dollars, unless prior
  approval for payment by other currencies is given by the Fund. The  Investment
  Fund(s)  and the  class(es) to  be purchased should  be designated  on the New
  Account Application. For purchases by  check, the Fund is ordinarily  credited
  with  Federal Funds within one  business day. Thus your  purchase of shares by
  check is ordinarily credited to your account at the net asset value per  share
  of the Investment Fund next determined on the day of receipt.
 
2) BY  FEDERAL  FUNDS WIRE.   Purchases  may be  made by  having your  bank wire
   Federal Funds to the Fund's bank account ($1,000 minimum for each  Investment
   Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250). To help ensure
   prompt  receipt of your Federal  Funds Wire, it is  important that you follow
   these steps:
 
  A.  Telephone  the Fund  (toll free:  1-800-282-4404) and  provide your  name,
     address,  telephone number,  Social Security or  Tax Identification Number,
     the Investment Fund(s) and the class(es) selected, the amount being  wired,
     and  by which bank. The Fund will then provide you with a bank wire control
     number. (Investors with existing accounts  must also notify the Fund  prior
     to wiring funds.)
 
  B.    Instruct your  bank  to wire  the specified  amount  to the  Fund's Wire
     Concentration Bank Account (be sure to  have your bank include the name  of
     the  Investment Fund(s) selected and the  bank wire control number assigned
     to you):
 
          Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
         One Chase Manhattan Plaza
         New York, NY 10081-1000
         ABA# 021000021
         DDA# 910-2-732907
         Attn: Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
         Ref: (Investment Fund name, your account number, your account name)
 
      Please call the Fund at 1-800-282-4404 prior to wiring funds.
 
  C.  Complete and sign the New Account  Application and mail it to the  address
      shown thereon.
 
      Purchase  orders for  shares of  the Investment  Funds which  are received
      prior to the regular close of the NYSE (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern  Time)
      will  be executed at the price computed on  the date of receipt as long as
      the Transfer Agent receives payment by check or in Federal Funds prior  to
      the regular close of the NYSE on such day.
 
      Federal  Funds purchase orders will be accepted only on a day on which the
Fund and  Chase (the  "Custodian Bank")  are open  for business.  Your bank  may
charge a service fee for wiring funds.
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
3) BY  BANK WIRE.   The  same procedure outlined  under "By  Federal Funds Wire"
   above must be  followed in  purchasing shares  by bank  wire. However,  money
   transferred  by bank wire may or may  not be converted into Federal Funds the
   same day, depending on the time the  money is received and the bank  handling
   the  wire. The timing of  effectiveness of purchase of  shares and receipt of
   dividends is subject  to the  same timing considerations  as described  above
   with respect to purchase by Federal Funds wire and depends on when payment in
   Federal  Funds is  received. Your  bank may charge  a service  fee for wiring
   funds.
 
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENTS
 
    You may add to your account at any time (minimum additional investment $100,
except for  IRAs,  for which  the  minimum  additional investment  is  $50,  and
automatic  reinvestment of dividends and  capital gains distributions, for which
there is  no minimum  and no  sales charge)  by purchasing  shares through  your
Participating Dealer, by mailing a check to the Fund (payable to "Morgan Stanley
Fund,  Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]") at the above address or by wiring monies
to the Custodian Bank as outlined above. It is very important that your  account
number  or wire  control number  be specified  in the  letter or  wire to better
assure proper  crediting to  your account.  In order  to ensure  that your  wire
orders  are invested  promptly, you  are requested to  notify one  of the Fund's
representatives (toll-free 1-800-282-4404) prior to the wire.
 
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN
 
    After establishing an account with  the Fund, investors may purchase  shares
of  the  Fund  through  an  Automatic Investment  Plan,  under  which  an amount
specified by the  shareholder equal to  at least the  applicable minimum for  an
investment amount on a monthly basis will be sent to the Transfer Agent from the
investor's  bank for investment  in the Fund. Investors  who are participants in
the Fund's Systematic Withdrawal Plan should not at the same time participate in
the Automatic Investment Plan. Investors interested in the Automatic  Investment
Plan  or seeking  further information should  contact a  Participating Dealer or
fund representative.  Shares  to  be held  in  broker  street name  may  not  be
purchased through the Automatic Investment Plan.
 
OTHER PURCHASE INFORMATION
 
    The  purchase price for the Class A  shares of the Investment Funds is based
upon the net asset  value per share  plus the applicable  sales charge, if  any,
next  determined after  the order is  received by the  Fund and for  the Class B
shares and Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  is based on  the net  asset
value  per  share next  determined  after the  order  is received  by  the Fund.
Participating Dealers are responsible for forwarding orders they receive to  the
Fund by the applicable times described below on the same day as their receipt of
the orders to permit purchase of shares as described above and the failure to do
so  will result  in the investors  being unable  to obtain that  day's net asset
value. See "Valuation of Shares." An  order received prior to the regular  close
of  the NYSE, which is  currently 4:00 p.m. (Eastern  Time), will be executed at
the price computed on the date of receipt as long as the Transfer Agent receives
payment by check or in Federal Funds prior  to the regular close of the NYSE  on
such day. An order received after the regular close of the NYSE will be executed
at  the price computed on the next day the  NYSE is open as long as the Transfer
Agent receives payment by check or in  Federal Funds prior to the regular  close
of  the NYSE on such day. If you purchase shares of an Investment Fund directly,
you must make payment by check or  Federal Funds to effect your purchase of  the
shares and obtain the price for the shares as described above. Purchasing shares
of  an Investment  Fund is different  from placing  a trade for  securities at a
given price and having a certain number  of days in which to make settlement  or
payment for the securities.
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
    In  the interest  of economy  and convenience  and because  of the operating
procedures of the Fund, certificates representing shares of the Investment Funds
will normally  not  be issued.  Such  certificates  will be  made  available  to
investors,  however, upon written request to  the Fund. All shares purchased are
confirmed to you and credited to your account on the Fund's books maintained  by
the  Adviser or  its agents. You  will have  the same rights  and ownership with
respect to such shares as if certificates had been issued.
 
    To ensure that checks are collected by the Fund, withdrawals of  investments
made  by check are not presently permitted  until the Fund's depository bank has
made fully  available for  withdrawal the  check amount  used to  purchase  Fund
shares, which generally will be within 15 days. As a condition of this offering,
if  a purchase  is canceled  due to  nonpayment or  because your  check does not
clear, you will be responsible for any loss the Fund and/or its agents incur. If
you are already a shareholder, the  Fund may redeem shares from your  account(s)
to  reimburse the Fund and/or  its agents for any loss.  In addition, you may be
prohibited or restricted from making future purchases in the Fund.
 
    Investors who purchase Class A shares of an Investment Fund directly  rather
than through a Participating Dealer will pay the public offering price including
the  sales charge,  and the  sales charge  will be  payable, as  described under
"Purchase of  Shares  -- Offering  Price"  above,  to Morgan  Stanley  unless  a
Participating  Dealer is  designated on  the account  application. Investors may
also invest in the Investment  Funds by purchasing shares through  Participating
Dealers.
 
                              REDEMPTION OF SHARES
 
    You  may  withdraw all  or  any portion  of the  amount  in your  account by
redeeming shares at any time. Please note  that purchases made by check are  not
permitted  to  be  redeemed until  the  Fund's  depository bank  has  made fully
available for withdrawal the  check amount used to  purchase Fund shares,  which
generally  will be within  15 days. The Fund  will redeem shares  of each of the
Investment Funds at its next determined net asset value. A CDSC of 1.00% will be
imposed on certain Class  A shares of the  Investment Funds that were  purchased
without  payment of the initial sales charge due to the size of the purchase and
are redeemed  within  one  year of  purchase.  A  maximum CDSC  of  5.00%  which
decreases  in steps to  0% after six years,  will be imposed  on certain Class B
shares of the Investment Funds that are redeemed within six years of purchase. A
CDSC of 1.00% will be imposed on certain Class C shares of the Investment  Funds
that  are redeemed within  one year of  purchase. See "Purchase  of Shares." The
CDSC will be imposed on the lesser of the current market value or the total cost
of the shares  being redeemed. In  determining whether either  of such CDSCs  is
payable,  and, if so,  the amount of the  charge, it is  assumed that shares not
subject to such charge are the first redeemed followed by other shares held  for
the  longest period of time.  On days that both the  NYSE and the Custodian Bank
are open for business, the net asset value per share of the Investment Funds  is
determined  at the  regular close  of trading of  the NYSE  (currently 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time).  Shares  of  an  Investment  Fund may  be  redeemed  by  mail  or
telephone.  Any redemption may be  more or less than  the purchase price of your
shares depending on the  market value of the  investment securities held by  the
Investment Fund at the time of purchase and of redemption, among other factors.
 
    The  CDSC may be waived on redemptions  of shares in connection with certain
post-retirement withdrawals from IRA or other retirement plans or following  the
death  or  disability (as  defined  in the  Internal  Revenue Code  of  1986, as
amended) of a shareholder of the Fund.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
    Redemption of shares held in broker  street name may not be accomplished  by
mail  or telephone as described below. Shares  held in broker street name may be
redeemed only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    The Investment Funds will  redeem their shares at  the net asset value  next
determined  after your request is received, if your request is received in "good
order" by  the Transfer  Agent. If  applicable, a  CDSC will  be deducted.  Your
request  should be  addressed to Chase  Global Funds Services  Company, P.O. Box
2798, Boston,  Massachusetts 02208-2798,  except  that deliveries  by  overnight
courier  should be addressed to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. c/o Chase Global Funds
Services Company, 73 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108-3913.
 
    "Good order"  means that  the  request to  redeem  shares must  include  the
following documentation:
 
    (a)  A letter of instruction or a  stock assignment specifying the number of
shares or dollar amount to be redeemed,  signed by all registered owners of  the
shares in the exact names in which they are registered;
 
    (b)  Any required signature guarantees (see "Further Redemption Information"
below); and
 
    (c) Other supporting legal documents, if  required, in the case of  estates,
trusts,  guardianships, custodianships, corporations, pension and profit-sharing
plans and other organizations.
 
    Shareholders who are uncertain of requirements for redemption should consult
with their Participating Dealers or with a Fund representative.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    Unless you have elected on the New Account Application or on a separate form
supplied by  the Transfer  Agent not  to utilize  the telephone  redemption  and
exchange  privileges, you or your Participating  Dealer can request a redemption
of your shares  by calling the  Fund and requesting  the redemption proceeds  be
mailed  to  you  or  wired  to  your bank.  Please  contact  one  of  the Fund's
representatives for further details. In times of drastic market conditions,  the
telephone  redemption option  may be difficult  to implement.  If you experience
difficulty in making a telephone redemption, your request may be made by mail or
overnight courier,  and it  will be  implemented  at the  net asset  value  next
determined  after it is received minus the CDSC, if any. The Fund and the Fund's
Transfer Agent will  employ reasonable procedures  to confirm that  instructions
communicated  by telephone are  genuine. These procedures  include requiring the
investor to provide certain personal  identification information at the time  an
account  is  opened  and  prior  to  effecting  each  transaction  requested  by
telephone. In addition, all telephone transaction requests will be recorded  and
investors  may be required to provide additional telecopied written instructions
of such transaction requests. The Fund or the Transfer Agent may be  responsible
for   losses,  liabilities,  costs   or  expenses  for   acting  upon  telephone
transactions if procedures are  not followed to  confirm that such  transactions
are genuine.
 
    For  shares  that  are  held  in  broker  street  name,  you  cannot request
redemption by  telephone  or  by mail;  such  shares  may be  redeemed  only  by
contacting  your Participating Dealer. The  Fund may impose a  fee of $8.00 on a
wire redemption of shares of the Fund that will be deducted from the  redemption
proceeds.
 
    To  change the name of the commercial  bank or account designated to receive
redemption proceeds, a written request must be sent to the Transfer Agent at the
address above. Requests to  change the bank  or account must  be signed by  each
shareholder and each signature must be guaranteed.
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN
 
    A  shareholder of $5,000 or more of  the Fund's shares at the Offering Price
(net asset value plus the sales charge, if any) may provide for the payment from
the owner's account of any requested dollar amount to be paid to the owner or  a
designated  payee  monthly,  quarterly, semiannually  or  annually.  The minimum
periodic payment is  $100. Shares are  redeemed so that  the payee will  receive
payment  on approximately the  first of the  month. Any income  and capital gain
dividends  will  be  automatically  reinvested   at  net  asset  value  on   the
reinvestment  date. A  sufficient number of  full and fractional  shares will be
redeemed to make the designated payment. Depending upon the size of the payments
requested and  fluctuations in  the  net asset  value  of the  shares  redeemed,
redemptions for the purpose of making such payments may result in a gain or loss
for  tax purposes and may reduce or even exhaust the shareholder's Fund account.
To protect shareholders and the Funds, if the Systematic Withdrawal Plan is  not
established  when an  account is  opened, a  signature guarantee  is required to
establish a Systematic Withdrawal Plan  subsequently if withdrawal payments  are
directed  to an  address other  than the address  of record,  or if  a change of
address request  has been  submitted in  the last  30 days.  See "Redemption  of
Shares" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    The  purchase of Class A shares of an Investment Fund while participating in
a systematic withdrawal plan ordinarily will be disadvantageous to the  investor
because  the investor will be paying a sales charge on the purchase of shares at
the same time that the  investor is redeeming shares  upon which a sales  charge
may  already have been paid.  The purchase of certain Class  B shares or Class C
shares of an Investment  Fund while participating  in the Systematic  Withdrawal
Plan  may be disadvantageous because  the new shares will be  subject to up to a
5.00% CDSC for up  to six years after  purchase, or a 1.00%  CDSC for the  first
year after purchase, respectively. Therefore, the Fund will not knowingly permit
additional investments of less than $2,000 in an Investment Fund if the investor
is  at the  same time  making systematic withdrawals.  The right  is reserved to
amend the Systematic  Withdrawal Plan on  thirty days' notice.  The plan may  be
terminated at any time by the investor or the Fund.
 
    The  CDSC on Class B  shares is waived for  withdrawals under the Systematic
Withdrawal Plan of a maximum of 1% per month, 3% per quarter, 6% semiannually or
12%  annually,  of  a  shareholder's   investment  in,  and  any  dividends   or
distributions on, Class B shares of a Fund at the time the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan  commences, provided that the shareholder  elects to have all dividends and
distributions on the  shareholder's Class B  shares automatically reinvested  in
additional Class B shares. Under this CDSC waiver policy, amounts withdrawn each
month  will be  paid by  redeeming first Class  B shares  not subject  to a CDSC
because the shares were  purchased by the reinvestment  of dividends or  capital
gains  distributions, the CDSC  period has elapsed  or some other  waiver of the
CDSC applies. If no Class B shares not subject to the CDSC are available, or not
enough such shares are available, Class B shares having a CDSC will be  redeemed
next, beginning with such shares held for the longest period of time (having the
lowest  CDSC payable upon  redemption) and continuing with  shares held the next
longest period  of  time until  shares  held the  shortest  period of  time  are
redeemed.  Under  this  policy, the  least  amount  of CDSC  will  be  waived by
withdrawals under the Systematic Withdrawal Plan.
 
    See "Purchase of Shares" for a description of the circumstances under  which
a  CDSC on Class A shares, Class B  shares and Class C shares, respectively, may
be assessed on redemptions of such shares made through the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan as described above.
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
FURTHER REDEMPTION INFORMATION
 
    The  Fund  will  pay  for  shares  redeemed  through  broker-dealers   using
electronic  purchase and redemption systems within seven days after receipt of a
redemption request through such system.  In other situations, the Fund  normally
will  make  payment for  all  shares redeemed  under  this procedure  within one
business day of receipt  of the request,  but in no event  will payment be  made
more  than  seven days  after receipt  of  a redemption  request in  good order.
Payment for redeemed shares  will be sent to  the shareholder within seven  days
after  receipt of the request in proper form, except that the Fund may delay the
mailing of  the  redemption  check,  or a  portion  thereof,  until  the  Fund's
depository bank has made fully available for withdrawal the check amount used to
purchase  Fund shares,  which generally  will be  within 15  days. The  Fund may
suspend the right of redemption or postpone  the date at times when the NYSE  is
closed, or under any emergency circumstances as determined by the SEC.
 
    If  the Board of  Directors determines that  it would be  detrimental to the
best interests of  the remaining  shareholders of  the Investment  Fund to  make
payment  wholly or partly in  cash, the Fund may  pay the redemption proceeds in
whole or in part by a distribution-in-kind of readily marketable securities held
by the Investment Funds in lieu of  cash in conformity with applicable rules  of
the  SEC. Shareholders  may incur brokerage  charges upon the  sale of portfolio
securities so received  in payment of  redemptions. Due to  the relatively  high
cost  of maintaining  smaller accounts,  the Fund  reserves the  right to redeem
shares in any account invested in an Investment Fund having a value of less than
$1,000. The  Fund, however,  will not  redeem shares  based solely  upon  market
reductions  in net asset  value. If at  any time your  total investment does not
equal or exceed the stated minimum value,  you may be notified of this fact  and
you will be allowed at least 60 days to make an additional investment before the
redemption is processed.
 
    To  protect  your account,  the Fund  and its  agents from  fraud, signature
guarantees are required for  certain redemptions to verify  the identity of  the
person  who has  authorized a redemption  from your account.  Please contact the
Transfer Agent  for  further information.  See  "Redemption of  Shares"  in  the
Statement of Additional Information.
 
                              SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    You may exchange shares that you own in an Investment Fund for shares of the
same  class of another  Investment Fund. Shares  of the Investment  Funds may be
exchanged by  mail or  telephone, except  that  no shares  may be  exchanged  by
telephone  if you have elected  on the New Account  Application or on a separate
form supplied by the Transfer Agent  not to accept the telephone redemption  and
exchange  privilege. Before you make an exchange, you should read the Prospectus
of the new  Investment Fund in  which you  seek to invest.  Because an  exchange
transaction is treated as a redemption followed by a purchase, an exchange would
be  considered a  taxable event  for shareholders  subject to  tax. The exchange
privilege is only available with respect to Investment Funds that are registered
for sale in a  shareholder's state of residence.  The exchange privilege may  be
modified  or  terminated  by  the Fund  at  any  time upon  60  days'  notice to
shareholders.
 
    No CDSC, if one is otherwise applicable, will be assessed at the time of the
exchange if the shareholder exchanges from one class of an Investment Fund  into
the same class of another Investment Fund. For purposes of determining whether a
shareholder's  redemption will be  subject to a  CDSC, the shareholder's holding
period
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
of shares acquired  through an exchange  will be  related back to  the time  the
shareholder  initially purchased the Fund shares  that were exchanged so long as
the shares are held in  the same class of the  Investment Funds. As an  example,
Class  A share purchases  of $1,000,000 or  more, purchased at  net asset value,
will not be assessed the 1.00% CDSC if exchanged into Class A shares of  another
Investment  Fund during  the first  year after  purchase. Class  B shares  of an
Investment Fund will not be assessed the Class B CDSC if exchanged into Class  B
shares  of another  Investment Fund during  the first six  years after purchase.
Class C shares of an Investment Fund will not be subject to a CDSC for the first
year if exchanged into Class C shares of another Investment Fund. If the initial
shares of an Investment Fund purchased by  the investor were not subject to  any
sales  load or CDSC on such shares, then no sales load or CDSC for shares of the
same class will be imposed on any subsequent exchanges involving such shares. No
initial sales charge will be assessed, however, and any applicable CDSC will not
be imposed when  shares of an  Investment Fund  are exchanged for  shares of  an
Investment  Fund where the purchase of shares of the Investment Fund through the
exchange is of any of the types that benefit from a waiver of such initial sales
charge or CDSC.
 
    CLASS A SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class A shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class A shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class A shares  purchased pursuant  to such exchange  will not  be assessed  the
initial sales charges described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS  B SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender their Class B shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the  number
of Class B shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have  a value equal to the total  redemption proceeds of shares tendered divided
by the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is  received.
Class  B shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS C SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class C shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class C shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class C shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the  CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    Morgan Stanley will tender the shares offered for exchange for redemption by
the  Fund  and  will use  the  proceeds  to purchase  shares  of  the designated
Investment Fund on the shareholder's behalf. Under normal circumstances,  Morgan
Stanley will use the proceeds from shares redeemed on any day to purchase shares
on the same Business Day.
 
    Exchanges may also be subject to limitations as to amounts or frequency, and
to  other restrictions established by the Board of Directors to assure that such
exchanges do not disadvantage the Fund and its shareholders.
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
    Exchange of Fund shares held in  broker street name may not be  accomplished
by  mail or telephone as described below.  Shares held in broker street name may
be exchanged only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    In order to  exchange shares  by mail, you  should include  in the  exchange
request the name and account number of your current Investment Fund, the name of
the  Investment Fund and class of such  Fund, if applicable, from which and into
which you  intend to  exchange  shares, and  the  signatures of  all  registered
account  holders. Send the exchange request  to the Transfer Agent, Chase Global
Funds Services Company, P.O. Box 2798, Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    When exchanging shares by  telephone, have ready the  name and your  account
number of the Investment Fund, the name of the Investment Fund and class of such
Fund,  if applicable, from which  and into which you  intend to exchange shares,
your Social  Security number  or  Tax I.D.  number,  and your  account  address.
Requests  for telephone exchanges received prior to 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time) are
processed at the close of business that same day based on the net asset value of
the applicable Investment Funds at such time. Requests received after 4:00  p.m.
(Eastern  Time) are processed the next Business Day based on the net asset value
determined at the close  of business on  such day. For shares  that are held  in
broker  street name, you cannot  request exchange by telephone  or by mail; such
shares may  be  exchanged only  by  contacting your  Participating  Dealer.  For
additional   information  regarding  responsibility   for  the  authenticity  of
telephoned instructions, see "Redemption of Shares -- By Telephone" above.
 
TRANSFER OF REGISTRATION
 
    You may transfer  the registration  of any of  your Fund  shares to  another
person  by writing to  the Transfer Agent, Chase  Global Funds Services Company,
P.O. Box 2798, Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798. As in the case of  redemptions,
the  written request must be received in "good order" before any transfer can be
made. Shares held in  broker street name may  be transferred only by  contacting
your Participating Dealer.
 
                              VALUATION OF SHARES
 
    The  net asset  value per  share of  each Investment  Fund is  determined by
dividing the total fair  market value of the  Investment Fund's investments  and
other assets, less all liabilities, by the total number of outstanding shares of
the  Investment Fund. Net asset value is calculated separately for each class of
the Investment  Funds. Net  asset value  per share  of the  Investment Funds  is
determined as of the regular close of the NYSE on each day that the NYSE is open
for  business.  Securities  listed on  a  securities exchange  for  which market
quotations are available are valued at their closing price. If no closing  price
is  available, such securities will  be valued at the  last quoted sale price on
the day the valuation is made.  Price information on listed securities is  taken
from  the exchange where  the security is  primarily traded. Unlisted securities
and listed  securities  not  traded  on the  valuation  date  for  which  market
quotations  are not readily available  are valued at a  price within a range not
exceeding the  current asked  price nor  less than  the current  bid price.  The
current  bid and asked prices are determined either based on the average bid and
asked prices quoted on such valuation  date by reputable brokers or as  provided
by a reputable pricing service.
 
                                       47
<PAGE>
    Bonds and other fixed income securities are valued according to the broadest
and  most representative market,  which will ordinarily  be the over-the-counter
market. Net asset value includes interest  on fixed income securities, which  is
accrued  daily.  In addition,  bonds and  other fixed  income securities  may be
valued on the basis of prices provided by a pricing service when such prices are
believed to  reflect  the fair  market  value  of such  securities.  The  prices
provided  by a pricing service are determined without regard to bid or last sale
prices but take  into account institutional  size trading in  similar groups  of
securities  and any developments related  to the specific securities. Securities
not priced in this manner  are valued at the most  recent quoted bid price,  or,
when  stock exchange valuations are used, at the latest quoted sale price on the
day of valuation. If there is no such reported sale, the latest quoted bid price
will be used. Debt securities purchased with remaining maturities of 60 days  or
less are valued at amortized cost, if it approximates market value. In the event
that  amortized  cost  does  not  approximate  market  value,  market  prices as
determined above will be used.
 
    For the purpose of  calculating each Investment Fund's  net asset value  per
share,  certain  securities  are  valued  by  the  "amortized  cost"  method  of
valuation, which does  not take into  account unrealized gains  or losses.  This
involves  valuing an instrument  at its cost and  thereafter assuming a constant
amortization to maturity of any discount or premium, regardless of the impact of
fluctuating interest rates  on the market  value of the  instrument. While  this
method  provides certainty in  valuation, it may result  in periods during which
value, as determined by amortized cost, is  higher or lower than the price  each
Investment Fund would receive if it sold the instrument.
 
    The value of other assets and securities for which no quotations are readily
available  (including  restricted  and unlisted  foreign  securities)  and those
securities for which it is inappropriate to determine prices in accordance  with
the  above procedures are determined  in good faith at  fair value using methods
determined by the  Board of  Directors. For  purposes of  calculating net  asset
value  per  share, all  assets and  liabilities  initially expressed  in foreign
currencies will be converted into U.S. Dollars at the mean of the bid price  and
asked  price of  such currencies against  the U.S.  Dollar as quoted  by a major
bank.
 
    Although the legal rights  of Class A,  Class B and Class  C shares will  be
identical,  the different expenses borne by  each class will result in different
net asset  values and  dividends.  Dividends will  differ by  approximately  the
amount  of the distribution expense accrual  differential among the classes. The
respective net asset values of Class B shares and Class C shares will  generally
be  lower than the net asset  value of Class A shares  as a result of the larger
distribution fee charged to Class B and Class C shares.
 
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
    The Fund may  from time  to time advertise  total return  of the  Investment
Funds.  THESE FIGURES ARE BASED  ON HISTORICAL EARNINGS AND  ARE NOT INTENDED TO
INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return"  shows what an investment in  an
Investment  Fund would have earned over a specified period of time (such as one,
three, five or ten  years) assuming that all  distributions and dividends by  an
Investment  Fund were  reinvested on the  reinvestment dates  during the period.
Total return does not take into account  any federal or state income taxes  that
may be payable upon redemption by shareholders subject to tax. The Fund may also
include  comparative  performance  information in  advertising  or  marketing an
Investment Fund's shares.  Such performance  information may  include data  from
Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. and Morgan Stanley Capital International.
 
    From  time  to time  the American  Value Fund  may advertise  "yield." Yield
figures are based  on historical performance  and are not  intended to  indicate
future    performance.   The   "yield"   of   such   Investment   Funds   refers
 
                                       48
<PAGE>
to the income generated by an investment  in the Investment Funds over a  30-day
period  (which period will be stated in  the advertisement). The 30-day yield is
further described under "Performance Information" in the Statement of Additional
Information. The Fund may also use comparative performance information from time
to time  in  marketing  Fund  shares,  including  data  from  Lipper  Analytical
Services, Inc. and/or Donoghue's Money Fund Report.
 
    The  respective performance figures for Class B shares and Class C shares of
each Fund will generally  be lower than  those for Class A  shares of such  Fund
because  of the larger  distribution fee charged  to Class B  shares and Class C
shares.
 
                          DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    Shareholders  will  automatically  be   credited  with  all  dividends   and
distributions  in additional shares  at net asset value,  without payment of any
initial sales charge for Class A shares  of any of the Investment Funds,  except
that,  upon written notice to the Fund or by checking off the appropriate box in
the Distribution Option Section  on the New  Account Application, a  shareholder
may  elect to  receive dividends and/or  distributions in  cash. Shares received
through reinvestment of dividends  and/or distributions will  not be subject  to
any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    Each  Investment Fund  expects to  distribute substantially  all of  its net
investment income in  the form of  quarterly dividends. Net  realized gains,  if
any,  will be distributed  annually. Confirmations of the  purchase of shares of
each Investment Fund through the automatic reinvestment of income dividends  and
capital  gains distributions will be provided,  pursuant to Rule 10b-10(b) under
the Securities Exchange Act  of 1934, as amended,  on the next quarterly  client
statement following such purchase of shares. Consequently, confirmations of such
purchases  will not be provided at the  time of completion of such purchases, as
might otherwise be required by Rule 10b-10.
 
    Any undistributed  net investment  income and  undistributed realized  gains
increase  an Investment  Fund's net  assets for  the purpose  of calculating net
asset value  per share.  Therefore, on  the "ex-dividend"  or  "ex-distribution"
date, the net asset value per share excludes the dividend or distribution (i.e.,
is  reduced by the per share amount  of the dividend or distribution). Dividends
and distributions paid  shortly after  the purchase  of shares  by an  investor,
although  in effect a return of capital,  are taxable to shareholders subject to
tax.
 
    Because of  the  higher  distribution fee,  potentially  higher  shareholder
servicing  fee, and any other  expenses that may be  attributable to the Class B
shares and Class C shares of  the Investment Funds, the net income  attributable
to  and  the dividends  payable  on Class  B  shares and  Class  C shares  of an
Investment Fund  will be  lower than  the  net income  attributable to  and  the
dividends  payable on Class A  shares of the Investment  Funds. As a result, the
net asset value per share  of the classes of an  Investment Fund will differ  at
times.  Expenses  of a  Fund allocated  to a  particular class  of shares  of an
Investment Fund will be borne on a  pro rata basis by each outstanding share  of
that class.
 
                                       49
<PAGE>
                                     TAXES
 
TAX STATUS OF THE INVESTMENT FUNDS
 
    The following summary of certain federal income tax consequences is based on
current tax laws and regulations, which may be changed by legislative, judicial,
or  administrative  action.  See  also  the tax  sections  in  the  Statement of
Additional Information.
 
    No attempt has been made to  present a detailed explanation of the  federal,
state,  or local income tax treatment of an Investment Fund or its shareholders.
Accordingly, shareholders  are urged  to consult  their tax  advisors  regarding
specific questions as to federal, state and local income taxes.
 
    Each  Investment Fund is generally treated  as a separate entity for federal
income tax purposes,  and thus the  provisions of the  Internal Revenue Code  of
1986, as amended (the "Code"), generally will be applied to each Investment Fund
separately,  rather than to  the Fund as  a whole. Net  long-term and short-term
capital gains, net income, and  operating expenses therefore will be  determined
separately for each Investment Fund.
 
    Each  Investment  Fund  intends to  qualify  for the  special  tax treatment
afforded "regulated investment  companies" ("RICs")  under Subchapter  M of  the
Code  so that it will be relieved of federal  income tax on that part of its net
investment income and net capital gain (the excess of net long-term capital gain
over net short-term capital loss) which is distributed to its shareholders.
 
TAX STATUS OF DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    Each Investment Fund  distributes substantially  all of  its net  investment
income  (including,  for  this purpose,  net  short-term capital  gain),  to its
shareholders. Dividends  paid by  an  Investment Fund  from its  net  investment
income  will be taxable to the shareholders  of such Investment Fund as ordinary
income, whether received in cash or in additional shares, if the shareholder  is
subject  to tax. Such  dividends paid by  an Investment Fund  generally will not
qualify for the dividends-received deduction to corporations.
 
    Distributions of net  capital gains  (i.e., net long-term  capital gains  in
excess  of  net  short-term  capital  losses  and  any  available  capital  loss
carryforward) are taxable to  shareholders subject to  tax as long-term  capital
gains,  regardless of  how long the  shareholder has held  the Investment Fund's
shares.  Capital  gains  distributions  are  not  eligible  for  the   corporate
dividends-received  deduction. Each Investment Fund  will make annual reports to
shareholders of the Federal income tax status of all distributions.
 
    Shareholders may also be subject to  state and local taxes on  distributions
from  the Fund. Shareholders are advised to  consult their own tax advisers with
respect to tax consequences to them of an investment in the Fund.
 
    Dividends declared in October, November  and December by an Investment  Fund
payable as of a record date in such month and paid at any time during January of
the  following year are  treated as having  been paid by  an Investment Fund and
received by the shareholders on December 31 of the year declared.
 
    A sale, exchange or  redemption of shares  held as a  capital asset will  be
capital  gain or  loss and  such gain  or loss  will be  a taxable  event to the
shareholder.
 
                                       50
<PAGE>
    THE  TAX  DISCUSSION  SET  FORTH  ABOVE  IS  INCLUDED  HEREIN  FOR   GENERAL
INFORMATION  ONLY. PROSPECTIVE  INVESTORS AND SHAREHOLDERS  SHOULD CONSULT THEIR
OWN TAX ADVISERS WITH RESPECT TO THE  TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF AN  INVESTMENT
IN AN INVESTMENT FUND.
 
                              GENERAL INFORMATION
 
DESCRIPTION OF COMMON STOCK
 
    The  Fund was organized  as a Maryland  corporation on August  14, 1992. The
Amended Articles  of Incorporation  currently permit  the Fund  to issue  13.375
billion  shares of  common stock,  par value  $.001 per  share. Pursuant  to the
Fund's By-Laws, the  Board of Directors  may increase the  number of shares  the
Fund  is authorized  to issue  without the approval  of the  shareholders of the
Fund. The Board of Directors has the  power to designate one or more classes  of
shares  of common stock and to classify  and reclassify any unissued shares with
respect to such classes. The current Class C shares of the Investment Funds were
named Class B shares  until May 1,  1995 when such shares  were renamed Class  C
shares and thereafter new Class B shares were created.
 
    The  shares  of  the Investment  Funds,  when  issued, will  be  fully paid,
nonassessable, fully transferable and  redeemable at the  option of the  holder.
The  shares have no preference as to conversion, exchange, dividends, retirement
or other features and  have no preemptive rights.  The shares of the  Investment
Funds  have non-cumulative voting  rights, which means that  the holders of more
than 50% of the shares  voting for the election of  Directors can elect 100%  of
the  Directors if  they choose  to do so.  Under Maryland  law, the  Fund is not
required to hold an annual meeting of its shareholders unless required to do  so
under  the 1940  Act. A  Director may  be removed  by shareholders  at a special
meeting called upon written request of  shareholders owning at least 10% of  the
outstanding shares of the Fund. Any person or organization owning 25% or more of
the  outstanding shares of an  Investment Fund may be  presumed to "control" (as
that term is  defined in the  1940 Act) such  Investment Fund. As  of March  31,
1996, The Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New
York  10020, was presumed to "control" the  Class C shares of the American Value
Fund and the Class A, Class B and  Class C shares of the Aggressive Equity  Fund
based solely on its ownership of 25% or more of the outstanding voting shares of
such funds.
 
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
 
    The  Fund will send to its  shareholders annual and semi-annual reports; the
financial statements  appearing in  annual reports  are audited  by  independent
accountants.
 
    In  addition, the Fund or the Transfer  Agent, will send to each shareholder
having  an  account  directly  with  the  Fund  a  quarterly  statement  showing
transactions in the account, the total number of shares owned, and any dividends
or distributions paid. In addition, when a transaction occurs in a shareholder's
account, the Fund or the Transfer Agent will send the shareholder a confirmation
statement showing the same information.
 
CUSTODIAN
 
    As  of September 1,  1995, domestic securities  and cash are  held by Chase,
which replaced U.S.  Trust, as the  Fund's domestic custodian.  Chase is not  an
affiliate  of  the Adviser  or the  Distributor.  Morgan Stanley  Trust Company,
Brooklyn, New York ("Morgan  Stanley Trust"), acts as  the Fund's custodian  for
foreign assets held outside the United States and employs subcustodians who were
approved by the Directors of the Fund in
 
                                       51
<PAGE>
accordance  with regulations of  the SEC for the  purpose of providing custodial
services for such assets.  Morgan Stanley Trust may  also hold certain  domestic
assets for the Fund. Morgan Stanley Trust is an affiliate of the Adviser and the
Distributor. For more information on the custodians, see "General Information --
Custody Arrangements" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
DIVIDEND DISBURSING AND TRANSFER AGENT
 
    Chase   Global   Funds  Services   Company,   73  Tremont   Street,  Boston,
Massachusetts 02108-3913, acts as Dividend Disbursing and Transfer Agent for the
Fund.
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
    Price Waterhouse  LLP, 1177  Avenue of  the Americas,  New York,  NY  10036,
serves  as independent accountants for the  Fund and audits its annual financial
statements.
 
                                       52
<PAGE>
                                   APPENDIX A
                     DESCRIPTION OF CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
 
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    Aaa  -- Bonds which  are rated Aaa are  judged to be  the best quality. They
carry the smallest degree  of investment risk and  are generally referred to  as
"gilt-edge."  Interest payments are protected by  a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin, and principal  is secure. While  the various protective  elements
are  likely to change,  such changes as  can be visualized  are most unlikely to
impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
 
    Aa -- Bonds  which are  rated Aa are  judged to  be of high  quality by  all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high  grade bonds. They are  rated lower than the  best bonds because margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements may be  of greater  amplitude or there  may be  other elements  present
which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.
 
    Moody's  applies  numerical modifiers  1, 2  and 3  in the  Aa and  A rating
categories. The modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks at a higher end  of
the  rating category, modifier 2 indicates a mid-range rating and the modifier 3
indicates that the issue ranks at the lower end of the rating category.
 
    A -- Bonds which  are rated A possess  many favorable investment  attributes
and  are  to be  considered as  upper medium  grade obligations.  Factors giving
security to principal and interest are  considered adequate but elements may  be
present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.
 
    Baa -- Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium grade obligations,
i.e.,  they are neither  highly protected nor  poorly secured. Interest payments
and principal security appear  adequate for the  present but certain  protective
elements  may be lacking or may  be characteristically unreliable over any great
length of time. Such  bonds lack outstanding  investment characteristics and  in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.
 
    Ba  -- Bonds  which are  rated Ba are  judged to  have speculative elements;
their future  cannot be  considered as  well assured.  Often the  protection  of
interest  and  principal payments  may be  very moderate,  and thereby  not well
safeguarded during  both good  and bad  times over  the future.  Uncertainty  of
position characterizes bonds in this class.
 
    B -- Bonds which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest  and principal payments  or of maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
 
    Caa -- Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal  or
interest.
 
    Ca  -- Bonds which are rated  Ca represent obligations which are speculative
in a  high  degree. Such  issues  are often  in  default or  have  other  marked
shortcomings.
 
    C -- Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues
so  rated can be regarded  as having extremely poor  prospects of ever attaining
any real investment standing.
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    AAA -- Bonds rated AAA have the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's
to a debt obligation and indicate an extremely strong capacity to pay  principal
and interest.
 
    AA  -- Bonds rated AA have a very  strong capacity to pay interest and repay
principal and differ from the highest rated issues only to a small degree.
 
    A --  Bonds  rated A  have  a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and  repay
principal  although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in  circumstances and  economic conditions  than bonds  in higher  rated
categories.
 
    BBB  -- Debt  rated BBB is  regarded as  having an adequate  capacity to pay
interest and repay principal. Whereas  it normally exhibits adequate  protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions or  changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a  weakened capacity to pay  interest and repay principal  for
debt in this category than for debt in higher rated categories.
 
    BB,  B, CCC, CC -- Debt rated BB, B,  CCC and CC is regarded, on balance, as
predominantly speculative with  respect to  capacity to pay  interest and  repay
principal  in  accordance with  the terms  of the  obligation. BB  indicates the
lowest degree of  speculation and CC  the highest degree  of speculation.  While
such  debt will likely  have some quality  and protective characteristics, these
are outweighed  by  large  uncertainties  or major  risk  exposures  to  adverse
conditions.
 
    C -- The rating C is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is being
paid.
 
    D -- Debt rated D is in default, and payment of interest and/or repayment of
principal is in arrears.
 
                                      A-2
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
AMERICAN VALUE, AGGRESSIVE EQUITY AND U.S. REAL ESTATE FUNDS
          P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MA 02208-2798 (800-282-4404)        NEW ACCOUNT
APPLICATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              ACCOUNT REGISTRATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          / /  Individual         / /  Joint Tenants         / /  Trust
/ /  Gift/Transfer to Minor            / /  Other____________________
 
NOTE:  Joint  tenant  registration  will  be as  "joint  tenants  with  right of
survivorship"  and  not   as  "tenants  in   common"  unless  specified.   Trust
registrations  should specify  name of the  trust, trustee(s), beneficiary(ies),
and date of trust instrument. Registration for Uniform Gifts/Transfers to Minors
should be in the name of one custodian and one minor and include the state under
which the custodianship  is created  (using the minor's  Social Security  Number
("SSN")).  For an Individual Retirement  Account ("IRA") a different application
is required.  Please  call Chase  Global  Funds Services  Company  ("CGFSC")  at
800-282-4404 or your investment dealer to obtain the IRA application.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
- ---------------------------------------------    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name(s) (PLEASE PRINT)                           Social Security Number(s) or Taxpayer Identification Number(s) ("TIN(s)")
 
- ---------------------------------------------    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name                                             Telephone Number
 
- ---------------------------------------------
Address
 
- ---------------------------------------------    / /  U.S. Citizen         / /  Other (specify citizenship) --------------------
City/State/Zip
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSOLIDATED  MAILINGS: If you  or your family members  own multiple accounts in
the Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc.,  you can  prevent  duplicate mailings  to  your
address by completing this section.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                                 NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 FUND SELECTION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The  minimum initial and subsequent investment is $1,000 and $100, respectively,
except for IRAs, for which the  minimum amounts are $250 and $50,  respectively.
Attach a check payable to MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC. -- Investment Fund name.
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>
Morgan Stanley American Value Fund             Class A (603)   $           Class B (628)   $           Class C (653)   $
                                                               ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity Fund          Class A (610)   $           Class B (634)   $           Class C (660)
                                                               ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley U.S. Real Estate Fund           Class A (608)   $           Class B (632)   $           Class C (658)   $
                                                               ----------                  ----------                  ----------
                                                                          Total Initial Investment:
 
<CAPTION>
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>
 
NOTE: IF INVESTING BY WIRE, YOU MUST      A.  By Mail: Enclosed is a check in the amount of $
OBTAIN A BANK WIRE CONTROL NUMBER. TO DO  ---------------------- payable to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
SO, PLEASE CALL 800-282-4404.             B.  By Wire: A bank wire in the amount of $ ----------------------- has been
                                          sent to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
                                              from ----------------------------- -----------------------------
                                                      Name of Bank                Wire Control Number
</TABLE>
 
CAPITAL   GAIN  AND  DIVIDEND  DISTRIBUTIONS:  All  capital  gain  and  dividend
distributions will be reinvested in additional  shares of the same class  unless
appropriate boxes below are checked:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                           <C>                           <C>
All Dividends are to be       / /  reinvested               / /  paid in cash
All Capital Gains are to be   / /  reinvested               / /  paid in cash
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               ACCOUNT PRIVILEGES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE AND REDEMPTION                                 AUTHORITY  TO TRANSMIT  REDEMPTION PROCEEDS  TO PRE-DESIGNATED
You will automatically have telephone exchange and  redemption    ACCOUNT.
privileges for yourself and your investment dealer and appoint    I/We  hereby authorize CGFSC to act upon instructions received
CGFSC to act as your  agent to act upon instructions  received    by telephone to withdraw $1,000 or more from my/our account in
by  telephone in  order to  effect such  privileges unless you    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. and wire the amount withdrawn to the
mark one or more of the boxes below:                              following commercial bank account.
                                                                  I/We understand that CGFSC charges an $8.00 fee for each  wire
                                                                  redemption,  which will be  deducted from the  proceeds of the
                                                                  redemption.
                No, I/we do not want:                             Title on Bank Account
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------------
 
                    / /  telephone exchange privileges            Name of Bank
                    / /  telephone redemption privileges          -------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Bank  A.B.A.  Number  -----------------        Account  Number
                                                                  -----------------
      for myself/ourselves or my/our investment dealer.
                                                                  City/State/Zip
                                                                  ------------------------------------------------------------
I/We  further acknowledge that it  is my/our responsibility to
read the Prospectus  of any  Investment Fund  into which  I/we
exchange.
Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. will mail redemption proceeds to the
name  and address in  which my/our fund  account is registered                      ATTACH A VOIDED CHECK HERE
unless I check the following box and complete the  information
at right.  / /
A  corporation or partnership must also submit a "Corporate Resolution" or "Certificate of Partnership" indicating the names and
titles of officers authorized to act on its behalf.
The Fund and the Fund's Transfer Agent will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by  telephone
are  genuine. These procedures include requiring the investor to provide certain personal identification information at the time
an account is opened  and prior to  effecting each transaction requested  by telephone. In  addition, all telephone  transaction
requests  will be recorded and investors  may be required to provide  additional telecopying written instructions of transaction
requests. Neither the Fund nor the Transfer  Agent will be responsible for any  loss, liability, cost or expenses for  following
instructions received by telephone that it reasonably believes to be genuine.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Fund  shareholders together with  members of their families,  may be entitled to
reduced sales charges with respect to their purchases of Class A shares of Funds
of Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc.  sold with  an  initial sales  load  ("Investment
Funds"). You may also receive a reduced sales charge by completing the Letter of
Intent  as set forth below  as provided in the  Prospectus of the Morgan Stanley
Fund, Inc. (the "Prospectus"). See the Prospectus for details.
 
To qualify,  you  must complete  this  section,  listing all  of  your  accounts
including those in your spouse's name, joint accounts and accounts held for your
minor children. If you need more space, please attach a separate sheet.
 
I/We  qualify  for  the Rights  of  Accumulation initial  sales  charge discount
described in the Prospectus  and Statement of  Additional Information of  Morgan
Stanley Fund, Inc.
/ /  I/We  own Class A shares of more than one Investment Fund of Morgan Stanley
     Fund, Inc.
/ /  The registration of some of my/our  Class A shares differs from that  shown
     on  this  application.  Listed below  are  the account  number(s)  and full
     registration(s) in each case.
 
LIST OF OTHER ACCOUNTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                   NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          LETTER OF INTENT (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/we agree to the Letter of Intent Conditions on the last page of this
application.
I/we intend to  invest, within a  13-month period beginning  on the date  hereof
(initial  purchase  date) in  Class A  shares of  the Investment  Fund purchased
hereunder and the  other Investment  Fund, an aggregate  amount which,  together
with  the value of Class A  shares of any of the  Investment Funds then owned by
me/us, will equal or exceed the amount indicated below:
 
/ /  $100,000       / /  $250,000       / /  $500,000      / /  $1,000,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN (OPTIONAL)   / /    Yes  / /  No    Not Available for
IRAs
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Available to shareholders with account balances of $5,000 or more.
I/We hereby  authorize CGFSC  to  redeem the  necessary  number of  shares  from
my/our  Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc. Account on  the designated dates  in order to
make the following periodic payments:
 
     / /  Monthly     / /  Quarterly     / /  Semiannually     / /  Annually
 
(This request  for  participation in  the  Systematic Withdrawal  Plan  must  be
received  by the 18th day  of the month in which  you wish withdrawals to begin.
Redemptions of shares to make the payments elected above will occur on the  25th
day  of the month prior to  payment, or if such day  is not a business day, then
the next preceding business day.)
 
Withdrawal ($100 minimum) from:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                          Amount of
Fund Name                                                                                                 Each Check         Or
 
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>                 <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class :    ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class :    ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
- ---------------------------------------------------   Class :    ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------
 
                                                                 Recipient
Please make check payable to:                                    ---------------------------------------------------------
 (to be completed only if redemption proceeds to be              Street Address ---------------------------------------------------
 paid to other than account holder of record or                  City, State, Zip Code
 mailed to address other than address of record)
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------
 
*With the systematic withdrawal plan, a maximum of 12% per year may be withdrawn from Class B accounts without being
 subject to a CDSC.
 
<CAPTION>
Fund Name
<S>                                                   <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
- ---------------------------------------------------   --------%
Please make check payable to:
 (to be completed only if redemption proceeds to be
 paid to other than account holder of record or
 mailed to address other than address of record)
*With the systematic withdrawal plan, a maximum of 1
 subject to a CDSC.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/We hereby authorize  CGFSC to debit  my/our personal checking  account on  the
designated  dates in order  to purchase shares  in the Funds  indicated below at
the applicable public offering price determined on that day.
 
         / /  Monthly on the 5th day        / /  Monthly on the 20th day
 
Amount of each debit (minimum $100) to be invested as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund Name
 
<S>                                       <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE:  A  completed Bank Authorization  Form (see below)  and a voided  personal
check MUST accompany this Automatic Investment Plan application.
 
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN -- BANK AUTHORIZATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>                                         <C>
- -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------
Bank Name                                   Bank Address                                Bank Account Number
</TABLE>
 
I/We  authorize you, the above  named bank, to debit  my/our account for amounts
drawn by Chase  Global Funds Services  Company, acting as  my/our agent for  the
purchase  of Shares of Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc. I/We agree that your rights in
respect to each withdrawal shall  be the same as if  it were a check drawn  upon
you  and signed by me/us. This authority shall remain in effect until revoked in
writing and received by you. I/We agree  that you shall incur no liability  when
honoring  debits,  except  a loss  due  to payments  drawn  against insufficient
funds. I/We  further  agree that  you  will incur  no  liability to  me  if  you
dishonor  any such withdrawal. This will be so even though such dishonor results
in the cancellation of that purchase.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------   ---------------------------------------------------------------
Account Holder's Name                                             Joint Account Holder's Name
 
X -----------------------------------------      -------------    X -----------------------------------------      -------------
                       Signature                       Date       Signature                                               Date
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           AGREEMENTS AND SIGNATURES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
By signing this application, I/we hereby certify under penalties of perjury that
the information on this application is complete and correct and that as required
by federal law:
 
/ /  I/We certify that  (1) the number(s)  shown above on  this form is/are  the
     correct  SSN(s)  or TIN(s)  and  (2) I/we  are  not subject  to  any backup
     withholding either  because I/we  have not  been notified  by the  Internal
     Revenue Service ("IRS") that I/we are subject to backup withholding, or the
     IRS  has  notified me/us  that  I am/we  are  no longer  subject  to backup
     withholding. (NOTE: IF ANY  OR ALL OF  CLAUSE (2) IS  NOT TRUE, STRIKE  OUT
     THAT PART BEFORE SIGNING).
 
/ /  If  no TIN(s) or SSN(s) has/have been provided above, I/we have applied, or
     intend to apply, to the IRS or the Social Security Administration for a TIN
     or a SSN, and I/we understand that if I/we do not provide either number  to
     CGFSC  within 60 days  of the date of  this application or  if I/we fail to
     furnish my/our correct SSN or TIN, I/we  may be subject to a penalty and  a
     31%  backup withholding  on distributions and  redemption proceeds. (Please
     provide either  number on  IRS Form  W-9).  You may  request such  form  by
     calling CGFSC at 800-282-4404.
 
I/We  represent that I am/we are of legal age and capacity to purchase shares of
the Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. I/We understand that unless otherwise indicated in
this application, my/our investment dealer  and I/we will automatically  receive
telephone  exchange and redemption privileges and that Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
and CGFSC and their directors, officers and employees will not be liable for any
loss, liability, cost or expense incurred for acting upon instructions  believed
to  be  authentic  and  in  accordance with  the  procedures  set  forth  in the
Prospectus. I/We have received, read and carefully reviewed a copy of the Fund's
current Prospectus and agree to its terms and by signing below I/we  acknowledge
that neither the Fund nor the Distributor is a bank and that Fund shares are not
backed or guaranteed by any bank or insured by the FDIC.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                  <C>
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
</TABLE>
 
Sign  exactly as name(s) of registered owner(s) appear(s) above (including legal
title if signing for a corporation, trust custodial account, etc.)
 
NOTE: THE FOLLOWING SECTION SHOULD BE COMPLETED ONLY IF YOU ARE INVESTING IN THE
      MORGAN STANLEY FUND,  INC. THROUGH A  PARTICIPATING DEALER (AN  INVESTMENT
      DEALER).
 
FOR USE BY AUTHORIZED AGENT (PARTICIPATING DEALER) ONLY
 
We  hereby submit this application for the purchase of shares in accordance with
the terms of our  selling agreement with Morgan  Stanley & Co. Incorporated  and
with  the Prospectus  and Statement  of Additional  Information of  the Fund. We
agree to notify CGFSC of any purchases made under the Letter of Intent or Rights
of Accumulation.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                       <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Investment Dealer's Name                                  Representative's Name
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Number                                             Representative's Telephone Number
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Address
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
City/State/Zip Code
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Telephone Number                                   Investment Dealer's Authorized Signature
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
 
NO  DEALER, SALES REPRESENTATIVE OR ANY OTHER PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE
ANY INFORMATION OR TO  MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS, OTHER  THAN THOSE CONTAINED  IN
THIS  PROSPECTUS, IN CONNECTION WITH  THE OFFER MADE BY  THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF
GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH OTHER INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON
AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE  FUND OR THE DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS  DOES
NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER BY THE FUND OR THE DISTRIBUTOR TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION
OF  AN OFFER TO BUY ANY OF THE  SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY IN ANY JURISDICTION TO
ANY PERSON TO WHOM  IT IS UNLAWFUL  TO MAKE SUCH OFFER  OR SOLICITATION IN  SUCH
JURISDICTION.
 
                           --------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                     <C>
                                        PAGE
                                        ----
Fund Expenses...........................   2
Financial Highlights....................   6
Prospectus Summary......................   9
Investment Objectives and Policies......  13
Additional Investment Information.......  19
Investment Limitations..................  28
Management of the Fund..................  29
Portfolio Transactions..................  33
Purchase of Shares......................  34
Redemption of Shares....................  42
Shareholder Services....................  45
Valuation of Shares.....................  47
Performance Information.................  48
Dividends and Distributions.............  49
Taxes...................................  50
General Information.....................  51
Appendix A.............................. A-1
New Account Application
</TABLE>
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             U.S. REAL ESTATE FUND
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                                   FUND, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
                               ($.001 PAR VALUE)
 
                                 --------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                                 --------------
 
                               INVESTMENT ADVISER
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             ASSET MANAGEMENT INC.
 
                                  DISTRIBUTOR
 
                              MORGAN STANLEY & CO.
 
                                  INCORPORATED
 
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              P R O S P E C T U S
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  MORGAN STANLEY GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
                        MORGAN STANLEY ASIAN GROWTH FUND
                      MORGAN STANLEY EMERGING MARKETS FUND
                       MORGAN STANLEY LATIN AMERICAN FUND
                    MORGAN STANLEY INTERNATIONAL MAGNUM FUND
                      MORGAN STANLEY JAPANESE EQUITY FUND
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                           MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02208-2798
                      FOR INFORMATION CALL 1-800-282-4404
                               ------------------
 
    Morgan  Stanley Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end management investment
company,  or   mutual  fund,   which  consists   of  fifteen   diversified   and
non-diversified   investment  portfolios.  This  prospectus  (the  "Prospectus")
describes the  Class  A, Class  B  and Class  C  shares of  the  six  investment
portfolios  listed  above (each,  an "Investment  Fund").  (The current  Class C
shares were named Class B shares until May 1, 1995 when such shares were renamed
Class C shares  and thereafter new  Class B  shares were created).  The Fund  is
designed  to make available to retail  investors the expertise of Morgan Stanley
Asset Management  Inc., the  Investment Adviser  and Administrator.  Shares  are
available  through  Morgan Stanley  & Co.  Incorporated ("Morgan  Stanley"), the
Distributor, and investment  dealers, banks  and financial  services firms  that
provide  distribution,  administrative or  shareholder  services ("Participating
Dealers").
 
    The Investment  Funds  are subject  to  certain special  risk  factors.  For
information about these risk factors, see "Prospectus Summary -- Risk Factors."
 
    INVESTORS  SHOULD NOTE THAT EACH INVESTMENT FUND MAY INVEST UP TO 15% OF ITS
NET ASSETS IN ILLIQUID ASSETS, INCLUDING RESTRICTED SECURITIES (OTHER THAN  RULE
144A  SECURITIES THAT ARE  DETERMINED TO BE  LIQUID). SEE "ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT
INFORMATION -- NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED
SECURITIES." INVESTMENTS  IN  RESTRICTED  SECURITIES  IN  EXCESS  OF  5%  OF  AN
INVESTMENT  FUND'S TOTAL  ASSETS MAY BE  CONSIDERED A  SPECULATIVE ACTIVITY, MAY
INVOLVE GREATER RISK AND MAY INCREASE THE INVESTMENT FUND'S EXPENSES.
 
    The Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Fund may invest in equity securities  of
Russian  companies. Russia's system  of share registration  and custody involves
certain risks of loss that are not normally associated with investments in other
securities markets. See "Additional Investment Information -- Russian Securities
Transactions."
 
    INVESTMENTS IN THE INVESTMENT  FUNDS ARE NEITHER  INSURED NOR GUARANTEED  BY
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
 
    This Prospectus is designed to set forth concisely the information about the
Investment Funds that a prospective investor should know before investing and it
should  be retained for future reference.  The Fund offers additional portfolios
which are described in other prospectuses and under "Prospectus Summary"  below.
The Fund currently offers the following portfolios: (I) GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY  -- Morgan Stanley Global Equity Allocation, Morgan Stanley Asian Growth,
Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets, Morgan  Stanley Latin American, Morgan  Stanley
International  Magnum, Morgan Stanley Japanese Equity, Morgan Stanley Growth and
Income and Morgan  Stanley European  Equity Funds;  (II) U.S.  EQUITY --  Morgan
Stanley American Value, Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity and Morgan Stanley U.S.
Real  Estate Funds;  (III) GLOBAL  FIXED INCOME  -- Morgan  Stanley Global Fixed
Income, Morgan  Stanley Worldwide  High  Income and  Morgan Stanley  High  Yield
Funds;  and (IV)  MONEY MARKET --  Morgan Stanley Money  Market Fund. Additional
information  about  the  Fund  is  contained  in  a  "Statement  of   Additional
Information,"  dated May 1, 1996, which is incorporated herein by reference. The
Statement of Additional Information and the prospectuses pertaining to the other
portfolios of the Fund are available upon request and without charge by  writing
or calling the Fund at the address and telephone number set forth above.
 
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.
 
                  THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS MAY 1, 1996.
<PAGE>
                                 FUND EXPENSES
 
    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
an Investment Fund may incur:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  GLOBAL
                                  EQUITY      ASIAN     EMERGING    LATIN     INTERNATIONAL
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION         ALLOCATION    GROWTH    MARKETS    AMERICAN      MAGNUM        JAPANESE
EXPENSES                           FUND        FUND       FUND       FUND         FUND       EQUITY FUND
- ------------------------------  ----------   --------   --------   --------   ------------   ------------
<S>                             <C>          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>            <C>
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on
 Purchases
    Class A...................   4.75%(1)    4.75%(1)   4.75%(1)   4.75%(1)   4.75%(1)       4.75%(1)
    Class B...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class C...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on
 Reinvested Dividends
    Class A...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class B...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class C...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
Deferred Sales Load
  For Purchases up to $999,999
    Class A...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class B...................   5.00%(2)    5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)       5.00%(2)
    Class C...................   1.00%(3)    1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)       1.00%(3)
  For Purchases of $1,000,000
    or more
    Class A...................   1.00%(1)    1.00%(1)   1.00%(1)   1.00%(1)   1.00%(1)       1.00%(1)
    Class B...................   5.00%(2)    5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)   5.00%(2)       5.00%(2)
    Class C...................   1.00%(3)    1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)   1.00%(3)       1.00%(3)
Redemption Fees (4)
    Class A...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class B...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class C...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
Exchange Fees
    Class A...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class B...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
    Class C...................     None        None       None       None         None           None
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(1) Percentage shown is the maximum sales  load. Certain large purchases may  be
    subject  to  a  reduced sales  load.  Purchases  of Class  A  shares  of the
    Investment Funds  which, when  combined  with the  net  asset value  of  the
    purchaser's  existing investment in Class A shares of these Funds, aggregate
    $1 million  or more  are not  subject to  a sales  load (an  "initial  sales
    charge").  A  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC")  of 1.00%  will be
    imposed, however, on shares from any such purchase that are redeemed  within
    one  year  following  such purchase.  Any  such  CDSC will  be  paid  to the
    Distributor. Certain other  purchases are  not subject to  an initial  sales
    charge. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
(2) Percentage  shown is the  maximum CDSC. Purchases  of Class B  shares of the
    Investment Funds are subject to a  maximum CDSC of 5.00% which decreases  in
    steps to 0% after six years. See "Purchase of Class B Shares." Any such CDSC
    will be paid to the Distributor.
 
(3) Purchases of Class C shares of the Investment Funds are subject to a CDSC of
    1.00%  for redemptions made within one year  of purchase. Any such CDSC will
    be paid to the Distributor.
 
(4) A charge of  $8.00 may be  imposed on redemptions  by wire which  is not  an
    expense of the Fund.
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  GLOBAL
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES    EQUITY     ASIAN    EMERGING     LATIN                      JAPANESE
(AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE     ALLOCATION   GROWTH   MARKETS     AMERICAN    INTERNATIONAL    EQUITY
NET ASSETS)                        FUND       FUND      FUND        FUND       MAGNUM FUND      FUND
                                ----------   ------   --------   ----------   -------------   --------
<S>                             <C>          <C>      <C>        <C>          <C>             <C>
Investment Advisory Fee (after
 expense reimbursement and/or
 fee waiver) (5)
    Class A...................       0.67%      1.00%     0.46%     0.00%        0.80%            0.80%
    Class B...................       0.67%      1.00%     0.46%     0.00%        0.80%            0.80%
    Class C...................       0.67%      1.00%     0.46%     0.00%        0.80%            0.80%
12b-1 Fees
    Class A...................       0.25%      0.25%     0.25%     0.25%        0.25%            0.25%
    Class B (6)...............       1.00%      1.00%     1.00%     1.00%        1.00%            1.00%
    Class C (6)...............       1.00%      1.00%     1.00%     1.00%        1.00%            1.00%
Other Expenses (after expense
 reimbursement and/or fee
 waiver) (5)
    Class A...................       0.78%      0.65%     1.44%     1.85%        0.60%            0.65%
    Class B...................       0.78%      0.65%     1.44%     1.85%        0.60%            0.65%
    Class C...................       0.78%      0.65%     1.44%     1.85%        0.60%            0.65%
Total Operating Expenses
 (after expense reimbursement
 and/or fee waiver) (5)
    Class A...................       1.70%      1.90%     2.15%     2.10%        1.65%            1.70%
    Class B...................       2.45%      2.65%     2.90%     2.85%        2.40%            2.45%
    Class C...................       2.45%      2.65%     2.90%     2.85%        2.40%            2.45%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
(5) The  Adviser  has agreed  to  waive its  advisory  fees and/or  to reimburse
    expenses of the Investment Funds, if necessary, if such fees would cause the
    total annual operating expenses of the Investment Funds, as a percentage  of
    average  daily net assets, to exceed the  percentages set forth in the table
    above. The following sets  forth, for each  Investment Fund, (i)  investment
    advisory  fees absent advisory fee waivers and (ii) expected total operating
    expenses absent fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      INVESTMENT                   TOTAL
                                     ADVISORY FEES          OPERATING EXPENSES
                                     -------------   ---------------------------------
                                     (ALL CLASSES)   CLASS A    CLASS B      CLASS C
                                     -------------   -------   ----------   ----------
<S>                                  <C>             <C>       <C>          <C>
Global Equity Allocation Fund......      1.00%        2.03%     2.78%        2.78%
Asian Growth Fund..................      1.00%        1.90%     2.65%        2.65%
Emerging Markets Fund..............      1.25%        3.10%     3.90%        3.90%
Latin American Fund................      1.25%        4.30%     5.20%        5.20%
International Magnum Fund..........      1.00%        1.90%     2.65%        2.65%
Japanese Equity Fund...............      1.00%        1.90%     2.65%        2.65%
</TABLE>
 
   As a result of  these reductions, the Investment  Advisory Fees stated  above
   are  lower than contractual  fees stated under "Management  of the Fund." The
   Adviser reserves the right to terminate any of its fee waivers at any time in
   its  sole  discretion.  For  further   information  on  Fund  expenses,   see
   "Management of the Fund."
 
(6) Of  the 12b-1  fees for  the Class B  shares and  the Class  C shares, 0.75%
    represents a distribution  fee and 0.25%  represents a shareholder  services
    fee.
 
    The  purpose of the above  table is to assist  the investor in understanding
the various expenses that an investor in  any of the Investment Funds will  bear
directly or indirectly. The Class A and Class C expenses and fees for the Global
Equity  Allocation, Asian Growth, Emerging Markets  and Latin American Funds are
based on actual figures for the period ended June 30, 1995. The Class A, Class B
and Class C expenses and fees  for the International Magnum and Japanese  Equity
Funds  are based on estimates. The Class  B expenses and fees for each remaining
Investment Fund  are  based  on  estimates.  For  purposes  of  calculating  the
estimated  expenses  and  fees set  forth  above,  the table  assumes  that each
Investment Fund's average daily net assets will be $50,000,000. "Other Expenses"
include,  among   others,  Directors'   fees  and   expenses,  amortization   of
organizational  costs, filing fees, professional fees, and the costs for reports
to shareholders. Due  to the  continuous nature  of Rule  12b-1 fees,  long-term
shareholders  may pay  more than the  equivalent of the  maximum front-end sales
charges otherwise  permitted by  the  Rules of  Fair  Practice of  the  National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD").
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
    The  following  example illustrates  the expenses  that you  would pay  on a
$1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual rate of return and redemption at the end
of each time period as indicated, in (i) Class A shares of each Investment Fund,
including the maximum 4.75% sales charge, (ii) Class B shares of each Investment
Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge and (iii) Class C shares of
each Investment Fund, which have a CDSC, but no initial sales charge.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      GLOBAL
                                                                      EQUITY    ASIAN   EMERGING   LATIN    INTERNATIONAL JAPANESE
                                                                      ALLOCATION GROWTH MARKETS   AMERICAN   MAGNUM    EQUITY
                                                                       FUND     FUND      FUND      FUND      FUND      FUND
                                                                      -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  --------
<S>                                                                   <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
Class A shares
 (If it is assumed there are no redemptions, the expenses are the
 same)
    1 Year........................................................... $ 64(1)  $ 66(1)  $ 68(1)   $ 68(1)   $ 63(1)   $ 64(1)
    3 Years..........................................................   99      104      112       110        97        99
    5 Years..........................................................  135      145      157       155         *         *
    10 Years.........................................................  239      259      284       279         *         *
Class B shares
 (Assuming complete redemption at end of period)
    1 Year...........................................................   75       77       79        79        74        75
    3 Years..........................................................  106      112      120       118       105       106
    5 Years..........................................................  151      161      173       170         *         *
    10 Years.........................................................  279      298      322       318         *         *
(Assuming no redemption)
    1 Year...........................................................   25       27       29        29        24        25
    3 Years..........................................................   76       82       90        88        75        76
    5 Years..........................................................  131      141      153       150         *         *
    10 Years.........................................................  279      298      322       318         *         *
Class C shares
 (Whether or not complete redemption occurs at end of period)
    1 Year...........................................................   25(2)    27(2)    29(2)     29(2)     24(2)     25(2)
    3 Years..........................................................   76       82       90        88        75        76
    5 Years..........................................................  131      141      153       150         *         *
    10 Years.........................................................  279      298      322       318         *         *
</TABLE>
 
- --------------
 *   Because the International Magnum and Japanese Equity Funds were either  not
     operational  or  had recently  become operational  as of  the date  of this
     Prospectus, the  Fund  has not  projected  expenses beyond  the  three-year
     period shown.
 
(1)  Reduced sales charges apply to purchases of $100,000 or more of the Class A
     shares  of  the Investment  Funds. See  "Purchase of  Shares." For  Class A
     shares of the Investment Funds, generally  purchases of $1 million or  more
     may be accomplished at net asset value without an initial sales charge, but
     may be subject to a 1.00% CDSC if liquidated within one year of purchase.
 
(2)  If  Class C shares of the Investment  Funds are redeemed within one year of
     purchase, the expense figures in the  first year increase to the  following
     amounts for each Investment Fund: Global Equity Allocation Fund, $35; Asian
     Growth  Fund, $37;  Emerging Markets Fund,  $39; Latin  American Fund, $39;
     International Magnum Fund, $34; and Japanese Equity Fund, $35.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
    THIS EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE CONSIDERED  A REPRESENTATION OF  PAST OR  FUTURE
EXPENSES  OR  PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL  EXPENSES MAY  BE GREATER  OR LESS  THAN THOSE
SHOWN. The Adviser in its discretion may terminate voluntary fee waivers  and/or
reimbursements  at  any time.  Absent  the waiver  of  fees or  reimbursement of
expenses, the amounts in the example above would be greater.
 
    The Fund intends  to comply  with all  state laws  that restrict  investment
company  expenses. Currently, the  most restrictive state  law requires that the
aggregate annual expenses  of an  investment company  shall not  exceed two  and
one-half  percent (2 1/2%) of  the first $30 million  of average net assets, two
percent (2%) of the next $70 million of average net assets, and one and one-half
percent (1 1/2%)  of the remaining  net assets of  such investment company.  The
Adviser has agreed to a reduction in the amounts payable to it, and to reimburse
the  Investment  Funds, if  necessary,  if in  any fiscal  year  the sum  of the
Investment Funds' expenses exceeds the limit set by applicable state law.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
    The following tables provide financial highlights  for the Class A, Class  B
and  Class  C shares  of the  Global Equity  Allocation, Asian  Growth, Emerging
Markets and Latin American Funds for  each of the respective periods  presented.
(The  Class C shares were  named Class B shares until  May 1, 1995.) The audited
financial highlights for the periods  ended June 30, 1993  and 1995 and for  the
years  ended June 30, 1994 and 1995 are part of the Fund's financial statements,
which appear in the Fund's June 30,  1995 Annual Report to Shareholders and  the
unaudited  financial highlights for the period  ended December 31, 1995 are part
of the  Fund's  unaudited  financial  statements, which  appear  in  the  Fund's
December  31, 1995  Semi-Annual Report to  Shareholders. Both  of such financial
statements are included in the  Fund's Statement of Additional Information.  The
Investment  Funds' financial  highlights for the  year ended June  30, 1995 have
been  audited  by  Price  Waterhouse  LLP,  whose  report  thereon  (which   was
unqualified)  is  also  included  in the  Statement  of  Additional Information.
Additional performance information  about the  Fund is contained  in the  Fund's
Annual  Report and Semi-Annual Report. The Annual Report, Semi-Annual Report and
the  financial  statements  contained  therein,  along  with  the  Statement  of
Additional  Information, are available at  no cost from the  Fund at the address
and  telephone  number  noted  on  the  cover  page  of  this  Prospectus.   The
International  Magnum and Japanese  Equity Funds were not  operational as of the
date of the  Annual Report  or as  of the date  of the  Semi-Annual Report.  The
following   information  should  be  read  in  conjunction  with  the  financial
statements and notes thereto.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                          CLASS B+
                                                           CLASS A                                     --------------
                           -----------------------------------------------------------------------       AUGUST 1,
                                                                                      SIX MONTHS          1995* TO
                                                                                    ENDED DECEMBER      DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA    JANUARY 4, 1993*      YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED          31, 1995             1995
 AND RATIOS                TO JUNE 30, 1993     JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995      (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------  ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
<S>                        <C>                  <C>               <C>               <C>                <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....  $          10.00     $       11.09     $       11.99     $        12.60     $        13.01
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................              0.04              0.10              0.12               0.05              (0.04)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain.......              1.05              0.90              0.67               1.73               1.15
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............              1.09              1.00              0.79               1.78               1.11
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income..                --             (0.03)               --              (0.39)             (0.35)
  In Excess of Net
   Investment Income.....                --                --             (0.05)                --                 --
  Net Realized Gain......                --             (0.07)            (0.13)             (0.48)             (0.48)
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
  Total Distributions....                --             (0.10)            (0.18)             (0.87)             (0.83)
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................  $          11.09     $       11.99     $       12.60     $        13.51     $        13.29
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
TOTAL RETURN (1).........             10.90%             9.02%             6.69%             14.14%              8.53%
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
                           ----------------     -------------     -------------     --------------     --------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)..................  $         10,434     $      33,425     $      42,586     $       47,839     $        3,056
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............              1.70%**           1.70%             1.70%              1.70%**            2.45%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........              1.04%**           0.98%             1.01%              0.31%**           (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................                14%               30%               39%                22%                22%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................  $           0.08     $        0.09     $        0.04     $         0.06     $         0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets................              3.65%**           2.58%             2.03%              2.08%**            2.83%**
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets................             (0.91)%**          0.10%             0.68%             (0.07)%**          (0.82)%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                        CLASS C
                                              (CLASS B UNTIL MAY 1, 1995)
                         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   SIX MONTHS
                           JANUARY 4,                                            ENDED DECEMBER
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA   1993* TO JUNE       YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED          31, 1995
 AND RATIOS                 30, 1993         JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995      (UNAUDITED)
- ----------------------------------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
<S>                        <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....$         10.00     $       11.05     $       11.90     $        12.43
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................           0.01              0.06              0.04              (0.03)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain.......           1.04              0.86              0.65               1.73
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............           1.05              0.92              0.69               1.70
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income..             --                --                --              (0.33)
  In Excess of Net
   Investment Income.....             --                --             (0.03)                --
  Net Realized Gain......             --             (0.07)            (0.13)             (0.48)
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
  Total Distributions....             --             (0.07)            (0.16)             (0.81)
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................$         11.05     $       11.90     $       12.43     $        13.32
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
TOTAL RETURN (1).........          10.50%             8.34%             5.84%             13.67%
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
                         ---------------     -------------     -------------     --------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)..................$         6,995     $      29,892     $      40,460     $       47,879
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............           2.45%**           2.45%             2.45%              2.45%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........           0.29%**           0.23%             0.25%             (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................             14%               30%               39%                22%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expen
 Limitation During the Pe
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................$          0.07     $        0.12     $        0.05     $         0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets................           4.40%**           3.34%             2.78%              2.83%**
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets................          (1.66)%**         (0.66)%           (0.08)%            (0.82)%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  *  Commencement of operations
 
 **  Annualized
 
  +  The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class
     B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
 (1)  Total Return is calculated  exclusive of sales  charges or deferred  sales
      charges.
 
 (2)  Under  the  terms  of an  Investment  Advisory Agreement,  the  Adviser is
      entitled to receive  an investment  advisory fee calculated  at an  annual
      rate  of  1.00% of  the  average daily  net  assets of  the  Global Equity
      Allocation Fund. The  Adviser has agreed  to waive a  portion of this  fee
      and/or  reimburse expenses of  the Investment Fund to  the extent that the
      total operating  expenses  of the  Investment  Fund exceed  1.70%  of  the
      average  daily net assets relating to the  Class A shares and 2.45% of the
      average daily net assets  relating to the Class  C shares. For the  fiscal
      periods ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994, June 30, 1995 and December 31,
      1995, the Adviser waived advisory fees and/or reimbursed expenses totaling
      approximately $130,000, $353,000, $247,000 and $171,000, respectively, for
      the Global Equity Allocation Fund.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                              CLASS B+
                                                            CLASS A                                       ----------------
                           -------------------------------------------------------------------------      AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                                    SIX MONTHS ENDED             TO
                                                                                      DECEMBER 31,          DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA     JUNE 23, 1993*         YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED           1995                  1995
 AND RATIOS                TO JUNE 30, 1993      JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995      (UNAUDITED)           (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------  ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
<S>                        <C>                   <C>               <C>              <C>                   <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....  $          12.00      $        12.00    $        15.50   $          16.42      $          16.51
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS..............
  Net Investment Loss....                --               (0.03)               --              (0.04)                (0.03)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain
   (Loss)................                --                3.53              1.43              (0.15)                (0.51)
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............                --                3.50              1.43              (0.19)                (0.54)
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
DISTRIBUTIONS............
  Net Realized Gain......                --                  --             (0.49)                --                    --
  In Excess of Net
   Realized Gain.........                --                  --             (0.02)                --                    --
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
                                         --                  --             (0.51)                --                    --
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................  $          12.00      $        15.50    $        16.42   $          16.23      $          15.97
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
TOTAL RETURN (1).........              0.00%              29.17%             9.50%             (1.16)%               (3.27)%
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
                           ----------------      --------------    --------------   ----------------      ----------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA....................
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)                    $         11,770      $      138,212    $      178,667   $        183,658      $         11,398
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............              1.90%**             1.90%             1.90%              1.90%**               2.65%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........             (0.81)%**           (0.24)%            0.04%             (0.46)%**             (1.21)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................                 0%                 34%               34%                10%                   10%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Loss...  $           0.01      $         0.03                --                 --                    --
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets................             11.83%**             2.17%             1.90%              1.90%**               2.65%**
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets................            (10.74)%**           (0.51)%            0.04%             (0.46)%**             (1.21)%**
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                              CLASS C
                                                    (CLASS B UNTIL MAY 1, 1995)
                           ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                         SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                           DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA     JUNE 23, 1993*          YEAR ENDED          YEAR ENDED             1995
 AND RATIOS                TO JUNE 30, 1993       JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------  ----------------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
<S>                        <C>                   <C>                 <C>                 <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....  $          12.00      $          12.00    $          15.40    $          16.19
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS..............
  Net Investment Loss....                --                 (0.10)              (0.12)              (0.10)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain
   (Loss)................                --                  3.50                1.42               (0.15)
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............                --                  3.40                1.30               (0.25)
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
DISTRIBUTIONS............
  Net Realized Gain......                --                    --               (0.49)                 --
  In Excess of Net
   Realized Gain.........                --                    --               (0.02)                 --
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                         --                    --               (0.51)                 --
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................  $          12.00      $          15.40    $          16.19    $          15.94
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
TOTAL RETURN (1).........              0.00%                28.33%               8.71%              (1.54)%
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                   --------      ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA....................
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)                    $          8,491      $        116,889    $        139,497    $        139,518
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............              2.65%**               2.65%               2.65%               2.65%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........             (1.56)%**             (0.99)%             (0.77)%             (1.21)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................                 0%                   34%                 34%                 10%
- -------------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expen
 Limitation During the Pe
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Loss...  $           0.02      $           0.03                  --                  --
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets................             12.64%**               2.92%               2.65%               2.65%**
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets................            (11.55)%**             (1.26)%             (0.77)%             (1.21)%**
- -------------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  *  Commencement of Operations.
 **  Annualized.
  +  The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class
     B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 (1)  Total  return is calculated  exclusive of sales  charges or deferred sales
      charges.
 (2)  Under the  terms  of an  Investment  Advisory Agreement,  the  Adviser  is
      entitled  to receive  an investment advisory  fee calculated  at an annual
      rate of 1.00% of the  average daily net assets  of the Asian Growth  Fund.
      The  Adviser has agreed  to waive a  portion of this  fee and/or reimburse
      expenses of the  Investment Fund to  the extent that  the total  operating
      expenses  of the  Investment Fund  exceed 1.90%  of the  average daily net
      assets relating to the Class A shares  and 2.65% of the average daily  net
      assets  relating to the Class C shares.  For the fiscal periods ended June
      30, 1993, June  30, 1994 and  June 30, 1995,  the Adviser waived  advisory
      fees  and/or reimbursed expenses  totaling approximately $29,000, $464,000
      and $0, respectively, for the Asian Growth Fund.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                  CLASS C
                                       CLASS A                     CLASS B+             (CLASS B UNTIL MAY 1, 1995)
                           -------------------------------      ---------------      ---------------------------------
                                              SIX MONTHS        AUGUST 1, 1995*                           SIX MONTHS
                                                 ENDED                TO                                     ENDED
                           JULY 6, 1994*     DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,        JULY 6, 1994*       DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA     TO JUNE 30,          1995                1995             TO JUNE 30,            1995
  AND RATIOS                   1995           (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)             1995            (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------  -------------     -------------      ---------------      --------------      -------------
<S>                        <C>               <C>                <C>                  <C>                 <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....  $       12.00     $       10.61      $         10.91      $        12.00      $       10.53
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................           0.05             (0.01)               (0.03)                 --              (0.05)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Loss.......          (1.44)            (0.33)               (0.73)              (1.47)             (0.33)
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............          (1.39)            (0.34)               (0.76)              (1.47)             (0.38)
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS............
  Net Investment
   Income................             --             (0.05)                  --                  --                 --
  Net Realized Gain......             --                --#                  --#                 --                 --#
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
  Total Distributions....             --             (0.05)                  --                  --                 --
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
 
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................  $       10.61     $       10.22      $         10.15      $        10.53      $       10.15
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
TOTAL RETURN (1).........         (11.58)%           (3.26)%              (6.96)%            (12.25)%            (3.60)%
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
                           -------------     -------------              -------      --------------      -------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)..................  $      26,091     $      33,562      $         2,500      $       22,245      $      26,499
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............           2.33%**           2.15%**              2.90%**             3.08%**            2.90%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........           0.81%**          (0.26)%**            (1.01)%**            0.06%**           (1.01)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................             32%               22%                  22%                 32%                22%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary
 Expense Limitation
 During the Period
 Per Share Benefit to Net
 Investment Income
 (Loss)..................  $        0.04     $        0.11      $          0.02      $         0.04      $        0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets................           3.10%**           2.77%**              3.52%**             3.90%**            3.52%**
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets................           0.04%**          (0.88)%**            (1.63)%**           (0.76)%**          (1.63)%**
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  # Amount less than $0.01 per share.
 
  * Commencement of operations.
 
 ** Annualized
 
  +  The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class
     B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
 (1) Total Return is  calculated exclusive  of sales charges  or deferred  sales
     charges.
 
 (2) Under  the  terms  of  an Investment  Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser is
     entitled to receive an investment advisory fee calculated at an annual rate
     of 1.25% of the average daily net assets of the Emerging Markets Fund.  The
     Adviser has agreed to waive a portion of this fee and/or reimburse expenses
     of  the Investment Fund to the extent  that the total operating expenses of
     the Investment Fund exceed 2.15% of  the average daily net assets  relating
     to the Class A shares and 2.90% of the average daily net assets relating to
     the Class C shares. For the fiscal periods ended June 30, 1995 and December
     31,  1995,  the Adviser  waived  advisory fees  and/or  reimbursed expenses
     totaling approximately $197,000 and $172,000, respectively for the Emerging
     Markets Fund.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS CONTINUED
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      CLASS C
                                         CLASS A                                            (CLASS B UNTIL MAY 1, 1995)
                           -----------------------------------         CLASS B+          ----------------------------------
                                                  SIX MONTHS        ---------------                            SIX MONTHS
                                                    ENDED           AUGUST 1, 1995*                              ENDED
                           JULY 6, 1994*         DECEMBER 31,       TO DECEMBER 31,      JULY 6, 1994*        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA     TO JUNE 30,              1995                1995             TO JUNE 30,             1995
 AND RATIOS                     1995             (UNAUDITED)          (UNAUDITED)             1995            (UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------  --------------       --------------      ---------------      --------------      --------------
<S>                        <C>                  <C>                 <C>                  <C>                 <C>
NET ASSET VALUE,
 BEGINNING OF PERIOD.....  $        12.00       $         9.08      $          9.58      $        12.00      $         8.99
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................           (0.02)                0.03                (0.02)              (0.08)              (0.02)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain
   (Loss)................           (2.70)                0.33                (0.24)              (2.73)               0.33
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations............           (2.72)                0.36                (0.26)              (2.81)               0.31
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment
   Income................              --                (0.02)                  --                  --                  --
  Paid in Capital........           (0.20)                  --                   --               (0.20)                 --
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
  Total Distributions....           (0.20)               (0.02)                  --               (0.20)                 --
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
 PERIOD..................  $         9.08       $         9.42      $          9.32      $         8.99      $         9.30
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
 
TOTAL RETURN (1).........          (23.07)%               3.93%               (2.71)%            (23.83)%              3.45%
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
                                  -------       --------------              -------             -------      --------------
 
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
 DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
 (000s)..................  $        7,658       $       10,076      $           424      $        4,085      $        5,055
Ratio of Expenses to
 Average Net
 Assets (2)..............            2.46%**++            2.10%**              2.85%**             3.20%**++           2.85%**
Ratio of Net Investment
 Income (Loss) to Average
 Net Assets (2)..........           (0.44)%**             0.31%**             (0.44)%**           (1.16)%**           (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover
 Rate....................             107%                  64%                  64%                107%                 64%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary
 Expense Limitation
 During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Income
   (Loss)................  $         0.13       $         0.15      $          0.02      $         0.12      $         0.07
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets (Including
   Brazilian Tax
   Expense)..............            4.30%**              3.66%                4.41%**             5.20%**             4.41%**
  Net Investment Loss to
   Average Net Assets....           (2.26)%**            (1.25)%**            (2.00)%**           (3.16)%**           (2.00)%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 *  Commencement of Operations.
 
**  Annualized.
 
 +  The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class
    B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
++  The ratio of expenses to average net assets includes Brazilian tax  expense.
    Without  the effect of the  Brazilian tax expense, the  ratio of expenses to
    average net assets  would have  been 2.10%** and  2.85%,** for  Class A  and
    Class C shares, respectively.
 
(1) Total  Return is  calculated exclusive  of sales  charges or  deferred sales
    charges.
 
(2) Under the terms of an Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser is entitled
    to receive an investment advisory fee calculated at an annual rate of  1.25%
    of  the average daily net assets of the Latin American Fund. The Adviser has
    agreed to  waive a  portion of  this fee  and/or reimburse  expenses of  the
    Investment  Fund  to the  extent that  the total  operating expenses  of the
    Investment Fund exceed 2.10% of the average daily net assets relating to the
    Class A shares and  2.85% of the  average daily net  assets relating to  the
    Class  C shares. For the fiscal periods ended June 30, 1995 and December 31,
    1995, the Adviser waived advisory  fees and/or reimbursed expenses  totaling
    approximately  $165,000 and  $111,000, respectively, for  the Latin American
    Fund.
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
THE FUND
 
    The  Fund  currently consists  of  fifteen investment  portfolios  which are
designed to offer investors  a range of investment  choices with Morgan  Stanley
providing  services as  Adviser, Administrator and  Distributor. Each investment
portfolio has its own  investment objectives and policies  designed to meet  its
specific goals.
 
    - The  GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by
      investing in equity securities of U.S. and non-U.S. issuers in  accordance
      with country weightings determined by the Adviser and with stock selection
      within each country designed to replicate a broad market index.
 
    - The  ASIAN GROWTH FUND  seeks long-term capital  appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Asian issuers, excluding Japan.
 
    - The  EMERGING  MARKETS  FUND  seeks  long-term  capital  appreciation   by
      investing primarily in equity securities of emerging country issuers.
 
    - The  LATIN AMERICAN FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Latin American issuers and investing  in
      debt  securities  issued or  guaranteed by  Latin American  governments or
      governmental entities.
 
    - The INTERNATIONAL  MAGNUM FUND  seeks  long-term capital  appreciation  by
      investing primarily in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers in accordance
      with  EAFE  country (as  defined in  "Investment Objectives  and Policies"
      below) weightings determined by Adviser.
 
    - The JAPANESE EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of Japanese issuers.
 
    The  other  investment  portfolios  of  the  Fund  are  described  in  other
prospectuses  which may be obtained  from the Fund at  the address and telephone
number noted on the cover page of this Prospectus. The objectives of these other
investment portfolios are listed below:
 
GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUNDS:
 
    - The EUROPEAN EQUITY FUND seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
      primarily in equity securities of European issuers.
 
    - The GROWTH AND INCOME FUND  seeks capital appreciation and current  income
      by investing primarily in equity and equity-linked securities.
 
U.S. EQUITY FUNDS:
 
    - The  AMERICAN VALUE FUND seeks high long-term total return by investing in
      undervalued equity securities of small-to medium-sized corporations.
 
    - The  AGGRESSIVE  EQUITY  FUND  seeks  capital  appreciation  by  investing
      primarily   in  a  non-diversified  portfolio   of  corporate  equity  and
      equity-linked securities.
 
    - The U.S. REAL ESTATE  FUND seeks to  provide above-average current  income
      and  long-term  capital  appreciation  by  investing  primarily  in equity
      securities of companies in the  U.S. real estate industry, including  real
      estate investment trusts.
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUNDS:
 
    - The  GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND seeks to  produce an attractive real rate of
      return while preserving capital by investing in fixed income securities of
      issuers throughout the world, including U.S. issuers.
 
    - The WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND  seeks high current income consistent  with
      relative stability of principal and, secondarily, capital appreciation, by
      investing   primarily  in  a  portfolio  of  high  yielding  fixed  income
      securities of issuers throughout the world.
 
    - The HIGH  YIELD FUND  seeks to  maximize total  return by  investing in  a
      diversified  portfolio of high yield fixed  income securities that offer a
      yield above  that generally  available  on debt  securities in  the  three
      highest rating categories of the recognized rating services.
 
MONEY MARKET FUND:
 
    - The  MONEY  MARKET  FUND seeks  to  maximize current  income  and preserve
      capital while maintaining  high levels of  liquidity through investing  in
      high  quality money  market instruments  with remaining  maturities of 397
      days or less.
 
    The Growth and Income, European Equity and Money Market Funds are  currently
not being offered.
 
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
 
    Morgan    Stanley   Asset   Management   Inc.   (the   "Adviser"   and   the
"Administrator"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group Inc., which,
together with its affiliated asset management companies, had approximately $57.4
billion in assets under  management as an investment  manager or as a  fiduciary
adviser at December 31, 1995, acts as investment adviser to the Fund and each of
its Investment Funds. See "Management of the Fund -- Investment Adviser" and "--
Administrator."
 
RISK FACTORS
 
    The  investment policies  of each Investment  Fund entail  certain risks and
considerations of which an investor should  be aware. The Investment Funds  will
invest  in  securities of  foreign issuers.  Securities  of foreign  issuers are
subject to  certain risks  not typically  associated with  domestic  securities,
including,  among other risks, changes in currency rates and in exchange control
regulations, costs in  connection with conversions  between various  currencies,
limited  publicly  available  information  regarding  foreign  issuers,  lack of
uniformity in  accounting, auditing  and financial  standards and  requirements,
potential  price volatility and lesser liquidity  of shares traded on securities
markets, less  government  supervision  and regulation  of  securities  markets,
changes  in taxes on income on  securities, possible seizure, nationalization or
expropriation of the  foreign issuer or  foreign deposits, the  risk of war  and
potentially  greater difficulty in  obtaining a judgment in  a court outside the
U.S. The  Asian Growth,  Emerging Markets  and Latin  American Funds  invest  in
securities  of  issuers located  in developing  countries and  emerging markets.
These securities  may  impose  greater  liquidity  risks  and  other  risks  not
typically  associated  with investing  in  more established  markets.  The Asian
Growth, Emerging  Markets  and Latin  American  Funds' investments  in  emerging
markets may be in small- to medium-sized companies, which are more vulnerable to
financial  risks and  other risks  than larger  corporations, and  therefore may
involve a higher  degree of risk  and price volatility  than investments in  the
securities  of  larger  corporations.  The Latin  American  Fund  may  invest in
sovereign debt. The  Emerging Markets  and Latin  American Funds  may invest  in
lower  rated and  unrated debt  securities (including in  the case  of the Latin
American Fund, sovereign debt) which  are considered speculative with regard  to
the  payment of interest  and return of principal.  In addition, each Investment
Fund may  invest in  repurchase  agreements, borrow  money, lend  its  portfolio
securities,  and purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis.
The Latin
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
American Fund may invest in reverse repurchase agreements. The Investment  Funds
may  invest in  forward foreign  currency exchange  contracts, and  the Emerging
Markets, Latin American  and International  Magnum Funds may  invest in  foreign
currency  exchange futures and  options, to hedge  the currency risks associated
with investment in non-U.S. dollar denominated securities. The Emerging Markets,
Latin American  and  International  Magnum  Funds may  invest  in  options.  The
Emerging  Markets  and Latin  American Funds  may engage  in short  selling. The
Japanese Equity Fund may invest in short-term or medium-term debt securities  or
hold cash or cash equivalents for temporary defensive purposes. In addition, the
Japanese  Equity Fund may also invest indirectly in securities through sponsored
or unsponsored American Depositary Receipts. Each of these investment strategies
involves specific risks  which are  described under  "Investment Objectives  and
Policies"  and "Additional Investment Information"  herein and under "Investment
Objectives and  Policies"  in  the  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  See
"Investment  Limitations" for  a description  of the  risks associated  with the
non-diversified status of the Emerging  Markets, International Magnum and  Latin
American  Funds. The  Emerging Markets Fund  may invest in  equity securities of
Russian companies.  The  registration,  clearing and  settlement  of  securities
transactions  in Russia are subject to significant risks not normally associated
with securities  transactions in  the  United States  and other  more  developed
markets.   See   "Additional  Investment   Information  --   Russian  Securities
Transactions."
 
HOW TO INVEST
 
    The Class A, Class B and Class C shares of the Investment Funds are designed
to provide investors a choice of three  ways to pay distribution costs. Class  A
shares  of the Investment Funds  are offered at net  asset value plus an initial
sales charge of  up to 4.75%  in graduated percentages  based on the  investor's
aggregate  investments in the Investment Funds. Shares of the Class B shares and
Class C shares of the Investment Funds  are offered at net asset value. Class  B
shares   are  subject  to  a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  ("CDSC")  for
redemptions   within   six   years   and   are   subject   to   higher    annual
distribution-related  expenses  than  the Class  A  shares. Class  C  shares are
subject to a  CDSC for redemptions  within one  year and are  subject to  higher
annual  distribution-related expenses than  the Class A  shares. Share purchases
may be made through Morgan Stanley, through Participating Dealers or by  sending
payments  directly to  the Transfer  Agent on  behalf of  the Fund.  The minimum
initial investment is $1,000 for each  Investment Fund, except that the  minimum
initial  investment amount for individual  retirement accounts ("IRAs") is $250.
The minimum for  subsequent investments  is $100,  except that  the minimum  for
subsequent  investments for IRAs  is $50 and  there is no  minimum for automatic
reinvestment of dividends and distributions. See "Purchase of Shares."
 
HOW TO REDEEM
 
    Shares of each Investment Fund may be redeemed at any time at the net  asset
value  per share  of the  Investment Fund next  determined after  receipt of the
redemption request. The redemption price may  be more or less than the  purchase
price.  A Class A shareholder  of an Investment Fund who  did not pay an initial
sales charge due to the size of the purchase and redeems shares within one  year
of  purchase will be  subject to a  CDSC of 1.00%  on the lesser  of the current
market value of the shares  redeemed or the total  cost of such shares.  Certain
Class  B shares that are redeemed within six  years of purchase are subject to a
maximum CDSC of 5.00% which  decreases in steps to  0% after six years.  Certain
Class  C shares that are  redeemed within one year of  purchase are subject to a
CDSC of 1.00%. The CDSC in each case is applicable to the lesser of the  current
market  value  of the  shares  redeemed or  the total  cost  of such  shares. In
determining whether either of such CDSCs is  payable, and, if so, the amount  of
the  charge, it is assumed that shares not  subject to such charge are the first
redeemed followed by  other shares held  for the  longest period of  time. If  a
shareholder  reduces his/her total investment in shares of an Investment Fund to
less  than  $1,000,  the  entire  investment  may  be  subject  to   involuntary
redemption. See "Redemption of Shares."
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
 
    The  investment  objectives of  each  Investment Fund  are  described below,
together with the  policies the  Fund employs in  its efforts  to achieve  these
objectives.   Each  Investment  Fund's  investment  objectives  are  fundamental
policies which may not be changed by an Investment Fund without the approval  of
a  majority of the Investment Fund's  outstanding voting securities. There is no
assurance that an  Investment Fund  will attain its  objectives. The  investment
policies described below are not fundamental policies and may be changed without
shareholder approval.
 
THE GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
    The  investment objective of the Global Equity Allocation Fund is to provide
long-term capital appreciation  by investing  in equity securities  of U.S.  and
non-U.S. issuers in accordance with country weightings determined by the Adviser
and  with  stock selection  within each  country designed  to replicate  a broad
market index. The Investment Fund  will, under normal market conditions,  invest
at least 65% of the value of its total assets in equity securities of issuers in
at  least three different countries. The Adviser utilizes a top-down approach in
selecting investments for the Investment Fund that emphasizes country  selection
and weighting rather than individual stock selection. This approach reflects the
Adviser's  philosophy that  a diversified  selection of  securities representing
exposure to world markets based upon the economic outlook and current  valuation
levels  for each country is an effective way to maximize the return and minimize
the risk associated with global investment.
 
    The Adviser determines  country allocations  for the Investment  Fund on  an
ongoing   basis  within  policy   ranges  dictated  by   each  country's  market
capitalization and  liquidity. The  Investment Fund  will invest  in the  United
States and other industrialized countries throughout the world that comprise the
Morgan  Stanley Capital International World Index. These countries currently are
Australia, Austria,  Belgium, Canada,  Denmark, Finland,  France, Germany,  Hong
Kong,  Italy, Japan, the Netherlands,  New Zealand, Norway, Singapore/ Malaysia,
Spain, Sweden,  Switzerland,  the  United  Kingdom and  the  United  States.  In
addition,  the Investment Fund  may invest a  portion of its  assets in emerging
country equity securities, which  are described in detail  in the discussion  of
the  Emerging Markets Fund, below. The Adviser  intends to use the same criteria
as used for the  Emerging Markets Fund in  selecting emerging market  securities
for  investment. The Investment Fund currently intends  to invest in some or all
of the following countries:
 
<TABLE>
<S>        <C>        <C>          <C>
                                   South
Argentina  Indonesia  Portugal     Africa
Brazil     Malaysia   Philippines  Thailand
India      Mexico     South Korea  Turkey
</TABLE>
 
    By analyzing a variety of  macroeconomic and political factors, the  Adviser
develops  fundamental  projections  on  interest  rates,  currencies,  corporate
profits and economic growth for each country. These country projections are then
used to determine what  the Adviser believes  to be a fair  value for the  stock
market  of each country.  Discrepancies between actual value  and fair value, as
determined by the Adviser, provide an expected return for each stock market. The
expected return is  adjusted by  currency return expectations  derived from  the
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
Adviser's  purchasing-power parity exchange rate model  to arrive at an expected
total return in  U.S. dollars.  The final  country allocation  decision is  then
reached  by considering  the expected total  return in light  of various country
specific considerations such as market  size, volatility, liquidity and  country
risk.
 
    Within  a particular country,  investments are made  through the purchase of
common stocks which, in the aggregate, replicate a broad market index, which  in
most  cases will be the Morgan Stanley Capital International Index for the given
country. The Morgan Stanley Capital  International ("MSCI") Indices measure  the
performance  of stock markets  worldwide. The various MSCI  Indices are based on
the share  prices  of  companies listed  on  the  local stock  exchange  of  the
specified  country or countries  within a specified  region. The combined market
capitalization of companies in these indices represent approximately 60  percent
of the aggregate market value of the covered stock exchanges. Companies included
in the MSCI country index replicate the industry composition of the local market
and  are a representative sampling of large, medium and small companies, subject
to liquidity. Non-domiciled companies traded on the local exchange and companies
with restricted  float  due  to dominant  shareholders  or  cross-ownership  are
avoided.  The Adviser  may overweight  or underweight  an industry  segment of a
particular index if it  concludes this would be  advantageous to the  Investment
Fund.  With respect to the Investment Fund, equity securities include common and
preferred stocks, convertible  securities, and rights  and warrants to  purchase
common stocks. Debt securities convertible into common stocks will be investment
grade  (rated  in one  of the  four  highest rating  categories by  a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization ("NRSRO")) or, if unrated, will be of
comparable quality as  determined by the  Adviser under the  supervision of  the
Board  of Directors. Indexation of the Investment Fund's stock selection reduces
stock-specific risk  through diversification  and minimizes  transaction  costs,
which can be substantial in foreign markets.
 
    The  Investment Fund may, to a limited extent, invest in non-publicly traded
securities,  private  placements  and  restricted  securities.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and
Restricted Securities."
 
    The  Investment Fund will normally purchase  common stocks listed on a major
stock  exchange  in  the   subject  country.  For   a  description  of   special
considerations and certain risks associated with investments in foreign issuers,
see  "Additional Investment  Information." The  Investment Fund  may temporarily
reduce its equity holdings for defensive purposes in response to adverse  market
conditions  and  invest in  domestic,  Eurodollar and  foreign  short-term money
market instruments.  See  "Additional  Investment Information  --  Money  Market
Instruments"  in this Prospectus and "Investment Objectives and Policies" in the
Statement of Additional Information.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may  be  invested in  certain  securities or  obligations,  including derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
    The investment  objective of  the  Asian Growth  Fund is  long-term  capital
appreciation through investment primarily in equity securities of Asian issuers,
excluding  Japan. The  production of  any current  income is  incidental to this
objective. The Investment Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing under
normal
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
market conditions  at least  65% of  the value  of its  total assets  in  equity
securities  which are traded  on recognized stock exchanges  of the countries in
Asia described below and in equity  securities of companies organized under  the
laws  of an Asian country  whose business is conducted  principally in Asia. The
Investment Fund does  not intend  to invest in  securities which  are traded  in
markets  in  Japan  or in  companies  organized  under the  laws  of  Japan. The
Investment Fund may also invest in sponsored or unsponsored American  Depositary
Receipts  of Asian  issuers that  are traded  on stock  exchanges in  the United
States. See "Additional Investment Information -- Depositary Receipts."
 
    The Investment Fund will invest in countries having more established markets
in the Asian  region. The Asian  countries to be  represented in the  Investment
Fund  will  consist of  three or  more  of the  following countries:  Hong Kong,
Singapore, Malaysia,  Thailand, the  Philippines and  Indonesia. The  Investment
Fund  may also invest in common stocks traded on markets in China, Taiwan, South
Korea, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and other developing markets that are open  to
foreign  investment. There  is no requirement  that the Investment  Fund, at any
given time, invest  in any one  particular country  or in all  of the  countries
listed  above or in  any other Asian  countries. The Investment  Fund has no set
policy for allocating investments among the several Asian countries.  Allocation
of  investments  among  the  various  countries  will  depend  on  the  relative
attractiveness of the stocks of issuers in the respective countries.  Government
regulation  and restrictions in many of the  countries of interest may limit the
amount, mode and extent of investment in companies in such countries.
 
    Under normal  circumstances,  at  least  65% of  the  total  assets  of  the
Investment  Fund  will be  invested  in equity  securities  of issuers  in Asian
countries, excluding Japan. The remaining portion of the Investment Fund will be
kept in any  combination of debt  instruments, bills and  bonds of  governmental
entities  in Asia and the U.S., in  notes, debentures, and bonds of companies in
Asia and in money market instruments in the U.S. With respect to the  Investment
Fund,  equity  securities  include  common  and  preferred  stocks,  convertible
securities, and rights and warrants  to purchase common stocks. Debt  securities
convertible  into common stocks  will be investment  grade (rated in  one of the
four highest rating categories by a NRSRO) or, if unrated will be of  comparable
quality  as determined  by the  Adviser under  the supervision  of the  Board of
Directors.
 
    The Adviser's approach in selecting  investments for the Investment Fund  is
oriented  to individual stock selection and is value driven. In selecting stocks
for the Investment Fund, the Adviser initially identifies those stocks which  it
believes  to  be undervalued  in  relation to  the  issuer's assets,  cash flow,
earnings and revenues,  and then evaluates  the future value  of such stocks  by
running  the  results of  an in-depth  study  of the  issuer through  a dividend
discount model.  The Adviser  utilizes  the research  of  a number  of  sources,
including  its  affiliate in  Geneva, Morgan  Stanley Capital  International, in
identifying attractive securities, and applies a number of proprietary screening
criteria to identify those securities it believes to be undervalued.  Investment
Fund  holdings are regularly  reviewed and subjected  to fundamental analysis to
determine whether  they continue  to conform  to the  Adviser's value  criteria.
Those  which  no  longer conform  are  sold.  The Adviser  will  analyze assets,
revenues and  earnings of  an  issuer. In  selecting industries  and  particular
issuers,  the Adviser will evaluate costs of  labor and raw materials, access to
technology,  export  of  products   and  government  regulation.  Although   the
Investment Fund seeks to invest in larger companies, it may invest in small- and
medium-sized  companies that, in the Adviser's  view, have potential for growth.
The Investment  Fund may  invest  in equity  securities of  smaller  capitalized
companies,  which are more  vulnerable to financial and  other risks than larger
companies. Investment in securities  of smaller companies  may involve a  higher
degree of risk and price volatility than in securities
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
of  larger companies. The Investment  Fund's investments will include securities
of issuers located in developing countries and traded in emerging markets. These
securities pose  greater liquidity  risks  and other  risks than  securities  of
companies located in developed countries and traded in more established markets.
For  a description of  special considerations and  certain risks associated with
investment in foreign issuers, see "Additional Investment Information." See also
"Investment Objectives and Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    Although the  Investment  Fund intends  to  invest primarily  in  securities
listed  on  stock  exchanges,  it  may  also  invest  in  securities  traded  in
over-the-counter markets  and,  to  a limited  extent,  in  non-publicly  traded
securities.  Securities  traded  in  over-the-counter  markets  and non-publicly
traded securities pose liquidity  risks. See "Additional Investment  Information
- -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and Restricted Securities"
in this Prospectus.
 
    Pending investment or settlement, and for liquidity purposes, the Investment
Fund  may invest  in domestic,  Eurodollar and  foreign short-term  money market
instruments. As determined by the Adviser, the Investment Fund may also purchase
such instruments to temporarily reduce the Investment Fund's equity holdings for
defensive purposes in response to adverse market conditions.
 
    Because of the lack of hedging  facilities in the currency markets of  Asia,
no  active  currency hedging  strategy is  anticipated currently.  Instead, each
investment will be considered on a total currency adjusted basis with the United
States dollar as  a base  currency. The Investment  Fund may  engage in  foreign
currency  exchange contracts. See "Additional  Investment Information -- Foreign
Currency Hedging Transactions" in this Prospectus.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may  be  invested in  certain  securities or  obligations,  including derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
    The investment  objective  of  the  Emerging  Markets  Fund  is  to  provide
long-term  capital appreciation by  investing primarily in  equity securities of
emerging  country  issuers.  Under  normal  conditions,  at  least  65%  of  the
Investment  Fund's  total assets  will be  invested  in emerging  country equity
securities. With  respect  to the  Investment  Fund, equity  securities  include
common  and preferred stocks, convertible securities, and rights and warrants to
purchase common stocks. As used in this Prospectus, the term "emerging  country"
applies  to  any country  which, in  the  opinion of  the Adviser,  is generally
considered to  be  an  emerging  or  developing  country  by  the  international
financial  community, including  the International  Bank for  Reconstruction and
Development (more  commonly  known as  The  World Bank)  and  the  International
Finance  Corporation.  There  are currently  over  130 countries  which,  in the
opinion of the Adviser,  are generally considered to  be emerging or  developing
countries  by the international  financial community, approximately  40 of which
currently have stock markets. These countries generally include every nation  in
the  world except the  United States, Canada, Japan,  Australia, New Zealand and
most nations located in  Western Europe. Currently,  investing in many  emerging
countries  is  not feasible  or may  involve  unacceptable political  risks. The
Investment Fund will focus its investments on those
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
emerging market  countries in  which it  believes the  economics are  developing
strongly  and  in  which  the  markets  are  becoming  more  sophisticated.  The
Investment Fund intends  to invest  primarily in some  or all  of the  following
countries:
 
<TABLE>
<S>         <C>        <C>          <C>
Argentina   Hungary    Morocco      South Korea
Botswana    India      Nigeria      Sri Lanka
Brazil      Indonesia  Pakistan     Taiwan
Chile       Israel     Peru         Thailand
China       Jamaica    Philippines  Turkey
Colombia    Jordan     Poland       Venezuela
Ghana       Kenya      Portugal     Zimbabwe
Greece      Malaysia   Russia
                       South
Hong Kong   Mexico     Africa
</TABLE>
 
    As markets in other countries develop, the Investment Fund expects to expand
and further diversify the emerging countries in which it invests. The Investment
Fund  does not intend to invest in any  security in a country where the currency
is not  freely convertible  to  U.S. dollars,  unless  the Investment  Fund  has
obtained  the necessary governmental licensing to convert such currency or other
appropriately licensed  or  sanctioned  contractual guarantee  to  protect  such
investment  against loss  of that currency's  external value,  or the Investment
Fund has a reasonable expectation at the  time the investment is made that  such
governmental  licensing or other appropriately  licensed or sanctioned guarantee
would be obtained or that the currency in which the security is quoted would  be
freely  convertible at  the time  of any  proposed sale  of the  security by the
Investment Fund.
 
    An emerging country security is one issued by a company that, in the opinion
of the  Adviser, has  one or  more  of the  following characteristics:  (i)  its
principal  securities trading market is in an emerging country; (ii) alone or on
a consolidated basis it derives  50% or more of  its annual revenue from  either
goods produced, sales made or services performed in emerging countries; or (iii)
it  is organized under the  laws of, and has a  principal office in, an emerging
country. The  Adviser will  base determinations  as to  eligibility on  publicly
available  information  and inquiries  made to  the companies.  (See "Additional
Investment Information -- Foreign Investment" for a discussion of the nature  of
information publicly available for non-U.S. companies).
 
    To the extent that the Investment Fund's assets are not invested in emerging
country  equity securities, the remainder  of the assets may  be invested in (i)
debt securities denominated in the currency of an emerging country or issued  or
guaranteed  by  an emerging  country company  or the  government of  an emerging
country; (ii) equity  or debt  securities of corporate  or governmental  issuers
located  in industrialized countries; and  (iii) short-term and medium-term debt
securities of the type described below under "Additional Investment  Information
- --  Temporary Investments." The Investment Fund's assets may be invested in debt
securities when the Investment  Fund believes that, based  upon factors such  as
relative  interest rate levels and foreign  exchange rates, such debt securities
offer opportunities for long-term capital  appreciation. It is likely that  many
of the debt securities in which the Investment Fund will invest will be unrated,
and  whether or not rated, such securities may have speculative characteristics.
When deemed appropriate by the Adviser, the Investment Fund may invest up to 10%
of its total assets (measured  at the time of  the investment) in lower  quality
debt  securities. Lower quality debt securities, also known as "junk bonds," are
often considered to be speculative and involve
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
greater risk  of  default  or price  changes  due  to changes  in  the  issuer's
creditworthiness.  The market prices of these securities may fluctuate more than
those of higher quality securities and  may decline significantly in periods  of
general  economic difficulty, which may follow periods of rising interest rates.
Securities in the lowest  quality category may present  the risk of default,  or
may  be in  default. For temporary  defensive purposes, the  Investment Fund may
invest less than 65% of its total assets in emerging country equity  securities,
in  which case the Investment Fund may  invest in other equity securities or may
invest in debt  securities of  the kind described  under "Additional  Investment
Information -- Temporary Investments" below.
 
    The  Investment Fund may invest indirectly in securities of emerging country
issuers through sponsored or unsponsored American Depositary Receipts  ("ADRs").
ADRs  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
stock  of unsponsored ADRs are not obligated to disclose material information in
the United States and,  therefore, there may not  be a correlation between  such
information  and  the  market  value  of  the  ADR.  See  "Additional Investment
Information --  Depositary Receipts."  The  Investment Fund  may, to  a  limited
extent,  invest  in  non-publicly  traded  securities,  private  placements  and
restricted securities. See  "Additional Investment  Information --  Non-Publicly
Traded Securities, Private Placements and Restricted Securities."
 
    The  Investment Fund intends  to purchase and  hold securities for long-term
capital appreciation and does not expect to trade for short-term gain. The  rate
of  portfolio turnover will  not be a  limiting factor when  the Investment Fund
deems it appropriate to purchase or  sell securities. However, the U.S.  federal
tax  requirement that  the Investment  Fund derive  less than  30% of  its gross
income from the sale  or disposition of securities  held less than three  months
may limit the Investment Fund's ability to dispose of its securities.
 
    Any  remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described above
may be  invested  in certain  securities  or obligations,  including  derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
    The  investment objective  of the Latin  American Fund  is long-term capital
appreciation. The Investment Fund seeks  to achieve this objective by  investing
primarily  in equity securities (i)  of companies organized in  or for which the
principal securities trading market is in  Latin America, (ii) denominated in  a
Latin  American  currency issued  by companies  to  finance operations  in Latin
America, or (iii) of companies that alone or on a consolidated basis derive  50%
or  more of  their annual  revenues from  either goods  produced, sales  made or
services performed in Latin America (collectively, "Latin American issuers") and
by investing, from time to  time, in debt securities  issued or guaranteed by  a
Latin  American government or governmental  entity ("Sovereign Debt"). Income is
not a consideration in selecting investments or an investment objective.
 
    The  securities  markets  of  Latin  American  countries  are  substantially
smaller,  less liquid and more volatile than the major securities markets in the
United States. A high  proportion of the shares  of many Latin American  issuers
may be held by a limited number of persons, which may limit the number of shares
available  for investment by the Investment Fund. A limited number of issuers in
most,  if  not  all,   Latin  American  securities   markets  may  represent   a
disproportionately  large percentage of market capitalization and trading value.
The limited liquidity of Latin American  securities markets may also affect  the
Investment Fund's ability to acquire or
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
dispose  of securities at  the price and time  it wishes to  do so. In addition,
certain Latin American securities markets, including those of Argentina, Brazil,
Chile and Mexico, are susceptible to being influenced by large investors trading
significant  blocks  of  securities  or  by  large  dispositions  of  securities
resulting from the failure to meet margin calls when due.
 
    In  addition to their smaller size, lesser liquidity and greater volatility,
Latin American  securities  markets  are less  developed  than  U.S.  securities
markets. Disclosure and regulatory standards are in many respects less stringent
than  U.S.  standards.  Furthermore, there  is  a  low level  of  monitoring and
regulation of the markets and the  activities of investors in such markets,  and
enforcement  of existing  regulations has been  extremely limited. Consequently,
the prices at which the Investment Fund may acquire investments may be  affected
by  other market participants' anticipation  of the Investment Fund's investing,
by trading by  persons with  material non-public information  and by  securities
transactions  by brokers in anticipation of  transactions by the Investment Fund
in particular securities. Commissions  and other transaction  costs on most,  if
not  all, Latin American  securities exchanges are generally  higher than in the
United States, although the  Investment Fund will endeavor  to achieve the  most
favorable net results on its portfolio transactions.
 
    The economies of individual Latin American countries may differ favorably or
unfavorably  from the  U.S. economy in  such respects  as the rate  of growth of
gross domestic product,  the rate of  inflation, capital reinvestment,  resource
self-sufficiency  and balance  of payments  position. Governments  of many Latin
American countries have exercised and continue to exercise substantial influence
over many aspects of the private sector.  In some cases, the government owns  or
controls  many  companies,  including  some  of  the  largest  in  the  country.
Accordingly, government actions in the future could have a significant effect on
economic conditions  in a  Latin American  country, which  could affect  private
sector  companies and the Investment Fund,  and on market conditions, prices and
yields  of  securities  in  the  Investment  Fund's  portfolio.   Expropriation,
confiscatory   taxation,   nationalization,   political,   economic   or  social
instability or  other developments  could  adversely affect  the assets  of  the
Investment Fund held in particular Latin American countries.
 
    Beginning  in 1982, certain Latin  American countries experienced difficulty
in servicing their  sovereign debt.  Over the last  few years,  the major  Latin
American  countries, including  Brazil, Mexico and  Argentina, have successfully
restructured and are now servicing their external debt. Obligations arising from
past restructuring  agreements  have affected,  and  those arising  from  future
restructuring  agreements  may affect,  the  economic performance  and political
stability of certain Latin American countries.
 
    Under normal conditions, substantially  all, but not less  than 80%, of  the
Investment  Fund's  total  assets are  invested  in equity  securities  of Latin
American issuers and  in Sovereign Debt.  With respect to  the Investment  Fund,
unless  otherwise  indicated,  Latin  America  consists  of  Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,  Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador,  El
Salvador,  Guatemala,  Honduras,  Mexico,  Nicaragua,  Panama,  Paraguay,  Peru,
Uruguay  and  Venezuela.  See  "Additional  Investment  Information  --  Foreign
Investment" for a discussion of the nature of information publicly available for
non-U.S.  companies.  With respect  to  the Investment  Fund,  equity securities
include common  or preferred  stocks  (including convertible  preferred  stock),
bonds,  notes or  debentures convertible into  common or  preferred stock, stock
purchase warrants  or rights,  equity  interests in  trusts or  partnerships  or
American,  Global  or  other  types  of  Depositary  Receipts.  See  "Additional
Investment Information -- Depositary Receipts."
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
    The Investment Fund focuses its  investments in listed equity securities  in
Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico, the most developed capital markets in Latin
America. The Investment Fund expects, under normal market conditions, to have at
least 55% of its total assets invested in listed equity securities of issuers in
these  four  countries. In  addition, the  Investment  Fund actively  invests in
markets in other Latin American countries such as Colombia, Peru and  Venezuela.
The  Investment Fund is not limited in the  extent to which it may invest in any
Latin American  country  and  intends to  invest  opportunistically  as  markets
develop.  The portion  of the Investment  Fund's holdings in  any Latin American
country will vary  from time  to time, although  the portion  of the  Investment
Fund's assets invested in Chile may tend to vary less than the portions invested
in  other  Latin American  countries because,  with limited  exceptions, capital
invested in Chile currently cannot be repatriated for one year.
 
    The governments  of  some Latin  American  countries have  been  engaged  in
programs  of  selling  part  or  all of  their  stakes  in  government  owned or
controlled   enterprises   ("privatization").   The   Adviser   believes    that
privatization   may  offer  investors   opportunities  for  significant  capital
appreciation  and  intends  to   invest  assets  of   the  Investment  Fund   in
privatization in appropriate circumstances. In certain Latin American countries,
the  ability of foreign entities, such as the Investment Fund, to participate in
privatization may be limited by local law, or the terms on which the  Investment
Fund  may be permitted  to participate may  be less advantageous  than those for
local investors. There can be no assurance that Latin American governments  will
continue  to sell companies  currently owned or  controlled by them  or that any
privatization programs  in  which  the  Investment  Fund  participates  will  be
successful.
 
    Several  Latin  American countries  have  adopted debt  conversion programs,
pursuant to which  investors may use  Sovereign Debt of  a country, directly  or
indirectly,  to make  investments in local  companies. The terms  of the various
programs vary from country to country although each program includes significant
restrictions on the application of the  proceeds received in the conversion  and
on  the remittance of profits on the investment and of the invested capital. The
Investment Fund may participate in Latin American debt conversion programs.  The
Adviser  will evaluate opportunities to  enter into debt conversion transactions
as they arise.
 
    Securities in which the  Investment Fund may invest  include those that  are
neither  listed on a stock exchange nor  traded over-the-counter. As a result of
the absence of a public  trading market for these  securities, they may be  less
liquid  than publicly traded securities.  See "Additional Investment Information
- --Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and Restricted Securities."
 
    To the extent that the Investment  Fund's assets are not invested in  equity
securities  of Latin American issuers or in Sovereign Debt, the remainder of the
assets may be invested  in (i) debt securities  of Latin American issuers,  (ii)
equity  or  debt  securities of  corporate  or governmental  issuers  located in
countries outside  Latin  America, and  (iii)  short-term and  medium-term  debt
securities  of  the  type  described below  under  "Temporary  Investments." The
Investment Fund's assets may be invested in debt securities when the  Investment
Fund believes that, based upon factors such as relative interest rate levels and
foreign  exchange rates, such debt  securities offer opportunities for long-term
capital appreciation. It is likely that many of the debt securities in which the
Investment Fund will invest will be  unrated. The Investment Fund may invest  up
to  20% of its total assets in securities  that are determined by the Adviser to
be comparable to securities rated below investment
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
grade by  Standard  &  Poor's  or Moody's.  Such  lower-quality  securities  are
regarded  as being predominantly speculative  and involve significant risks. See
"Additional Investment Information -- Lower Rated and Unrated Debt Securities."
 
    The Investment Fund's holdings of lower-quality debt securities will consist
predominantly of Sovereign Debt, much  of which trades at substantial  discounts
from  face value and  which may include Sovereign  Debt comparable to securities
rated as low as  D by Standard &  Poor's Ratings Group ("S&P")  or C by  Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's"). The Investment Fund may invest in Sovereign
Debt  to  hold and  trade in  appropriate circumstances,  as well  as to  use to
participate in debt  for equity  conversion programs. The  Investment Fund  will
invest in Sovereign Debt only when the Investment Fund believes such investments
offer  opportunities for long-term capital appreciation. Investment in Sovereign
Debt involves a high degree of risk and such securities are generally considered
to be speculative in nature.
 
    For temporary defensive purposes, the  Investment Fund may invest less  than
80%  of its total assets in Latin American equity securities and Sovereign Debt,
in which case the Investment Fund may invest in other equity or debt  securities
or  may invest in certain  short-term (less than twelve  months to maturity) and
medium-term (not greater than  five years to maturity)  debt securities or  hold
cash.  See  "Additional Investment  Information  -- Temporary  Investments." The
Investment Fund may enter into  forward foreign currency exchange contracts  and
foreign  currency futures contracts, may purchase  and write (sell) put and call
options  on  securities,  foreign  currency  and  on  foreign  currency  futures
contracts,  and may enter  into stock index and  interest rate futures contracts
and options thereon.  See "Additional Investment  Information." There  currently
are   limited  options  and  futures  markets  for  Latin  American  currencies,
securities and indexes, and the nature of the strategies adopted by the  Adviser
and  the extent to which those strategies are used depends on the development of
those markets. The Investment  Fund may also from  time to time lend  securities
(but  not in excess of  20% of its total assets)  from its portfolio to brokers,
dealers and financial  institutions. See "Additional  Investment Information  --
Loans of Portfolio Securities."
 
    The Investment Fund will not invest more than 25% of its total assets in one
industry  except and  to the extent,  and only for  such period of  time as, the
Board of Directors determines in view of the considerations discussed below that
it is  appropriate and  in the  best interest  of the  Investment Fund  and  its
shareholders  to invest more than  25% of the Investment  Fund's total assets in
companies involved  in the  telecommunications  industry. Since  the  securities
markets  of Latin  American countries  are emerging  markets characterized  by a
relatively small number of issues, it is  possible that one or more markets  may
on  occasion be dominated  by issues of  companies engaged in  that industry. In
addition, it is possible that government privatization in certain Latin American
countries, which currently  represent a  primary source  of new  issues in  many
Latin  American markets and often represent attractive investment opportunities,
will occur in  that industry. As  a result,  the Investment Fund  has adopted  a
policy under which it may invest more than 25% of its total assets in securities
of  issuers in that industry. The Investment Fund would only take this action if
the Board of Directors determines that the Latin American markets are  dominated
by  securities of issuers in such industry and that, in light of the anticipated
return, investment  quality, availability  and liquidity  of the  issues in  the
industry,  the  Investment Fund's  ability to  achieve its  investment objective
would, in  light  of its  investment  policies and  limitations,  be  materially
adversely  affected if the Investment Funds were not able to invest greater than
25% of  its total  assets in  such  industry. In  the event  that the  Board  of
Directors    permits    greater   than    25%    of   the    Investment   Fund's
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
total assets to be invested  in the telecommunications industry, the  Investment
Fund may be exposed to increased investment risks peculiar to that industry. The
Investment  Fund will notify  its shareholders of  any decision by  the Board of
Directors to permit (or  cease) investments of more  than 25% of the  Investment
Fund's total assets in the telecommunications industry. Such notice will, to the
extent  applicable,  include  a  discussion of  any  increased  investment risks
peculiar to such industry to which the Investment Fund may be exposed.
 
    The Investment Fund  is authorized  to borrow  up to  33 1/3%  of its  total
assets  (including the amount  borrowed), less all  liabilities and indebtedness
other than the borrowing,  for investment purposes  to increase the  opportunity
for  greater  return  and  for  payment  of  dividends.  Such  borrowings  would
constitute leverage,  which is  a  speculative characteristic.  Leveraging  will
magnify  declines as well as increases in  the net asset value of the Investment
Fund's shares  and  in the  yield  on  the Investment  Fund's  investments.  See
"Additional Investment Information --Borrowing and Other Forms of Leverage."
 
    The  Investment Fund intends  to purchase and  hold securities for long-term
capital appreciation and does not expect to trade for short-term gain. The  rate
of  portfolio turnover will  not be a  limiting factor when  the Investment Fund
deems it appropriate to purchase or  sell securities. However, the U.S.  federal
tax  requirement that  the Investment  Fund derive  less than  30% of  its gross
income from the sale  or disposition of securities  held less than three  months
may limit the Investment Fund's ability to dispose of its securities.
 
    Any  remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described above
may be  invested  in certain  securities  or obligations,  including  derivative
securities, as set forth in "Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE INTERNATIONAL MAGNUM FUND
 
    The  investment objective  of the  International Magnum  Fund is  to provide
long-term  capital  appreciation.  The  production  of  any  current  income  is
incidental to this objective. The Investment Fund seeks to achieve its objective
by  investing primarily in  equity securities of  non-U.S. issuers in accordance
with the EAFE country (defined below) weightings determined by the Adviser. With
respect to the Investment Fund,  equity securities include common and  preferred
stocks,  convertible  securities, and  rights  and warrants  to  purchase common
stocks. The equity  securities in which  the Investment Fund  may invest may  be
denominated in any currency.
 
    The  countries in which the Investment Fund will invest are those comprising
the Morgan  Stanley  Capital  International  EAFE  Index  (the  "Index"),  which
includes  Australia, Japan, New Zealand, most  nations located in Western Europe
and certain developed countries in Asia,  such as Hong Kong and Singapore  (each
an  "EAFE country," and collectively the "EAFE  countries"). At least 65% of the
total assets of  the Investment Fund  will be invested  in equity securities  of
issuers in at least three different EAFE countries under normal circumstances.
 
    By  analyzing a variety of macroeconomic  and political factors, the Adviser
develops fundamental  projections  on comparative  interest  rates,  currencies,
corporate  profits and economic growth among  the various regions represented in
the Index.  These projections  will  be used  to establish  regional  allocation
strategies.  Within these regional allocations,  the Adviser then selects equity
securities among issuers of a region.
 
    The Adviser's approach in selecting among equity securities within a  region
comprised  of EAFE  countries is oriented  to individual stock  selection and is
value  driven.   The   Adviser   identifies  those   equity   securities   which
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
it  believes to be  undervalued in relation  to the issuer's  assets, cash flow,
earnings and  revenues.  In  selecting investments,  the  Adviser  utilizes  the
research of a number of sources, including Morgan Stanley Capital International,
an  affiliate of the  Adviser located in Geneva,  Switzerland. Fund holdings are
regularly reviewed and  subjected to fundamental  analysis to determine  whether
they continue to conform to the Adviser's investment criteria. Equity securities
which no longer conform to such investment criteria will be sold.
 
    Although   the  Investment  Fund  intends  to  invest  primarily  in  equity
securities listed on a  stock exchange in an  EAFE country, the Investment  Fund
may invest in equity securities that are traded over the counter or that are not
admitted  to listing on a stock exchange or dealt in on a regulated market. As a
result of  the absence  of a  public trading  market, such  securities may  pose
liquidity  risks. The Investment  Fund may also invest  in private placements or
initial public  offerings in  the form  of oversubscriptions.  Such  investments
generally   entail  short-term  liquidity   risks.  See  "Additional  Investment
Information -- Non-Publicly Traded Securities, Private Placements and Restricted
Securities."
 
    The Investment  Fund  may invest  up  to 10%  of  its total  assets  in  (i)
investment  funds with investment  objectives similar to  that of the Investment
Fund and (ii) for temporary purposes,  money market funds and pooled  investment
vehicles. If the Investment Fund invests in other investment funds, stockholders
will  bear  not only  their  proportionate share  of  the expenses  of  the Fund
(including operating expenses and fees of the Investment Adviser), but also will
indirectly bear similar expenses of the underlying investment fund.
 
    Although the  Investment Fund  anticipates being  fully invested  in  equity
securities  of EAFE countries,  the Fund may  invest, under normal circumstances
for cash  management  purposes,  up  to  35% of  its  total  assets  in  certain
short-term  (less than twelve  months to maturity)  and medium-term (not greater
than five years  to maturity)  debt securities or  hold cash.  In addition,  for
temporary  defensive  purposes  during  periods in  which  the  Adviser believes
changes in economic, financial  or political conditions  make it advisable,  the
Investment Fund may invest up to 100% of its total assets in such short-term and
medium-term debt securities or hold cash. The Investment Fund will not invest in
debt  securities that are not  rated at least investment  grade by either S&P or
Moody's. See "Additional Investment Information - Temporary Investments."
 
    Although  the  Investment  Fund  will  not  invest  for  short-term  trading
purposes,  investment securities may be sold from time to time without regard to
the length  of time  they have  been held.  It is  anticipated that  the  annual
turnover rate of the Fund will not exceed 100% under normal circumstances.
 
    Any  remaining  assets of  the Investment  Fund may  be invested  in certain
securities and obligations,  including derivative  securities, as  set forth  in
"Additional Investment Information" below.
 
THE JAPANESE EQUITY FUND
 
    The investment objective of the Japanese Equity Fund is to provide long-term
capital  appreciation. The  Investment Fund seeks  to achieve  this objective by
investing primarily in equity  securities of Japanese  issuers. With respect  to
the  Investment  Fund, equity  securities include  common and  preferred stocks,
convertible securities, and rights and warrants to purchase common stocks.
 
    Under normal conditions, the Investment Fund will invest at least 80% of its
total assets in securities issued by entities that are organized under the  laws
of   Japan,  entities  for   which  the  principal   securities  trading  market
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
is in Japan, and entities not organized under the laws of Japan but deriving 50%
or more of their  revenues or profits from  goods produced or sold,  investments
made,  or services performed in Japan or which have at least 50% of their assets
situated in Japan. These securities may  include debt securities (issued by  the
Japanese government or by Japanese companies) when the Adviser believes that the
potential  for capital appreciation from investment in debt securities equals or
exceeds  that  available  from  investment  in  equity  securities.  In   making
investment  decisions, the Adviser will consider,  among other factors, the size
of the company, its financial  condition, its marketing and technical  strengths
and  its  competitiveness in  its  industry. All  debt  securities in  which the
Investment Fund  may invest  will be  rated no  lower than  BBB by  S&P, Baa  by
Moody's  or BBB  by Mikuni  Inc. ("Mikuni")  (a Japanese  rating agency)  or, if
unrated, of comparable quality  as determined by  the Adviser. Securities  rated
BBB by S&P, Baa by Moody's or BBB by Mikuni have speculative characteristics and
changes in economic conditions or other circumstances are more likely to lead to
a  weakened capacity to make principal  and interest payments on such securities
than would be the case with higher rated securities. The convertible  securities
in  which  the  Investment Fund  may  invest include  bonds,  notes, debentures,
preferred stocks and other securities convertible into common stocks and may  be
fixed-income  or  zero  coupon  debt  securities.  Prior  to  their  conversion,
convertible securities may have  characteristics similar to nonconvertible  debt
securities.
 
    The  Investment Fund currently intends to  focus its investments in Japanese
companies that  have an  active market  for their  shares and  that the  Adviser
believes  show a potential  for better than average  growth. The Investment Fund
anticipates that  most  equity securities  of  Japanese companies  in  which  it
invests,  either directly or indirectly by means of American Depositary Receipts
or convertible debentures, will be listed on securities exchanges in Japan.  The
Investment  Fund may also invest in equity securities of Japanese companies that
are traded in an over-the-counter market.
 
    The Investment Fund may also invest up to 20% of its total assets in cash or
short-term government  or  other  short-term  prime  obligations  or  repurchase
agreements  so  that  funds  may  be  readily  available  for  general corporate
purposes,  including  the  payment  of  dividends,  redemptions  and   operating
expenses,  for investment in securities through exercise of rights or otherwise.
For temporary defensive purposes, the Investment Fund may invest some or all  of
its assets in cash or such short-term obligations.
 
    Although  the  Investment  Fund  will  not  invest  for  short-term  trading
purposes, investment securities may be sold from time to time without regard  to
the  length  of time  they have  been held.  It is  anticipated that  the annual
portfolio turnover rate of the Investment Fund will not exceed 100% under normal
circumstances.
 
    Any remaining assets of the Investment Fund not invested as described  above
may be invested in certain securities or obligations as set forth in "Additional
Investment Information" below.
 
    Investors  should consider the  following factors inherent  in investment in
Japan.
 
    TRADE ISSUES.  Because  of the concentration of  Japanese exports in  highly
visible  products such as automobiles, machine tools and semiconductors, and the
large trade surpluses ensuing  therefrom, Japan is in  a difficult phase in  its
relation  with  its trading  partners, particularly  the  U.S., where  the trade
imbalance is the  greatest. Retaliatory  action taken by  such trading  partners
could  affect  the  ability  of  Japanese companies  to  export  goods  to these
countries, which  could  negatively  impact  the  value  of  securities  in  the
Investment Fund.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
    CURRENCY  FACTORS.   Over  a long  period  of years,  the yen  has generally
appreciated in relation to the dollar.  The yen's appreciation would add to  the
returns  of dollars invested through the Investment  Fund in Japan. A decline in
the value of  the yen would  have the opposite  effect, adversely affecting  the
value of the Investment Fund in dollar terms.
 
    THE  JAPANESE STOCK  MARKET.  Like  other stock markets,  the Japanese stock
market can be volatile. A  decline in the market may  have an adverse effect  on
the availability of credit and on the value of the substantial stock holdings of
Japanese  companies in particular, Japanese banks, insurance companies and other
financial institutions. A decline  in the market may  contribute to weakness  in
Japan's  economy. The common stocks of many Japanese companies continue to trade
at high price-earnings ratios even after the recent market decline.  Differences
in  accounting methods  make it  difficult to  compare the  earnings of Japanese
companies with those  of companies in  other countries, especially  the U.S.  In
general,  however, reported net income in  Japan is understated relative to U.S.
accounting standards. In addition,  Japanese companies have tended  historically
to  have higher  growth rates than  U.S. companies, and  Japanese interest rates
have generally been lower than in the U.S., both of which factors tend to result
in lower discount rates  and higher price-earnings ratios  in Japan than in  the
U.S.
 
                       ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION
 
BORROWING AND OTHER FORMS OF LEVERAGE
 
    The  Latin American Fund is authorized to  borrow money from banks and other
entities in an amount equal to up to 33 1/3% of its total assets (including  the
amount   borrowed),  less  all  liabilities  and  indebtedness  other  than  the
borrowing, and may use the proceeds of the borrowing for investment purposes  or
to   pay  dividends.   Borrowing  creates   leverage  which   is  a  speculative
characteristic. Although the Investment Fund is authorized to borrow, it will do
so only when  the Adviser believes  that borrowing will  benefit the  Investment
Fund after taking into account considerations such as the costs of borrowing and
the  likely  investment returns  on securities  purchased with  borrowed monies.
Borrowing by the Investment Fund will  create the opportunity for increased  net
income  but,  at  the  same  time,  will  involve  special  risk considerations.
Leveraging resulting from borrowing will  magnify declines as well as  increases
in the Investment Fund's net asset value per share and net yield.
 
    The  Investment Fund  expects that all  of its  borrowing will be  made on a
secured basis. The Investment Fund's Custodian will either segregate the  assets
securing  the borrowing for the  benefit of the lenders  or arrangements will be
made with  a suitable  sub-custodian. If  assets used  to secure  the  borrowing
decrease  in value,  the Investment  Fund may  be required  to pledge additional
collateral to the lender in the form of cash or securities to avoid  liquidation
of those assets.
 
    The  Investment Fund may also enter  into reverse repurchase agreements. See
"Additional Investment Information --Reverse Repurchase Agreements" below.
 
DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS
 
    The Asian Growth, Emerging Markets, Latin American and Japanese Equity Funds
may on  occasion invest  in  American Depositary  Receipts ("ADRs").  The  Asian
Growth,  Emerging  Markets and  Latin American  Funds may  also invest  in other
Depositary Receipts,  including Global  Depositary Receipts  ("GDRs"),  European
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
Depositary Receipts ("EDRs") and other Depositary Receipts (which, together with
ADRs,  GDRs and  EDRs, are hereinafter  collectively referred  to as "Depositary
Receipts"), to the extent that  such Depositary Receipts become available.  ADRs
are   securities,  typically   issued  by   a  U.S.   financial  institution  (a
"depositary"), that evidence  ownership interests  in a  security or  a pool  of
securities  issued by a  foreign issuer (the  "underlying issuer") and deposited
with the depositary. ADRs include American Depositary Shares and New York Shares
and may be "sponsored" or "unsponsored." Sponsored ADRs are established  jointly
by  a  depositary and  the underlying  issuer, whereas  unsponsored ADRs  may be
established by  a depositary  without participation  by the  underlying  issuer.
GDRs,  EDRs  and other  types  of Depositary  Receipts  are typically  issued by
foreign depositories, although they may also be issued by U.S. depositories, and
evidence ownership  interests in  a security  or pool  of securities  issued  by
either a foreign or a U.S. corporation.
 
    Holders  of  unsponsored Depositary  Receipts generally  bear all  the costs
associated with establishing the unsponsored Depositary Receipt. The  depositary
of  an  unsponsored  Depositary Receipt  is  under no  obligation  to distribute
shareholder communications  received  from  the underlying  issuer  or  to  pass
through  to the holders of the unsponsored Depositary Receipt voting rights with
respect to the deposited securities  or pool of securities. Depositary  Receipts
are  not  necessarily  denominated  in  the  same  currency  as  the  underlying
securities to which  they may  be connected. Generally,  Depositary Receipts  in
registered  form  are  designed  for  use  in  the  U.S.  securities  market and
Depositary Receipts in bearer  form are designed for  use in securities  markets
outside  the U.S. The  Investment Funds may invest  in sponsored and unsponsored
Depositary Receipts. For purposes of the Investment Fund's investment  policies,
the  Investment Fund's investments  in Depositary Receipts will  be deemed to be
investments in the underlying securities.
 
DERIVATIVES
 
    Each of the Investment Funds may invest in one or more types of derivatives,
which are financial  products or instruments  that derive their  value from  the
value  of  an  underlying asset,  reference  rate  or index.  The  following are
derivatives: forward foreign  currency exchange contracts,  options (e.g.,  puts
and  calls),  futures  contracts,  options  on  futures  contracts,  convertible
securities, warrants, when-issued and delayed delivery securities and depositary
receipts. See elsewhere in this "Additional Investment Information" section  for
descriptions  of these various  instruments, and see  "Investment Objectives and
Policies" for more information regarding any investment policies or  limitations
applicable to their use.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY HEDGING TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Investment  Funds  may  enter into  forward  foreign  currency exchange
contracts ("forward contracts"). Forward contracts  provide for the purchase  or
sale of an amount of a specified foreign currency at a future date. Purposes for
which  such contracts  may be  used include  protecting against  a decline  in a
foreign currency against the U.S. dollar  between the trade date and  settlement
date  when such Investment  Funds purchases or sells  securities, locking in the
U.S. dollar value  of dividends declared  on securities held  by the  Investment
Fund  and generally protecting the  U.S. dollar value of  securities held by the
Investment Fund against exchange rate fluctuations. While such forward contracts
may  limit  losses  to  the  Investment  Fund  as  a  result  of  exchange  rate
fluctuations,  they will also limit any exchange rate gains that might otherwise
have been realized. The Global Equity Allocation, Asian Growth and International
Magnum Funds will enter into such contracts only to protect against the  effects
of fluctuating rates of currency exchange and exchange control regulations.
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
    The Emerging Markets, Latin American and International Magnum Funds may also
enter  into  foreign  currency  futures contracts.  A  foreign  currency futures
contract is  a standardized  contract for  the future  delivery of  a  specified
amount  of a foreign currency at a future date at a price set at the time of the
contract. Foreign currency futures  contracts traded in the  U.S. are traded  on
regulated  exchanges. Parties to  a futures contract  must make initial "margin"
deposits to secure performance of the contract, which generally range from 2% to
5% of the contract price. There also are requirements to make "variation" margin
deposits as the value of the futures contract fluctuates. Such Investment  Funds
may not enter into foreign currency futures contracts if the aggregate amount of
initial  margin deposits on  the Investment Fund's  futures positions, including
stock index futures contracts  (which are discussed below),  would exceed 5%  of
the  value of the Investment Fund's total  assets. The Investment Fund also will
be required to segregate assets to cover its futures contracts obligations.
 
    At the maturity of  a forward or futures  contract, the Investment Fund  may
either  accept or make  delivery of the  currency specified in  the contract or,
prior to  maturity, enter  into  a closing  purchase transaction  involving  the
purchase  or sale of an offsetting  contract. Closing purchase transactions with
respect to forward contracts are usually  effected with the currency trader  who
is  a party to the original forward contract. Closing purchase transactions with
respect to futures contracts  are effected on an  exchange. The Investment  Fund
will  only enter into such a forward or  futures contract if it is expected that
there will be a liquid  market in which to close  out such contract. There  can,
however,  be no assurance that such a liquid market will exist in which to close
a forward or futures contract,  in which case the  Investment Fund may suffer  a
loss.
 
    The  Emerging  Markets, Latin  American and  International Magnum  Funds may
attempt to accomplish objectives similar  to those described above with  respect
to forward and futures contracts for currency by means of purchasing put or call
options  on foreign currencies on exchanges.  A put option gives such Investment
Funds the right to sell a currency at the exercise price until the expiration of
the option. A  call option gives  the Investment  Fund the right  to purchase  a
currency at the exercise price until the expiration of the option.
 
    Each   Investment  Fund's   Custodian  will  place   cash,  U.S.  government
securities, or liquid high-grade  debt securities into  a segregated account  of
the  Investment Fund in an  amount equal to the  value of such Investment Fund's
total assets committed to the consummation of forward foreign currency  exchange
contracts.  If  the value  of the  securities placed  in the  segregated account
declines, additional cash or securities will be placed in the account on a daily
basis so that the value of the account  will be at least equal to the amount  of
such   Investment  Fund's  commitments  with  respect  to  such  contracts.  See
"Investment  Objectives  and  Policies  --  Forward  Foreign  Currency  Exchange
Contracts" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
 
    Each  of the Investment  Funds may invest in  securities of foreign issuers.
Investment in securities of foreign issuers, especially in securities of issuers
in emerging  countries,  and in  foreign  branches of  domestic  banks  involves
somewhat  different  investment risks  from those  affecting securities  of U.S.
issuers. There may  be limited  publicly available information  with respect  to
foreign  issuers,  and  foreign issuers  are  not generally  subject  to uniform
accounting,  auditing,  and   financial  and  other   reporting  standards   and
requirements  comparable to  those applicable to  domestic companies. Therefore,
disclosure of certain material information may not be made and less  information
may  be available to investors  investing in foreign countries  than in the U.S.
There may  also  be  less  government  supervision  and  regulation  of  foreign
securities exchanges, brokers and listed
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
companies  than in the  U.S. Many foreign  securities markets have substantially
less volume  than U.S.  national securities  exchanges, and  securities of  some
foreign  issuers are  less liquid and  subject to greater  price volatility than
securities of  comparable  domestic  issuers. Brokerage  commissions  and  other
transaction  costs on foreign securities exchanges  are generally higher than in
the U.S.  Dividends and  interest paid  by  foreign issuers  may be  subject  to
withholding  and  other foreign  taxes,  which may  decrease  the net  return on
foreign investments as compared to dividends and interest paid to the Investment
Funds by  domestic  companies.  See "Taxes."  Additional  risks  include  future
adverse  political  and economic  developments, the  possibility that  a foreign
jurisdiction might impose  or change  withholding taxes on  income payable  with
respect   to   foreign   securities,   possible   seizure,   nationalization  or
expropriation of  the  foreign issuer  or  foreign deposits,  and  the  possible
adoption  of  foreign  governmental  restrictions  such  as  exchange  controls.
Emerging countries  may  have  less  stable  political  environments  than  more
developed  countries. Also, it may  be more difficult to  obtain a judgment in a
court outside the U.S.
 
    Investments in securities of foreign  issuers are frequently denominated  in
foreign   currencies,  and  each  Investment  Fund  may  also  temporarily  hold
uninvested reserves in bank deposits in foreign currencies. Therefore, the value
of an Investment Fund's assets measured in United States Dollars may be affected
favorably or  unfavorably by  changes in  currency exchange  rates and  exchange
control  regulations.  Each Investment  Fund will  also  incur certain  costs in
connection with conversions between various currencies.
 
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
 
    In order  to remain  fully invested  and to  reduce transaction  costs,  the
Emerging  Markets,  Latin American  and International  Magnum Funds  may utilize
appropriate securities index futures contracts  and options on securities  index
futures  contracts to a limited  extent and the Latin  American Fund may utilize
appropriate interest rate futures contracts and options on interest rate futures
contracts to a limited extent. Because transaction costs associated with futures
and options may be lower than the costs of investing in securities directly,  it
is  expected that the use of index  futures and options to facilitate cash flows
may reduce  an  Investment  Fund's  overall transaction  costs.  Each  of  these
Investment Funds may sell indexed financial futures contracts in anticipation of
or  during a market decline to attempt to offset the decrease in market value of
securities in its  portfolio that  might otherwise result.  When the  Investment
Fund  is not  fully invested  and the  Adviser anticipates  a significant market
advance, it  may purchase  stock index  futures in  order to  gain rapid  market
exposure that may in part or entirely offset increases in the cost of securities
that  it intends to  purchase. In a substantial  majority of these transactions,
the Investment  Fund  will purchase  such  securities upon  termination  of  the
futures position but, under unusual market conditions, a futures position may be
terminated  without  the corresponding  purchase  of securities.  The Investment
Funds will  engage in  futures  and options  on  futures transactions  only  for
hedging purposes.
 
    The International Magnum Fund will engage only in transactions in securities
index  futures contracts,  interest rate  futures contracts  and options thereon
which are traded on a recognized securities or futures exchange. There currently
are limited securities index futures, interest rate futures and options on  such
futures markets in many countries, particularly emerging countries such as Latin
American countries, and the nature of the strategies adopted by the Adviser, and
the extent to which those strategies are used, will depend on the development of
such markets.
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
    The  Emerging  Markets, Latin  American and  International Magnum  Funds may
enter into futures contracts and options thereon provided that not more than  5%
of  each  such  Investment Fund's  total  assets  at the  time  of  entering the
transaction are required as deposit to secure obligations under such  contracts,
and  provided further  that not  more than 20%  of each  Investment Fund's total
assets, in  the aggregate  are  invested in  futures  contracts and  options  on
futures contracts.
 
    The  primary risks associated  with the use  of futures and  options are (i)
imperfect correlation between the change in  market value of the stocks held  by
the Investment Fund and the prices of futures and options relating to the stocks
purchased  or sold by  the Investment Fund,  and (ii) possible  lack of a liquid
secondary market for a futures contract  and the resulting inability to close  a
futures  position which  could have an  adverse impact on  the Investment Fund's
ability to hedge.  The risk  of loss  in trading  on futures  contracts in  some
strategies  can be substantial, due both to the low margin deposits required and
the extremely high  degree of leverage  involved in futures  pricing. Gains  and
losses  on  futures  and options  depend  on  the Adviser's  ability  to predict
correctly the  direction of  stock prices,  interest rates,  and other  economic
factors. In the opinion of the Directors, the risk that the Investment Fund will
be  unable to close out a futures position or options contract will be minimized
by only entering into futures contracts or options transactions for which  there
appears  to be  a liquid secondary  market. For more  detailed information about
futures transactions see "Investment Objectives  and Policies" in the  Statement
of Additional Information.
 
INVESTMENT COMPANIES
 
    Some  emerging  market countries  have laws  and regulations  that currently
preclude direct  foreign  investment  in  the  securities  of  their  companies.
However,  indirect foreign investment in the  securities of companies listed and
traded on  the  stock exchanges  in  these  countries is  permitted  by  certain
emerging  market countries through investment funds which have been specifically
authorized. Certain  of the  Investment  Funds may  invest in  these  investment
companies,  subject to the provisions of the 1940 Act and other applicable laws.
If an  Investment Fund  invests  in such  investment companies,  the  Investment
Fund's shareholders will bear not only their proportionate share of the expenses
of  the  Investment  Fund (including  operating  expenses  and the  fees  of the
Adviser), but  also will  indirectly  bear similar  expenses of  the  underlying
investment funds.
 
    Certain  of the investment companies referred  to in the preceding paragraph
are advised by  the Adviser.  An Investment Fund  may, to  the extent  permitted
under  the  1940  Act  and  other applicable  law,  invest  in  these investment
companies. If the Investment Fund  does elect to make  an investment in such  an
investment  company, it  will only  purchase the  securities of  such investment
company in the secondary market.
 
LOANS OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
    Each Investment Fund may lend its portfolio securities to brokers,  dealers,
domestic  and foreign banks  or other financial institutions  for the purpose of
increasing its net investment income.  These loans must be secured  continuously
by  cash or equivalent collateral or by a letter of credit at least equal to the
market value  of the  securities loaned  plus accrued  interest. The  Investment
Funds  will  not  enter  into  securities  loan  transactions  exceeding  in the
aggregate 33  1/3% of  the market  value of  an Investment  Fund's total  assets
(exceeding in the aggregate 20% of such value with respect to the Latin American
Fund). As with other extensions of credit, there
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
are  risks of delay in recovery or even  loss of rights in collateral should the
borrower of  the  portfolio  securities  fail  financially.  For  more  detailed
information  about securities lending, see  "Investment Objectives and Policies"
in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
LOWER RATED AND UNRATED DEBT SECURITIES
 
    The Emerging Markets and Latin American  Funds may invest in lower rated  or
unrated  debt securities, commonly referred to as "junk bonds." In addition, the
emerging country debt securities in which  such Investment Funds may invest  are
subject  to risk and will not be required  to meet a minimum rating standard and
may not be rated. Fixed income securities are subject to the risk of an issuer's
inability to meet  principal and  interest payments on  the obligations  (credit
risk)  and  may also  be  subject to  price volatility  due  to such  factors as
interest rate  sensitivity, market  perception of  the creditworthiness  of  the
issuer  and  general  market liquidity  (market  risk). Lower  rated  or unrated
securities are more likely to react to developments affecting market and  credit
risk  than are more highly rated  securities, which react primarily to movements
in the  general level  of  interest rates.  The  market values  of  fixed-income
securities  tend to vary inversely with the  level of interest rates. Yields and
market values of  lower rated and  unrated debt securities  will fluctuate  over
time, reflecting not only changing interest rates but the market's perception of
credit  quality and  the outlook for  economic growth.  When economic conditions
appear to be  deteriorating, medium  to lower  rated securities  may decline  in
value  due to heightened  concern over credit  quality, regardless of prevailing
interest rates. Fluctuations in  the value of  an Investment Fund's  investments
will  be  reflected in  the Investment  Fund's  net asset  value per  share. The
Adviser considers  both  credit  risk  and  market  risk  in  making  investment
decisions  for  an  Investment  Fund. Investors  should  carefully  consider the
relative risks  of investing  in lower  rated and  unrated debt  securities  and
understand   that  such  securities  are  not  generally  meant  for  short-term
investing.
 
    The U.S.  corporate  lower  rated  and unrated  debt  securities  market  is
relatively  new  and its  recent  growth paralleled  a  long period  of economic
expansion and an increase in merger, acquisition and leveraged buyout  activity.
Adverse  economic developments may  disrupt the market  for U.S. corporate lower
rated and unrated debt securities and for emerging country debt securities. Such
disruptions may  severely  affect  the ability  of  issuers,  especially  highly
leveraged  issuers,  to  service  their  debt  obligations  or  to  repay  their
obligations upon maturity. In addition, the secondary market for lower rated and
unrated debt securities, which is concentrated in relatively few market  makers,
may  not be as liquid as the  secondary market for more highly rated securities.
As a result, the Adviser could find  it more difficult to sell these  securities
or  may  be able  to  sell the  securities  only at  prices  lower than  if such
securities were widely traded. In addition, there may be limited trading markets
for debt securities of  issuers located in  emerging countries. Prices  realized
upon   the  sale  of  such  lower  rated  or  unrated  securities,  under  these
circumstances, may be  less than the  prices used in  calculating an  Investment
Fund's net asset value.
 
    Prices  for  lower rated  and  unrated debt  securities  may be  affected by
legislative and regulatory  developments. These laws  could adversely affect  an
Investment Fund's net asset value and investment practices, the secondary market
for  lower rated and unrated debt securities, the financial condition of issuers
of such securities  and the value  of outstanding lower  rated and unrated  debt
securities.  For example, U.S. federal  legislation requiring the divestiture by
federally insured savings and  loan associations of  their investments in  lower
rated  and unrated debt securities and limiting the deductibility of interest by
certain corporate issuers of lower  rated and unrated debt securities  adversely
affected the market in recent years.
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
    Lower  rated or unrated debt obligations also present risks based on payment
expectations. If an issuer calls  the obligations for redemption, an  Investment
Fund  may have to replace the security with a lower yielding security, resulting
in  a  decreased  return  for  investors.  If  an  Investment  Fund  experiences
unexpected  net  redemptions,  it  may  be  forced  to  sell  its  higher  rated
securities, resulting  in  a  decline  in the  overall  credit  quality  of  the
Investment  Fund's  investment  portfolio  and increasing  the  exposure  of the
Investment Fund to the risks of lower rated and unrated debt securities.
 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS
 
    Each Investment Fund  is permitted  to invest in  money market  instruments,
although  the Investment Funds intend to  stay invested in securities satisfying
their primary investment objective to the extent practical. The Investment Funds
may make money  market investments  pending other investment  or settlement  for
liquidity  or  in  adverse  market  conditions.  The  money  market  investments
permitted for the Investment  Funds include obligations  of the U.S.  Government
and  its agencies  and instrumentalities, obligations  of foreign sovereignties,
other debt securities, commercial paper including bank obligations, certificates
of  deposit  (including  Eurodollar  certificates  of  deposit)  and  repurchase
agreements.  For more detailed information about these money market investments,
see "Description  of Securities  and  Ratings" in  the Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
NON-PUBLICLY TRADED SECURITIES, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES
 
    Each  Investment  Fund,  except  the Japanese  Equity  Fund,  may  invest in
securities that  are neither  listed on  a stock  exchange nor  traded over  the
counter. Such unlisted equity securities may involve a higher degree of business
and  financial risk that  can result in  substantial losses. As  a result of the
absence of a public trading market for these securities, they may be less liquid
than publicly  traded securities.  Although these  securities may  be resold  in
privately negotiated transactions, the prices realized from these sales could be
less  than those originally paid by such  Investment Funds or less than what may
be considered  the  fair value  of  such securities.  Further,  companies  whose
securities  are not  publicly traded  may not be  subject to  the disclosure and
other investor  protection  requirements  which might  be  applicable  if  their
securities  were  publicly  traded.  If  such  securities  are  required  to  be
registered under the securities laws of  one or more jurisdictions before  being
resold,   the  Investment  Fund  may  be   required  to  bear  the  expenses  of
registration. As a general matter, the Investment Fund may not invest more  than
15%  of its  net assets in  illiquid securities, including  securities for which
there is no readily available secondary market nor, for the International Magnum
Fund, more than 10% of its total  assets in securities that are restricted  from
sale  to  the public  without registration  ("Restricted Securities")  under the
Securities Act of  1933, as amended  (the "1933 Act").  Securities that are  not
registered  under the 1933  Act, but that  can be offered  and sold to qualified
institutional buyers under Rule 144A under that Act will not be included  within
the  foregoing 15% limit on illiquid securities if the securities are determined
to be liquid. The Board of Directors has adopted guidelines and delegated to the
Adviser, subject  to  the supervision  of  the  Board of  Directors,  the  daily
function  of determining and  monitoring the liquidity  of Rule 144A securities.
Rule 144A securities may become  illiquid if qualified institutional buyers  are
not interested in acquiring the securities.
 
OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
 
    Each  of the Emerging Markets, Latin American and International Magnum Funds
may seek to increase its return or may  hedge all or a portion of its  portfolio
investments through options with respect to securities in
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
which such Investment Funds may invest. The Investment Funds will engage only in
transactions  in options which are traded  on a recognized securities or futures
exchange. There  currently  are  limited  options  markets  in  many  countries,
particularly emerging countries such as Latin American countries, and the nature
of  the  strategies  adopted  by  the Adviser  and  the  extent  to  which those
strategies are used will depend on the development of such option markets.
 
    The Investment Funds may write (i.e., sell) covered call options which  give
the  purchaser the right  to buy the  underlying security covered  by the option
from the Investment Funds at the stated exercise price. A "covered" call  option
means  that so long as  the Investment Funds are obligated  as the writer of the
option, it will own (i) the underlying securities subject to the option, or (ii)
securities convertible or exchangeable without the payment of any  consideration
into  the securities subject to the option. As a matter of operating policy, the
value of the underlying securities on which  options will be written at any  one
time will not exceed 5% of the total assets of the Investment Funds.
 
    The Investment Funds will receive a premium from writing call options, which
increases  the Investment Fund's return on  the underlying security in the event
the option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit. By writing a  call,
the  Investment Funds will limit  its opportunity to profit  from an increase in
the market value  of the  underlying security above  the exercise  price of  the
option  for as long as the Investment  Fund's obligation as writer of the option
continues. Thus, in some  periods the Investment Funds  will receive less  total
return  and  in other  periods greater  total return  from writing  covered call
options than it would  have received from its  underlying securities had it  not
written call options.
 
    The  Investment Funds  may also write  (i.e., sell) covered  put options. By
selling a covered put  option, the Investment Funds  incur an obligation to  buy
the security underlying the option from the purchaser of the put at the option's
exercise price at any time during the option period, at the purchaser's election
(certain  options written  by the  Investment Funds  will be  exercisable by the
purchaser only on a specific date). Generally, a put option is "covered" if  the
Investment  Funds maintain cash, U.S. Government  securities or other high grade
debt obligations equal to the exercise price of the option or if the  Investment
Funds hold a put option on the same underlying security with a similar or higher
exercise  price.  The  Investment Funds  may  sell  put options  to  receive the
premiums paid by  purchasers and to  close out  a long put  option position.  In
addition,  when the Adviser wishes to purchase  a security at a price lower than
its current market price,  the Investment Funds  may write a  covered put at  an
exercise price reflecting the lower purchase price sought.
 
    The  Investment Funds  may also purchase  put or call  options on individual
securities or baskets of securities. When  the Investment Funds purchase a  call
option  it acquires the right to buy a designated security at a designated price
(the "exercise price"), and when the  Investment Funds purchase a put option  it
acquires  the right to sell a designated security at the exercise price, in each
case on or before  a specified date (the  "termination date"), usually not  more
than  nine months from the  date the option is  issued. The Investment Funds may
purchase call options to close out a covered call position or to protect against
an increase in the price of a security it anticipates purchasing. The Investment
Funds may purchase put options on securities which it holds in its portfolio  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
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
for  the  option,  the Investment  Funds  would  incur no  additional  loss. The
Investment Funds  may  also  purchase  put options  to  close  out  written  put
positions  in a  manner similar  to call  option closing  purchase transactions.
There are no other limits on the Investment Funds' ability to purchase call  and
put options.
 
    The  primary  risks associated  with the  use of  options are  (i) imperfect
correlation between the  change in market  value of the  securities held by  the
Investment  Funds and the prices of options relating to the securities purchased
or sold by the Investment  Funds; and (ii) possible  lack of a liquid  secondary
market  for  an  option.  In the  opinion  of  the Adviser,  the  risk  that the
Investment Funds  will  be unable  to  close out  an  options contract  will  be
minimized  by only entering into options transactions for which there appears to
be a liquid secondary market.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
    Each Investment  Fund may  enter into  repurchase agreements  with  brokers,
dealers  or  banks  that meet  the  credit  guidelines of  the  Fund's  Board of
Directors. In a repurchase agreement, an Investment Fund buys a security from  a
seller  that has  agreed to  repurchase it  at a  mutually agreed  upon date and
price, reflecting the interest rate effective for the term of the agreement. The
term of these agreements is usually from overnight to one week and never exceeds
one year. A repurchase agreement may be viewed as a fully collateralized loan of
money by an Investment Fund to  the seller. The Investment Funds always  receive
securities  as collateral  with a  market value at  least equal  to the purchase
price, including accrued interest, and this value is maintained during the  term
of  the agreement. If the seller defaults  and the collateral value declines, an
Investment Fund might incur a loss. If bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with
respect to the seller, the Investment Fund's realization upon the collateral may
be delayed  or  limited. The  aggregate  of certain  repurchase  agreements  and
certain   other  investments   is  limited   as  set   forth  under  "Investment
Limitations."
 
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
    The Latin American Fund  may enter into  reverse repurchase agreements  with
brokers,  dealers, domestic  and foreign  banks or  other financial institutions
that have  been determined  by the  Adviser  to be  creditworthy. In  a  reverse
repurchase  agreement,  such  Investment Funds  sell  a security  and  agrees to
repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon date and price, reflecting the  interest
rate  effective for  the term  of the agreement.  It may  also be  viewed as the
borrowing of money by the Investment  Fund. The Investment Fund's investment  of
the  proceeds of a reverse repurchase  agreement is the speculative factor known
as leverage. The Investment Fund will enter into a reverse repurchase  agreement
only  if the interest income  from investment of the  proceeds is expected to be
greater than  the interest  expense  of the  transaction  and the  proceeds  are
invested  for a period no longer than  the term of the agreement. The Investment
Fund will  maintain with  the Custodian  a separate  account with  a  segregated
portfolio  of cash, U.S.  Government securities or other  liquid high grade debt
obligations in an amount at least equal to its purchase obligations under  these
agreements (including accrued interest). If interest rates rise during a reverse
repurchase  agreement, it may adversely affect  the Investment Fund's ability to
maintain a stable net  asset value. In  the event that  the buyer of  securities
under  a reverse repurchase agreement files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent,
the buyer  or its  trustee  or receiver  may receive  an  extension of  time  to
determine  whether to enforce  the Investment Fund's  repurchase obligation, and
the Investment  Fund's use  of  proceeds of  the  agreement may  effectively  be
restricted pending such decision. The aggregate of these
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
agreements  is  limited as  set  forth under  "Investment  Limitations." Reverse
repurchase agreements are  considered to be  borrowings and are  subject to  the
percentage limitations on borrowings set forth in "Investment Limitations."
 
RUSSIAN SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Emerging  Markets  Fund  may invest  in  equity  securities  of Russian
companies. The registration, clearing and settlement of securities  transactions
in  Russia  are  subject  to  significant  risks  not  normally  associated with
securities transactions in the United  States and other more developed  markets.
Ownership  of shares in Russian companies is evidenced by entries in a company's
share register (except where shares are held through depositories that meet  the
requirements of the 1940 Act) and the issuance of extracts from the register or,
in  certain limited cases, by formal  share certificates. However, Russian share
registers are frequently unreliable and the Investment Fund could possibly  lose
its  registration through oversight, negligence or fraud. Moreover, Russia lacks
a centralized registry to record securities transactions and registrars  located
throughout   Russia  or  the  companies  themselves  maintain  share  registers.
Registrars are under no obligation  to provide extracts to potential  purchasers
in  a timely manner or at all and are not necessarily subject to effective state
supervision. In  addition, while  registrars  are liable  under law  for  losses
resulting  from their  errors, it  may be difficult  for the  Investment Fund to
enforce any rights it may have against the registrar or issuer of the securities
in the event of loss of share registration. Although Russian companies with more
than 1,000 shareholders are required by law to employ an independent company  to
maintain  share registers, in practice, such  companies have not always followed
this law. Because of  this lack of independence  of registrars, management of  a
Russian  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  on  the  share  register.  Furthermore,  these
practices  may prevent the  Investment Fund from investing  in the securities of
certain Russian companies deemed suitable by the Adviser and could cause a delay
in the sale of Russian securities by the Investment Fund if the company deems  a
purchaser  unsuitable, which may expose the Investment Fund to potential loss on
its investment.
 
    In light  of  the risks  described  above, the  Board  of Directors  of  the
Investment Fund has approved certain procedures concerning the Investment Fund's
investments  in Russian securities. Among these procedures is a requirement that
the Investment  Fund will  not invest  in the  securities of  a Russian  company
unless  that issuer's registrar has entered  into a contract with the Investment
Fund's sub-custodian containing certain  protective conditions including,  among
other  things, the sub-custodian's right  to conduct regular share confirmations
on behalf of the Investment Fund.  This requirement will likely have the  effect
of  precluding investments in certain Russian companies that the Investment Fund
would otherwise make.
 
SHORT SALES
 
    The Emerging Markets  and Latin American  Funds may from  time to time  sell
securities  short without limitation, although  neither of such Investment Funds
intends to  sell  securities  short on  a  regular  basis. A  short  sale  is  a
transaction  in which the Investment Fund would  sell securities it does not own
(but has borrowed)  in anticipation  of a  decline in  the market  price of  the
securities.  When  the  Investment Fund  makes  a  short sale,  the  proceeds it
receives from the sale will be held  on behalf of a broker until the  Investment
Fund  replaces the borrowed securities. To  deliver the securities to the buyer,
the Investment  Fund  will  need to  arrange  through  a broker  to  borrow  the
securities  and,  in so  doing,  the Investment  Fund  will become  obligated to
replace the
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
securities borrowed at their market price  at the time of replacement,  whatever
that  price may be. The Investment Fund may  have to pay a premium to borrow the
securities and must  pay any  dividends or  interest payable  on the  securities
until they are replaced.
 
    The  Investment  Fund's obligation  to  replace the  securities  borrowed in
connection with a short  sale will be secured  by collateral deposited with  the
broker  that consists of cash, U.S.  Government securities or other liquid, high
grade debt  obligations.  In addition,  the  Investment  Fund will  place  in  a
segregated  account  with  its  Custodian an  amount  of  cash,  U.S. Government
securities or other liquid high grade debt obligations equal to the  difference,
if  any, between (1)  the market value of  the securities sold  at the time they
were sold short  and (2) any  cash, U.S. Government  securities or other  liquid
high  grade  debt  obligations  deposited  as  collateral  with  the  broker  in
connection with the short sale (not  including the proceeds of the short  sale).
Short   sales  by  the  Investment  Fund   involve  certain  risks  and  special
considerations. Possible losses from short  sales differ from losses that  could
be  incurred from a purchase of a  security, because losses from short sales may
be unlimited, whereas  losses from  purchases can  equal only  the total  amount
invested.
 
TEMPORARY INVESTMENTS
 
    During  periods in which the Adviser believes changes in economic, financial
or political conditions make it advisable, for temporary defensive purposes each
of the Emerging Markets Fund and Latin American Fund may reduce its holdings  in
equity  and other  securities and  may invest  in certain  short-term (less than
twelve months  to maturity)  and medium-term  (not greater  than five  years  to
maturity)  debt securities or may hold cash. The short-term and medium-term debt
securities in which such Investment Funds may invest consist of (a)  obligations
of  the U.S.  or emerging country  governments (Latin  American governments with
respect  to   the   Latin  American   Fund),   their  respective   agencies   or
instrumentalities;   (b)   bank   deposits  and   bank   obligations  (including
certificates of  deposit, time  deposits and  bankers' acceptances)  of U.S.  or
emerging  country banks (Latin American banks with respect to the Latin American
Fund) denominated  in  any currency;  (c)  floating rate  securities  and  other
instruments  denominated  in any  currency  issued by  international development
agencies;  (d)  finance  company  and  corporate  commercial  paper  and   other
short-term  corporate debt obligations of U.S. and emerging country corporations
(Latin American corporations with  respect to the  Latin American Fund)  meeting
the  Investment Fund's credit  quality standards; and  (e) repurchase agreements
with banks and broker-dealers with  respect to such securities. See  "Additional
Investment  Information  --  Repurchase  Agreements."  For  temporary  defensive
purposes,  the  Investment  Fund  intends  to  invest  only  in  short-term  and
medium-term  debt securities  that the Adviser  believes to be  of high quality,
i.e., subject to relatively low risk of loss of interest or principal (there  is
currently  no  rating system  for debt  securities  in most  emerging countries,
including most Latin American countries.)
 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES
 
    Each Investment Fund  may purchase  securities on a  when-issued or  delayed
delivery  basis. In such  transactions, instruments are  bought with payment and
delivery taking place in the future in order to secure what is considered to  be
an  advantageous yield or price at the  time of the transaction. Delivery of and
payment for these securities may take as long as a month or more after the  date
of  the purchase commitment but will take place  no more than 120 days after the
trade  date.  Each  Investment   Fund  will  maintain   with  the  Custodian   a
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
separate account with a segregated portfolio of cash, U.S. Government securities
or  other liquid,  high grade debt  obligations in  an amount at  least equal to
these commitments. The payment  obligation and the interest  rates that will  be
received  are  each  fixed  at  the time  an  Investment  Fund  enters  into the
commitment, and no  interest accrues  to the Investment  Fund until  settlement.
Thus,  it is possible that  the market value at the  time of settlement could be
higher or lower than the purchase price  if the general level of interest  rates
has  changed. It is a  current policy of the Investment  Funds not to enter into
when-issued  commitments  or  delayed  delivery  securities  exceeding,  in  the
aggregate,  15% of the  Investment Fund's net assets  other than the obligations
created by these commitments.
 
                             INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
 
    Each Investment  Fund,  except  the Emerging  Markets,  Latin  American  and
International  Magnum Funds, is a diversified  investment company under the 1940
Act, and is subject  to the following  limitations: (a) as to  75% of its  total
assets,  the Investment Fund may not invest more  than 5% of its total assets in
the securities of any one issuer, except obligations of the U.S. Government  and
its agencies and instrumentalities, and (b) the Investment Fund may not own more
than  10% of the outstanding  voting securities of any  one issuer. The Emerging
Markets, Latin  American  and  International Magnum  Funds  are  non-diversified
investment  companies  under  the  1940  Act,  which  means  that  each  of such
Investment Funds is not limited by the  1940 Act in the proportion of its  total
assets that may be invested in the obligations of a single issuer. Thus, each of
such Investment Funds may invest a greater proportion of its total assets in the
securities  of a smaller number of issuers and,  as a result, will be subject to
greater risk with respect to its  portfolio securities. Each of such  Investment
Funds,  however, intends to comply with the diversification requirements imposed
by the  Internal  Revenue Code  of  1986, as  amended,  for qualification  as  a
regulated investment company. See "Taxes."
 
    The Investment Funds also operate under certain investment restrictions that
are  deemed fundamental policies and  may be changed by  an Investment Fund only
with the  approval  of  the holders  of  a  majority of  the  Investment  Fund's
outstanding shares. In addition to other restrictions listed in the Statement of
Additional  Information, an  Investment Fund may  not (i)  enter into repurchase
agreements with more than seven days to maturity if, as a result, more than  15%
of  the market value  of the Investment  Fund's net assets  would be invested in
these agreements  and other  investments  for which  market quotations  are  not
readily available or which are otherwise illiquid; (ii) borrow money except from
banks for extraordinary or emergency purposes and then only in amounts up to 10%
of the value of the Investment Fund's total assets, taken at market value at the
time  of borrowing,  or purchase  securities while  borrowings exceed  5% of its
total assets, or mortgage, pledge or hypothecate any assets except in connection
with any such  borrowing in amounts  up to 10%  of the value  of the  Investment
Fund's  total assets at  the time of  borrowing; except that  the Latin American
Fund may borrow, and mortgage, pledge  or hypothecate its assets to secure  such
borrowings, in amounts equal to up to 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the
amount   borrowed),  less  all  liabilities  and  indebtedness  other  than  the
borrowing; and  except that  the  Latin American  Fund  may enter  into  reverse
repurchase  agreements  in  accordance  with  their  investment  objectives  and
policies; (iii) invest  in fixed  time deposits with  a duration  of over  seven
calendar  days; (iv) invest in  fixed time deposits with  a duration of from two
business days to seven calendar days if  more than 10% of the Investment  Fund's
total assets would be invested in these deposits; or (v) invest more than 25% of
the  Investment  Fund's  total assets  in  securities  of companies  in  any one
industry, except for the Latin American Fund.
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
 
    INVESTMENT ADVISER.  Morgan Stanley Asset Management Inc. (the "Adviser") is
the Investment Adviser and Administrator of the Fund and each of its  Investment
Funds.  The Adviser provides investment advice and portfolio management services
pursuant to an Investment Advisory Agreement and, subject to the supervision  of
the  Fund's Board of  Directors, makes each of  the Investment Fund's investment
decisions, arranges for  the execution of  portfolio transactions and  generally
manages  each of the Investment Fund's investments. Set forth below as an annual
percentage of average daily net assets are the advisory fees paid to the Adviser
quarterly by  each Investment  Fund.  The investment  advisory fees  of  certain
Investment  Funds  are  higher  than  those  of  most  investment  companies but
comparable to those of investment companies with similar objectives.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                         <C>
Global Equity Allocation
Fund                           1.00 %
Asian Growth Fund              1.00 %
Emerging Markets Fund          1.25 %
Latin American Fund            1.25 %
International Magnum Fund      1.00 %
Japanese Equity Fund           1.00 %
</TABLE>
 
    The Adviser, with  principal offices  at 1221  Avenue of  the Americas,  New
York,  NY 10020, conducts a worldwide portfolio management business. It provides
a broad range of portfolio management services to customers in the United States
and abroad. At December 31, 1995, the Adviser together with its affiliated asset
management companies managed investments  totaling approximately $57.4  billion,
including  approximately $41.9 billion under active management and $15.5 billion
as Named  Fiduciary  or  Fiduciary  Adviser. See  "Management  of  the  Fund  --
Investment   Advisory  and  Administrative  Agreements"   in  the  Statement  of
Additional Information.
 
    Each  class  of  the  Investment  Funds  have  adopted  separate  Plans   of
Distribution  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the  1940 Act (each, a "Plan"). Under
the applicable  Plan, which  is  described in  more detail  under  "Distributor"
below,  the Distributor is entitled to receive from each of the Investment Funds
with respect to the  Class A shares,  payments of 0.25%  of such class's  annual
average net assets and, with respect to the Class B and Class C shares, payments
of  0.75% of each such  class's annual average net  assets. Each Plan recognizes
that, in addition to  such payments, the  Adviser may use  its advisory fees  or
other  resources  to  pay expenses  associated  with activities  which  might be
construed to be financing the sale of these Investment Funds' shares. Each  Plan
provides that the Adviser may make payments from these sources to third parties,
such  as  consultants that  provide assistance  in  the distribution  effort (in
addition to selling shares and providing shareholder services). As part of  such
distribution fees for the Class A shares of the Investment Funds, up to 0.25% of
the  net assets  of such class  will be  used to compensate  the Distributor for
shareholder services provided.  In addition  to such distribution  fees for  the
Class  B shares and  Class C shares, the  Rule 12b-1 plan of  each class of each
Investment Fund authorizes the payment of 0.25%  of the net assets of each  such
class to compensate the Distributor for shareholder services provided.
 
    PORTFOLIO  MANAGERS  --  The following  individuals  have  primary portfolio
management responsibility for the Investment Funds noted below:
 
    GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND -- BARTON  M. BIGGS, MADHAV DHAR, FRANCINE  J.
BOVICH  AND ANN D. THIVIERGE.  Barton Biggs has been  Chairman and a director of
the Adviser since 1980 and a Managing Director of
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
Morgan Stanley since 1975. He  is also a director  of Morgan Stanley Group  Inc.
and  a director and officer of six  registered investment companies to which the
Adviser and certain of its affiliates provide investment advisory services.  Mr.
Biggs  holds a B.A. from Yale University and an M.B.A. from New York University.
Madhav Dhar is a Managing Director of  Morgan Stanley. He joined the Adviser  in
1984  to focus on global asset allocation  and investment strategy and now heads
the Adviser's  emerging  markets  group  and serves  as  the  group's  principal
portfolio  manager. Mr. Dhar  also coordinates the  Adviser's developing country
funds effort and  has been involved  in the launching  of the Adviser's  country
funds.  He is  the portfolio  manager of the  Fund's Emerging  Markets Fund, the
Emerging Markets and Active Country Allocation Portfolios of the Morgan  Stanley
Institutional  Fund, Inc., and the Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Fund, Inc. (a
closed-end investment company listed on the  New York Stock Exchange). Mr.  Dhar
is  also a director of the Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Fund, Inc. He holds a
B.S. (honors) from St. Stephens College, Delhi University (India), and an M.B.A.
from Carnegie  - Mellon  University. Francine  Bovich joined  the Adviser  as  a
Principal in 1993. She is responsible for portfolio management and communication
of  the Adviser's asset  allocation strategy to  institutional investor clients.
Previously, Ms. Bovich was a Principal and Executive Vice President of  Westwood
Management  Corp. ("Westwood"), a registered  investment adviser. Before joining
Westwood, she was a  Managing Director of  Citicorp Investment Management,  Inc.
(now   Chancellor  Capital  Management),  where  she  was  responsible  for  the
Institutional Investment  Management  group.  Ms. Bovich  began  her  investment
career  with  Banker's  Trust  Company.  She  holds  a  B.A.  in  Economics from
Connecticut College  and an  M.B.A. in  Finance from  New York  University.  Ann
Thivierge  is a Vice President of the Adviser.  She is a member of the Adviser's
asset allocation  committee, primarily  representing the  Total Fund  Management
team  since its  inception in 1991.  Prior to  joining the Adviser  in 1986, she
spent two  years at  Edgewood Management  Company, a  privately held  investment
management  firm. Ms.  Thivierge holds  a B.A.  in International  Relations from
James Madison College, Michigan State University, and an M.B.A. in Finance  from
New York University.
 
    ASIAN  GROWTH FUND --  EAN WAH CHIN  AND SEAH KIAT  SENG. Ean Wah  Chin is a
Managing Director  of  Morgan  Stanley  and is  responsible  for  the  Adviser's
regional  Asia  ex-Japan  operations based  in  Singapore. She  has  had primary
management responsibility for the Investment Fund since its inception. Prior  to
joining  Morgan Stanley in  1986, Ms. Chin  spent eight years  with the Monetary
Authority of Singapore and the  Government of Singapore Investment  Corporation,
where  she was a portfolio manager on one of the largest portfolios in Asia. Ms.
Chin was an  ASEAN scholar educated  at the University  of Singapore. Seah  Kiat
Seng   joined  the   Adviser's  Singapore   office  in   1990  as   a  portfolio
manager/analyst specializing in the Southeast  Asian markets. He is currently  a
Vice  President, responsible  for investments  in Thailand.  He has  had primary
management  responsibility  for  the   Investment  Fund  since  its   inception.
Previously,  Kiat Seng worked  at Barclays de  Zoete Wedd (BZW),  where he was a
senior investment analyst who helped pioneer BZW's research effort in Singapore.
Kiat Seng is a  Chartered Financial Analyst and  a qualified real estate  valuer
who  has worked  for the Singapore  Ministry of  Finance. He was  a Colombo Plan
Scholar educated in New Zealand.
 
    EMERGING MARKETS  FUND --  MADHAV  DHAR. Information  about Madhav  Dhar  is
included under the Global Equity Allocation Fund above. Mr. Dhar has had primary
responsibility for managing the Investment Fund's assets since inception.
 
    LATIN  AMERICAN FUND -- ROBERT L. MEYER.  Robert Meyer joined the Adviser in
1989 and is now a Principal of Morgan Stanley. He is responsible for all of  the
Adviser's equity investments in Latin America and has had primary responsibility
for managing the Investment Fund since its inception.
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
    INTERNATIONAL  MAGNUM FUND -- FRANCINE J. BOVICH. Information about Francine
Bovich is included under the Global Equity Allocation Fund above.
 
    JAPANESE EQUITY FUND -- DOMINIC CALDECOTT AND KUNIHIKO SUGIO. Mr.  Caldecott
is  responsible for research  and stock selection  in the Pacific  Basin and has
been primarily responsible for managing  the Investment Fund's assets since  its
inception.  He has ten  years professional experience,  primarily in Tokyo. Hong
Kong and Seoul. Prior  to joining Morgan Stanley,  he worked with GT  Management
Group  in  Tokyo  and  Hong  Kong,  specializing  in  Pacific  Basin  investment
management. He became a Vice President of Morgan Stanley in 1987, a principal in
1989, and a Managing Director in 1991. He is responsible for a number of Pacific
Basin investment programs  for clients  of Morgan  Stanley. Mr.  Caldecott is  a
graduate  of New College, Oxford, England.  Kunihiko Sugio joined the Adviser in
December 1993  as  a  Vice  President  and  manages  dedicated  japanese  equity
portfolios.  He  has been  primarily  responsible for  managing  the Portfolio's
assets since its  inception. Prior  to joining  Morgan Stanley,  he worked  with
Baring  International Investment Management, Tokyo, where  he was a Director and
fund manager. He graduated from Wakayama Kokuritsu University.
 
    ADMINISTRATOR.   The  Adviser also  provides  the Fund  with  administrative
services  pursuant to a separate Administration Agreement. The services provided
under the  Administration  Agreement  are  subject to  the  supervision  of  the
officers   and  Board   of  Directors  of   the  Fund   and  include  day-to-day
administration of  matters  related to  the  corporate existence  of  the  Fund,
maintenance  of its records,  preparation of reports,  supervision of the Fund's
arrangements with its custodian and assistance in the preparation of the  Fund's
registration  statements  under  federal  and  state  laws.  The  Administration
Agreement also provides  that the Adviser  through its agents  will provide  the
Fund dividend disbursing and transfer agent services. For its services under the
Administration  Agreement, the Fund pays  the Adviser a monthly  fee which on an
annual basis equals  0.25% of the  average daily net  assets of each  Investment
Fund.
 
    In  a merger completed on September 1,  1995, The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
("Chase") succeeded to all of the rights and obligations under the United States
Trust Administration Agreement between the  Adviser and the United States  Trust
Company  of New York ("U.S. Trust"), pursuant  to which U.S. Trust had agreed to
provide certain administrative services  to the Fund.  Pursuant to a  delegation
clause  in the  U.S. Trust  Administration Agreement,  U.S. Trust  delegated its
administration  responsibilities  to   Chase  Global   Funds  Services   Company
("CGFSC"),  formerly Mutual Funds  Service Company, which  after the merger with
Chase  is  a  subsidiary  of  Chase   and  will  continue  to  provide   certain
administrative  services to the  Fund. The Adviser  supervises and monitors such
administrative services  provided  by CGFSC.  The  services provided  under  the
Administration  Agreement and the  U.S. Trust Administration  Agreement are also
subject to the supervision of the Board  of Directors of the Fund. The Board  of
Directors  of the  Fund has approved  the provision of  services described above
pursuant to  the  Administration Agreement  and  the U.S.  Trust  Administration
Agreement  as being in the best interests  of the Fund. CGFSC's business address
is  73  Tremont  Street,   Boston,  Massachusetts  02108-3913.  For   additional
information  on the Administration  Agreement and the  U.S. Trust Administration
Agreement,  see  "Management  of  the  Fund"  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
    ADMINISTRATORS FOR THE LATIN AMERICAN FUND.  The Investment Fund has entered
into  an administration agreement (the  "Chilean Administration Agreement") with
Bice Chileconsult  Agente  de  Valores S.A.  (the  "Chilean  Administrator"),  a
Chilean  corporation, pursuant  to which the  Chilean Administrator  acts as the
Investment  Fund's   legal   representative   in  Chile.   Under   the   Chilean
Administration  Agreement, the  Chilean Administrator  performs various services
for  the  Investment   Fund,  including  making   and  obtaining  all   exchange
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
control  filings  and  approvals  required for  the  Investment  Fund  to effect
investment and other transactions in Chile and to remit moneys and other  assets
outside  of  Chile,  obtaining  from  the  relevant  authorities  in  Chile  all
confirmations or consents relating to the tax status of the Investment Fund  and
all  tax rebates and other payments which may be due to the Investment Fund, and
performing all other administrative duties in  Chile required by Chilean law  or
Chilean authorities through instructions or regulations to be performed. For its
services,  the Chilean Administrator is paid an  annual fee by the Fund equal to
the greater  of  0.125% of  the  Investment  Fund's average  weekly  net  assets
invested  in Chile  or $20,000,  paid monthly.  Unless terminated  by the Fund's
Board of  Directors  upon 60  days'  prior written  notice,  or by  the  Chilean
Administration  upon 90 days'  prior written notice,  the Chilean Administration
Agreement will continue automatically from year to year.
 
    The Investment  Fund  is  required  under Brazilian  law  to  have  a  local
administrator  in  Brazil.  Unibanco-Uniao  (the  "Brazilian  Administrator"), a
Brazilian corporation,  acts as  the Investment  Fund's Brazilian  administrator
pursuant to an agreement with the Investment Fund (the "Brazilian Administration
Agreement").   Under  the  Brazilian  Administration  Agreement,  the  Brazilian
Administrator performs  various  services  for the  Investment  Fund,  including
effecting  the registration  of the Investment  Fund's foreign  capital with the
Central Bank of Brazil, effecting  all foreign exchange transactions related  to
the Investment Fund's investments in Brazil and obtaining all approvals required
for  the Investment Fund to make remittances of income and capital gains and for
the repatriation of the  Fund's investments pursuant to  Brazilian law. For  its
services,  the Brazilian Administrator is  paid an annual fee  equal to .125% of
the Investment  Fund's  average  weekly  net assets  invested  in  Brazil,  paid
monthly.  The  principal office  of the  Brazilian  Administrator is  located at
Avenida  Eusebio  Matoso,   891,  Sao   Paulo,  S.P.,   Brazil.  The   Brazilian
Administration  Agreement is terminable upon six months' notice by either party.
The Brazilian Administrator may be replaced only by an entity authorized to  act
as  a  joint  manager of  a  managed  portfolio of  bonds  and  securities under
Brazilian law.
 
    The Investment  Fund  is  required  under Colombian  law  to  have  a  local
administrator  in Colombia.  CitiTrust S.A.  (the "Colombian  Administrator"), a
Colombian Trust Company, acts as  the Investment Fund's Colombian  administrator
pursuant  to an agreement with the  Investment Fund (the "Colombian Agreement").
Under the  Colombian Agreement,  the  Colombian Administrator  performs  various
services  for the Investment  Fund, including effecting  the registration of the
Investment Fund's foreign capital with  the Central Bank of Colombia,  effecting
all  foreign exchange transactions related  to the Investment Fund's investments
in Colombia and obtaining all approvals required for the Investment Fund to make
remittances of  income  and  capital  gains and  for  the  repatriation  of  the
Investment  Fund's investments pursuant to Colombian  law. For its services, the
Colombian  Administrator  is  paid  an  annual  fee  of  $1,000  plus  .20%  per
transaction.  The principal office of the  Colombian Administrator is located at
Sociedad Fiduciaria  International  S.A., 8-89,  Piso  2, Santa  Fe  de  Bogota,
Colombia.  The Colombian Agreement is terminable  upon 30 days' notice by either
party. The Colombian Administrator may be replaced only by an entity  authorized
to  act as a joint manager of a  managed portfolio of bonds and securities under
Colombian law.
 
    DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.  Pursuant  to the Fund's Articles of  Incorporation,
the  Board of Directors  decides upon matters  of general policy  and review the
actions of the Fund's Adviser,  administrators and Distributor. The Officers  of
the Fund conduct and supervise its daily business operations.
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
    DISTRIBUTOR.   Morgan Stanley serves as the Distributor of the shares of the
Fund. Under  its Distribution  Agreement  with the  Fund, Morgan  Stanley  sells
shares of the Fund upon the terms and at the current offering price described in
this  Prospectus. Morgan Stanley is not obligated to sell any specific number of
shares of the Fund.
 
    The Fund  currently  offers only  the  classes  of shares  offered  by  this
Prospectus.  The Fund may in the future offer  one or more classes of shares for
each Investment Fund that may have  different CDSCs or initial sales charges  or
other  distribution charges or a combination  thereof than the classes currently
offered.
 
    The Board of Directors of the Fund has approved and adopted the Distribution
Agreement for  the Fund  and  a Plan  for each  class  of the  Investment  Funds
pursuant  to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940  Act. Under each Plan, the Distributor is
entitled to receive  from these Investment  Funds a distribution  fee, which  is
accrued  daily  and paid  quarterly, of  0.25% for  the Class  A shares  of each
Investment Fund, and  0.75% of the  Class B shares  and Class C  shares of  each
Investment  Fund, on an annualized basis of the average daily net assets of such
Investment Fund or classes.  The Distributor expects to  reallocate most of  its
fee  to  investment  dealers, banks  or  financial services  firms  that provide
distribution services  ("Participating  Dealers").  The actual  amount  of  such
compensation  is  agreed  upon by  the  Fund's  Board of  Directors  and  by the
Distributor. The Distributor may, in its discretion, voluntarily waive from time
to time all or any portion of  its distribution fee and the Distributor is  free
to  make additional payments out  of its own assets to  promote the sale of Fund
shares. Class B shares and Class C shares  are also subject to a service fee  at
an  annual rate of 0.25% on an annualized  basis of the average daily net assets
of such class of shares of an Investment Fund.
 
    In addition to  the distribution  and shareholder  servicing fees  described
above,  Morgan Stanley also receives a sales charge  of up to 4.75% of the sales
price of Class A shares of each  Investment Fund. Morgan Stanley may reallow  up
to  the full  applicable sales  charge, as  shown in  the table  in "Purchase of
Shares"  below,  to  certain  Participating  Dealers  during  periods  and   for
transactions  specified in  "Purchase of  Shares" and  such reallowances  may be
based upon attainment of minimum sales  levels. During periods when 90% or  more
of the sales charge is reallowed, certain Participating Dealers may be deemed to
be  underwriters  as that  term is  defined in  the Securities  Act of  1933, as
amended. Morgan Stanley may receive a CDSC of up to 1.00% of the sales price  of
the  Class A  shares and Class  C shares  of the Investment  Funds, as described
below under "Purchase of Shares." Morgan Stanley  may also receive a CDSC of  up
to  5.00% of the sales price  of shares of the Class  B shares of the Investment
Funds, as described below under "Purchase  of Shares." In addition to the  sales
charges  described above, Morgan Stanley may from  time to time and from its own
resources pay or allow  additional discounts or  promotional incentives, in  the
form of cash or other compensation, to Participating Dealers. In some instances,
such  discounts or other incentives may be offered only to certain Participating
Dealers that sell or are expected to sell during specified time periods  certain
minimum  amounts of shares  of the Fund,  or other funds  underwritten by Morgan
Stanley. In some  instances, these  incentives may  be offered  only to  certain
Participating  Dealers that have sold or may sell significant amounts of shares.
In addition,  Morgan Stanley  pays ongoing  trail commissions  to  Participating
Dealers.  At  the option  of  the Participating  Dealer,  such bonuses  or other
incentives may take the form of  payment for travel expenses, including  lodging
incurred  in  connection  with  trips  taken  by  persons  associated  with  the
Participating Dealer and members of their  families to places within or  outside
of  the  United  States.  The Distributor  or  Participating  Dealers  and their
investment  representatives  may  receive   different  levels  of   compensation
depending on which class of shares they sell.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
    The Plans obligate the Investment Funds to accrue and pay to the Distributor
the  fee agreed to under  its Distribution Agreement. The  Plans do not obligate
the Investment Funds to reimburse Morgan Stanley for the actual expenses  Morgan
Stanley may incur in fulfilling its obligations under the Plan. Thus, under each
Plan,  even if  Morgan Stanley's  actual expenses exceed  the fee  payable to it
thereunder at any given time, the Investment Funds will not be obligated to  pay
more than that fee. If Morgan Stanley's actual expenses are less than the fee it
receives, Morgan Stanley will retain the full amount of the fee.
 
    Each  Plan of Distribution  for a class  of Fund shares,  under the terms of
Rule 12b-1, will  remain in effect  only if  approved at least  annually by  the
Fund's  Board of  Directors, including those  directors who  are not "interested
persons" of the Fund  as that term is  defined in the 1940  Act and who have  no
direct  or indirect  financial interest  in the  operation of  a Plan  or in any
agreements related thereto ("12b-1 Directors").  Each Plan may be terminated  at
any  time by  a vote  of a majority  of the  12b-1 Directors or  by a  vote of a
majority of the  outstanding voting  securities of  the applicable  class of  an
Investment  Fund. The fee set forth above will be paid by the Investment Fund or
class thereof to Morgan  Stanley unless and  until a Plan  is terminated or  not
renewed.  The Fund intends to operate each Plan in accordance with its terms and
the NASD Rules concerning sales charges.
 
    PAYMENTS TO  FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.    The Adviser  or its  affiliates  may
compensate  certain financial institutions for the continued investment of their
customers' assets  in  the Investment  Funds  pursuant  to the  advice  of  such
financial  institutions. These payments will be  made directly by the Adviser or
its affiliates from their assets,  and will not be made  from the assets of  the
Fund  or  by  the  assessment  of  a  sales  charge  on  shares.  Such financial
institutions may also perform certain shareholder or recordkeeping services that
would otherwise be performed  by CGFSC. The  Adviser may elect  to enter into  a
contract to pay the financial institutions for such services.
 
    EXPENSES.  The Investment Funds are responsible for payment of certain other
fees  and expenses (including professional fees, custodial fees and printing and
mailing costs) specified in the Administration and Distribution Agreements.
 
                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
 
    The Investment  Advisory  Agreement authorizes  the  Adviser to  select  the
brokers  or  dealers that  will execute  the purchases  and sales  of investment
securities for each of the Investment Funds  and directs the Adviser to use  its
best  efforts to  obtain the best  available price and  most favorable execution
with respect  to  all  transactions  for the  Investment  Funds.  The  Fund  has
authorized  the Adviser  to pay higher  commissions in  recognition of brokerage
services which, in the opinion of the Adviser, are necessary for the achievement
of better  execution, provided  the Adviser  believes  this to  be in  the  best
interest of the Fund.
 
    Shares  of the Investment  Funds are marketed  through Participating Dealers
and the Fund may allocate brokerage or principal business on the basis of  sales
of  shares of  the Investment Funds  which may  be made through  such firms. The
Adviser may place portfolio orders  with qualified broker-dealers who  recommend
the  Investment Funds  or who  act as agents  in the  purchase of  shares of the
Investment Funds for their clients.
 
    In purchasing and selling securities for each of the Investment Funds, it is
the Fund's policy  to seek  to obtain quality  execution at  the most  favorable
prices,  through  responsible  broker-dealers.  In  selecting  broker-dealers to
execute the securities transactions for the Investment Funds, consideration will
be given  to  such factors  as  the  price of  the  security, the  rate  of  the
commission,   the   size  and   difficulty  of   the  order,   the  reliability,
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
integrity, financial condition, general  execution and operational  capabilities
of  competing broker-dealers, and the brokerage and research services which they
provide to the Fund.  Some securities considered for  investment by each of  the
Investment  Funds  may  also be  appropriate  for  other clients  served  by the
Adviser. If  purchase  or sale  of  securities consistent  with  the  investment
policies  of an Investment Fund and one or  more of such other clients served by
the Adviser  is considered  at or  about  the same  time, transactions  in  such
securities  will be allocated among  the Investment Fund and  other clients in a
manner deemed fair and reasonable by the Adviser. Although there is no specified
formula for allocating such transactions, the various allocation methods used by
the Adviser, and the results of such allocations, are subject to periodic review
by the Fund's Board of Directors.
 
    Subject to the overriding objective of obtaining the best possible execution
of orders, the Adviser may allocate a portion of the Fund's portfolio  brokerage
transactions  to Morgan Stanley or broker affiliates of Morgan Stanley. In order
for Morgan Stanley or  its affiliates to effect  any portfolio transactions  for
the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration received by Morgan Stanley
or such affiliates 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   a
securities  exchange during a comparable period  of time. Furthermore, the Board
of Directors of  the Fund, including  a majority  of the Directors  who are  not
"interested  persons"  of the  Fund as  defined  in the  1940 Act,  have adopted
procedures which are reasonably designed  to provide that any commissions,  fees
or  other remuneration paid to Morgan  Stanley or such affiliates are consistent
with the foregoing standard.
 
    Portfolio securities will not be purchased  from, or through, or sold to  or
through,  the Adviser or Morgan Stanley  or any "affiliated persons," as defined
in the 1940 Act, of Morgan Stanley when such entities are acting as  principals,
except to the extent permitted by law.
 
    Although  the primary objective  of each of  the Investment Funds  is not to
invest for short-term trading,  each of the Investment  Funds will seek to  take
advantage  of  trading  opportunities  as  they arise  to  the  extent  they are
consistent  with  the  Investment  Fund's  objectives.  Accordingly,  investment
securities  may be sold from  time to time without regard  to the length of time
they have been  held. Each of  the Investment Funds  anticipate that its  annual
portfolio  turnover rate will not exceed 100% under normal circumstances and the
Emerging Markets and Latin  American Fund anticipate  that each such  Investment
Fund's  annual  portfolio  turnover  rate  will  not  exceed  50%  under  normal
circumstances. Market conditions could result in portfolio activity at a greater
or  lesser   rate   than   anticipated.   High   portfolio   turnover   involves
correspondingly  greater transaction costs  which will be  borne directly by the
Investment Fund. In addition, high portfolio turnover may result in more capital
gains which would be taxable to the shareholders of the Investment Fund.
 
                               PURCHASE OF SHARES
 
    Shares of  the  Investment  Funds may  be  purchased  through  Participating
Dealers or directly from the Fund. Class A shares of the Investment Funds may be
purchased  at the net asset value per share plus the applicable sales charge, if
any, next determined after receipt  of the purchase order  by the Fund. Class  B
shares  and Class C shares  of the Investment Funds may  be purchased at the net
asset value per share next determined after receipt of the purchase order by the
Fund. Participating Dealers are responsible  for forwarding orders they  receive
to  the Fund by  the applicable times described  below on the  same day as their
receipt of the orders to  permit purchase of shares  as described above and  the
failure  to do so will result in the investors being unable to obtain that day's
net asset value. See "Valuation of Shares."
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
    The Class A, Class B and Class  C alternatives permit an investor to  choose
the  method of purchasing shares that is most beneficial given the amount of the
purchase, the length of time the investor expects to hold the shares, and  other
circumstances. Investors should consider whether, during the anticipated life of
their  investment in the Fund, the combination of sales charge, distribution fee
and  CDSC  on  Class  A  shares  is  more  favorable  than  the  combination  of
distribution/service  fees and CDSC on Class B shares or Class C shares. In some
cases, investors planning to  purchase $100,000 or more  of Fund shares may  pay
lower  aggregate charges  and expenses by  purchasing Class A  shares. (See "Fee
Table.")
 
OFFERING PRICE OF CLASS A SHARES
 
    Class A shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net  asset
value per share plus a sales charge (the "Offering Price") which is a percentage
of  the Offering Price that decreases as the amount of the purchase increases as
shown below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             SALES CHARGE AS    SALES CHARGE AS    DEALER RETENTION
      CLASS A SHARES          PERCENTAGE OF    PERCENTAGE OF NET   AS PERCENTAGE OF
    AMOUNT OF PURCHASE       OFFERING PRICE     AMOUNT INVESTED    OFFERING PRICE**
- ---------------------------  ---------------   -----------------   ----------------
<S>                          <C>               <C>                 <C>
Less than $100,000                4.75%              4.99%               4.25%
$100,000 - $249,999               3.50%              3.63%               3.00%
$250,000 - $499,999               2.50%              2.56%               2.00%
$500,000 - $999,999               2.00%              2.04%               1.50%
$1,000,000 and over               None*              None**                  *++
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
 * Purchases of $1  million or more  may be  subject to a  redemption fee.  (See
   below.)  Morgan Stanley may make payments to Participating Dealers in amounts
   up to 1.00% of the Offering Price.
 
** The Distributor  may,  in its  discretion,  permit Participating  Dealers  to
   retain the full amount of the sales charge in connection with certain sales.
 
 + The  amount of  purchase includes  net asset value  of the  purchase plus the
   sales charge.
 
++ Commission is payable by Morgan Stanley as discussed below.
 
    Morgan Stanley may  in its  discretion compensate  Participating Dealers  in
connection  with  the sale  of  Class A  shares of  the  Investment Funds  in an
aggregate amount of $1 million or more up to the following amounts: 1.00% of the
net asset value of shares sold on amounts up to $3 million, .50% on the next  $2
million  and .25% on  amounts over $5  million. For purposes  of determining the
appropriate commission percentage to be applied  to a particular sale under  the
foregoing  schedule, Morgan Stanley will consider the cumulative amount invested
by the purchaser in Class A shares of the Investment Funds.
 
    REDUCTION  OR  WAIVER  OF  SALES  CHARGES.    A  shareholder  who  purchases
additional Class A shares of an Investment Fund may obtain reduced sales charges
through  a right of  accumulation of current  purchases of Class  A shares of an
Investment Fund  with  concurrent purchases  of  Class  A shares  of  the  other
Investment  Fund and with  existing Class A share  investments in all Investment
Funds. The applicable sales charge will be determined based on the total of  (a)
the  shareholder's current purchases of Class  A shares of Investment Funds plus
(b) an amount equal to the greater of  the then current net asset value, or  the
total  purchase price of the investor's prior purchases of all Class A shares of
Investment Funds held  by the shareholder.  To obtain the  reduced sales  charge
through  a right of accumulation, the shareholder must provide Morgan Stanley at
the time
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
of purchase, either directly  or through a  Participating Dealer or  shareholder
servicing  agent, as applicable, with sufficient  information to verify that the
shareholder has such  a right. The  Fund may  amend or terminate  this right  of
accumulation at any time as to subsequent purchases.
 
    For  purposes of reduced sales charges based on amount of purchase, the term
"purchase" refers  to purchases  made  at one  time  by any  "purchaser,"  which
includes  an individual; a group composed of an individual and his or her spouse
and children under the age of 21; a trustee or other fiduciary of a single trust
estate or single fiduciary account;  an organization exempt from federal  income
tax  under Section 501(c)(3)  or (13) of  the Internal Revenue  Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code"); a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit  plan,
whether or not qualified under Section 401 of the Code; or 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. In
order to qualify for a  lower sales charge on purchases  of the Class A  shares,
all  orders from  an organized  group will  have to  be placed  through a single
Participating Dealer and identified as originating from a qualifying purchaser.
 
    An investor may also obtain reduced  sales charges shown above on  purchases
of  the Class A shares by executing a  written letter of intent which states the
investor's intention to invest not less  than $100,000 within a 13-month  period
in  Class A shares of the Investment  Funds ("Letter"). Each purchase of Class A
shares of an Investment Fund under a  Letter will be made at the Offering  Price
applicable  at the time of such purchase  to single purchases of the full amount
indicated on  the Letter.  (See Terms  and Conditions  included in  the form  of
Letter  in the New Account Application attached to this Prospectus.) An investor
who wishes to enter into  a Letter in connection with  an investment in Class  A
shares  of an Investment Fund should use the form in the New Account Application
attached to this Prospectus. The Letter, which imposes no obligation to purchase
or sell additional  Class A shares,  provides for a  price adjustment  depending
upon  the actual amount  purchased within such period.  The Letter provides that
the first purchase following execution of the Letter must be at least 5% of  the
amount  of the  intended purchase,  and that  5% of  the amount  of the intended
purchase normally  will  be  held  in  escrow in  the  form  of  shares  pending
completion  of the intended purchase. If  the total investments under the Letter
are less than the intended  amount and thereby qualify  only for a higher  sales
charge  than actually  paid, the appropriate  number of escrowed  Class A shares
will be redeemed and the proceeds used toward satisfaction of the obligation  to
pay the increased sales charge. A shareholder may include the value of all Class
A  shares of the Investment Funds held of record as of the initial purchase date
under the Letter as an "accumulation credit" toward the completion of the  terms
of the Letter, but no price adjustment will be made on such shares.
 
    Class  A shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset value
without a sales charge by employee benefit plans, retirement plans and  deferred
compensation  plans  and trusts  used  to fund  such  plans, including,  but not
limited to, those  defined in  Section 401(a),  403(b) or  457 of  the Code  and
"rabbi  trusts." Morgan Stanley may, in its discretion, compensate Participating
Dealers up  to 1.00%  in  connection with  the  sale of  Class  A shares  of  an
Investment   Fund  to  401(k),  403(b)  or  457  participant-directed  qualified
retirement plans.  Such  shareholders  would  not be  subject  to  a  CDSC  upon
liquidation.
 
    As  disclosed above, no sales charge will be payable at the time of purchase
of Class A  shares on  investments of  $1 million  or more.  However, except  as
described  above, a CDSC will  be imposed on such investments  in the event of a
redemption of  such Class  A shares  of  the Investment  Fund within  12  months
following the purchase,
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
at  the rate of  1.00% of the lesser  of the current market  value of the shares
redeemed or the  total cost of  such shares.  In determining whether  a CDSC  is
payable,  and, if so, the amount of the fee or charge, it is assumed that shares
not subject to  such fee or  charge are  the first redeemed,  followed by  other
shares  held for  the longest  period of time.  The Fund  may also  sell Class A
shares of the Investment Funds  at net asset value  (without a sales charge)  to
Directors  of the Fund, directors and employees of Morgan Stanley, Participating
Dealers, their respective affiliates and their immediate families and  employees
of  agents of the Fund. In addition, Class  A shares may be sold without a sales
charge when purchased  (i) through  bank trust departments;  (ii) for  investors
whose  account is  managed by certain  investment advisers  registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended; (iii) for investors through certain
broker/dealers and other financial services firms that have entered into certain
agreements with the  Fund which may  include a requirement  that such shares  be
sold  for the benefit of clients participating  in a "wrap account" or a similar
program under which such clients pay a fee to such broker/dealer or other  firm;
(iv)  with  redemption proceeds  from other  investment  companies on  which the
investor had  paid a  front-end  or contingent  deferred  sales charge;  or  (v)
through  a  broker that  maintains an  omnibus  account with  the Fund  and such
purchases are  made  by the  following:  (1) investment  advisers  or  financial
planners  who  place trades  for their  own  accounts or  the accounts  of their
clients and who charge a management, consulting or other fee for their services,
(2) clients of such investment advisers  or financial planners who place  trades
for  their own accounts if the accounts are linked to the master account of such
investment adviser or financial planner on  the books and records of the  broker
or  agent, or (3) retirement and deferred  compensation plans and trusts used to
fund such plans, including, but not limited to, those defined in Section 401(a),
403(b) or 457 of the Code and  "rabbi trusts." Investors who purchase or  redeem
shares  through a  trust department,  broker, dealer,  agent, financial planner,
financial services  firm, or  investment adviser  may be  charged an  additional
service or transaction fee by that institution.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS B SHARES
 
    Class  B shares of the Investment Funds  may be purchased at net asset value
without an initial  sales charge.  However, a CDSC  will be  imposed on  certain
Class  B shares redeemed within six years of purchase. The charge is assessed on
an amount equal to the  lesser of the then-current market  value of the Class  B
shares redeemed or the total cost of such shares. Accordingly, the CDSC will not
be  applied to dollar amounts  representing an increase in  the net asset values
above the initial purchase price of  the shares being redeemed. In addition,  no
charge is assessed on redemptions of Class B shares derived from reinvestment of
dividends or capital gains distributions.
 
    In  determining  whether  the  CDSC  is  applicable  to  a  redemption,  the
calculation is made  in the  manner that results  in the  lowest possible  rate.
Therefore,  it is assumed that the redemption is  first of any Class B shares in
the  shareholder's   account   that  represent   reinvested   dividends   and/or
distributions,  and/or  of  Class B  shares  held  longer than  six  years after
purchase, and  next  of Class  B  shares held  the  longest during  the  initial
six-year  period after  purchase. The  amount of  the contingent  deferred sales
charge, if any,  will vary depending  on the number  of years from  the time  of
purchase  of Class B  shares until the  redemption of such  shares (the "holding
period"). The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC.
 
                                       47
<PAGE>
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             SALES CHARGE
                                                  AS
                                             PERCENTAGE OF
                                                  THE
                                             DOLLAR AMOUNT
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE                           SUBJECT TO
PAYMENT WAS MADE                                CHARGE
- ----------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                          <C>
First........................................     5.0%
Second.......................................     4.0%
Third........................................     3.0%
Fourth.......................................     3.0%
Fifth........................................     2.0%
Sixth........................................     1.0%
Thereafter...................................     None*
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------
* As described more fully below, Class B shares automatically convert to Class A
  shares after the seventh year following purchase.
 
    Proceeds from the CDSC  are paid to  Morgan Stanley and  are used by  Morgan
Stanley   to  defray  the  expenses  of  Morgan  Stanley  related  to  providing
distribution-related services to  the Fund in  connection with the  sale of  the
Class  B shares. Morgan Stanley will  make payments to the Participating Dealers
that handle the purchases of  such shares at the rate  of 4.00% of the  purchase
price of such shares at the time of purchase and expects to reallocate a portion
of  its distribution fee, with respect to such shares, under the Rule 12b-1 Plan
for such  class  of  shares, as  described  under  "Management of  the  Fund  --
Distributor"  above. The combination  of the CDSC  and the distribution services
fee facilitates the ability  of the Fund  to sell the Class  B shares without  a
sales charge being deducted at the time of purchase.
 
    WAIVER OF CDSC.  The CDSC will be waived on the redemption of Class B shares
(i)  following the death  or initial determination of  disability (as defined in
the Code) of a shareholder; (ii) to the extent that the redemption represents  a
minimum  required distribution  from an  individual retirement  account or other
retirement plan to a shareholder who has attained the age of 70 1/2; or (iii) to
the extent that shares redeemed have been withdrawn from a Systematic Withdrawal
Plan, up to a maximum amount of 12% per year from a shareholder account based on
the value of the account at the  time the Plan is established, provided  however
that  all  dividends and  distributions are  reinvested in  Class B  Shares. The
waiver with  respect  to  (i)  above  is only  applicable  in  cases  where  the
shareholder  account is registered (a) in the  name of an individual person, (b)
as a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship, (c) as community property or (d)
in the name of  a minor child  under the Uniform Gifts  or Uniform Transfers  to
Minors  Act. A shareholder, or his or her representative, must notify the Fund's
Transfer Agent prior to the time  of redemption if such circumstances exist  and
the  shareholder is eligible for this waiver. The shareholder is responsible for
providing sufficient documentation to the Transfer Agent to verify the existence
of such circumstances. For information on the imposition and waiver of the CDSC,
contact the Transfer Agent at 1-800-282-4404.
 
    AUTOMATIC CONVERSION TO CLASS  A SHARES.  After  the seventh year  following
purchase,  Class B shares will automatically convert  to Class A shares and will
no longer  be  subject  to  the  higher  distribution  and  service  fees.  Such
conversion  will be  on the basis  of the relative  net asset values  of the two
classes, without the imposition  of any sales load,  fee or other charge.  Under
current tax law, the conversion is not a taxable event to the shareholder.
 
                                       48
<PAGE>
    Class B shares may also be purchased through an Automatic Investment Plan as
described below.
 
PURCHASE OF CLASS C SHARES
 
    Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  may be purchased  at the net asset
value per share and such shares  are subject to a CDSC  at the rate of 1.00%  of
the  lesser of the current market value of the shares redeemed or the total cost
of such shares for shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase.  Morgan
Stanley  will  make  payments  to  the  Participating  Dealers  that  handle the
purchases of such  shares at the  rate of 1.00%  of the purchase  price of  such
shares  at  the  time  of  purchase  and  expects  to  reallocate  most  of  its
distribution fee, with  respect to such  shares, under the  Rule 12b-1 Plan  for
such class of shares, as described under "Management of the Fund -- Distributor"
above.  In determining whether a CDSC is payable,  and, if so, the amount of the
fee or charge, it is assumed that shares  not subject to such fee or charge  are
the  first redeemed,  followed by  other shares held  for the  longest period of
time.
 
AUTOMATIC REINVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    No initial  sales charge  or  CDSC will  be payable  on  the shares  of  any
Investment Fund or class thereof purchased through the automatic reinvestment of
dividends and distributions on shares of the Investment Funds.
 
REINVESTMENT PRIVILEGE OF EACH CLASS
 
    A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class A shares  of an  Investment Fund may
reinvest up to the full  amount redeemed (less any  CDSC, if applicable) at  net
asset  value at the time of the reinvestment  in Class A shares of an Investment
Fund without payment of a sales charge.  A shareholder who has redeemed Class  B
shares  of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may reinvest
up to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  A shares at net  asset
value  with no  initial sales  charge. A  shareholder who  has redeemed  Class C
Shares of an Investment Fund and paid  a CDSC upon such redemption may  reinvest
up  to the full amount  received upon redemption in Class  C shares at net asset
value and not be subject to a CDSC. Purchases through the reinvestment privilege
are subject to the minimum applicable investment requirements. The  reinvestment
privilege as to any specific Class A, Class B or Class C shares must be effected
within  180 days  of the  redemption. The Transfer  Agent must  receive from the
shareholder or the shareholder's Participating Dealer both a written request for
reinvestment and a check or wire which does not exceed the redemption  proceeds.
The  written request must state  that the reinvestment is  made pursuant to this
reinvestment privilege.  If a  loss is  realized on  the redemption  of Class  A
shares,  the reinvestment may be subject to the "wash sale" rules if made within
30 days of  the redemption, resulting  in a postponement  of the recognition  of
such  loss for  federal income tax  purposes. The reinvestment  privilege may be
terminated or modified at any time.
 
RETIREMENT PLANS
 
    Qualified  retirement  plans,  IRAs,  banks,  bank  trust  departments   and
registered  investment  advisory companies,  acting in  a fiduciary  or advisory
capacity for individual, institutional or  trust accounts, may purchase Class  A
shares  of one  or more of  the Investment Funds  at net asset  value (without a
sales charge) provided that the initial order for such purchases is in an amount
of $1 million or more or  is part of a series of  orders covered by a Letter  to
invest  $1 million or  more in Class  A shares of  the Investment Funds. Certain
employee benefit plans,  retirement plans  and deferred  compensation plans  and
trusts  used to fund  such plans may  purchase Class A  shares of the Investment
Funds at net  asset value without  imposition of a  sales charge. See  "Offering
Price of Class A Shares."
 
                                       49
<PAGE>
    Morgan  Stanley  provides retirement  plan  services and  documents  and can
establish investor accounts in IRAs trusteed by Chase. This includes  Simplified
Employee  Pension Plan ("SEP")  IRA accounts and  prototype documents. Brochures
describing such plans  and materials  for establishing them  are available  from
Morgan  Stanley upon request. The brochures for plans trusteed by Chase describe
the current fees payable to Chase for its services as trustee. Investors  should
consult with their own tax advisers before establishing a retirement plan.
 
INITIAL PURCHASES DIRECTLY FROM THE FUND
 
1) BY  CHECK.  An account may be opened  by completing and signing a New Account
   Application and mailing it,  together with a check  ($1,000 minimum for  each
   Investment Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250) made
   payable to "Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]," to:
 
    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
    P.O. Box 2798
    Boston, Massachusetts 02208-2798
  Payment  will be accepted only by check  payable in U.S. Dollars, unless prior
  approval for payment by other currencies is given by the Fund. The  Investment
  Fund(s)  and the  class(es) to  be purchased should  be designated  on the New
  Account Application. For purchases by  check, the Fund is ordinarily  credited
  with  Federal Funds within one  business day. Thus your  purchase of shares by
  check is ordinarily credited to your account at the net asset value per  share
  of the Investment Fund next determined on the day of receipt.
 
2) BY  FEDERAL  FUNDS WIRE.   Purchases  may be  made by  having your  bank wire
   Federal Funds to the Fund's bank account ($1,000 minimum for each  Investment
   Fund, except for IRAs, for which the initial minimum is $250). To help ensure
   prompt  receipt of your Federal  Funds Wire, it is  important that you follow
   these steps:
 
  A.  Telephone  the Fund  (toll free:  1-800-282-4404) and  provide your  name,
     address,  telephone number,  Social Security or  Tax Identification Number,
     the Investment Fund(s) and the class(es) selected, the amount being  wired,
     and  by which bank. The Fund will then provide you with a bank wire control
     number. (Investors with existing accounts  must also notify the Fund  prior
     to wiring funds.)
 
  B.    Instruct your  bank  to wire  the specified  amount  to the  Fund's Wire
     Concentration Bank Account (be sure to  have your bank include the name  of
     the  Investment Fund(s) selected and the  bank wire control number assigned
     to you):
 
          Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
         One Chase Manhattan Plaza
         New York, NY 10081-1000
         ABA# 021000021
         DDA# 910-2-732907
         Attn: Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
         Ref: (Investment Fund name, your account number, your account name)
 
      Please call the Fund at 1-800-282-4404 prior to wiring funds.
 
  C.  Complete and sign the New  Account Application and mail it to the  address
     shown thereon.
 
                                       50
<PAGE>
      Purchase  orders for  shares of  the Investment  Funds which  are received
     prior to the regular close of  the NYSE (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern  Time)
     will  be executed at the  price computed on the date  of receipt as long as
     the Transfer Agent receives payment by  check or in Federal Funds prior  to
     the regular close of the NYSE on such day.
 
      Federal  Funds purchase orders will be accepted only on a day on which the
     Fund and Chase (the "Custodian Bank") are open for business. Your bank  may
     charge a service fee for wiring funds.
 
3) BY  BANK WIRE.   The  same procedure outlined  under "By  Federal Funds Wire"
   above must be  followed in  purchasing shares  by bank  wire. However,  money
   transferred  by bank wire may or may  not be converted into Federal Funds the
   same day, depending on the time the  money is received and the bank  handling
   the  wire. The timing of  effectiveness of purchase of  shares and receipt of
   dividends is subject  to the  same timing considerations  as described  above
   with respect to purchase by Federal Funds wire and depends on when payment in
   Federal  Funds is  received. Your  bank may charge  a service  fee for wiring
   funds.
 
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENTS
 
    You may add to your account at any time (minimum additional investment $100,
except for  IRAs,  for which  the  minimum  additional investment  is  $50,  and
automatic  reinvestment of dividends and  capital gains distributions, for which
there is  no minimum  and no  sales charge)  by purchasing  shares through  your
Participating Dealer, by mailing a check to the Fund (payable to "Morgan Stanley
Fund,  Inc. -- [Investment Fund name]") at the above address or by wiring monies
to the Custodian Bank as outlined above. It is very important that your  account
number  or wire  control number  be specified  in the  letter or  wire to better
assure proper  crediting to  your account.  In order  to ensure  that your  wire
orders  are invested  promptly, you  are requested to  notify one  of the Fund's
representatives (toll-free 1-800-282-4404) prior to the wire.
 
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN
 
    After establishing an account with  the Fund, investors may purchase  shares
of  the  Fund  through  an  Automatic Investment  Plan,  under  which  an amount
specified by the  shareholder equal to  at least the  applicable minimum for  an
investment amount on a monthly basis will be sent to the Transfer Agent from the
investor's  bank for investment  in the Fund. Investors  who are participants in
the Fund's Systematic Withdrawal Plan should not at the same time participate in
the Automatic Investment Plan. Investors interested in the Automatic  Investment
Plan  or seeking  further information should  contact a  Participating Dealer or
fund representative.  Shares  to  be held  in  broker  street name  may  not  be
purchased through the Automatic Investment Plan.
 
OTHER PURCHASE INFORMATION
 
    The  purchase price for the Class A  shares of the Investment Funds is based
upon the net asset  value per share  plus the applicable  sales charge, if  any,
next  determined after  the order is  received by the  Fund and for  the Class B
shares and Class  C shares of  the Investment Funds  is based on  the net  asset
value  per  share next  determined  after the  order  is received  by  the Fund.
Participating Dealers are responsible for forwarding orders they receive to  the
Fund by the applicable times described below on the same day as their receipt of
the orders to permit purchase of shares as described above and the failure to do
so  will result  in the investors  being unable  to obtain that  day's net asset
value. See "Valuation of Shares." An  order received prior to the regular  close
of  the NYSE, which is  currently 4:00 p.m. (Eastern  Time), will be executed at
the price computed on the date of receipt as long as the Transfer Agent receives
payment by check or in Federal Funds prior  to the regular close of the NYSE  on
such day. An order received after the regular close of the NYSE will be executed
at the price computed
 
                                       51
<PAGE>
on  the next day the NYSE is open as long as the Transfer Agent receives payment
by check or in Federal Funds prior to the regular close of the NYSE on such day.
If you purchase shares of an Investment Fund directly, you must make payment  by
check  or Federal  Funds to effect  your purchase  of the shares  and obtain the
price for the shares as described above. Purchasing shares of an Investment Fund
is different from placing a trade for  securities at a given price and having  a
certain  number  of  days  in  which  to  make  settlement  or  payment  for the
securities.
 
    In the interest  of economy  and convenience  and because  of the  operating
procedures of the Fund, certificates representing shares of the Investment Funds
will  normally  not  be issued.  Such  certificates  will be  made  available to
investors, however, upon written request to  the Fund. All shares purchased  are
confirmed  to you and credited to your account on the Fund's books maintained by
the Adviser or  its agents. You  will have  the same rights  and ownership  with
respect to such shares as if certificates had been issued.
 
    To  ensure that checks are collected by the Fund, withdrawals of investments
made by check are not presently  permitted until the Fund's depository bank  has
made  fully  available for  withdrawal the  check amount  used to  purchase Fund
shares, which generally will be within 15 days. As a condition of this offering,
if a purchase  is canceled  due to  nonpayment or  because your  check does  not
clear, you will be responsible for any loss the Fund and/or its agents incur. If
you  are already a shareholder, the Fund  may redeem shares from your account(s)
to reimburse the Fund and/or  its agents for any loss.  In addition, you may  be
prohibited or restricted from making future purchases in the Fund.
 
    Investors  who purchase Class A shares of an Investment Fund directly rather
than through a Participating Dealer will pay the public offering price including
the sales  charge, and  the sales  charge will  be payable,  as described  under
"Purchase  of  Shares --  Offering Price  of  Class A  Shares" above,  to Morgan
Stanley unless a Participating Dealer is designated on the account  application.
Investors  may also invest in the  Investment Funds by purchasing shares through
Participating Dealers.
 
                                       52
<PAGE>
                              REDEMPTION OF SHARES
 
    You  may  withdraw all  or  any portion  of the  amount  in your  account by
redeeming shares at any time. Please note  that purchases made by check are  not
permitted  to  be  redeemed until  the  Fund's  depository bank  has  made fully
available for withdrawal the  check amount used to  purchase Fund shares,  which
generally  will be within  15 days. The Fund  will redeem shares  of each of the
Investment Funds at its next determined net asset value. A CDSC of 1.00% will be
imposed on certain Class  A shares of the  Investment Funds that were  purchased
without  payment of the initial sales charge due to the size of the purchase and
are redeemed  within  one  year of  purchase.  A  maximum CDSC  of  5.00%  which
decreases  in steps to  0% after six years,  will be imposed  on certain Class B
shares of the Investment Funds that are redeemed within six years of purchase. A
CDSC of 1.00% will be imposed on certain Class C shares of the Investment  Funds
that  are redeemed within  one year of  purchase. See "Purchase  of Shares." The
CDSC will be imposed on the lesser of the current market value or the total cost
of the shares  being redeemed. In  determining whether either  of such CDSCs  is
payable,  and, if so,  the amount of the  charge, it is  assumed that shares not
subject to such charge are the first redeemed followed by other shares held  for
the  longest period of time.  On days that both the  NYSE and the Custodian Bank
are open for business, the net asset value per share of the Investment Funds  is
determined  at the  regular close  of trading of  the NYSE  (currently 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time).  Shares  of  an  Investment  Fund may  be  redeemed  by  mail  or
telephone.  Any redemption may be  more or less than  the purchase price of your
shares depending on the  market value of the  investment securities held by  the
Investment Fund at the time of purchase and of redemption, among other factors.
 
    The  CDSC may be waived on redemptions  of shares in connection with certain
post-retirement withdrawals from IRA or other retirement plans or following  the
death  or  disability (as  defined  in the  Internal  Revenue Code  of  1986, as
amended) of a shareholder of the Fund.
 
    Redemption of shares held in broker  street name may not be accomplished  by
mail  or telephone as described below. Shares  held in broker street name may be
redeemed only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    The Investment Funds will  redeem their shares at  the net asset value  next
determined  after your request is received, if your request is received in "good
order" by  the Transfer  Agent. If  applicable, a  CDSC will  be deducted.  Your
request  should be  addressed to Chase  Global Funds Services  Company, P.O. Box
2798, Boston,  Massachusetts 02208-2798,  except  that deliveries  by  overnight
courier  should be addressed to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. c/o Chase Global Funds
Services Company, 73 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108-3913.
 
    "Good order"  means that  the  request to  redeem  shares must  include  the
following documentation:
 
        (a)  A letter of instruction or a stock assignment specifying the number
    of  shares or dollar amount to be  redeemed, signed by all registered owners
    of the shares in the exact names in which they are registered;
 
        (b)  Any  required   signature  guarantees   (see  "Further   Redemption
    Information" below); and
 
        (c)    Other supporting  legal documents,  if required,  in the  case of
    estates, trusts,  guardianships, custodianships,  corporations, pension  and
    profit-sharing plans and other organizations.
 
                                       53
<PAGE>
    Shareholders who are uncertain of requirements for redemption should consult
with their Participating Dealers or with a Fund representative.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    Unless you have elected on the New Account Application or on a separate form
supplied  by  the Transfer  Agent not  to utilize  the telephone  redemption and
exchange privileges, you or your  Participating Dealer can request a  redemption
of  your shares by  calling the Fund  and requesting the  redemption proceeds be
mailed to  you  or  wired  to  your bank.  Please  contact  one  of  the  Fund's
representatives  for further details. In times of drastic market conditions, the
telephone redemption option  may be  difficult to implement.  If you  experience
difficulty in making a telephone redemption, your request may be made by mail or
overnight  courier,  and it  will be  implemented  at the  net asset  value next
determined after it is received minus the CDSC, if any. The Fund and the  Fund's
Transfer  Agent will employ  reasonable procedures to  confirm that instructions
communicated by telephone  are genuine. These  procedures include requiring  the
investor  to provide certain personal identification  information at the time an
account  is  opened  and  prior  to  effecting  each  transaction  requested  by
telephone.  In addition, all telephone transaction requests will be recorded and
investors may be required to provide additional telecopied written  instructions
of  such transaction requests. The Fund or the Transfer Agent may be responsible
for  losses,  liabilities,   costs  or  expenses   for  acting  upon   telephone
transactions  if procedures are  not followed to  confirm that such transactions
are genuine.
 
    For shares  that  are  held  in  broker  street  name,  you  cannot  request
redemption  by  telephone  or by  mail;  such  shares may  be  redeemed  only by
contacting your Participating Dealer. The  Fund may impose a  fee of $8.00 on  a
wire  redemption of shares of the Fund that will be deducted from the redemption
proceeds.
 
    To change the name of the  commercial bank or account designated to  receive
redemption proceeds, a written request must be sent to the Transfer Agent at the
address  above. Requests to  change the bank  or account must  be signed by each
shareholder and each signature must be guaranteed.
 
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN
 
    A shareholder of $5,000 or more of  the Fund's shares at the Offering  Price
(net asset value plus the sales charge, if any) may provide for the payment from
the  owner's account of any requested dollar amount to be paid to the owner or a
designated payee  monthly,  quarterly,  semiannually or  annually.  The  minimum
periodic  payment is $100.  Shares are redeemed  so that the  payee will receive
payment on approximately  the first of  the month. Any  income and capital  gain
dividends   will  be  automatically  reinvested  at   net  asset  value  on  the
reinvestment date. A  sufficient number of  full and fractional  shares will  be
redeemed to make the designated payment. Depending upon the size of the payments
requested  and  fluctuations in  the  net asset  value  of the  shares redeemed,
redemptions for the purpose of making such payments may result in a gain or loss
for tax purposes and may reduce or even exhaust the shareholder's Fund  account.
To  protect shareholders and the Funds, if the Systematic Withdrawal Plan is not
established when an  account is  opened, a  signature guarantee  is required  to
establish  a Systematic Withdrawal Plan  subsequently if withdrawal payments are
directed to an  address other  than the  address of record,  or if  a change  of
address  request has  been submitted  in the  last 30  days. See  "Redemption of
Shares" in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    The purchase of Class A shares of an Investment Fund while participating  in
a  systematic withdrawal plan ordinarily will be disadvantageous to the investor
because the investor will be paying a sales charge on the purchase of shares  at
the  same time that the  investor is redeeming shares  upon which a sales charge
may already
 
                                       54
<PAGE>
have been paid. The purchase of certain Class  B shares or Class C shares of  an
Investment Fund while
participating  in the Systematic Withdrawal  Plan may be disadvantageous because
the new shares will be subject to up to  a 5.00% CDSC for up to six years  after
purchase,  or  a 1.00%  CDSC for  the first  year after  purchase, respectively.
Therefore, the Fund  will not  knowingly permit additional  investments of  less
than  $2,000 in an  Investment Fund if the  investor is at  the same time making
systematic withdrawals. The right is reserved to amend the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan on thirty  days' notice.  The plan  may be terminated  at any  time by  the
investor or the Fund.
 
    The  CDSC on Class B  shares is waived for  withdrawals under the Systematic
Withdrawal Plan of a maximum of 1% per month, 3% per quarter, 6% semiannually or
12%  annually,  of  a  shareholder's   investment  in,  and  any  dividends   or
distributions on, Class B shares of a Fund at the time the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan  commences, provided that the shareholder  elects to have all dividends and
distributions on the  shareholder's Class B  shares automatically reinvested  in
additional Class B shares. Under this CDSC waiver policy, amounts withdrawn each
month  will be  paid by  redeeming first Class  B shares  not subject  to a CDSC
because the shares were  purchased by the reinvestment  of dividends or  capital
gains  distributions, the CDSC  period has elapsed  or some other  waiver of the
CDSC applies. If no Class B shares not subject to the CDSC are available, or not
enough such shares are available, Class B shares having a CDSC will be  redeemed
next, beginning with such shares held for the longest period of time (having the
lowest  CDSC payable upon  redemption) and continuing with  shares held the next
longest period  of  time until  shares  held the  shortest  period of  time  are
redeemed.  Under  this  policy, the  least  amount  of CDSC  will  be  waived by
withdrawals under the Systematic Withdrawal Plan.
 
    See "Purchase of Shares" for a description of the circumstances under  which
a  CDSC on Class A shares, Class B  shares and Class C shares, respectively, may
be assessed on redemptions of such shares made through the Systematic Withdrawal
Plan as described above.
 
FURTHER REDEMPTION INFORMATION
 
    The  Fund  will  pay  for  shares  redeemed  through  broker-dealers   using
electronic  purchase and redemption systems within seven days after receipt of a
redemption request through such system.  In other situations, the Fund  normally
will  make  payment for  all  shares redeemed  under  this procedure  within one
business day of receipt  of the request,  but in no event  will payment be  made
more  than  seven days  after receipt  of  a redemption  request in  good order.
Payment for redeemed shares  will be sent to  the shareholder within seven  days
after  receipt of the request in proper form, except that the Fund may delay the
mailing of  the  redemption  check,  or a  portion  thereof,  until  the  Fund's
depository bank has made fully available for withdrawal the check amount used to
purchase  Fund shares,  which generally  will be  within 15  days. The  Fund may
suspend the right of redemption or postpone  the date at times when the NYSE  is
closed, or under any emergency circumstances as determined by the SEC.
 
    If  the Board of  Directors determines that  it would be  detrimental to the
best interests of  the remaining  shareholders of  the Investment  Fund to  make
payment  wholly or partly in  cash, the Fund may  pay the redemption proceeds in
whole or in part by a distribution-in-kind of readily marketable securities held
by the Investment Funds in lieu of  cash in conformity with applicable rules  of
the  SEC. Shareholders  may incur brokerage  charges upon the  sale of portfolio
securities so received  in payment of  redemptions. Due to  the relatively  high
cost  of maintaining  smaller accounts,  the Fund  reserves the  right to redeem
shares in any account
 
                                       55
<PAGE>
invested in an Investment  Fund having a  value of less  than $1,000. The  Fund,
however, will not redeem shares based solely upon market reductions in net asset
value.  If at any time your total investment does not equal or exceed the stated
minimum value, you may be notified of this fact and you will be allowed at least
60 days to make an additional investment before the redemption is processed.
 
    To protect  your account,  the Fund  and its  agents from  fraud,  signature
guarantees  are required for  certain redemptions to verify  the identity of the
person who has  authorized a redemption  from your account.  Please contact  the
Transfer  Agent  for  further information.  See  "Redemption of  Shares"  in the
Statement of Additional Information.
 
                              SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    You may exchange shares that you own in an Investment Fund for shares of the
same class of  another Investment Fund.  Shares of the  Investment Funds may  be
exchanged  by  mail or  telephone, except  that  no shares  may be  exchanged by
telephone if you have elected  on the New Account  Application or on a  separate
form  supplied by the Transfer Agent not  to accept the telephone redemption and
exchange privilege. Before you make an exchange, you should read the  Prospectus
of  the new  Investment Fund in  which you  seek to invest.  Because an exchange
transaction is treated as a redemption followed by a purchase, an exchange would
be considered a  taxable event  for shareholders  subject to  tax. The  exchange
privilege is only available with respect to Investment Funds that are registered
for  sale in a shareholder's  state of residence. The  exchange privilege may be
modified or  terminated  by  the Fund  at  any  time upon  60  days'  notice  to
shareholders.
 
    No CDSC, if one is otherwise applicable, will be assessed at the time of the
exchange  if the shareholder exchanges from one class of an Investment Fund into
the same class of another Investment Fund. For purposes of determining whether a
shareholder's redemption will be  subject to a  CDSC, the shareholder's  holding
period  of shares acquired through an exchange  will be related back to the time
the shareholder initially purchased the Fund shares that were exchanged so  long
as the shares are held in the same class of the Investment Funds. As an example,
Class  A share purchases  of $1,000,000 or  more, purchased at  net asset value,
will not be assessed the 1.00% CDSC if exchanged into Class A shares of  another
Investment  Fund during  the first  year after  purchase. Class  B shares  of an
Investment Fund will not be assessed the Class B CDSC if exchanged into Class  B
shares  of another  Investment Fund during  the first six  years after purchase.
Class C shares of an Investment Fund will not be subject to a CDSC for the first
year if exchanged into Class C shares of another Investment Fund. If the initial
shares of an Investment Fund purchased by  the investor were not subject to  any
sales  load or CDSC on such shares, then no sales load or CDSC for shares of the
same class will be imposed on any subsequent exchanges involving such shares. No
initial sales charge will be assessed, however, and any applicable CDSC will not
be imposed when  shares of an  Investment Fund  are exchanged for  shares of  an
Investment  Fund where the purchase of shares of the Investment Fund through the
exchange is of any of the types that benefit from a waiver of such initial sales
charge or CDSC.
 
    CLASS A SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class A shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class A shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
 
                                       56
<PAGE>
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class A shares  purchased pursuant  to such exchange  will not  be assessed  the
initial sales charges described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS  B SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender their Class B shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the  number
of Class B shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have  a value equal to the total  redemption proceeds of shares tendered divided
by the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is  received.
Class  B shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    CLASS C SHARES.  As described above  and as permitted pursuant to any  rule,
regulation or order promulgated by the SEC, shareholders of Investment Funds may
tender  their Class C shares of any Investment Fund for exchange into the number
of Class C shares of another Investment Fund (including fractions thereof) which
have a value equal to the  total redemption proceeds of shares tendered  divided
by  the net asset value per share  next determined after such order is received.
Class C shares redeemed pursuant to such exchange will not be assessed the  CDSC
described above or any other charge at purchase.
 
    Morgan Stanley will tender the shares offered for exchange for redemption by
the  Fund  and  will use  the  proceeds  to purchase  shares  of  the designated
Investment Fund on the shareholder's behalf. Under normal circumstances,  Morgan
Stanley will use the proceeds from shares redeemed on any day to purchase shares
on the same Business Day.
 
    Exchanges may also be subject to limitations as to amounts or frequency, and
to  other restrictions established by the Board of Directors to assure that such
exchanges do not disadvantage the Fund and its shareholders.
 
    Exchange of Fund shares held in  broker street name may not be  accomplished
by  mail or telephone as described below.  Shares held in broker street name may
be exchanged only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
BY MAIL
 
    In order to  exchange shares  by mail, you  should include  in the  exchange
request the name and account number of your current Investment Fund, the name of
the Investment Fund and class of such Investment Fund, if applicable, from which
and  into  which  you intend  to  exchange  shares, and  the  signatures  of all
registered account holders.  Send the  exchange request to  the Transfer  Agent,
Chase  Global  Funds  Services  Company, P.O.  Box  2798,  Boston, Massachusetts
02208-2798.
 
BY TELEPHONE
 
    When exchanging shares by  telephone, have ready the  name and your  account
number of the Investment Fund, the name of the Investment Fund and class of such
Investment Fund, if applicable, from which and into which you intend to exchange
shares,  your  Social  Security number  or  Tax  I.D. number,  and  your account
address. Requests for telephone exchanges  received prior to 4:00 p.m.  (Eastern
Time)  are processed  at the close  of business that  same day based  on the net
asset value of the applicable Investment  Funds at such time. Requests  received
after  4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time) are processed the next Business Day based on the
net asset value determined at the close of business on such day. For shares that
are held in broker street name, you cannot
 
                                       57
<PAGE>
request exchange by telephone or by mail;  such shares may be exchanged only  by
contacting  your  Participating  Dealer.  For  additional  information regarding
responsibility for the authenticity of telephoned instructions, see  "Redemption
of Shares -- By Telephone" above.
 
TRANSFER OF REGISTRATION
 
    You  may transfer  the registration  of any of  your Fund  shares to another
person by writing to  the Transfer Agent, P.O.  Box 2798, Boston,  Massachusetts
02208-2798.  As in the case of redemptions, the written request must be received
in "good order" before any  transfer can be made.  Shares held in broker  street
name may be transferred only by contacting your Participating Dealer.
 
                              VALUATION OF SHARES
 
    The  net asset  value per  share of  each Investment  Fund is  determined by
dividing the total fair  market value of the  Investment Fund's investments  and
other assets, less all liabilities, by the total number of outstanding shares of
the  Investment Fund. Net asset value is calculated separately for each class of
the Investment  Funds. Net  asset value  per share  of the  Investment Funds  is
determined as of the regular close of the NYSE on each day that the NYSE is open
for  business.  Securities  listed on  a  securities exchange  for  which market
quotations are available are valued at their closing price. If no closing  price
is  available, such securities will  be valued at the  last quoted sale price on
the day the valuation is made.  Price information on listed securities is  taken
from  the exchange where  the security is  primarily traded. Unlisted securities
and listed  securities  not  traded  on the  valuation  date  for  which  market
quotations  are not readily available  are valued at a  price within a range not
exceeding the  current asked  price nor  less than  the current  bid price.  The
current  bid and asked prices are determined either based on the average bid and
asked prices quoted on such valuation  date by reputable brokers or as  provided
by a reputable pricing service.
 
    Bonds and other fixed income securities are valued according to the broadest
and  most representative market,  which will ordinarily  be the over-the-counter
market. Net asset value includes interest  on fixed income securities, which  is
accrued  daily.  In addition,  bonds and  other fixed  income securities  may be
valued on the basis of prices provided by a pricing service when such prices are
believed to  reflect  the fair  market  value  of such  securities.  The  prices
provided  by a pricing service are determined without regard to bid or last sale
prices but take  into account institutional  size trading in  similar groups  of
securities  and any developments related  to the specific securities. Securities
not priced in this manner  are valued at the most  recent quoted bid price,  or,
when  stock exchange valuations are used, at the latest quoted sale price on the
day of valuation. If there is no such reported sale, the latest quoted bid price
will be used. Debt securities purchased with remaining maturities of 60 days  or
less are valued at amortized cost, if it approximates market value. In the event
that  amortized  cost  does  not  approximate  market  value,  market  prices as
determined above will be used.
 
    For the purpose of  calculating each Investment Fund's  net asset value  per
share,  certain  securities  are  valued  by  the  "amortized  cost"  method  of
valuation, which does  not take into  account unrealized gains  or losses.  This
involves  valuing an instrument  at its cost and  thereafter assuming a constant
amortization to maturity of any discount or premium, regardless of the impact of
fluctuating interest rates  on the market  value of the  instrument. While  this
method  provides certainty in  valuation, it may result  in periods during which
value, as determined by amortized cost, is  higher or lower than the price  each
Investment Fund would receive if it sold the instrument.
 
                                       58
<PAGE>
    The value of other assets and securities for which no quotations are readily
available  (including  restricted  and unlisted  foreign  securities)  and those
securities for which it is inappropriate to determine prices in accordance  with
the  above procedures are determined  in good faith at  fair value using methods
determined by the  Board of  Directors. For  purposes of  calculating net  asset
value  per  share, all  assets and  liabilities  initially expressed  in foreign
currencies will be converted into U.S. Dollars at the mean of the bid price  and
asked  price of  such currencies against  the U.S.  Dollar as quoted  by a major
bank.
 
    Although the legal rights  of Class A,  Class B and Class  C shares will  be
identical,  the different expenses borne by  each class will result in different
net asset  values and  dividends.  Dividends will  differ by  approximately  the
amount  of the distribution expense accrual  differential among the classes. The
respective net asset values of Class B shares and Class C shares will  generally
be  lower than the net asset  value of Class A shares  as a result of the larger
distribution fee charged to Class B and Class C shares.
 
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
    The Fund may  from time  to time advertise  total return  of the  Investment
Funds.  THESE FIGURES ARE BASED  ON HISTORICAL EARNINGS AND  ARE NOT INTENDED TO
INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return"  shows what an investment in  an
Investment  Fund would have earned over a specified period of time (such as one,
three, five or ten  years) assuming that all  distributions and dividends by  an
Investment  Fund were  reinvested on the  reinvestment dates  during the period.
Total return does not take into account  any federal or state income taxes  that
may be payable upon redemption by shareholders subject to tax. The Fund may also
include  comparative  performance  information in  advertising  or  marketing an
Investment Fund's shares.  Such performance  information may  include data  from
Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. and Morgan Stanley Capital International.
 
    The  respective performance figures for Class B shares and Class C shares of
each Investment Fund will generally  be lower than those  for Class A shares  of
such  Investment Fund because of the larger  distribution fee charged to Class B
shares and Class C shares.
 
                          DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    Shareholders  will  automatically  be   credited  with  all  dividends   and
distributions  in additional shares  at net asset value,  without payment of any
initial sales charge for Class A shares  of any of the Investment Funds,  except
that,  upon written notice to the Fund or by checking off the appropriate box in
the Distribution Option Section  on the New  Account Application, a  shareholder
may  elect to  receive dividends and/or  distributions in  cash. Shares received
through reinvestment of dividends  and/or distributions will  not be subject  to
any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    Each  Investment Fund  expects to  distribute substantially  all of  its net
investment income in the form of  annual dividends. Net realized gains, if  any,
after reduction for any available tax loss carryforward, may also be distributed
annually.
 
    Each  of  the  International Magnum  and  Japanese Equity  Funds  expects to
distribute substantially  all  of its  net  investment  income in  the  form  of
quarterly  dividends. Net realized gains, if  any, will be distributed annually.
Confirmations of the  purchase of  shares of  each Investment  Fund through  the
automatic  reinvestment of income dividends and capital gains distributions will
be   provided,    pursuant   to    Rule   10b-10(b)    under   the    Securities
 
                                       59
<PAGE>
Exchange  Act  of  1934, as  amended,  on  the next  quarterly  client statement
following such purchase of shares. Consequently, confirmations of such purchases
will not be  provided at  the time  of completion  of such  purchases, as  might
otherwise be required by Rule 10b-10.
 
    Any  undistributed net  investment income  and undistributed  realized gains
increase an Investment  Fund's net  assets for  the purpose  of calculating  net
asset  value  per share.  Therefore, on  the "ex-dividend"  or "ex-distribution"
date, the net asset value per share excludes the dividend or distribution (i.e.,
is reduced by the per share  amount of the dividend or distribution).  Dividends
and  distributions paid  shortly after  the purchase  of shares  by an investor,
although in effect a return of  capital, are taxable to shareholders subject  to
tax.
 
    Because  of  the  higher distribution  fee,  potentially  higher shareholder
servicing fee, and any other  expenses that may be  attributable to the Class  B
shares  and Class C shares of the  Investment Funds, the net income attributable
to and  the dividends  payable  on Class  B  shares and  Class  C shares  of  an
Investment  Fund  will be  lower than  the  net income  attributable to  and the
dividends payable on Class A  shares of the Investment  Funds. As a result,  the
net  asset value per share  of the classes of an  Investment Fund will differ at
times. Expenses  of a  Fund allocated  to a  particular class  of shares  of  an
Investment  Fund will be borne on a pro  rata basis by each outstanding share of
that class.
 
                                     TAXES
 
TAX STATUS OF THE INVESTMENT FUND
 
    The following summary of certain federal income tax consequences is based on
current tax laws and regulations, which may be changed by legislative, judicial,
or administrative  action.  See  also  the tax  sections  in  the  Statement  of
Additional Information.
 
    No  attempt has been made to present  a detailed explanation of the federal,
state, or local income tax treatment of an Investment Fund or its  shareholders.
Accordingly,  shareholders  are urged  to consult  their tax  advisors regarding
specific questions as to federal, state and local income taxes.
 
    Each Investment Fund is generally treated  as a separate entity for  federal
income  tax purposes, and  thus the provisions  of the Internal  Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code"), generally will be applied to each Investment Fund
separately, rather than  to the Fund  as a whole.  Net long-term and  short-term
capital  gains, net income, and operating  expenses therefore will be determined
separately for each Investment Fund.
 
    Each Investment  Fund  intends to  qualify  for the  special  tax  treatment
afforded  "regulated investment  companies" ("RICs")  under Subchapter  M of the
Code so that it will be relieved of  federal income tax on that part of its  net
investment income and net capital gain (the excess of net long-term capital gain
over net short-term capital loss) which is distributed to its shareholders.
 
TAX STATUS OF DISTRIBUTIONS
 
    Each  Investment Fund  distributes substantially  all of  its net investment
income (including,  for  this purpose,  net  short-term capital  gain),  to  its
shareholders.  Dividends  paid by  an Investment  Fund  from its  net investment
income will be taxable to the  shareholders of such Investment Fund as  ordinary
income,  whether received in cash or in additional shares, if the shareholder is
subject to tax.  Such dividends paid  by an Investment  Fund generally will  not
qualify for the dividends-received deduction to corporations.
 
                                       60
<PAGE>
    Distributions  of net  capital gains (i.e.,  net long-term  capital gains in
excess  of  net  short-term  capital  losses  and  any  available  capital  loss
carryforward)  are taxable to  shareholders subject to  tax as long-term capital
gains, regardless of  how long the  shareholder has held  the Investment  Fund's
shares.   Capital  gains  distributions  are  not  eligible  for  the  corporate
dividends-received deduction. Each Investment Fund  will make annual reports  to
shareholders of the Federal income tax status of all distributions.
 
    Shareholders  may also be subject to  state and local taxes on distributions
from the Fund. Shareholders are advised  to consult their own tax advisers  with
respect to tax consequences to them of an investment in the Fund.
 
    Dividends  declared in October, November and  December by an Investment Fund
payable as of a record date in such month and paid at any time during January of
the following year are  treated as having  been paid by  an Investment Fund  and
received by the shareholders on December 31 of the year declared.
 
    A  sale, exchange or  redemption of shares  held as a  capital asset will be
capital gain or  loss and  such gain  or loss  will be  a taxable  event to  the
shareholder.
 
    THE   TAX  DISCUSSION  SET  FORTH  ABOVE  IS  INCLUDED  HEREIN  FOR  GENERAL
INFORMATION ONLY. PROSPECTIVE  INVESTORS AND SHAREHOLDERS  SHOULD CONSULT  THEIR
OWN  TAX ADVISERS WITH RESPECT TO THE  TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF AN INVESTMENT
IN AN INVESTMENT FUND.
 
                              GENERAL INFORMATION
 
DESCRIPTION OF COMMON STOCK
 
    The Fund was  organized as a  Maryland corporation on  August 14, 1992.  The
Amended  Articles of  Incorporation currently  permit the  Fund to  issue 13.375
billion shares  of common  stock, par  value $.001  per share.  Pursuant to  the
Fund's  By-Laws, the Board  of Directors may  increase the number  of shares the
Fund is authorized  to issue  without the approval  of the  shareholders of  the
Fund.  The Board of Directors has the power  to designate one or more classes of
shares of common stock and to  classify and reclassify any unissued shares  with
respect to such classes. The current Class C shares of the Investment Funds were
named  Class B shares  until May 1, 1995  when such shares  were renamed Class C
shares and thereafter new Class B shares were created.
 
    The shares  of  the Investment  Funds,  when  issued, will  be  fully  paid,
nonassessable,  fully transferable and  redeemable at the  option of the holder.
The shares have no preference as to conversion, exchange, dividends,  retirement
or  other features and have  no preemptive rights. The  shares of the Investment
Funds have non-cumulative voting  rights, which means that  the holders of  more
than  50% of the shares  voting for the election of  Directors can elect 100% of
the Directors if  they choose  to do  so. Under Maryland  law, the  Fund is  not
required  to hold an annual meeting of its shareholders unless required to do so
under the 1940  Act. A  Director may  be removed  by shareholders  at a  special
meeting  called upon written request of shareholders  owning at least 10% of the
outstanding shares of the Fund. Any person or organization owning 25% or more of
the outstanding shares of  an Investment Fund may  be presumed to "control"  (as
that  term is  defined in the  1940 Act) such  Investment Fund. As  of March 31,
1996, Charles  Schwab  & Co.  Inc.,  Exclusive  Benefit of  its  Customers,  101
Montgomery  Street, San Francisco, CA 94104, was presumed to "control" the Class
A shares of the Emerging  Markets Fund based solely on  its ownership of 25%  or
more of the outstanding voting shares of such funds.
 
                                       61
<PAGE>
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
 
    The  Fund will send to its  shareholders annual and semi-annual reports; the
financial statements  appearing in  annual reports  are audited  by  independent
accountants.
 
    In  addition, the Fund or the Transfer  Agent, will send to each shareholder
having  an  account  directly  with  the  Fund  a  quarterly  statement  showing
transactions in the account, the total number of shares owned, and any dividends
or distributions paid. In addition, when a transaction occurs in a shareholder's
account, the Fund or the Transfer Agent will send the shareholder a confirmation
statement showing the same information.
 
CUSTODIAN
 
    As  of September 1,  1995, domestic securities  and cash are  held by Chase,
which replaced U.S.  Trust, as the  Fund's domestic custodian.  Chase is not  an
affiliate  of  the Adviser  or the  Distributor.  Morgan Stanley  Trust Company,
Brooklyn, New York ("Morgan  Stanley Trust"), acts as  the Fund's custodian  for
foreign assets held outside the United States and employs subcustodians who were
approved  by the Directors of the Fund in accordance with regulations of the SEC
for the purpose of providing custodial services for such assets. Morgan  Stanley
Trust  may also hold certain domestic assets  for the Fund. Morgan Stanley Trust
is an affiliate of the Adviser and the Distributor. For more information on  the
custodians,  see "General Information --  Custody Arrangements" in the Statement
of Additional Information.
 
DIVIDEND DISBURSING AND TRANSFER AGENT
 
    Chase  Global   Funds  Services   Company,   73  Tremont   Street,   Boston,
Massachusetts 02108-3913, acts as Dividend Disbursing and Transfer Agent for the
Fund.
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
    Price  Waterhouse  LLP, 1177  Avenue of  the Americas,  New York,  NY 10036,
serves as independent accountants for the  Fund and audits its annual  financial
statements.
 
                                       62
<PAGE>
                                   APPENDIX A
                     DESCRIPTION OF CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
 
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    Aaa  -- Bonds which  are rated Aaa are  judged to be  the best quality. They
carry the smallest degree  of investment risk and  are generally referred to  as
"gilt-edge."  Interest payments are protected by  a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin, and principal  is secure. While  the various protective  elements
are  likely to change,  such changes as  can be visualized  are most unlikely to
impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
 
    Aa -- Bonds  which are  rated Aa are  judged to  be of high  quality by  all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high  grade bonds. They are  rated lower than the  best bonds because margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements may be  of greater  amplitude or there  may be  other elements  present
which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.
 
    Moody's  applies  numerical modifiers  1, 2  and 3  in the  Aa and  A rating
categories. The modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks at a higher end  of
the  rating category, modifier 2 indicates a mid-range rating and the modifier 3
indicates that the issue ranks at the lower end of the rating category.
 
    A -- Bonds which  are rated A possess  many favorable investment  attributes
and  are  to be  considered as  upper medium  grade obligations.  Factors giving
security to principal and interest are  considered adequate but elements may  be
present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.
 
    Baa -- Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium grade obligations,
i.e.,  they are neither  highly protected nor  poorly secured. Interest payments
and principal security appear  adequate for the  present but certain  protective
elements  may be lacking or may  be characteristically unreliable over any great
length of time. Such  bonds lack outstanding  investment characteristics and  in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.
 
    Ba  -- Bonds  which are  rated Ba are  judged to  have speculative elements;
their future  cannot be  considered as  well assured.  Often the  protection  of
interest  and  principal payments  may be  very moderate,  and thereby  not well
safeguarded during  both good  and bad  times over  the future.  Uncertainty  of
position characterizes bonds in this class.
 
    B -- Bonds which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest  and principal payments  or of maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
 
    Caa -- Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal  or
interest.
 
    Ca  -- Bonds which are rated  Ca represent obligations which are speculative
in a  high  degree. Such  issues  are often  in  default or  have  other  marked
shortcomings.
 
    C -- Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues
so  rated can be regarded  as having extremely poor  prospects of ever attaining
any real investment standing.
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
 
    AAA -- Bonds rated AAA have the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's
to a debt obligation and indicate an extremely strong capacity to pay  principal
and interest.
 
    AA  -- Bonds rated AA have a very  strong capacity to pay interest and repay
principal and differ from the highest rated issues only to a small degree.
 
    A --  Bonds  rated A  have  a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and  repay
principal  although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in  circumstances and  economic conditions  than bonds  in higher  rated
categories.
 
    BBB  -- Debt  rated BBB is  regarded as  having an adequate  capacity to pay
interest and repay principal. Whereas  it normally exhibits adequate  protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions or  changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a  weakened capacity to pay  interest and repay principal  for
debt in this category than for debt in higher rated categories.
 
    BB,  B, CCC, CC -- Debt rated BB, B,  CCC and CC is regarded, on balance, as
predominantly speculative with  respect to  capacity to pay  interest and  repay
principal  in  accordance with  the terms  of the  obligation. BB  indicates the
lowest degree of  speculation and CC  the highest degree  of speculation.  While
such  debt will likely  have some quality  and protective characteristics, these
are outweighed  by  large  uncertainties  or major  risk  exposures  to  adverse
conditions.
 
    C -- The rating C is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is being
paid.
 
    D -- Debt rated D is in default, and payment of interest and/or repayment of
principal is in arrears.
 
                                      A-2
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
          GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION, ASIAN GROWTH, EMERGING MARKETS, LATIN
AMERICAN, INTERNATIONAL MAGNUM AND JAPANESE EQUITY FUNDS
            P.O. BOX 2798, BOSTON, MA 02208-2798 (800-282-4404)      NEW ACCOUNT
APPLICATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              ACCOUNT REGISTRATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          / /  Individual         / /  Joint Tenants         / /  Trust
/ /  Gift/Transfer to Minor            / /  Other____________________
 
NOTE:  Joint  tenant  registration  will  be as  "joint  tenants  with  right of
survivorship"  and  not   as  "tenants  in   common"  unless  specified.   Trust
registrations  should specify  name of the  trust, trustee(s), beneficiary(ies),
and date of trust instrument. Registration for Uniform Gifts/Transfers to Minors
should be in the name of one custodian and one minor and include the state under
which the custodianship  is created  (using the minor's  Social Security  Number
("SSN")).  For an Individual Retirement  Account ("IRA") a different application
is required.  Please  call Chase  Global  Funds Services  Company  ("CGFSC")  at
800-282-4404 or your investment dealer to obtain the IRA application.
<TABLE>
<S>                                                             <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
Name(s) (PLEASE PRINT)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------
Name
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------
Address
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------
City/State/Zip
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                --------------------------------------------------------------------
- ------
<S>                                                             <C>
Name(s) (PLEASE PRINT)                                          Social Security Number(s) or Taxpayer Identification Number(s) ("TIN
(s)")
- --------------------------------------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------------------------
- ------
Name                                                            Telephone Number
- --------------------------------------------------------------
Address
- --------------------------------------------------------------  / /  U.S. Citizen         / /  Other (specify citizenship) ---------
- -----------
City/State/Zip
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSOLIDATED  MAILINGS: If you  or your family members  own multiple accounts in
the Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc.,  you can  prevent  duplicate mailings  to  your
address by completing this section.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                                 NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------                 --------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 FUND SELECTION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The  minimum initial and subsequent investment is $1,000 and $100, respectively,
except for IRAs, for which the  minimum amounts are $250 and $50,  respectively.
Attach a check payable to MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.--Investment Fund name.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>         <C>             <C>
Morgan Stanley Global Equity                   Class A (600)   $           Class B (625)   $           Class C (650)   $
 Allocation Fund                                               ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Asian Growth                    Class A (602)   $           Class B (627)   $           Class C (652)   $
 Fund                                                          ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Emerging                        Class A (605)   $           Class B (630)   $           Class C (655)   $
 Markets Fund                                                  ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Latin American                  Class A (609)   $           Class B (633)   $           Class C (659)   $
 Fund                                                          ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley International                   Class A (612)   $           Class B (636)   $           Class C (662)   $
 Magnum Fund                                                   ----------                  ----------                  ----------
Morgan Stanley Japanese                        Class A (611)   $           Class B (635)   $           Class C (661)   $
 Equity Fund                                                   ----------                  ----------                  ----------
                                                                           Total Initial Investment:  $ ----------------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>
 
NOTE: IF INVESTING BY WIRE, YOU MUST OBTAIN A  A.  By Mail: Enclosed is a check
BANK WIRE CONTROL NUMBER. TO DO SO, PLEASE     payable to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
CALL 800-282-4404.                             B.  By Wire: A bank wire in the amount of $ ------------------------ has been
                                               sent to Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
                                                   from
                                                        ----------------------------- -----------------------------
                                                           Name of Bank                Wire Control Number
</TABLE>
 
CAPITAL   GAIN  AND  DIVIDEND  DISTRIBUTIONS:  All  capital  gain  and  dividend
distributions will be reinvested in additional  shares of the same class  unless
appropriate boxes below are checked:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                           <C>                           <C>
All Dividends are to be       / /  reinvested               / /  paid in cash
All Capital Gains are to be   / /  reinvested               / /  paid in cash
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               ACCOUNT PRIVILEGES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE AND REDEMPTION                                 AUTHORITY  TO TRANSMIT  REDEMPTION PROCEEDS  TO PRE-DESIGNATED
You will automatically have telephone exchange and  redemption    ACCOUNT.
privileges for yourself and your investment dealer and appoint    I/We  hereby authorize CGFSC to act upon instructions received
CGFSC to act as your  agent to act upon instructions  received    by telephone to withdraw $1,000 or more from my/our account in
by  telephone in  order to  effect such  privileges unless you    Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. and wire the amount withdrawn to the
mark one or more of the boxes below:                              following commercial bank account. I/ We understand that CGFSC
                                                                  charges an $8.00 fee for  each wire redemption, which will  be
                                                                  deducted from the proceeds of the redemption.
                No, I/we do not want:                             Title on Bank Account
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------------
 
                    / /  telephone exchange privileges            Name of Bank
                    / /  telephone redemption privileges          -------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Bank  A.B.A.  Number  -----------------        Account  Number
                                                                  -----------------
      for myself/ourselves or my/our investment dealer.
                                                                  City/State/Zip
                                                                  ------------------------------------------------------------
I/We further acknowledge that  it is my/our responsibility  to
read  the Prospectus  of any  Investment Fund  into which I/we
exchange.
Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. will mail redemption proceeds to the
name and address  in which my/our  fund account is  registered                      ATTACH A VOIDED CHECK HERE
unless  I check the following box and complete the information
at right.  / /
A corporation or partnership must also submit a "Corporate Resolution" or "Certificate of Partnership" indicating the names  and
titles of officers authorized to act on its behalf.
The  Fund and the Fund's Transfer Agent will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by telephone
are genuine. These procedures include requiring the investor to provide certain personal identification information at the  time
an  account is opened  and prior to  effecting each transaction requested  by telephone. In  addition, all telephone transaction
requests will be recorded and investors  may be required to provide  additional telecopying written instructions of  transaction
requests.  Neither the Fund nor the Transfer  Agent will be responsible for any  loss, liability, cost or expenses for following
instructions received by telephone that it reasonably believes to be genuine.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Fund shareholders together with  members of their families,  may be entitled  to
reduced sales charges with respect to their purchases of Class A shares of Funds
of  Morgan Stanley  Fund, Inc. ("Investment  Funds") sold with  an initial sales
load. You may also receive  a reduced sales charge  by completing the Letter  of
Intent  as set forth below  as provided in the  Prospectus of the Morgan Stanley
Fund, Inc. (the "Prospectus"). See the Prospectus for details.
 
To qualify,  you  must complete  this  section,  listing all  of  your  accounts
including those in your spouse's name, joint accounts and accounts held for your
minor children. If you need more space, please attach a separate sheet.
 
I/We  qualify  for  the Rights  of  Accumulation initial  sales  charge discount
described in the Prospectus  and Statement of  Additional Information of  Morgan
Stanley Fund, Inc.
/ /  I/We  own Class A shares of more than one Investment Fund of Morgan Stanley
     Fund, Inc.
/ /  The registration of some of my/our  Class A shares differs from that  shown
     on  this  application.  Listed below  are  the account  number(s)  and full
     registration(s) in each case.
 
LIST OF OTHER ACCOUNTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <C>
ACCOUNT NUMBER(S)                                   NAME(S) IN WHICH ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- -------------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          LETTER OF INTENT (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/we agree to the Letter of Intent Conditions on the last page of this
application.
I/we intend to  invest, within a  13-month period beginning  on the date  hereof
(initial  purchase  date) in  Class A  shares of  the Investment  Fund purchased
hereunder and the  other Investment  Fund, an aggregate  amount which,  together
with  the value of Class A  shares of any of the  Investment Funds then owned by
me/us, will equal or exceed the amount indicated below:
 
      / /  $100,000     / /  $250,000     / /  $500,000     / /  $1,000,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN (OPTIONAL)   / /  Yes   / /  No     Not Available for
IRAs
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Available to shareholders with account balances of $5,000 or more.
I/We hereby  authorize CGFSC  to  redeem the  necessary  number of  shares  from
my/our  Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc. Account on  the designated dates  in order to
make the following periodic payments:
 
     / /  Monthly     / /  Quarterly     / /  Semiannually     / /  Annually
 
(This request  for  participation in  the  Systematic Withdrawal  Plan  must  be
received  by the 18th day  of the month in which  you wish withdrawals to begin.
Redemptions of shares to make the payments elected above will occur on the  25th
day  of the month prior to  payment, or if such day  is not a business day, then
the next preceding business day.)
 
Withdrawal ($100 minimum) from:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              Amount of
Fund Name                                                                                     Each Check         Or          %*
 
<S>                                       <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>                 <C>        <C>
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------             --------%
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------             --------%
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ ----------------             --------%
 
Please make check payable to:                        Recipient ---------------------------------------------------------
 (to be completed only if redemption                 Street Address ---------------------------------------------------
 proceeds to be paid to other than                   City, State, Zip Code ---------------------------------------------
 account holder of record or mailed to
 address other than address of record)
*With the systematic withdrawal plan, a maximum of 12% per year may be withdrawn from Class B accounts
 without being subject to a CDSC.
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN (OPTIONAL)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I/We hereby authorize  CGFSC to debit  my/our personal checking  account on  the
designated dates in order to purchase shares in the Funds indicated below at the
applicable public offering price determined on that day.
 
         / /  Monthly on the 5th day        / /  Monthly on the 20th day
 
Amount of each debit (minimum $100) to be invested as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund Name
 
<S>                                       <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
- ----------------------------------------  Class  :   ----------   Code  :    ----------   $ -------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE:   A completed  Bank Authorization Form  (see below) and  a voided personal
check MUST accompany this Automatic Investment Plan application.
 
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN--BANK AUTHORIZATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>                                         <C>
- -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------
Bank Name                                   Bank Address                                Bank Account Number
</TABLE>
 
I/We authorize you, the  above named bank, to  debit my/our account for  amounts
drawn  by Chase Global  Funds Services Company,  acting as my/our  agent for the
purchase of Shares of Morgan Stanley Fund,  Inc. I/We agree that your rights  in
respect  to each withdrawal shall be  the same as if it  were a check drawn upon
you and signed by me/us. This authority shall remain in effect until revoked  in
writing  and received by you. I/We agree  that you shall incur no liability when
honoring debits, except a loss due to payments drawn against insufficient funds.
I/We further agree that you  will incur no liability to  me if you dishonor  any
such  withdrawal.  This will  be so  even  though such  dishonor results  in the
cancellation of that purchase.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------   ---------------------------------------------------------------
Account Holder's Name                                             Joint Account Holder's Name
 
X -----------------------------------------      -------------    X -----------------------------------------      -------------
                       Signature                       Date       Signature                       Date
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           AGREEMENTS AND SIGNATURES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
By signing this application, I/we hereby certify under penalties of perjury that
the information on this application is complete and correct and that as required
by federal law:
 
/ /  I/We certify that  (1) the number(s)  shown above on  this form is/are  the
     correct  SSN(s)  or TIN(s)  and  (2) I/we  are  not subject  to  any backup
     withholding either  because I/we  have not  been notified  by the  Internal
     Revenue Service ("IRS") that I/we are subject to backup withholding, or the
     IRS  has  notified me/us  that  I am/we  are  no longer  subject  to backup
     withholding. (NOTE: IF ANY  OR ALL OF  CLAUSE (2) IS  NOT TRUE, STRIKE  OUT
     THAT PART BEFORE SIGNING).
 
/ /  If  no TIN(s) or SSN(s) has/have been provided above, I/we have applied, or
     intend to apply, to the IRS or the Social Security Administration for a TIN
     or a SSN, and I/we understand that if I/we do not provide either number  to
     CGFSC  within 60 days  of the date of  this application or  if I/we fail to
     furnish my/our correct SSN or TIN, I/we  may be subject to a penalty and  a
     31%  backup withholding  on distributions and  redemption proceeds. (Please
     provide either  number on  IRS Form  W-9).  You may  request such  form  by
     calling CGFSC at 800-282-4404.
 
I/We  represent that I am/we are of legal age and capacity to purchase shares of
the Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. I/We understand that unless otherwise indicated in
this application, my/our investment dealer  and I/we will automatically  receive
telephone  exchange and redemption privileges and that Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
and CGFSC and their directors, officers and employees will not be liable for any
loss, liability, cost or expense incurred for acting upon instructions  believed
to  be  authentic  and  in  accordance with  the  procedures  set  forth  in the
Prospectus. I/We have received, read and carefully reviewed a copy of the Fund's
current Prospectus and agree to its terms and by signing below I/we  acknowledge
that neither the Fund nor the Distributor is a bank and that Fund shares are not
backed or guaranteed by any bank or insured by the FDIC.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                  <C>
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
X ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Date ---------------------
 Owner Signature
</TABLE>
 
Sign  exactly as name(s) of registered owner(s) appear(s) above (including legal
title if signing for a corporation, trust custodial account, etc.)
 
NOTE: THE FOLLOWING SECTION SHOULD BE COMPLETED ONLY IF YOU ARE INVESTING IN THE
      MORGAN STANLEY FUND,  INC. THROUGH A  PARTICIPATING DEALER (AN  INVESTMENT
      DEALER).
 
FOR USE BY AUTHORIZED AGENT (PARTICIPATING DEALER) ONLY
 
We  hereby submit this application for the purchase of shares in accordance with
the terms of our  selling agreement with Morgan  Stanley & Co. Incorporated  and
with  the Prospectus  and Statement  of Additional  Information of  the Fund. We
agree to notify CGFSC of any purchases made under the Letter of Intent or Rights
of Accumulation.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                       <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Investment Dealer's Name                                  Representative's Name
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Number                                             Representative's Telephone Number
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Address
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
City/State/Zip Code
 
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------------------------------------------------
Branch Telephone Number                                   Investment Dealer's Authorized Signature
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
 
  NO  DEALER, SALES  REPRESENTATIVE OR ANY  OTHER PERSON HAS  BEEN AUTHORIZED TO
GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS, OTHER THAN THOSE  CONTAINED
IN THIS PROSPECTUS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFER MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF
GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH OTHER INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON
AS  HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE FUND  OR THE DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES
NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER BY THE FUND OR THE DISTRIBUTOR TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION
OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY OF  THE SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY IN ANY JURISDICTION  TO
ANY  PERSON TO WHOM  IT IS UNLAWFUL TO  MAKE SUCH OFFER  OR SOLICITATION IN SUCH
JURISDICTION.
 
                           --------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                     <C>
                                        PAGE
                                        ----
Fund Expenses...........................   2
Financial Highlights....................   6
Prospectus Summary......................  11
Investment Objectives and Policies......  14
Additional Investment Information.......  26
Investment Limitations..................  37
Management of the Fund..................  38
Portfolio Transactions..................  43
Purchase of Shares......................  44
Redemption of Shares....................  53
Shareholder Services....................  56
Valuation of Shares.....................  58
Performance Information.................  59
Dividends and Distributions.............  59
Taxes...................................  60
General Information.....................  61
Appendix A.............................. A-1
New Account Application
</TABLE>
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           INTERNATIONAL MAGNUM FUND
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              JAPANESE EQUITY FUND
 
                               PORTFOLIOS OF THE
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                                   FUND, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
                               ($.001 PAR VALUE)
 
                                ---------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                                ---------------
 
                               INVESTMENT ADVISER
 
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             ASSET MANAGEMENT INC.
 
                                  DISTRIBUTOR
 
                              MORGAN STANLEY & CO.
 
                                  INCORPORATED
 
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
<PAGE>


                            MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


     Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end management 
investment company. The Fund currently consists of fifteen diversified and 
non-diversified investment portfolios designed to offer a range of investment 
choices. The Fund is designed to provide clients with attractive alternatives 
for meeting their investment needs. This Statement of Additional Information 
("SAI") addresses information of the Fund applicable to the Morgan Stanley 
Money Market Fund and to the Class A shares, Class B shares and Class C 
shares of the remaining investment portfolios listed below (each, an 
"Investment Fund") (collectively, the "Investment Funds"). The Morgan Stanley 
Growth and Income, the Morgan Stanley European Equity and the Morgan Stanley 
Money Market Funds are not currently offering shares.

     This Statement is not a prospectus but should be read in conjunction with
the Fund's prospectus (the "Prospectus"). To obtain the Prospectus, please call
the Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. Services Group:

                                 1-800-282-4404

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            PAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Investment Objectives and Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Federal Income Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Federal Tax Treatment of Forward Currency Contracts and Exchange
  Rate Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
Taxes and Foreign Shareholders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
Purchase of Shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
Redemption of Shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
Investment Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
Determining Maturities of Certain Instruments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Management of the Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Money Market Fund Net Asset Value. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
Portfolio Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
Performance Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28
General Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43
Description of Securities and Ratings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44
Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48


Statement of Additional Information dated May 1, 1996, relating to: 

     The Prospectus for the Morgan Stanley Global Fixed Income Fund,
     Morgan Stanley Worldwide High Income Fund and
     Morgan Stanley High Yield Fund, dated May 1, 1996

     The Prospectus for the Morgan Stanley American Value Fund,
     Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity Fund and
     Morgan Stanley U.S. Real Estate Fund, dated May 1, 1996

     The Prospectus for the Morgan Stanley Global Equity Allocation Fund,
     Morgan Stanley Asian Growth Fund,
     Morgan Stanley Latin American Fund,
     Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Fund,
     Morgan Stanley International Magnum Fund and
     Morgan Stanley Japanese Equity Fund, dated May 1, 1996

     The Prospectus for the Morgan Stanley Growth and Income Fund,
     Morgan Stanley European Equity Fund and
     Morgan Stanley Money Market Fund, dated ____, 1996


<PAGE>

                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

     The following policies supplement the investment objectives and policies 
set forth in the Fund's Prospectus with respect to the Fund's fifteen 
Investment Funds: the Morgan Stanley Global Fixed Income Fund, Morgan Stanley 
Worldwide High Income Fund, Morgan Stanley High Yield Fund, Morgan Stanley 
American Value Fund, Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity Fund, Morgan Stanley 
U.S. Real Estate Fund, Morgan Stanley Global Equity Allocation Fund, Morgan 
Stanley Asian Growth Fund, Morgan Stanley Latin American Fund, Morgan Stanley 
Emerging Markets Fund, Morgan Stanley International Magnum Fund, Morgan 
Stanley Japanese Equity Fund, Morgan Stanley Growth and Income Fund, Morgan 
Stanley European Equity Fund (collectively, the "Non-Money Funds") and Morgan 
Stanley Money Market Fund (referred to herein respectively as the "Global 
Fixed Income Fund," "Worldwide High Income Fund," "High Yield Fund," 
"American Value Fund," "Aggressive Equity Fund," "U.S. Real Estate Fund," 
"Global Equity Allocation Fund," "Asian Growth Fund," "Latin American Fund," 
"Emerging Markets Fund," "International Magnum Fund," "Japanese Equity Fund," 
"Growth and Income Fund," "European Equity Fund" and "Money Market Fund").

EQUITY-LINKED SECURITIES

     The Growth and Income and Aggressive Equity Funds may invest in 
equity-linked securities, including, among others, PERCS, ELKS or LYONs, 
which are securities that are convertible into, or the value of which is 
based upon the value of, equity securities upon certain terms and conditions. 
The amount received by an investor at maturity of such securities is not 
fixed but is based on the price of the underlying common stock.  It is 
impossible to predict whether the price of the underlying common stock will 
rise or fall.  Trading prices of the underlying common stock will be 
influenced by the issuer's operational results, by complex, interrelated 
political, economic, financial or other factors affecting the capital 
markets, the stock exchanges on which the underlying common stock is traded 
and the market segment of which the issuer is a part.  It is not possible to 
predict how equity-linked securities will trade in the secondary market or 
whether such market will be liquid or illiquid.  The following are three 
examples of equity-linked securities.  The Investment Fund may invest in the 
securities described below or other similar equity-linked securities.


     There are certain risks of loss of principal in connection with investing
in equity-linked securities, as described in the following examples of certain
equity-linked securities. Preferred Equity Redemption Cumulative Stock ("PERCS")
as described in "Additional Investment Information" in the Prospectus will
convert into common stock within three years no matter at what price the common
stock trades. If the common stock is trading at a price that is at or below the
cap, the Investment Fund receives one share of common stock for each PERCS
share.  If the common stock is trading at a price that is above the cap, the
Investment Fund receives less than one share, with the conversion ratio adjusted
so that the market value of the common stock received by the Investment Fund
equals the cap.  Accordingly, the Investment Fund is subject to the risk that if
the price of the common stock is below the cap price at the maturity of the
PERCS, the Investment Fund will lose the amount of the difference between the
price of the common stock and the cap.  Such a loss could substantially reduce
the Investment Fund's initial investment in the PERCS and any dividends that
were paid on the PERCS. PERCS also present risks based on payment expectations.
If a PERCS issuer redeems the PERCS, the Investment Fund may have to replace the
PERCS with a lower yielding security, resulting in a decreased return for
investors.

     The principal amount that Equity-Linked Securities ("ELKS") holders receive
at maturity, as described in "Additional Investment Information" in the
Prospectus, is based on the price of underlying common stock.  If the common
stock is trading at a price that is at or below the cap, the Investment Fund
receives for each ELKS share an amount equal to the average price of the common
stock.  If the common stock is trading at a price that is above the cap, the
Investment Fund receives the cap amount.  Accordingly, the Investment Fund is
subject to the risk that if the price of the common stock is below the cap price
at the maturity of the ELKS, the Investment Fund will lose the amount of the
difference between the price of the common stock and the cap.  Such a loss could
substantially reduce the Investment Fund's initial investment in the ELKS and
any dividends that were paid on the ELKS.  An additional risk is that the issuer
may "reopen" the issue of ELKS and issue additional ELKS at a later time or
issue additional debt securities or other securities with terms similar to those
of the ELKS, and such issuances may affect the trading value of the ELKS.

     The principal amount that Liquid Yield Option Notes ("LYONs") holders
receive for LYONs, other than the lower-than-marked yield at maturity, as
described in "Additional Investment Information" in the Prospectus, is based on
the price of underlying common stock.  If the common stock is trading at a price
that is at or below the purchase price of the LYONs plus accrued original issue
discount, the Investment Fund receives only the


                                        2
<PAGE>

lower-than-market yield, assuming the LYONs are not in default.  If the common
stock is trading at a price that is above the purchased price of the LYONs plus
accrued original issue discount, the Investment Fund will receive an amount
above the lower-than-market yield on the LYONs, based on how well the underlying
common stock does.  LYONs also present risks based on payment expectations.  If
a LYONs issuer redeems the LYONs, the Investment Fund may have to replace the
LYONs with a lower yielding security, resulting in a decreased return for
investors.


FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS

     The U.S. dollar value of the assets of the Global Equity Allocation, 
Global Fixed Income, Asian Growth, Emerging Markets, Latin American, European 
Equity, Japanese Equity and International Magnum Funds and to the extent they 
invest in foreign currencies, the American Value, Aggressive Equity, Growth 
and Income, Worldwide High Income and High Yield Funds may be affected 
favorably or unfavorably by changes in foreign currency exchange rates and 
exchange control regulations, and the Investment Funds may incur costs in 
connection with conversions between various currencies. The Investment Funds 
will conduct their foreign currency exchange transactions either on a spot 
(i.e., cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency 
exchange market, or through entering into forward contracts to purchase or 
sell foreign currencies. A forward foreign currency exchange contract (a 
"forward contract") involves an obligation to purchase or sell a specific 
currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from the 
date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at the time 
of the contract. These contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted 
directly between currency traders (usually large commercial banks) and their 
customers. A forward contract generally has no deposit requirement, and no 
commissions are charged at any stage for such trades.


     The Investment Funds may enter into forward contracts in several
circumstances. When an Investment Fund enters into a contract for the purchase
or sale of a security denominated in a foreign currency, or when an Investment
Fund anticipates the receipt in a foreign currency of dividends or interest
payments on a security which it holds, the Investment Fund may desire to
"lock-in" the U.S. dollar price of the security or the U.S. dollar equivalent of
such dividend or interest payment, as the case may be. By entering into a
forward contract for a fixed amount of dollars, for the purchase or sale of the
amount of foreign currency involved in the underlying transactions, the
Investment Fund will be able to protect itself against a possible loss resulting
from an adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar and the
subject foreign currency during the period between the date on which the
security is purchased or sold, or on which the dividend or interest payment is
declared, and the date on which such payments are made or received.

     Additionally, when any of these Investment Funds anticipates that the
currency of a particular foreign country may suffer a substantial decline
against the U.S. dollar, it may enter into a forward contract for a fixed amount
of dollars, to sell the amount of foreign currency approximating the value of
some or all of such Investment Fund's securities denominated in such foreign
currency. The precise matching of the forward contract amounts and the value of
the securities involved will not generally be possible since the future value of
securities in foreign currencies will change as a consequence of market
movements in the value of these securities between the date on which the forward
contract is entered into and the date it matures. The projection of short-term
currency market movement is extremely difficult, and the successful execution of
a short-term hedging strategy is highly uncertain. An Investment Fund will not
enter into such forward contracts or maintain a net exposure to such contracts
where the consummation of the contracts would obligate such Investment Fund to
deliver an amount of foreign currency in excess of the value of such Investment
Fund securities or other assets denominated in that currency.

     Under normal circumstances, consideration of the prospect for currency
parities will be incorporated into the long-term investment decisions made with
regard to overall diversification strategies. However, the management of the
Fund believes that it is important to have the flexibility to enter into such
forward contracts when it determines that the best interests of the performance
of each Investment Fund will thereby be served. Except in circumstances where
segregated accounts are not required by the 1940 Act and the rules adopted


                                        3
<PAGE>

thereunder, the Fund's Custodian will place cash, U.S. Government securities, or
liquid, high-grade debt securities into a segregated account of an Investment
Fund in an amount equal to the value of such Investment Fund's total assets
committed to the consummation of forward contracts. If the value of the
securities placed in the segregated account declines, additional cash or
securities will be placed in the account on a daily basis so that the value of
the account will be at least equal to the amount of such Investment Fund's
commitments with respect to such contracts.

     The Investment Funds generally will not enter into a forward contract with
a term of greater than one year. At the maturity of a forward contract, an
Investment Fund may either sell the portfolio security and make delivery of the
foreign currency, or it may retain the security and terminate its contractual
obligation to deliver the foreign currency by purchasing an "offsetting"
contract with the same currency trader obligating it to purchase, on the same
maturity date, the same amount of the foreign currency.

     It is impossible to forecast with absolute precision the market value of a
particular portfolio security at the expiration of the contract. Accordingly, it
may be necessary for an Investment Fund to purchase additional foreign currency
on the spot market (and bear the expense of such purchase) if the market value
of the security is less than the amount of foreign currency that such Investment
Fund is obligated to deliver and if a decision is made to sell the security and
make delivery of the foreign currency.

     If an Investment Fund retains the portfolio security and engages in an
offsetting transaction, such Investment Fund will incur a gain or a loss (as
described below) to the extent that there has been movement in forward contract
prices. Should forward prices decline during the period between an Investment
Fund entering into a forward contract for the sale of a foreign currency and the
date it enters into an offsetting contract for the purchase of the foreign
currency, such Investment Fund will realize a gain to the extent that the price
of the currency it has agreed to sell exceeds the price of the currency it has
agreed to purchase. Should forward prices increase, such Investment Fund would
suffer a loss to the extent that the price of the currency it has agreed to
purchase exceeds the price of the currency it has agreed to sell.

     The Investment Funds are not required to enter into such transactions with
regard to their foreign currency-denominated securities. It also should be
realized that this method of protecting the value of portfolio securities
against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in
the underlying prices of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of
exchange which one can achieve at some future point in time. Additionally,
although such contracts tend to minimize the risk of loss due to a decline in
the value of the hedged currency, at the same time, they tend to limit any
potential gain which might result should the value of such currency increase.


FUTURES CONTRACTS

     The Emerging Markets, Latin American, European Equity, International 
Magnum, American Value, Aggressive Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide 
High Income Funds may enter into securities index futures contracts and 
options on securities index futures contracts to a limited extent and the 
Latin American Fund may utilize appropriate interest rate futures contracts 
and options on interest rate futures contracts to a limited extent. In 
addition, the Emerging Markets, Latin American, European Equity, American 
Value, Aggressive Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide High Income Funds 
may enter into foreign currency futures contracts and options thereon.  The 
U.S. Real Estate Fund may enter into futures contracts and options on futures 
contracts for the purpose of remaining fully invested and reducing 
transaction costs.  The High Yield and U.S. Real Estate Funds may also enter 
into futures or contracts for hedging purposes.  No Portfolio will enter into 
futures contracts or options thereon for speculative purposes. Futures 
contracts provide for the future sale by one party and purchase by another 
party of a specified amount of a specific security or a specific currency at 
a specified future time and at a specified price. Futures contracts, which 
are standardized as to maturity date and underlying financial instrument, 
index or currency, traded in the United States are traded on national futures 
exchanges. Futures exchanges and trading are regulated under the Commodity 
Exchange Act by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC"), a U.S. 
government agency.


     Although futures contracts by their terms call for actual delivery or 
acceptance of the underlying securities or currencies, in most cases the 
contracts are closed out before the settlement date without the making

                                        4
<PAGE>

or taking of delivery. Closing out an open futures position is done by taking an
opposite position ("buying" a contract which has previously been "sold" or
"selling" a contract previously "purchased") in an identical contract to
terminate the position. Brokerage commissions are incurred when a futures
contract is bought or sold.


     The International Magnum, Emerging Markets, Latin American, European 
Equity, American Equity, Aggressive Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide 
High Income Funds may purchase and sell indexed financial futures contracts. 
An index futures contract is an agreement to take or make delivery of an 
amount of cash equal to the difference between the value of the index at the 
beginning and at the end of the contract period.  Successful use of index 
futures will be subject to the Adviser's ability to predict correctly 
movements in the direction of the relevant securities market.  No assurance 
can be given that the Adviser's judgment in this respect will be correct.

     The International Magnum, Emerging Markets, Latin American, European 
Equity, American Equity, Aggressive Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide 
High Income Funds may sell indexed financial futures contracts in anticipation 
of or during a market decline to attempt to offset the decrease in market 
value of securities in its portfolio that might otherwise result.  If the 
Adviser believes that a portion of the Investment Fund assets should be 
invested in emerging country securities but such investments have not been 
fully made and the Adviser anticipates a significant market advance, the 
Investment Fund may purchase index futures in order to gain rapid market 
exposure that may in part or entirely offset increases in the cost of 
securities that it intends to purchase.  In a substantial majority of these 
transactions, the Investment Fund will purchase such securities upon 
termination of the futures position but, under unusual market conditions, a 
futures position may be terminated without the corresponding purchase of debt 
securities.


     Futures traders are required to make a good faith margin deposit in cash or
government securities with a broker or custodian to initiate and maintain open
positions in futures contracts. A margin deposit is intended to assure
completion of the contract (delivery or acceptance of the underlying security)
if it is not terminated prior to the specified delivery date. Minimal initial
margin requirements are established by the futures exchange and may be changed.
Brokers may establish deposit requirements which are higher than the exchange
minimums. Futures contracts are customarily purchased and sold for prices that
may range upward from less than 5% of the value of the contract being traded.

     After a futures contract position is opened, the value of the contract is
marked to market daily. If the futures contract price changes to the extent that
the margin on deposit does not satisfy margin requirements, payment of an
additional "variation" margin will be required. Conversely, a change in the
contract value may reduce the required margin, resulting in a repayment of
excess margin to the contract holder. Variation margin payments are made to and
from the futures broker for as long as the contract remains open. The Investment
Fund expects to earn interest income on its margin deposits.

     Traders in futures contracts may be broadly classified as either "hedgers"
or "speculators." Hedgers use the futures markets primarily to offset
unfavorable changes in the value of securities otherwise held for investment
purposes or expected to be acquired by them. Speculators are less inclined to
own the underlying securities with futures contracts which they trade, and use
futures contracts with the expectation of realizing profits from market
fluctuations. The Investment Funds intend to use futures contracts only for
hedging purposes.

     Regulations of the CFTC applicable to the Investment Funds require that all
futures transactions constitute bona fide hedging transactions or transactions
for other purposes so long as the aggregate initial margin and premiums required
for such transaction will not exceed 5% of the liquidation value of the
Investment Fund's portfolio, after taking into account unrealized profits and
unrealized losses on any such contracts it has entered into. The Investment
Funds will only sell futures contracts to protect securities owned against
declines in price or purchase contracts to protect against an increase in the
price of securities intended for purchase. As evidence of this hedging interest,
the Investment Funds expect that approximately 75% of their respective futures
contracts will be "completed"; that is, equivalent amounts of related securities
will have been purchased or are being purchased by the Investment Fund upon sale
of open futures contracts.


                                        5
<PAGE>

     Although techniques other than the sale and purchase of futures contracts
could be used to control the Investment Fund's exposure to market fluctuations,
the use of futures contracts may be a more effective means of hedging this
exposure. While the Investment Funds will incur commission expenses in both
opening and closing out futures positions, these costs are lower than
transaction costs incurred in the purchase and sale of the underlying
securities.


RESTRICTIONS ON THE USE OF FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Emerging Markets, Latin 
American, European Equity, American Value, Aggressive Equity, Growth and 
Income and Worldwide High Income Funds will not enter into futures contract 
transactions to the extent that, immediately thereafter, the sum of its 
initial margin deposits on open contracts exceeds 5% of the market value of 
its total assets. In addition, the Investment Fund will not enter into 
futures contracts to the extent that its outstanding obligations to purchase 
securities under futures contracts and options would exceed 20% of its total 
assets.


RISK FACTORS IN FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  Positions in futures contracts may be
closed out only on an exchange which provides a secondary market for such
futures. However, there can be no assurance that a liquid secondary market will
exist for any particular futures contract at any specific time. Thus, it may not
be possible to close a futures position. In the event of adverse price
movements, an Investment Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash
payments to maintain its required margin. In such situations, if an Investment
Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to sell portfolio securities to meet its
daily margin requirement at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so. In
addition, the Investment Fund may be required to make delivery of the
instruments underlying futures contracts it holds. The inability to close
options and futures positions also could have an adverse impact on the
Investment Fund's ability to effectively hedge.

     Each Investment Fund will minimize the risk that it will be unable to close
out a futures contract by only entering into futures for which there appears to
be a liquid secondary market.

     The risk of loss in trading futures contracts in some strategies can be
substantial, due both to the low margin deposits required, and the extremely
high degree of leverage involved in futures pricing. As a result, a relatively
small price movement in a futures contract may result in immediate and
substantial loss (as well as gain) to the investor. For example, if, at the time
of purchase, 10% of the value of the futures contract is deposited as margin, a
subsequent 10% decrease in the value of the futures contract would result in a
total loss of the margin deposit, before any deduction for the transaction
costs, if the account were then closed out. A 15% decrease would result in a
loss equal to 150% of the original margin deposit if the contract were closed
out. Thus, a purchase or sale of a futures contract may result in losses in
excess of the amount invested in the contract. However, because the Investment
Funds engage in futures strategies only for hedging purposes, the Adviser does
not believe that the Investment Funds are subject to the risks of loss
frequently associated with futures transactions. The Investment Fund would
presumably have sustained comparable losses if, instead of the futures contract,
the Investment Fund had invested in the underlying security or currency and sold
it after the decline.

     Utilization of futures transactions by the Investment Fund does involve the
risk of imperfect or no correlation where the securities underlying futures
contracts have different maturities than the portfolio securities or currencies
being hedged. It is also possible that an Investment Fund could both lose money
on futures contracts and also experience a decline in value of its portfolio
securities. There is also the risk of loss by an Investment Fund of margin
deposits in the event of bankruptcy of a broker with whom the Investment Fund
has an open position in a futures contract or related option.

     Most futures exchanges limit the amount of fluctuation permitted in futures
contract prices during a single trading day. The daily limit establishes the
maximum amount that the price of a futures contract may vary either up or down
from the previous day's settlement price at the end of a trading session. Once
the daily limit has been reached in a particular type of contract, no trades may
be made on that day at a price beyond that limit. The daily limit governs only
price movement during a particular trading day and therefore does not limit
potential losses, because the limit may prevent the liquidation of unfavorable
positions. Futures contract prices have


                                        6
<PAGE>

occasionally moved to the daily limit for several consecutive trading days with
little or no trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions
and subjecting some futures traders to substantial losses.

GLOBAL INVESTING

     Global investment diversification can lower the risk that occurs from
fluctuations in any one market. Global stock and bond markets often do not
parallel the performance of each other which means that, over time, diversifying
investments across several countries can help reduce portfolio volatility while
increasing returns.

     U.S. stock and bond markets now comprise less than half of the total
securities available worldwide and investors who limit their investments to the
U.S. ignore over 80% of the world's blue chip companies. Participating in global
markets helps the astute investor take advantage of opportunities worldwide.
Over the past 10 years, through 1994, the U.S. ranked in the top five performing
stock markets only two times according to Morgan Stanley Capital International.

LOAN PARTICIPATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS

     The Worldwide High Income Fund may invest in fixed and floating rate loans
("Loans") arranged through private negotiations between an issuer of sovereign
debt obligations and one or more financial institutions ("Lenders").  The
Investment Fund's investments in Loans are expected in most instances to be in
the form of participations in Loans ("Participations") and assignments of all or
a portion of Loans ("Assignments") from third parties.  The Investment Fund will
have the right to receive payments of principal, interest and any fees to which
it is entitled only from the Lender selling the Participation and only upon
receipt by the Lender of the payments from the borrower. In the event of the
insolvency of the Lender selling a Participation, the Investment Fund may be
treated as a general creditor of the Lender and may not benefit from any set-off
between the Lender and the borrower. Certain Participations may be structured in
a manner designed to avoid purchasers of the Participation being subject to the
credit risk of the Lender with respect to the Participation, but even under such
a structure, in the event of the Lender's insolvency, the Lender's servicing of
the Participation may be delayed and the assignability of the Participation
impaired.  The Investment Fund will acquire a Participation only if the Lender
interpositioned between the Investment Fund and the borrower is determined by
the Adviser to be creditworthy.

     When the Investment Fund purchases Assignments from Lenders it will acquire
direct rights against the borrower on the Loan.  Because Assignments are
arranged through private negotiations between potential assignees and potential
assignors, however, the rights and obligations acquired by the Investment Fund
as the purchaser of an Assignment may differ from, and be more limited than,
those held by the assigning Lender.  Because there is no liquid market for such
securities, the Investment Fund anticipates that such securities could be sold
only to a limited number of institutional investors.  The lack of a liquid
secondary market may have an adverse impact on the value of such securities and
the Investment Fund's ability to dispose of particular Assignments or
Participation when necessary to meet the Investment Fund's liquidity needs or in
response to a specific economic event such as a deterioration in the
creditworthiness of the borrower.  The lack of a liquid secondary market for
Assignments and Participation also may make it more difficult for the Investment
Fund to assign a value to these securities for purposes of valuing the
Investment Fund's portfolio and calculating its net asset value.


MORGAN STANLEY CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL EAFE INDEX

     The International Magnum Fund seeks to achieve its objective by 
investing primarily in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers in accordance 
with the EAFE country (defined below) weightings determined by the Adviser.  
After establishing regional allocation strategies, the Adviser then selects 
equity securities among issuers of a region.  The Investment Fund invests in 
countries (each an "EAFE country") comprising the Morgan Stanley Capital 
International EAFE (Europe, Australia and the Far East) Index (the "EAFE 
Index").

    The EAFE Index is one of seven International Indices, twenty National 
Indices and thirty-eight Industry Indices making up the Morgan Stanley Capital 
International Indices.  The Morgan Stanley Capital International EAFE Index 
is based on the share prices of 1,066 companies listed on the stock exchanges 
of Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the Far East.  "Europe" includes 
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, 
Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.  "Far East" 
includes Japan, Hong Kong and Singapore/Malaysia.


MORGAN STANLEY CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL WORLD INDEX

     The investment objective of the Global Equity Allocation Fund is to provide
long-term capital appreciation by investing in accordance with country
weightings determined by the Adviser in common stocks of United States and
non-United States issuers. The Adviser determines country allocations for the
Investment Fund on an ongoing basis within policy ranges dictated by each
country's market capitalization and liquidity. The Investment Fund will invest
in the United States and industrialized countries throughout the world that
comprise


                                        7
<PAGE>

the Morgan Stanley Capital International World Index (the "World Index"). The
World Index is one of seven International Indices, twenty National Indices and
thirty-eight International Industry Indices making up the Morgan Stanley Capital
International Indices.

     The World Index is based on the share prices of companies listed on the
stock exchanges of Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway,
Singapore/Malaysia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the
United States.


OPTIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES

     The Emerging Markets, Latin American, European Equity, Aggressive 
Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide High Income Funds may attempt to 
accomplish objectives similar to those described above with respect to 
forward foreign currency exchange contracts and futures contracts for 
currency by means of purchasing put or call options on foreign currencies on 
exchanges. A put option gives the Investment Fund the right to sell a 
currency at the exercise price until the expiration of the option.  A call 
option gives the Investment Fund the right to purchase a currency at the 
exercise price until the expiration of the option.

OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS

     The Emerging Markets, Latin American, European Equity, International 
Magnum, Aggressive Equity, U.S. Real Estate, Growth and Income and Worldwide 
High Income Funds may write (i.e., sell) covered call options which give the 
purchaser the right to buy the underlying security covered by the option from 
the Investment Fund at the stated exercise price.  A "covered" call option 
means that so long as the Investment Fund is obligated as the writer of the 
option, it will own (i) the underlying securities subject to the option, or 
(ii) securities convertible or exchangeable without the payment of any 
consideration into the securities subject to the option.  As a matter of 
operating policy, the value of the underlying securities on which options 
will be written at any one time will not exceed 5% of the total assets of the 
Investment Fund.

     The Investment Fund will receive a premium from writing call options, which
increases the Investment Fund's return on the underlying security in the event
the option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit.  By writing a call,
the Investment Fund will limit its opportunity to profit from an increase in the
market value of the underlying security above the exercise price of the option
for as long as the Investment Fund's obligation as writer of the option
continues.  Thus, in some periods the Investment Fund will receive less total
return and in other periods greater total return from writing covered call
options than it would have received from its underlying securities had it not
written call options.

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

     It is anticipated that the annual portfolio turnover rate for each of 
the Investment Funds, except the Growth and Income and Aggressive Equity 
Funds will not exceed 100%, although in any particular year, market 
conditions could result in portfolio activity at a greater or lesser rate 
than anticipated. High rates of portfolio turnover necessarily result in 
correspondingly heavier brokerage and portfolio trading costs which are paid 
by each of the Investment Funds. In addition to portfolio trading costs, 
higher rates of portfolio turnover may result in the realization of capital 
gains, See "Taxes" in the Prospectus for more information on taxation. The 
portfolio turnover rate for a year is the lesser of the value of the 
purchases or sales for the year divided by the average monthly market value 
of the Investment Fund for the year, excluding U.S. Government securities and 
securities with maturities of one year or less.  The portfolio turnover rate 
for a year is calculated by dividing the lesser of sales or the average 
monthly value of the Investment Fund's portfolio purchases of portfolio 
securities during that year by securities, excluding money market 
instruments.  The rate of portfolio turnover will not be a limiting factor 
when the Investment Fund deems it appropriate to purchase or sell securities 
for the portfolio.  However, the U.S. federal tax requirement that the 
Investment Fund derive less than 30% of its gross income from the sale or 
disposition of securities held less than three months may limit the 
Investment Fund's ability to dispose of its securities. See "Federal Income


                                        8
<PAGE>

Tax." The tables set forth in the Prospectus under "Financial Highlights"
present each of the Investment Funds historical portfolio turnover ratios.

SECURITIES LENDING

     Each Investment Fund may lend its investment securities to qualified
institutional investors who need to borrow securities in order to complete
certain transactions, such as covering short sales, avoiding failures to deliver
securities or completing arbitrage operations. By lending its investment
securities, an Investment Fund attempts to increase its net investment income
through the receipt of interest on the loan. Any gain or loss in the market
price of the securities loaned that might occur during the term of the loan
would be for the account of the Investment Fund. Each Investment Fund may lend
its investment securities to qualified brokers, dealers, domestic and foreign
banks or other financial institutions, so long as the terms, structure and the
aggregate amount of such loans are not inconsistent with the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), or the Rules and Regulations or
interpretations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")
thereunder, which currently require that (a) the borrower pledge and maintain
with the Investment Fund collateral consisting of cash, an irrevocable letter of
credit issued by a domestic U.S. bank, or securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. Government having a value at all times not less than 100% of the value of
the securities loaned, including accrued interest, (b) the borrower add to such
collateral whenever the price of the securities loaned rises (i.e., the borrower
"marks to the market" on a daily basis), (c) the loan be made subject to
termination by the Investment Fund at any time, and (d) the Investment Fund
receive reasonable interest on the loan (which may include the Investment Fund
investing any cash collateral in interest bearing short-term investments), any
distributions on the loaned securities and any increase in their market value.
There may be risks of delay in recovery of the securities or even loss of rights
in the collateral should the borrower of the securities fail financially.
However, loans will only be made to borrowers deemed by Morgan Stanley Asset
Management Inc. (the "Adviser" or "MSAM") to be of good standing and when, in
the judgment of the Adviser, the consideration which can be earned currently
from such securities loans justifies the attendant risk. All relevant facts and
circumstances, including the creditworthiness of the broker, dealer or
institution, will be considered in making decisions with respect to the lending
of securities, subject to review by the Directors.

     At the present time, the Staff of the SEC does not object if an investment
company pays reasonable negotiated fees in connection with loaned securities, so
long as such fees are set forth in a written contract and approved by the
investment company's Directors. In addition, voting rights may pass with the
loaned securities, but if a material event will occur affecting an investment on
loan, the loan must be called and the securities voted.

                               FEDERAL INCOME TAX

     The following is only a summary of certain additional federal tax
considerations generally affecting the Fund and its shareholders that are not
described in the Fund's prospectus.  No attempt is made to present a detailed
explanation of the federal, state or local tax treatment of the Fund or its
shareholders, and the discussion here and in the Fund's prospectus is not
intended as a substitute for careful tax planning.

     Each Investment Fund is generally treated as a separate corporation for
federal income tax purposes, and thus the provisions of the Code generally will
be applied to each Investment Fund separately, rather than to the Fund as a
whole. Each Investment Fund intends to qualify and elect to be treated for each
taxable year as a regulated investment company ("RIC") under subchapter M of the
Code.

     The following discussion of federal income tax consequences is based on the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code") and the regulations
issued thereunder as in effect on the date of this Statement of Additional
Information. Legislation and administrative changes or court decisions may
significantly change the conclusions expressed herein, and may have a
retroactive effect with respect to the transactions contemplated herein.



                                        9
<PAGE>

     In order to qualify for the special tax treatment afforded to RIC under
Subchapter M of the Code, each Investment Fund must, among other things,
(a) derive at least 90% of its gross income each taxable year from dividends,
interest, payments with respect to securities loans, gains from the sale or
other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, and certain other
related income, including, generally, gains from options, futures and forward
contracts (the "90% Gross Income Test"); (b) derive less than 30% of its gross
income each taxable year from the sale or other disposition of (i) stocks or
securities, (ii) options, futures or forward contracts (other than options,
futures or forward contracts on foreign currencies) and (iii) foreign currencies
(or options, futures or forward contracts on foreign currencies), but only if
not directly related to the Investment Fund's principal business of investing in
stocks or securities (or options and futures with respect to stocks or
securities) held less than three months (the "Short-Short Gain Test"), and
(c) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each fiscal quarter of the
Fund's taxable year, (i) at least 50% of the market value of the Investment
Fund's total assets is represented by cash, United States Government securities,
securities of other RICs, and other securities and cash items, with such other
securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than
5% of the value of the Investment Fund's total assets or 10% of the outstanding
voting securities of such issuer, and (ii) not more than 25% of the value of its
total assets is invested in the securities of any one issuer or two or more
issuers which the Fund controls and which are engaged in the same, similar, or
related trades or businesses (other than U.S. Government securities or the
securities of other RICs). For purposes of the 90% gross income requirement
described above, foreign currency gains may be excluded by regulation from
income that qualifies under the 90% requirement.

     In addition to the requirements described above, in order to qualify as a
RIC, an Investment Fund must  distribute at least 90% of its net investment
income (which generally includes dividends, taxable interest, and net short-term
capital gains less operating expenses) to shareholders. If an Investment Fund
meets all of the RIC requirements, it will not be subject to federal income tax
on any of its net investment income or capital gains that it distributes to
shareholders.

     If an Investment Fund fails to qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, it
will be taxable at regular corporate rates. In such case, distributions
(including capital gain distributions) will be taxable as ordinary dividends to
the extent of the Investment Fund's current and accumulated earnings and profits
and such distributions generally will be eligible for the corporate dividends
received deductions.

     Each Investment Fund will decide whether to distribute or to retain all or
part of any net capital gains (the excess of net long-term capital gains over
net short-term capital losses) in any year for reinvestment. If any such gains
are retained, the Investment Fund will pay federal income tax thereon, and, if
the Investment Fund makes an election, the shareholders will include such
undistributed gains in their income and shareholders subject to tax will be able
to claim their share of the tax paid by the Investment Fund as a credit against
their federal income tax liability.

     A gain or loss realized by a shareholder on the sale or exchange of shares
of an Investment Fund held as a capital asset will be capital gain or loss, and
such gain or loss will be long-term if the holding period for the shares exceeds
one year, and otherwise will be short-term. Any loss realized on a sale or
exchange will be disallowed to the extent the shares disposed of are replaced
within the 61-day period beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the
shares are disposed of.  Any loss realized by a shareholder on the disposition
of shares held 6 months or less is treated as a long-term capital loss to the
extent of any distributions of net long-term capital gains received by the
shareholder with respect to such shares or any inclusion of undistributed
capital gain with respect to such shares.

     Each Investment Fund will generally be subject to a nondeductible 4%
federal excise tax to the extent it fails to distribute by the end of any
calendar year at least 98% of its ordinary income and 98% of its capital gain
net income (the excess of short and long-term capital gains over short and
long-term capital losses) for the one-year period ending on October 31 of that
year, plus certain other amounts.


                                       10
<PAGE>

     Each Investment Fund is required by federal law to withhold 31% of
reportable payments (which may include dividends, capital gains distributions,
and redemptions) paid to shareholders who have not certified on the Account
Registration Form or on a separate form supplied by the Investment Fund, that
the Social Security or Taxpayer Identification Number provided is correct and
that the shareholder is exempt from backup withholding or is not currently
subject to backup withholding.

FOREIGN INCOME TAX

     It is expected that each Investment Fund will be subject to foreign
withholding taxes with respect to its dividend and interest income from foreign
countries, and the Investment Fund may be subject to foreign income or other
taxes with respect to other income. So long as more than 50% in value of each
Investment Fund's total assets at the close of the taxable year consists of
stock or securities of foreign corporations, the Investment Fund may elect to
treat certain foreign income taxes imposed on it under U.S. federal income tax
law as paid directly by its shareholders. An Investment Fund will make such an
election only if it deems it to be in the best interest of its shareholders and
will notify shareholders in writing each year if it makes an election and of the
amount of foreign income taxes, if any, to be treated as paid by the
shareholders. If an Investment Fund makes the election, shareholders will be
required to include in income their proportionate shares of the amount of
foreign income taxes treated as imposed on the Investment Fund and will be
entitled to claim either a credit (subject to the limitations discussed below)
or, if they itemize deductions, a deduction for their shares of the foreign
income taxes in computing their federal income tax liability. (No deductions
will be allowed in computing alternative minimum tax liability.)

     Shareholders who choose to utilize a credit (rather than a deduction) for
foreign taxes will be subject to the limitation that the credit may not exceed
the shareholder's U.S. tax (determined without regard to the availability of the
credit) attributable to foreign source taxable income. For this purpose, the
portion of dividends and distributions paid by an Investment Fund from its
foreign source income will be treated as foreign source income. An Investment
Fund's gains from the sale of securities will generally be treated as derived
from U.S. sources and certain foreign currency gains and losses likewise will be
treated as derived from U.S. sources. The limitation on the foreign tax credit
is applied separately to foreign source "passive income," such as the portion of
dividends received from an Investment Fund which qualifies as foreign source
income. In addition, the foreign tax credit is allowed to offset only 90% of the
alternative minimum tax imposed on corporations as individuals. Because of these
limitations, shareholders may be unable to claim a credit for the full amount of
their proportionate shares of the foreign income taxes paid by an Investment
Fund.

     The foregoing is only a general description of the treatment of foreign
income taxes under the U.S. federal income tax laws. Because the availability of
a credit or deduction depends on the particular circumstances of each
shareholder, shareholders are advised to consult their own tax advisers.

                        FEDERAL TAX TREATMENT OF FORWARD
                  CURRENCY CONTRACTS AND EXCHANGE RATE CHANGES

     Except for certain hedging transactions, each Investment Fund is required
for federal income tax purposes to recognize as gain or loss for each taxable
year its net unrealized gains and losses on certain forward currency and futures
contracts as of the end of each taxable year, as well as those actually realized
during the year. In most cases, any such gain or loss recognized with respect to
a regulated futures contract is considered to be 60% long-term capital gain or
loss and 40% short-term capital gain or loss, without regard to the holding
period of the contract. Gain or loss attributable to a foreign currency forward
contract is treated as 100% ordinary income. Furthermore, forward currency
futures contracts which are intended to hedge against a change in the value of
securities held by an Investment Fund may affect the holding period of such
securities and, consequently, the nature of the gain or loss on such securities
upon disposition.


                                       11
<PAGE>

     Any net gain realized from the closing out of futures contracts will
generally be qualifying income for purposes of the 90% Gross Income test. In
order to satisfy the Short-Short Gain test, however, the Investment Fund will
have to avoid realizing gains on futures contracts and certain forward contracts
held less than three months and may be required to defer the closing out of
futures contracts beyond the time when it would otherwise be advantageous to do
so. It is anticipated that unrealized gains of such contracts that have been
open for less than three months as of the end of the Investment Fund's taxable
year and which are treated as recognized for tax purposes at the end of the
taxable year will not be considered gains on securities held less than three
months for purposes of the Short-Short Gain test.

     Gains or losses attributable to foreign currency contracts, or to
fluctuations in exchange rates that occur between the time the Investment Fund
accrues interest or other receivables or accrues expenses or other liabilities
denominated in a foreign currency and the time the Investment Fund actually
collects such receivables or pays such liabilities are treated as ordinary
income or ordinary loss. Similarly, gains or losses on disposition of debt
securities denominated in a foreign currency attributable to fluctuations in the
value of the foreign currency between the date of acquisition of the security
and the date of disposition also are treated as ordinary gain or loss. These
gains or losses increase or decrease the amount of an Investment Fund's net
investment income, if any, available to be distributed to its shareholders as
ordinary income.

                         TAXES AND FOREIGN SHAREHOLDERS

     Taxation of a shareholder who, as to the United States, is a nonresident
alien individual, a foreign trust or estate, foreign corporation, or foreign
partnership ("Foreign Shareholder") depends on whether the income from the Fund
is "effectively connected" with a U.S. trade or business carried on by such
shareholder.

     If the income from the Fund is not effectively connected with a U.S. trade
or business carried on by a Foreign Shareholder, distributions of ordinary
income will be subject to U.S. withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or lower
treaty rate) upon the gross amount of the dividend. Furthermore, Foreign
Shareholders will generally be exempt from United States federal income tax on
gains realized on the sale of shares of the Fund, distributions of net long-term
capital gains, and amounts retained by the Fund which are designated as
undistributed capital gains.

     If the income from the Fund is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or
business carried on by a Foreign Shareholder, then distributions of net
investment income and net long-term capital gains, and any gains realized upon
the sale of shares of the Fund, will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at
the rates applicable to United States citizens and residents or domestic
corporations.

     The Fund may be required to withhold U.S. federal income tax on
distributions that are otherwise exempt from withholding tax (or taxable at a
reduced treaty rate) unless the Foreign Shareholder complies with Internal
Revenue Service certification requirements.

     The tax consequences to a Foreign Shareholder entitled to claim the
benefits of an applicable tax treaty may differ from those described here.
Furthermore, Foreign Shareholders are strongly urged to consult their own tax
advisors with respect to the particular tax consequences to them of an
investment in the Fund.


                               PURCHASE OF SHARES

     For Class A shares of the Non-Money Funds, the purchase price of shares 
is based upon the net asset value per share plus the applicable sales charge, 
if any, next determined after the purchase order is received. Class B shares 
and Class C shares of the Non-Money Funds may be purchased at the net asset 
value per share next determined after the purchase order is received. For all 
classes of such Non-Money Funds an order received prior to the regular close 
of the New York Stock Exchange (the "NYSE") will be executed at the price 
computed on the date of receipt; and an order received after the regular 
close of the NYSE will be executed at the price computed

                                       12
<PAGE>


on the next day the NYSE is open. The purchase price of shares of the 
Non-Money Funds is based on such price as further described in the Prospectus 
under "Purchase of Shares." Class A shares of the Non-Money Funds purchased 
without an initial sales charge that are redeemed within one year of purchase 
are subject to a 1.00% contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC"), certain 
Class B shares of the Non-Money Funds that are redeemed within six years of 
purchase are subject to a  CDSC of up to 5.00% and certain Class C shares of 
the Non-Money Funds that are redeemed within one year of purchase are subject 
to a 1.00% CDSC, as described in the Prospectus under "Purchase of Shares." 
The initial sales charge and CDSC are not applicable to shares of any class 
of any Investment Fund purchased through the automatic reinvestment of 
dividends or distributions paid by any Investment Fund.  The price of shares 
of the Money Market Fund is the net asset per share next determined after 
Federal Funds are available to such Investment Fund.  A purchase of Money 
Market Fund shares by check is credited to the shareholder's account at the 
price next determined after receipt of Federal Funds on the day of receipt 
and will begin receiving dividends the following day. Shares of the Fund may 
be purchased on any day the NYSE is open. The NYSE is closed on the following 
days: New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, 
Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. 


     Each Investment Fund reserves the right in its sole discretion (i) to
suspend the offering of its shares, (ii) to reject purchase orders when in the
judgment of management such rejection is in the best interest of the Fund, and
(iii) to reduce or waive the minimum for initial and subsequent investments for
certain fiduciary accounts such as employee benefit plans or under circumstances
where certain economies can be achieved in sales of an Investment Fund's shares.

                              REDEMPTION OF SHARES

     Each Investment Fund may suspend redemption privileges or postpone the date
of payment (i) during any period that the NYSE is closed, or trading on the NYSE
is restricted as determined by the SEC, (ii) during any period when an emergency
exists as defined by the rules of the SEC as a result of which it is not
reasonably practicable for an Investment Fund to dispose of securities owned by
it, or fairly to determine the value of its assets, and (iii) for such other
periods as the SEC may permit.


     Any redemption may be more or less than the shareholder's cost depending 
on, among other factors, the market value of the securities held by the 
Investment Fund. Class A shares of the Non-Money Funds purchased without an 
initial sales charge due to the size of the purchase that are redeemed within 
one year of purchase are subject to a 1.00% CDSC, certain Class B shares of 
the Non-Money Funds that are redeemed within six years of purchase are 
subject to a CDSC of up to 5.00% that decreases to 0% after six years, and 
certain Class C shares of the Non-Money Funds that are redeemed within one 
year of purchase are subject to a 1.00% CDSC as described in the Prospectus 
under "Purchase of Shares." Such initial sales charge and CDSC are not 
applicable to shares of any class of any Investment Fund purchased through 
the automatic reinvestment of dividends or distributions paid by any 
Investment Fund.


     To protect your account and the Fund from fraud, signature guarantees are
required for certain redemptions. Signature guarantees enable the Fund to verify
the identity of the person who has authorized a redemption from your account.
Signature guarantees are required in connection with: (1) all redemptions,
regardless of the amount involved, when the proceeds are to be paid to someone
other than the registered owner(s) and/or registered address; and (2) share
transfer requests.

     Eligible signature guarantor institutions generally include banks,
broker-dealers, credit unions, national securities exchanges, registered
securities associations, clearing agencies and savings associations, provided
that the institution is a member of the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion
Program or another recognized signature guarantee program. Notaries public are
not acceptable guarantors.

     The signature guarantees must appear either: (1) on the written request for
redemption; (2) on a separate instrument for assignment ("stock power") which
should specify the total number of shares to be redeemed; or (3) on all stock
certificates tendered for redemption and, if shares held by the Fund are also
being redeemed, on the letter or stock power.


                                       13
<PAGE>

     Redemption of shares held in broker street name may not be accomplished by
mail or telephone as described above. Shares held in broker street name may be
redeemed only by contacting the investment dealer, bank or financial services
firm ("Participating Dealer") that handles your account.

                             INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS

     Each current Investment Fund of the Fund has adopted the following
restrictions which are fundamental policies and may not be changed without the
approval of the lesser of: (1) at least 67% of the voting securities of the
Investment Fund present at a meeting if the holders of more than 50% of the
outstanding voting securities of the Investment Fund are present or represented
by proxy, or (2) more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities of the
Investment Fund. Each current Investment Fund of the Fund will not:


     (1)  invest in commodities, except that each of the Emerging Markets Fund,
Latin American Fund, European Equity Fund, American Value Fund, Growth and
Income and Worldwide High Income Fund may invest in futures contracts and
options to the extent that not more than 5% of its total assets are required as
deposits to secure obligations under futures contracts and not more than 20% of
its total assets are invested in futures contracts and options at any time;

     (2)  purchase or sell real estate or real estate limited partnerships,
although it may purchase and sell securities of companies which deal in real
estate and may purchase and sell securities which are secured by interests in
real estate, and except that the U.S. Real Estate Fund may invest in real 
estate limited partnership interests but may not invest in such interests 
that are not publicly traded;

     (3)  make loans except (i) by purchasing bonds, debentures or similar
obligations (including repurchase agreements, subject to the limitation
described in (11) below) which are publicly distributed, and (ii) by lending its
portfolio securities to banks, brokers, dealers and other financial institutions
so long as such loans are not inconsistent with the 1940 Act or the Rules and
Regulations or interpretations of the SEC thereunder;

     (4)  purchase on margin or sell short except as specified above in (1) and
except that the Emerging Markets Fund, Latin American Fund, European Equity Fund
and Worldwide High Income Fund may enter into short sales in accordance with its
investment objectives and policies;

     (5)  with respect to all of the Investment Funds except the Global Fixed 
Income Fund, Emerging Markets Fund, Latin American Fund, Aggressive Equity 
Fund, International Magnum Fund and U.S. Real Estate Fund, purchase more 
than 10% of any class of the outstanding securities of any issuer;

     (6)  with respect to all the Investment Funds except the Global Fixed 
Income Fund, Emerging Markets Fund, Latin American Fund, U.S. Real Estate 
Fund, International Magnum Fund and Money Market Fund, purchase securities of 
an issuer (except obligations of the U.S. Government and its 
instrumentalities) if as the result, with respect to 75% of its total assets, 
more than 5% of the Investment Fund's total assets, at market, would be 
invested in the securities of such issuer;

     (7)  purchase or retain securities of an issuer if those officers and
Directors of the Fund or its investment adviser owning more than  1/2 of 1% of
such securities together own more than 5% of such securities;

     (8)  borrow, except from banks and as a temporary measure for 
extraordinary or emergency purposes and then, in no event, in excess of 10% 
of the Investment Fund's total assets valued at the lower of market or cost 
and an Investment Fund may not purchase additional securities when borrowings 
exceed 5% of total assets, except that the Worldwide High Income Fund, Latin 
American Fund, Growth and Income Fund and Money Market Fund  may enter into 
reverse repurchase agreements in accordance with their investment objectives 
and policies and except that each of the Latin American Fund, Aggressive 
Equity Fund and Worldwide High Income Fund may borrow amounts up to 33 1/3% 
of its total assets (including the amount borrowed), less all liabilities and 
indebtedness other than the borrowing;

                                       14
<PAGE>


     (9)  pledge, mortgage, or hypothecate any of its assets to an extent 
greater than 10% of its total assets at fair market value, except that each 
of the Latin American, Aggressive Equity  and Worldwide High Income Funds may 
pledge, mortgage or hypothecate its assets to secure borrowings in amounts up 
to 33 1/3% of its assets (including the amount borrowed);

     (10) underwrite the securities of other issuers;

     (11) invest more than an aggregate of 15% of the net assets of the 
Investment Fund (10% of the net assets of the Money Market Fund), determined 
at the time of investment, in illiquid assets, including repurchase 
agreements having maturities of more than seven days; provided, however, that 
no Investment Fund shall invest more than 10% of its total assets in 
securities subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale;

     (12) invest for the purpose of exercising control over management of any
company;

     (13) invest its assets in securities of any investment company, except by
purchase in the open market involving only customary brokers' commissions or in
connection with mergers, acquisitions of assets or consolidations and except as
may otherwise be permitted by the 1940 Act;

     (14) invest more than 5% of its total assets in securities of companies
which have (with predecessors) a record of less than three years' continuous
operation;

     (15) with respect to all the Investment Funds, except the Latin American 
Fund and U.S. Real Estate Fund, acquire any securities of companies within one 
industry if, as a result of such acquisition, more than 25% of the value of 
the Investment Fund's total assets would be invested in securities of 
companies within such industry; provided, however, that there shall be no 
limitation on the purchase of obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. 
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or (in the case of the Money 
Market Fund) instruments issued by U.S. banks;

     (16) write or acquire options or interests in oil, gas or other mineral
exploration or development programs or leases; or

     (17) issue senior securities.

     In addition, the Fund has adopted the following limitations which are not
fundamental policies and may be changed without shareholder approval:

     (1)  no Investment Fund will purchase puts, calls, straddles, spreads 
and any combination thereof if by reason thereof the value of its aggregate 
investment in such derivative securities will exceed 5% of its respective 
total assets except that the Emerging Markets, Latin American, European 
Equity, Aggressive Equity, Growth and Income and Worldwide High Income Funds 
may purchase puts and calls on foreign currencies and may write covered call 
options in accordance with its investment objective and policies;

     (2)  no Investment Fund may purchase warrants if, by reason of such 
purchase, more than 5% of the value of the Investment Fund's net assets would 
be invested in warrants valued at the lower of cost or market. Included in 
this amount, but not to exceed 2% of the value of the Investment Fund's net 
assets, may be warrants that are not listed on a nationally recognized stock 
exchange;


                                       15
<PAGE>

     (3)  no Investment Fund will invest in oil, gas or other mineral leases;


     The Money Market Fund will not purchase securities of an issuer (except 
obligations of the U.S. Government and instrumentalities) if more than 5% of 
its total assets, at market, would be invested in the securities of one 
issuer, except as permitted under applicable law.

     Each of the Global Fixed Income, Emerging Markets, Latin American, 
Aggressive Equity, International Magnum and U.S. Real Estate Funds will 
diversify its holdings so that, at the close of each quarter of its taxable 
year, (i) at least 50% of the market value of the Investment Fund's total 
assets is represented by cash (including cash items and receivables), U.S. 
Government securities, and other securities, with such other securities 
limited, in respect of any one issuer, for purposes of this calculation to an 
amount not greater than 5% of the value of the Investment Fund's total assets 
and 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer, and (ii) not 
more than 25% of the value of its total assets is invested in the securities 
of any one issuer (other than U.S. Government securities); and 

     (4)  the Emerging Markets Fund may invest up to 25% of its total assets in
privately placed securities, provided that it may not invest more than 15% of
its total assets in illiquid securities, including securities for which there is
no readily available market, and provided further that it will not invest more
than 10% of its total assets in securities which are restricted from sale to the
public without registration under the Securities Act of 1933, except securities
that are not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 but that can be offered
and sold to qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A under that Act.

     The percentage limitations contained in these restrictions apply at the
time of purchase of securities. Future Investment Funds of the Fund may adopt
different limitations.

                  DETERMINING MATURITIES OF CERTAIN INSTRUMENTS

     Generally, the maturity of a portfolio instrument shall be deemed to be the
period remaining until the date noted on the face of the instrument as the date
on which the principal amount must be paid, or in the case of an instrument
called for redemption, the date on which the redemption payment must be made.
However, instruments having variable or floating interest rates or demand
features may be deemed to have remaining maturities as follows: (1) a Government
Obligation with a variable rate of interest readjusted no less frequently than
annually may be deemed to have a maturity equal to the period remaining until
the next readjustment of the interest rate; (b) an instrument with a variable
rate of interest, the principal amount of which is scheduled on the face of the
instrument to be paid in one year or less, may be deemed to have a maturity
equal to the period remaining until the next readjustment of the interest rate;
(c) an instrument with a variable rate of interest that is subject to a demand
feature may be deemed to have a maturity equal to the longer of the period
remaining until the next readjustment of the interest rate or the period
remaining until the principal amount can be recovered through demand; (d) an
instrument with a floating rate of interest that is subject to a demand feature
may be deemed to have a maturity equal to the period remaining until the
principal amount can be recovered through demand; and (e) a repurchase agreement
may be deemed to have a maturity equal to the period remaining until the date on
which the repurchase of the underlying securities is scheduled to occur, or
where no date is specified, but the agreement is subject to demand, the notice
period applicable to a demand for the repurchase of the securities.

                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

     The Fund's officers, under the supervision of the Board of Directors,
manage the day-to-day operations of the Fund. The Directors set broad policies
for the Fund and choose its officers.  Three Directors and all of the officers
of the Fund are directors, officers or employees of the Fund's adviser,
distributor or administrative services provider. The other Directors have no
affiliation with the Fund's adviser, distributor or administrative services
provider. The Directors are also Directors of other open-end funds advised by
Morgan Stanley Asset Management Inc. (collectively with the Fund, the "Open-End
Fund Complex"). Officers of the Fund are also  Officers of some or all of the
other investment companies managed, administered, advised or distributed by
Morgan Stanley Asset Management Inc. or its affiliates. A list of the Directors
and officers of the Fund and a brief statement of their present positions and
principal occupations during the past 5 years is set forth below:


                                       16
<PAGE>


                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund           Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

Barton M. Biggs*             Chairman and          Chairman and Director of
1221 Avenue of the           Director              Morgan Stanley Asset
Americas                                           Management Inc. and Morgan
New York, NY 10020                                 Stanley Asset Management
(63)                                               Limited; Managing Director
                                                   of Morgan Stanley & Co.
                                                   Incorporated; Director of
                                                   Morgan Stanley Group Inc.;
                                                   Member of International
                                                   Advisory Counsel of the
                                                   Thailand Fund; Chairman and
                                                   Director of The Brazilian
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., The
                                                   Latin American Discovery
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Malaysia
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Africa Investment Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Asia-
                                                   Pacific Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Emerging Markets
                                                   Debt Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Emerging Markets
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Fund Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Global Opportunity Bond
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   High Yield Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley
                                                   Institutional Fund, Inc.,
                                                   The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.

Warren J. Olsen*             Director and          Principal of Morgan Stanley
1221 Avenue of the           President             & Co. Incorporated;
Americas                                           Principal of Morgan Stanley
New York, NY 10020                                 Asset Management Inc.;
(39)                                               President and Director of
                                                   The Brazilian Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Latin
                                                   American Discovery Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Malaysia Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Africa
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Asia-Pacific
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Debt Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Global
                                                   Opportunity Bond Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley High
                                                   Yield Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley India Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Institutional Fund, Inc.,
                                                   The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc., and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.



                                       17
<PAGE>

                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund          Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

John D. Barrett, II          Director              Chairman and Director of
521 Fifth Avenue                                   Barrett Associates, Inc.
New York, NY 10135                                 (investment counseling);
(60)                                               Director of the Ashforth
                                                   Company (real estate);
                                                   Director of the Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc. and PCS Cash Fund, Inc.

Gerard E. Jones              Director              Partner in Richards & O'Neil
43 Arch Street                                     LLP (law firm); Director of
Greenwich, CT 06830                                the Morgan Stanley Fund,
(58)                                               Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Institutional Fund, Inc. and
                                                   PCS Cash Fund, Inc.

Andrew McNally IV            Director              Chairman and Chief Executive
8255 North Central                                 Officer of Rand McNally
Park Avenue                                        (publication); Director of
Skokie, IL 60076                                   Allendale Insurance Co.,
(56)                                               Mercury Finance (consumer
                                                   finance); Zenith Electronics,
                                                   Hubbell, Inc. (industrial
                                                   electronics); Director of the
                                                   Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Institutional
                                                   Fund, Inc. and PCS Cash Fund,
                                                   Inc.; Director of the Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc. and PCS Cash Fund, Inc.


Samuel T. Reeves             Director              Chairman of the Board and
8211 North Fresno Street                           CEO, Pinacle L.L.C.
Fresno, CA 93720                                   (investment firm); Director,
(61)                                               Pacific Gas and Electric and
                                                   PG&E Enterprises (utilities);
                                                   Director of the Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc. and PCS Cash Fund, Inc.

Fergus Reid                  Director              Chairman and Chief Executive
85 Charles Colman Blvd.                            Officer of LumeLite
Pawling, NY 12564                                  Corporation (injection
(63)                                               molding firm); Trustee and
                                                   Director of Vista Mutual Fund
                                                   Group; Director of the Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc. and PCS Cash Fund, Inc.


                                       18

<PAGE>

                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund          Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

Frederick O. Robertshaw      Director              Of Counsel, Bryan, Cave (law
2800 North Central Avenue                          firm); Previously associated
Phoenix, AZ 85004                                  with Copple, Chamberlin &
(61)                                               Boehm, P.C. and Rake, Copple,
                                                   Downey & Black, P.C. (law
                                                   firms); Director of the
                                                   Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Institutional
                                                   Fund, Inc. and PCS Cash Fund,
                                                   Inc.

Frederick B. Whittemore*     Director              Advisory Director of Morgan
1251 Avenue of the                                 65 Stanley & Co.,
Americas                                           Incorporated; Vice-Chariman
30th Flr.                                          and Director of The Brazilian
New York, NY 10020                                 Investment Fund, Inc., The 
(65)                                               Latin American Discovery
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Malaysia
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Africa Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Asia-Pacific
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Debt Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.

James W. Grisham             Vice President        Principal of Morgan Stanley &
1221 Avenue of the                                 Co. Incorporated; Principal
Americas                                           of Morgan Stanley Asset
New York, NY 10020                                 Management Inc.; Vice
(54)                                               President of The Brazilian
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   The Latin American
                                                   Discovery Fund, Inc., The
                                                   Malaysia Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Africa Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Asia-Pacific Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Debt Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.


                                       19

<PAGE>

                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund          Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

Harold J. Schaaff, Jr.      Vice President        Principal of Morgan Stanley &
1221 Avenue of the                                 Co. Incorporated; Principal,
Americas                                           General Counsel and Secretary
New York, NY 10020                                 of Morgan Stanley Asset
(35)                                               Management Inc.; Vice
                                                   President of The Brazilian
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., The
                                                   Latin American Discovery
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Malaysia
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Africa Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Asia-Pacific
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Debt Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.

Joseph P. Stadler            Vice President        Vice President of Morgan
1221 Avenue of the                                 Stanley Asset Management
Americas                                           Inc.; Previously with Price
New York, NY 10020                                 Waterhouse LLP (accounting);
(41)                                               Vice President of The
                                                   Brazilian Investment Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Latin American
                                                   Discovery Fund, Inc., The
                                                   Malaysia Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Africa Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Asia-Pacific Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Debt Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.


                                       20

<PAGE>

                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund          Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

Valerie Y. Lewis             Secretary             Vice President of Morgan
1221 Avenue of the                                 Stanley Asset Management
Americas                                           Inc.; Previously with
New York, NY 10020                                 Citicorp (banking); Secretary
(39)                                               of The Brazilian Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Latin
                                                   American Discovery Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Malaysia Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Africa
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Asia-Pacific Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Debt Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The PCS Cash
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.

Karl O. Hartmann             Assistant             Senior Vice President,
73 Tremont Street            Secretary             Secretary and General Counsel
Boston, MA 02108-3913                              of Chase Global Funds
(40)                                               Services Company; Previously
                                                   with Leland, O'Brien,
                                                   Rubinstein Associates, Inc.
                                                   (investments).

James R. Rooney              Treasurer             Vice President,
73 Tremont Street                                  Chase Global Funds Services
Boston, MA 02108-3913                              Company; Director of Fund
(37)                                               Administration; Previously
                                                   with Scudder, Stevens &
                                                   Clark, Inc. (investment)
                                                   and Ernst & Young LLP
                                                   (accounting); Treasurer
                                                   of The Brazilian Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Latin
                                                   American Discovery
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Malaysia
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Africa Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Asia-Pacific
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Debt Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.


                                       21

<PAGE>

                                                   Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age        Position with Fund          Past Five Years
- ---------------------        -----------------     ---------------------------

Joanna Haigney               Assistant             Supervisor of Fund
73 Tremont Street            Treasurer             Administration and
Boston, MA 02108-3913                              Compliance, Chase Global
(29)                                               Funds Services Company;
                                                   Previously with Coopers &
                                                   Lybrand LLP; Assistant
                                                   Treasurer of The Brazilian
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., The
                                                   Latin American Discovery
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Malaysia
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Africa Investment Fund, Inc.,
                                                   Morgan Stanley Asia-Pacific
                                                   Fund, Inc., Morgan Stanley
                                                   Emerging Markets Debt Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley Emerging
                                                   Markets Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Global Opportunity
                                                   Bond Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley High Yield Fund,
                                                   Inc., Morgan Stanley India
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc., Morgan
                                                   Stanley Institutional Fund,
                                                   Inc., The Pakistan Investment
                                                   Fund, Inc., The Thai Fund,
                                                   Inc. and The Turkish
                                                   Investment Fund, Inc.

- ---------------
*"Interested Person" within the meaning of the 1940 Act.

REMUNERATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

     Effective June 28, 1995, the Open-End Fund Complex will pay each of the 
nine Directors who is not an "interested person" an annual aggregate fee of 
$55,000, plus out-of-pocket expenses. The Open-End Fund Complex will pay each 
of the members of the Fund's Audit Committee, which consists of the Fund's 
Directors who are not "interested persons" an additional annual aggregate fee 
of $10,000 for serving on such a committee, The allocation of such fees will 
be among the three funds in the Open-End Fund Complex in direct proportion to 
their respective average net assets. For the fiscal period ended June 30, 
1995, the Fund paid approximately $77,000 in Directors' fees and expenses. 
Directors who are also officers or affiliated persons receive no remuneration 
for their services as Directors. The Fund's officers and employees are paid 
by the Adviser or its agents. As of January 31, 1996, to Fund management's 
knowledge, the Directors and officers of the Fund, as a group, owned less 
than 1% of the outstanding common stock of each Investment Fund of the Fund.  
The following table shows aggregate compensation paid to each of the Fund's 
Directors by the Fund and the Fund Complex, respectively, for the fiscal year 
from July 1, 1994 to June 30, 1995.

                                       22
<PAGE>

                               COMPENSATION TABLE

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)                       (2)           (3)         (4)         (5)
Name of                   Aggregate     Pension or  Estimated   Total
Person,                   Compensation  Retirement  Annual      Compensation
Position                  From          Benefits    Benefits    From Registrant
                          Registrant    Accrued     Upon        and Fund
                                        as Part of  Retirement  Complex
                                        Fund                    Paid to
                                        Expenses                Directors

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Barton M. Biggs*                $0          $0         $0             $0
Director and Chairman of
the Board

John D. Barret, II,*            $0          $0         $0             $0
Director

John E. Eckleberry,***        $7,500        $0         $0           $7,500
Director

Gerard E. Jones,*             $8,700        $0         $0          $93,977
Director

Warren J. Olsen,*               $0          $0         $0             $0
Director and President

Andrew McNally IV,*             $0          $0         $0          $13,630
Director

Samuel T. Reeves,*              $0          $0         $0             $0
Director

Fergus Reid,*                   $0          $0         $0             $0
Director

Frederick O. Robertshaw,**   $11,152+       $0         $0          $32,002
Director

Frederick B. Whittemore,**   $21,254+       $0         $0          $69,904
Director (Chairman of the
Board until June 28, 1995)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Elected (Director) as of June 28, 1995.

**Reelected as of June 28, 1995.

***Resigned as of June 28, 1995.

+The total amount of deferred compensation for Frederick O. Robertshaw and
Frederick B. Whittemore was $3,652 and $13,754, respectively.

INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND ADMINISTRATIVE AGREEMENTS

     The Adviser is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group Inc.
("Group"). The principal offices of the Group are located at 1221 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, NY 10020.


                                       23
<PAGE>

     The Group, a renowned global financial services firm, is distinguished by
quality, service and a commitment to excellence. Tracing its roots to the
founding of the U.S. securities industry, the Group remains a leader in the
field. The Group's premier list of clients includes some of the largest
multinational corporations and institutions, governments, nation-states, royal
households and very high-net-worth individuals.

     The Group with its subsidiaries ("Morgan Stanley") maintains a major global
presence with offices in Chicago, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles,
Luxembourg, Melbourne, Milan, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Seoul, Singapore,
Taipei, Tokyo, Toronto and Zurich. With over 9,800 employees, approximately 35%
of which are located outside the U.S., and members of the portfolio management
teams which are native to the countries in which they are investing, Morgan
Stanley is in an exceptional position to interpret the forces that will impact
the world's capital markets today, over the next decade and beyond.


     The investment management division of Morgan Stanley was formed in 1975
under the leadership of Barton Biggs and incorporated as a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Group in 1981. MSAM was formed to offer investment management
and fiduciary services to institutions and high-net-worth individuals. MSAM
offers its clients the same superior service and high standards of integrity
that have been the hallmark of Morgan Stanley since its founding in 1935.

     As one of the world's premier global investment managers affiliated with 
one of the leading global financial services firms and with offices in the 
United States, Europe and Asia, MSAM brings a truly global perspective to the
investment of its clients' assets. This global perspective, coupled with Morgan
Stanley's long-standing tradition of integrity and prudence, puts MSAM in a
unique position to offer investment management services. As compensation for
advisory services for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994 and
June 30, 1995, the Adviser earned fees of approximately $126,000 (and
voluntarily waived all such fees), $2,322,000 (and voluntarily waived a portion
of such fees equal to approximately $1,026,000) and $4,571,000 (and voluntarily
waived a portion of such fees equal to approximately $868,000), respectively.

     Pursuant to the Administration Agreement between the Adviser and the Fund,
the Adviser provides administrative services. For its services under the
Administration Agreement, the Fund pays the Adviser a monthly fee which on an
annual basis equals 0.25% of the average daily net assets of each Investment
Fund. For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994 and June 30, 1995,
the Fund paid administrative fees to MSAM of approximately $58,000, $852,000 and
$1,154,000, respectively.

     Under an Agreement between the Adviser and The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
("Chase," successor in interest to United States Trust Company of New York),
Chase Global Funds Services Company ("CGFSC," formerly Mutual Funds Service
Company, a Chase subsidiary) provides certain administrative services to the
Fund. CGFSC provides operational and administrative services to investment
companies with approximately $61 billion in assets and having approximately
217,452 shareholder accounts as of  September 30, 1995. CGFSC's business address
is 73 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108-3913.


DISTRIBUTION OF FUND SHARES

     Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated (the "Distributor"), a wholly-owned 
subsidiary of Group, serves as the Distributor of the Fund's shares pursuant 
to a Distribution Agreement for the Fund and a Plan of Distribution for the 
Money Market Fund and each class of the Non-Money Funds pursuant to Rule 
12b-1 under the 1940 Act (each, a "Plan" and collectively, the "Plans").  
Under each Plan the Distributor is entitled to receive from these Investment 
Funds a distribution fee, which is accrued daily and paid quarterly, of up to 
0.25% for the Money Market Fund and Class A shares of each of the Non-Money 
Funds, the Class B shares and Class C shares of each of the Non-Money Funds, 
on an annualized basis, of the average daily net assets of such Investment 
Fund or classes. The Distributor expects to allocate most of its fee to 
investment dealers, banks or financial service firms that provide 
distribution, administrative or shareholder services ("Participating 
Dealer").  The actual amount of such compensation is agreed upon by the 
Fund's Board of Directors and by the Distributor.

                                       24
<PAGE>

The Distributor may, in its discretion, voluntarily waive from time to time all
or any portion of its distribution fee and the Distributor is free to make
additional payments out of its own assets to promote the sale of Fund shares.


     The Plans obligate the Investment Funds to accrue and pay to the 
Distributor the fee agreed to under its Distribution Agreement. The Plans do 
not obligate the Investment Funds to reimburse the Distributor for the actual 
expenses the Distributor may incur in fulfilling its obligations under the 
Plan. Thus, under each Plan, even if the Distributor's actual expenses exceed 
the fee payable to it thereunder at any given time, the Investment Funds will 
not be obligated to pay more than that fee. If the Distributor's actual 
expenses are less than the fee it receives, the Distributor will retain the 
full amount of the fee. The Plans for the Money Market Fund, the Class A, 
Class B and Class C shares were most recently approved by the Fund's Board of 
Directors, including those directors who are not "interested persons" of the 
Fund as that term is defined in the 1940 Act and who have no direct or 
indirect financial interest in the operation of a Plan or in any agreements 
related thereto, on September 20, 1995.

     As compensation for providing distribution services to the Fund for the
fiscal year ended June 30, 1995, the Distributor received aggregate fees of
approximately $2,697,893 which were attributable approximately as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              Fiscal Year
                                                                 Ended
                                                             June 30, 1995
                                                             -------------
<S>                                                          <C>

Global Equity Allocation Fund-Class A. . . . . . . . . .         $97,885
Global Equity Allocation Fund-Class B+ . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Global Equity Allocation Fund-Class C+ . . . . . . . . .         366,778
Global Fixed Income Fund-Class A . . . . . . . . . . . .          24,803
Global Fixed Income Fund-Class B+. . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Global Fixed Income Fund-Class C+. . . . . . . . . . . .          56,785
Asian Growth Fund-Class A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         402,870
Asian Growth Fund-Class B+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Asian Growth Fund-Class C+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       1,314,505
Emerging Markets Fund-Class A* . . . . . . . . . . . . .          34,453
Emerging Markets Fund-Class B* . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Emerging Markets Fund-Class C* . . . . . . . . . . . . .         110,688
Latin American Fund-Class A* . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          14,697
Latin American Fund-Class B* . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Latin American Fund-Class C* . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          28,402
American Value Fund-Class A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          35,886
American Value Fund-Class B+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
American Value Fund-Class C+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          93,416
Worldwide High Income Fund-Class A . . . . . . . . . . .          28,283
Worldwide High Income Fund-Class B . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Worldwide High Income Fund-Class C+. . . . . . . . . . .          88,442
Aggressive Equity Fund-Class A** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Aggressive Equity Fund-Class B** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Aggressive Equity Fund-Class C** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
High Yield Fund-Class A**. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
High Yield Fund-Class B**. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
High Yield Fund-Class C**. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
U.S. Real Estate Fund-Class A**. . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
U.S. Real Estate Fund-Class B**. . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
U.S. Real Estate Fund-Class C**. . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
International Magnum Fund-Class A**. . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
International Magnum Fund-Class B**. . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
International Magnum Fund-Class C**. . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Japanese Equity Fund-Class A** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Japanese Equity Fund-Class B** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Japanese Equity Fund-Class C** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Growth and Income Fund-Class A** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Growth and Income Fund-Class B** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Growth and Income Fund-Class C** . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
European Equity Fund-Class A** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
European Equity Fund-Class B** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
European Equity Fund-Class C** . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A
Money Market Fund**. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             N/A

</TABLE>
- ---------------
*    The Emerging Markets and Latin American Funds commenced operations on July
     6, 1994.

**   Not operational as of June 30, 1995.


+    The Class B shares listed above were created on May 1, 1995.  The original
     Class B shares were renamed Class C shares, as listed above, on May 1,
     1995. The Class B shares commenced operations on August 1, 1995. Therefore,
     no fees were incurred for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1995.


                                       25
<PAGE>

CODE OF ETHICS

     The Board of Directors of the Fund has adopted a Code of Ethics under Rule
17j-1 of the 1940 Act which incorporates the Code of Ethics of the Adviser
(together, the "Codes"). The Codes significantly restrict the personal investing
activities of all employees of the Adviser and, as described below, impose
additional, more onerous, restrictions on the Fund's investment personnel.

     The Codes require that all employees of the Adviser preclear any personal
securities investment (with limited exceptions, such as government securities).
The preclearance requirement and associated procedures are designed to identify
any substantive prohibition or limitation applicable to the proposed investment.
The substantive restrictions applicable to all employees of the Adviser include
a ban on acquiring any securities in a "hot" initial public offering and a
prohibition from profiting on short-term trading in securities. In addition, no
employee may purchase or sell any security that at the time is being purchased
or sold (as the case may be), or to the knowledge of the employee is being
considered for purchase or sale, by any fund advised by the Adviser.
Furthermore, the Codes provide for trading "blackout periods" that prohibit
trading by investment personnel of the Fund within periods of trading by the
Fund in the same (or equivalent) security.

CONTROL PERSONS AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF SECURITIES

     The names and addresses of the holders of 5% or more of the outstanding 
shares of any class of the Fund as of March 31, 1996 and the percentage of 
outstanding shares of such classes owned beneficially or of record by such 
shareholders as of such date are, to Fund management's knowledge, as follows:

     GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND: Scott & Stringfellow PSP, C/O David 
Plageman, P.O. Box 1575, Richmond, VA 23213, owned 5% of the total 
outstanding Class A shares of such Investment Fund and Advest, Inc., 90 State 
House Street Square, Hartford, CT 06103, owned 5% of the total outstanding 
Class C shares of such Investment Fund.

     GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND: The Morgan Stanley Group, Inc. ("The Group"), 
1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020, owned 23% of the total 
outstanding Class A shares and 53% of the total outstanding Class C shares of 
such Investment Fund and Piper Jaffray as Cust., FBO Albert Concialdi Trust, 
222 South 9th Street, Minneapolis, MN 55402 owned 18% of the total outstanding 
Class B shares of such Investment Fund.

     ASIAN GROWTH FUND:  Charles Schwab & Co. Inc., Exclusive Benefit of its 
Customers, 101 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA 94101, owned 6% of the 
total outstanding Class A shares of such Investment Fund.

                                       26
<PAGE>


     AMERICAN VALUE FUND:  Morgan Stanley Group Inc., 1221 Avenue of the 
Americas, New York, NY  10020, owned 18% of the total outstanding Class A 
shares and 28% of the total outstanding Class C shares of such Investment 
Fund and James G. McMurray, M.D. Profit Sharing Plan, 303 Williams Avenue, 
Suite 411, Huntsville, AL 35801, owned 8% of the total outstanding Class B 
shares of such Investment Fund. 

     WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND:  FTC & Co., Attn: Datalynx #118, P.O. Box 
173736, Denver, CO  80217, owned 10% of the total outstanding Class A shares 
of such Investment Fund and  Morgan Stanley Group Inc., 1221 Avenue of the 
Americas, New York, NY  10020, owned 17% of the total outstanding Class C 
shares of such Investment Fund.

     EMERGING MARKETS FUND: Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., Exclusive Benefit of 
its Customers, 101 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA 94104, owned 41% of 
the total outstanding Class A shares of such Investment Fund and Advest, 
Inc., 90 State House Street Square, Hartford, CT 06103, 5% of the total 
outstanding Class C shares of such Investment Fund.

     LATIN AMERICAN FUND:  Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., Exclusive Benefit of 
its Customers, 101 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA 94104, owned 17% of 
the total outstanding Class A shares of such Investment Fund; Principal 
Financial Customer FBO Mike A. LePrino, P.O. Box 508, Dallas, TX 75221, owned 
11% of the total outstanding Class B shares of such Investment Fund; and  The 
Group owned 15% of the total outstanding Class C shares of such Investment 
Fund.

     AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND:  Morgan Stanley Group Inc., 1221 Avenue of the 
Americas, New York, NY 10020, owned 68% of the total outstanding Class A 
shares of such Investment Fund, 96% of the total outstanding Class B shares 
of such Investment Fund and 87% of the total outstanding Class C shares of 
such Investment Fund.

     The Group may be deemed a "controlling person" of the Fund by virtue of its
power to control the voting or disposition of the shares it owns. As a result of
its ownership position, the Group may be able to control the outcome of matters
voted on by shareholders of the Funds.

                         MONEY MARKET FUND NET ASSET VALUE

     The Money Market Fund seeks to maintain a stable net asset value per 
share of $1.00.  The Investment Fund uses the amortized cost method of 
valuing its securities, which does not take into account unrealized gains or 
losses.  The use of amortized cost and the maintenance of the Investment 
Fund's per share net asset value at $1.00 is based on the Investment Fund's 
election to operate under the provisions of Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act.  As 
a condition of operating under that Rule, the Money Market Fund must maintain 
a dollar-weighted average portfolio maturity of 90 days or less, purchase 
only instruments having remaining maturities of 397 days or less, and invest 
only in securities which are of "eligible quality" as determined in 
accordance with regulations of the SEC.

     The Rule also requires that the Directors, as a particular 
responsibility within the overall duty of care owed to shareholders, 
establish procedures reasonably designed, taking into account current market 
conditions and the Investment Fund's investment objectives, to stablize the 
net asset value per share as computed for the purposes of sales and 
redemptions at $1.00.  These procedures include periodic review, as the 
Directors deem appropriate and at such intervals as are reasonable in light 
of current market conditions, of the relationship between the amortized cost 
value per share and a net asset value per share based upon available 
indications of market value.  In such review, investments for which market 
quotations are readily available are valued at most recent bid price or 
quoted yield available for such securities or for securities of comparable 
maturity, quality and type as obtained from one or more of the major market  
makers for the securities to be valued.  Other investments and assets are 
valued at  fair value, as determined in good faith by, or under procedures 
adopted by, the Directors.

     In the event of a deviation of over 1/2 of 1% between the Investment 
Fund's net asset value based upon available market quotations or market 
equivalents and $1.00 per share based on amortized cost, the Directors will 
promptly consider what action, if any, should be taken.  The Directors will 
also take such action as they deem appropriate to eliminate or to reduce to 
the extent reasonably practicable any material dilution or other unfair 
results which might arise from differences between the two.  Such action may 
include redemption in kind, selling instruments prior to maturity to realize 
capital gains or losses or to shorten the average maturity, withholding 
dividends, paying distributions from capital or capital gains or utilizing a 
net asset value per share as determined by using available market quotations.

     There are various methods of valuing the assets and of paying dividends 
and distributions from a money market fund.  The Money Market Fund values its 
assets at amortized cost while also monitoring the available market bid price,
or yield equivalents.  Since dividends from net investment income will be 
declared daily and paid monthly, the net asset value per share of the 
Investment Fund will ordinarily remain at $1.00, but the Investment Fund's 
daily dividends will vary in amount.  Net realized short-term capital 
gains, if any, less any capital loss carryforwards, will be distributed 
whenever the Directors determine that such distributions would be in the best 
interest of shareholders, but in any event, at least once a year.  The Money 
Market Fund does not expect to realize any long-term capital gains.  Should 
any such gains be realized, they will be distributed annually, less any 
capital loss carryforwards.


                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

     The Investment Advisory Agreement authorizes the Adviser to select the
brokers or dealers that will execute the purchases and sales of investment
securities for the Investment Fund and directs the Adviser to use its best
efforts to obtain the best available price and most favorable execution with
respect to all transactions for the Investment Fund. The Fund has authorized the
Adviser to pay higher commissions in recognition of brokerage


                                       27
<PAGE>

services which, in the opinion of the Adviser, are necessary for the achievement
of better execution, provided the Adviser believes this to be in the best
interest of the Fund.

     In purchasing and selling securities for the Investment Fund, it is the
Fund's policy to seek to obtain quality execution at the most favorable prices,
through responsible broker-dealers. In selecting broker-dealers to execute the
securities transactions for the Investment Fund, consideration will be given to
such factors as the price of the security, the rate of the commission, the size
and difficulty of the order, the reliability, integrity, financial condition,
general execution and operational capabilities of competing broker-dealers, and
the brokerage and research services which they provide to the Fund. Some
securities considered for investment by the Investment Fund may also be
appropriate for other clients served by the Adviser. If purchase or sale of
securities consistent with the investment policies of the Investment Fund and
one or more of these other clients served by the Adviser is considered at or
about the same time, transactions in such securities will be allocated among the
Investment Fund and clients in a manner deemed fair and reasonable by the
Adviser. Although there is no specified formula for allocating such
transactions, the various allocation methods used by the Adviser, and the
results of such allocations, are subject to periodic review by the Fund's
Directors.

     Subject to the overriding objective of obtaining the best possible
execution of orders, the Adviser may allocate a portion of the Fund's portfolio
brokerage transactions to Morgan Stanley or broker affiliates of Morgan Stanley.
In order for Morgan Stanley or its affiliates to effect any portfolio
transactions for the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration received
by Morgan Stanley or such affiliates 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
a securities exchange during a comparable period of time. Furthermore, the
Directors of the Fund, including a majority of the Directors who are not
"interested persons," have adopted procedures which are reasonably designed to
provide that any commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to Morgan Stanley
or such affiliates are consistent with the foregoing standard. For the  three
fiscal years ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994 and June 30, 1995, the Fund paid
brokerage commissions of approximately $2,497, $618,000 and $115,622,
respectively, to the Distributor, an affiliated broker-dealer.  For the fiscal
years ended June 30, 1993, June 30, 1994 and June 30, 1995, commissions paid to
the Distributor represented approximately 6.8%, 30%, and 7%, respectively, of
the total amount of brokerage commissions paid in such period and which were
paid on transactions that represented 8.9%, 21%, and 3%, respectively, of the
aggregate dollar amount of transactions that incurred commissions paid by the
Fund during such period.

     Investment Fund securities will not be purchased from, or through, or sold
to or through, the Adviser or Morgan Stanley or any "affiliated persons," as
defined in the 1940 Act, of Morgan Stanley when such entities are acting as
principals, except to the extent permitted by law.

                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

     The Fund may from time to time quote various performance figures to
illustrate the Investment Funds' past performance.

     Performance quotations by investment companies are subject to rules adopted
by the SEC, which require the use of standardized performance quotations. In the
case of total return, non-standardized performance quotations may be furnished
by the Fund but must be accompanied by certain standardized performance
information computed as required by the SEC. Current yield and average annual
compounded total return quotations used by the Fund are based on the
standardized methods of computing performance mandated by the SEC. An
explanation of those and other methods used by the Fund to compute or express
performance follows.


                                       28
<PAGE>

TOTAL RETURN

     From time to time the Investment Funds may advertise total return. Total
return figures are based on historical earnings and are not intended to indicate
future performance. The average annual total return is determined by finding the
average annual compounded rates of return over 1-, 5-, and 10-year periods (or
over the life of the Investment Fund) that would equate an initial hypothetical
$1,000 investment to its ending redeemable value. The calculation assumes that
all dividends and distributions are reinvested when paid. The quotation assumes
the amount was completely redeemed at the end of each 1-, 5-, and 10-year
period (or over the life of the Investment Fund) and the deduction of all
applicable Fund expenses on an annual basis.

Total return figures are calculated according to the following formula:

               P(1 + T)to the nth power = ERV
where:
    P     =    a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
    T     =    average annual total return
    n     =    number of years
    ERV   =    ending redeemable value of hypothetical $1,000 payment made at
               the beginning of the 1-, 5-, or 10-year periods at the end of the
               1-, 5-, or 10-year periods (or fractional portion thereof).

     Calculated using the formula above, the average annualized total return,
exclusive of a sales charge or deferred sales charge, for each of the Investment
Funds for the one-year period ended December 31, 1995 and for the period from 
the inception of each Investment Fund through December 31, 1995 are as follows:

                                    One-Year Period
                                         Ended                  Since
                                   December 31, 1995          Inception
                                    ---------------           ---------

Global Equity Allocation Fund
  (commenced operations on
  January 4, 1993)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .     19.65%                 13.82%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .       N/A                    N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .     18.33%                 12.98%

Global Fixed Income Fund
  (commenced operations on
  January 4, 1993)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .      17.65%                 8.54%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .        N/A                   N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .      16.63%                 7.63%

Asian Growth Fund
  (commenced operations on
  June 23, 1993)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .      6.36%                 14.20%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .       N/A                    N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .      5.49%                 13.40%


                                       29
<PAGE>

American Value Fund
  (commenced operations on
  Oct. 18, 1993)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .      19.34%                 9.44%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .        N/A                   N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .      18.43%                 8.57%

Worldwide High Income Fund
  (commenced operations on
   April 21, 1994)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .     19.77%                 12.03%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .       N/A                    N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .     18.88%                 11.18%

Emerging Markets Fund
  (commenced operations on
  July 6, 1994)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .     (7.11)                  (9.97)%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .       N/A                    N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .     (7.80)                 (10.64)%

Latin American Fund
  (commenced operations on
  July 6, 1994)

     Class A Shares . . . . . . . .    (20.43)                 (13.96)%
     Class B Shares+. . . . . . . .       N/A                    N/A
     Class C Shares+. . . . . . . .    (21.19)                 (14.80)%

     The High Yield, U.S. Real Estate, International Magnum, Japanese Equity, 
European Equity and Growth and Income Funds had not commenced operations in 
the period ended December 31, 1995.

     Calculated using the formula above, the total return, exclusive of a 
sales charge or deferred sales charge, for the Aggressive Equity Fund for the 
period from January 2, 1996 to March 31, 1996 are as follows:

                                         Period From
                                       January 2, 1996
                                              to
                                       March 31, 1996
                                       ---------------
Aggressive Equity Fund
  (commenced operations on
  January 2, 1996)

    Class A Shares . . . . . . . .         10.50%*
    Class B Shares . . . . . . . .         10.42%*
    Class C Shares . . . . . . . .         10.33%*



+    The Class B shares listed above were created on May 1, 1995. The original
     Class B shares were renamed Class C shares, as listed above, on May 1,
     1995. The Class B shares commenced operations on August 1, 1995. Therefore,
     no total return information is available.

*    Not Annualized.

YIELD FOR CERTAIN INVESTMENT FUNDS

     From time to time certain of the Investment Funds may advertise yield.

     Current yield reflects the income per share earned by an Investment Fund's
investments.

     Current yield is determined by dividing the net investment income per share
earned during a 30-day base period by the maximum offering price per share on
the last day of the period and annualizing the result. Expenses accrued for the
period include any fees charged to all shareholders during the base period.

     Current yield figures are obtained using the following formula:


                                       30
<PAGE>

Yield = 2[(a - b + 1)to the 6th power - 1]
           -----
            cd


where:
a    =    dividends and interest earned during the period
b    =    expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements)
c    =    the average daily number of shares outstanding during the period that
          were entitled to receive income distributions
d    =    the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the period

     The 30-day yield for the Global Fixed Income Fund as of  December 31, 
1995 was 4.75% for Class A shares, 4.21% for Class B Shares and  4.21% for 
Class  C shares. The 30-day yield for the Worlwide High Income Fund as of 
December 31, 1995 was 10.15% for Class A shares, 9.92% for Class B shares and 
9.92% for Class C shares.

COMPARISONS

     To help investors better evaluate how an investment in an Investment Fund
of Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. might satisfy their investment objective,
advertisements regarding the Fund may discuss various measures of Fund
performance as reported by various financial publications. Advertisements may
also compare performance (as calculated above) to performance as reported by
other investments, indices and averages. The following publications may be used:

     (a)  Dow Jones Composite Average or its component averages - an unmanaged
index composed of 30 blue-chip industrial corporation stocks (Dow Jones
Industrial Average), 15 utilities company stocks and 20 transportation stocks.
Comparisons of performance assume reinvestment of dividends.

     (b)  Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index or its component indices - unmanaged
index composed of 400 industrial stocks, 40 financial stocks, 40 utilities
company stocks and 20 transportation stocks. Comparisons of performance assume
reinvestment of dividends.

     (c)  The New York Stock Exchange composite or component indices - unmanaged
indices of all industrial, utilities, transportation and finance company stocks
listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

     (d)  Wilshire 5000 Equity Index or its component indices - represents the
return on the market value of all common equity securities for which daily
pricing is available. Comparisons of performance assume reinvestment of
dividends.

     (e)  Lipper - Mutual Fund Performance Analysis and Lipper - Fixed Income
Fund Performance Analysis - measures total return and average current yield for
the mutual fund industry. Ranks individual mutual fund performance over
specified time periods, assuming reinvestment of all distributions, exclusive of
any applicable sales charges.

     (f)  Morgan Stanley Capital International EAFE Index - an arithmetic,
market value-weighted average of the performance of over 1,000 securities on the
stock exchanges of countries in Europe, Australia and the Far East.

     (g)  Goldman Sachs 100 Convertible Bond Index - currently includes 67 bonds
and 33 preferred. The original list of names was generated by screening for
convertible issues of $100 million or greater in market capitalization. The
index is priced monthly.

     (h)  Salomon Brothers GNMA Index - includes pools of mortgages originated
by private lenders and guaranteed by the mortgage pools of the Government
National Association.


                                       31
<PAGE>

     (i)  Salomon Brothers High Grade Corporate Bond Index - consists of
publicly issued, non-convertible corporate bonds rated AA or AAA. It is
value-weighted, total return index, including approximately 800 issues with
maturities of 12 years or greater.

     (j)  Salomon Brothers Broad Investment Grade Bond - is a market-weighted
index that contains approximately 4700 individually priced investment grade
corporate bonds rated BBB or better, United States Treasury/agency issues and
mortgage pass-through securities.

     (k)  Salomon Brothers World Bond Index - measures the total return
performance of high-quality securities in major sectors of the international
bond market. The index covers approximately 600 bonds from 10 currencies:

               Australian Dollars            Netherlands Guilder
               Canadian Dollars              Swiss Francs
               European Currency Units       UK Pounds Sterling
               French Francs                 U.S. Dollars
               Japanese Yen                  German Deutsche Marks

     (l)  J.P. Morgan Traded Global Bond Index - is an unmanaged index of
government bond issues and includes Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom and United
States gross of withholding tax.

     (m)  Lehman LONG-TERM Treasury Bond - is composed of all bonds covered by
the Lehman Treasury Bond Index with maturities of 10 years or greater.

     (n)  Lehman Aggregate Bond Index - is an unmanaged index made up of the
Government/Corporate Index, the Mortgage-Backed Securities Index and the Asset-
Backed Securities Index.

     (o)  NASDAQ Industrial Index - is composed of more than 3,000 industrial
issues. It is a value-weighted index calculated on price change only and does
not include income.

     (p)  Composite Indices - 70% Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index and 30%
NASDAQ Industrial Index; 36% Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index and 65% Salomon
Brothers High Grade Bond Index; and 65% Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index and
35% Salomon Brothers High Grade Bond Index.

     (q)  CDA Mutual Fund Report, published by CDA Investment Technologies, Inc.
- - analyzes price, current yield, risk, total return and average rate of return
(average annual compounded growth rate) over specified time periods for the
mutual fund industry.

     (r)  Mutual Fund Source Book, published by Morningstar, Inc. - analyzes
price, yield, risk and total return for equity funds.

     (s)  Financial publications: Business Week, Changing Times, Financial
World, Forbes, Fortune, Money, Barron's, Consumer's Digest, Financial Times,
Global Investor, Investor's Daily, Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.,
Morningstar, Inc., New York Times, Personal Investor, Wall Street Journal and
Weisenberger Investment Companies Service - publications that rate fund
performance over specified time periods.

     (t)  Consumer Price Index (or cost of Living Index), published by the
United States Bureau of Labor Statistics - a statistical measure of change, over
time, in the price of goods and services in major expenditure groups.


                                       32
<PAGE>

     (u)  Stocks, Bonds, Bills and Inflation, published by Hobson Associates -
historical measure of yield, price and total return for common and small company
stock, long-term government bonds, Treasury bills and inflation.

     (v)  Savings and Loan Historical Interest Rates - as published in the
United States Savings & Loan League Fact Book.

     (w)  Historical data supplied by the research departments of First Boston
Corporation, the J.P. Morgan companies, Salomon Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner & Smith, Lehman Brothers Inc. and Bloomberg L.P.

     (x)  The MSCI Combined Far East Free ex-Japan Index, a
market-capitalization weighted index comprising stocks in Hong Kong, Indonesia,
Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Korea is included in the
MSCI Combined Far East Free ex Japan Index at 20% of its market capitalization.


     (y)  C.S. First Boston High Yield Index - generally includes over 180 
issues with an average maturity range of seven to ten years with a minimum 
capitalization of $100 million. All issues are individually trader-priced 
monthly.

     (z)  Russell 2500 Small Company Index - is comprised of the bottom 500
stocks in the Russell 1000 Index which represents the universe of stocks from
which most active money managers typically select; and all the stocks in the
Russell 2000 Index. The largest security in the index has a market
capitalization of approximately $1.3 billion.

     (aa) Morgan Stanley Capital International World Index - An arithmetic,
market value-weighted average of the performance of over 1,470 securities listed
on the stock exchanges of countries in Europe, Australia, the Far East, Canada
and the United States.

     (bb) Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Global Latin 
American Index - An unmanaged, arithmetic market value weighted average of 
the performance of over 196 securities on the stock exchanges of Argentina, 
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela. (Assumes reinvestment of 
dividends.)

     (cc) IFC Global Total Return Composite Index - An unmanaged index of common
stocks and includes 18 developing countries in Latin America, East and South
Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa (net of dividends reinvested).

     (dd) EMBI+ - Expanding on the EMBI, which includes only Bradys, the EMBI+
includes a broader group of Brady Bonds, loans, Eurobonds and U.S. Dollar local
markets instruments.  A more comprehensive benchmark than EMBI, the EMBI+ covers
49 instruments from 14 countries. At $98 billion, its market cap is nearly 50%
higher than the EMBI's. The EMBI+ is not, however, intended to replace the EMBI
but rather to complement it. The EMBI continues to represent the most liquid,
most easily traded segment of the market, while the EMBI+ represents the broader
market, including more of the assets that investors typically hold in their
portfolios. Both of these indices are published daily.

     (ee) The MSCI Latin America Global Index - is a broad-based market cap 
weighted composite index covering at least 60% of markets in Mexico, 
Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela (Assumes reinvestment 
of dividends.)

     (ff) Morgan Stanley Capital International Japan Index -  An unmanaged 
index of common stock (assumes dividends reinvested).

     (gg) NAREIT Index - An unmanaged market weighted index of tax qualified 
REITs (excluding healthcare REITs) listed on the New York Stock Exchange, 
American Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ National Market System, including 
dividends.


     In assessing such comparisons of performance an investor should keep in
mind that the composition of the investments in the reported indices and
averages is not identical to the composition of investments in the Fund's
Investment Funds, that the averages are generally unmanaged, and that the items
included in the calculations of such averages may not be identical to the
formula used by the Fund to calculate its performance.


                                       33
<PAGE>

In addition, there can be no assurance that the Fund will continue this
performance as compared to such other averages.

AMERICAN VALUE FUND

     The American Value Fund's portfolio managers are "value" investors, and as
such, their mission is to buy stocks of quality U.S.-based companies they
believe to be selling below their intrinsic worth and sell them when they reach
fair value.  This involves buying quality stocks when they are out of favor with
the majority of investors and selling them after the market has realized their
fair value.

     Since 1926, small market capitalization stocks have, on average,
outperformed large market capitalization stocks by 2%-3% annualized.  Small
capitalized stocks are defined as the five smallest market capitalization
deciles of the Center for Research in Security Prices at the University of
Chicago ("CRSP"); large capitalization stocks constitute the five largest CRSP
market capitalization deciles.

     Wilshire Associates reports small cap value stocks (an index made up of the
lowest price-to-book, lowest price-to-earnings and highest yielding small
capitalization stocks) have outperformed the average small cap stock as well as
the average small cap growth stock during the period of 1978 to 1994, and with
less risk than the average small cap growth stock (an index made up of small
capitalization stocks with the highest earnings growth, highest price-to-book
and highest price-to-earnings ratios as shown in the chart below).

             [THE FOLLOWING IS A NARRATIVE DESCRIPTION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

A graph entitled "Small Cap Value Has Provided A Favorable Risk/Return Profile"
indicates returns from 14.3% to 19.5% on the vertical axis and risk (standard
deviation) from 14.9% to 24.3% on the horizontal axis.  The following points are
indicated on the graph:

                        For Small Cap Value Portfolio:
              Return of 19.5% at risk (standard deviation) of 15.9%

                 For Small Cap Mean Between Value and Growth:
              Return of 15.9% at risk (standard deviation) of 20.6%

                          Small Cap Growth Portfolio:
              Return of 15.6% at risk (standard deviation) of 24.3%

       For S&P 500:  Return of 14.3% at risk (standard deviation) of 14.9%

          Source:  Wilshire Associates style performance data 1978-1994

                   [END OF NARRATIVE DESCRIPTION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

Past performance is no guarantee of future results.  The S&P 500 and the Style
Portfolio Data are unmanaged indices of securities.  The risk factor is an
annualized standard deviation of the annual returns.  The Small Cap Value Index
is a straightforward composite benchmark.  It is the average of three separate
indices:  Low Price/Book Index ("Low P/B"), High Yield Index, and Low
Price/Earnings Index ("Low P/E").  Each index is computed by sorting the
companies of stocks ranked 501-2000 by market capitalization by the fundamental
measure.  The universe is then split into equally weighted deciles based on the
sorted fundamental measure.  The Low P/B and the Low P/E indices are simply the
unweighted returns from the 8th and 9th decile.  The High Yield Index is the
unweighted return from the 2nd and 3rd decile.  The process is a repetitive,
rigid algorithm which is not subject to manager selectivity.  The Small Cap
Index is the Decile 6-8 index of the Center for Research in Security Prices of
the University of Chicago ("CRSP").  The CRSP indices are composed of nearly all
common stocks traded on the NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ within a given market-cap
range.  The size cutoffs are determined by ranking all NYSE stocks by market
cap, forming deciles, and then adding all the issues that fit the size range
from the other deciles.  The CRSP Decile 6-8 represents the sixth through eighth
deciles.  The market


                                       34
<PAGE>

capitalization ranges characterized by both indices are consistent with each
other and represent the MSAM/Chicago definition of the small capitalization
universe.

$10,000 invested 20 years ago in an unmanaged basket of small cap value stocks
would have significantly outperformed the other investments shown in the chart
below:

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

A graph entitled "Growth of a $10,000 investment on January 1, 1971 through
September 30, 1995"  indicates returns of $10,000 to $710,000 on the vertical
axis and calendar quarters from the fourth quarter of 1970 to the third quarter
of 1995 on the horizontal axis.  Every sixth quarter is presented instead of
lines covering each quarter.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


In Thousands (except last column)

<S>        <C>    <C>     <C>    <C>     <C>    <C>    <C>   <C>     <C>     <C>    <C>     <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>

70Q4       72Q2   73Q4    75Q2   76Q4    78Q2   79Q4   81Q2  82Q4    84Q2    85Q4   87Q2    88Q4   90Q2   91Q4   93Q2 94Q4  9/30/95
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small Cap  $10    $10     $10    $20     $30    $35    $55   $70     $110    $170   $240    $270   $270   $390   $525 $539  $657
Value
$10
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small Cap  10     10      10     15      20     30     45    55      70      100    120     110    135    160    210  $237  $304
10
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap  10     10      10     15      15     15     15    30      35      50     65      65     85     110    130  $130  $169
10
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 Year    10     10      10     12      15     15     15    30      30      35     40      45     50     60     75   $ 74  $ 85
Govt Bond
10
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T-Bill     10     10      10     12      15     15     20    30      35      35     40      45     50     55     58   $  60 $ 62
10
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

              [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES GRAPHIC
                      MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

Past performance is no guarantee of future results.  Small cap securities are
generally more volatile than T-Bills, 10-year government bonds or the S&P 500.
The returns shown assume the reinvestment of all distributions of income and
capital gains and do not reflect the deduction of sales charges or management
fees and expenses that would be applicable to a managed basket of equity
securities.  The deduction of such sales charges and management fees and
expenses would reduce the returns shown.  It is not possible to invest directly
in an index of equity securities, including any of the MSCI indices.  An
investment strategy may be designed to replicate an index of equity securities
and may be more or less successful in achieving such a replication.

     THE AMERICAN VALUE FUND'S PORTFOLIO.  The portfolio universe consists of
the next 2,000 companies that rank in size following the 500 largest U.S.
corporations.  The portfolio consists of approximately 100 companies, many of
which have been in business for over one hundred years and meet the stringent
criteria set forth by Morgan Stanley's portfolio management team.  Companies in
the portfolio must be bargain-priced, with quality products and a dominant
market niche.  They must demonstrate a sustainable growth rate, a healthy
financial position and have a history of paying dividends.

     Careful analysis, using this criteria, helps Morgan Stanley portfolio
managers distinguish an underpriced stock that is in a position to recover, from
one that will continue to decline.

     THE MORGAN STANLEY DISTINCTION.  The portfolio managers' goal is to
capitalize on the market's tendency to overreact to bad news.  Often a single
negative event that has been exaggerated in the stock market can cause a stock's
price to decline much more than is justified by the company's actual prospects.
This type of discrepancy between a company's market price and its intrinsic
worth (based on its earnings, cash flow, and/or asset values) is viewed by the
portfolio managers as an opportunity.


                                       35
<PAGE>


     The managers of the American Value Fund are long-term investors, not short-
term traders.  They recognize that the potentially higher rate of return
available from small stocks cannot be achieved overnight.  Value takes time to
be realized.

     The Fund's portfolio managers seek companies paying high, sustainable
dividends.  Dividends are important because they provide a good indication that
a company has not only quality, shareholder-oriented management, but also
financial strength.

THE ASIAN GROWTH POTENTIAL

     Annual growth, as measured by Gross National Product, in the 1990s is
projected to be 5.3% in Asia as compared with 2% in both North America and
Europe, according to the World Bank Atlas.  According to Morgan Stanley
research, the economies in this region are less mature and are expected to have
a higher rate of sustainable growth well into the next century.

     According to research conducted by J. Walter Thompson, by the year 2000,
Asia will have two-thirds of the world's population; only four of the world's
largest cities will be non-Asian; affluent Asian households will rise by 50% to
51 million; and per capita Gross Domestic Product ("GDP") will double.  In
addition, 240 million Asian households will have televisions (a 70% increase in
the past 5 years, as compared with a 4.3% increase in Britain and a 6.7%
increase in the U.S.).  China currently has one-quarter of the world's
population and is projected to have 200 million middle-class consumers by the
year 2000.  By 2012, China, alone, is projected to have the world's largest
economy.

     Annualized returns of stock markets in this region are, in some cases,
twice that of the U.S., according to Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI)
Indices.  On a relative basis, stock prices in this region are less than many
countries in the world, according to MSCI.

     MORGAN STANLEY:  THE ASIAN AUTHORITY.  Morgan Stanley has a strong
commitment to the Asian region.  The portfolio team is based in Morgan Stanley's
Singapore office, with managers who are native to the region and the markets
they analyze, offering local insights that have contributed to a superior
performance record.  Morgan Stanley has over 1,250 employees located in the Far
East and has offices in Singapore, Shanghai, Taipei and Seoul.

                              ESTIMATED GNP GROWTH
                                    1990-2000

               Asia                                        5.3%
               North America                               2.0%
               South America                               2.2%
               Europe                                      2.0%
               Middle East                                 1.6%
               Africa                                      0.3%
               Source:  World Bank Atlas

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

The following replaces a bar graph that indicates percentage returns on the
vertical axis and countries on the horizontal axis:


                                       36
<PAGE>

                        SUPERIOR HISTORIC MARKET RETURNS
                   1990-1994 ANNUALIZED RETURNS* (US DOLLARS)

               Hong Kong                                  27.18%
               Philippines                                21.44
               CFEFxJ                                     20.14
               Thailand                                   17.47
               Singapore                                  16.02
               Malaysia                                   13.86
               USA                                         9.16
               World                                       4.24
               EAFE                                        1.82
               Korea                                       0.26
               Indonesia                                  -2.15
               Taiwan                                     -2.98
               Japan                                      -3.43

Past performance of Asian markets is not a guarantee of their future performance
and is not indicative of the Fund's future performance.
* Gross Dividends
Sources: MSCI Indices

                  [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

Past Performance is no guarantee of future results.  The MSCI indices represent
an unmanaged basket of equity securities.  The returns shown assume the
reinvestment of all distributions of income and capital gains and do not reflect
the deduction of sales charges or management fees and expenses that would be
applicable to a managed basket of equity securities.  The deduction of such
sales charges and management fees and expenses would reduce the returns shown.
It is not possible to invest directly in an index of equity securities,
including any of the MSCI indices.  An investment strategy may be designed to
replicate an index of equity securities and may be more or less successful in
achieving such a replication.

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

The following replaces a bar graph that indicates price earnings ratios in
percentages from 0-100% on the vertical axis and countries on the horizontal
axis:

                   PRICE EARNINGS/RATIO* AS OF DECEMBER, 1994

               Japan                                      97.3%
               Taiwan (E)                                 36.0
               Philippines                                28.0
               Malaysia                                   24.2
               World                                      23.2
               Korea (E)                                  22.0
               Indonesia                                  20.9
               Thailand                                   20.1


                                       37
<PAGE>

               Singapore                                  19.5
               CFEFxJ(E)                                  19.4
               USA                                        16.9
               Hong Kong                                  13.3

*Trailing 12 Months
Source: MSCI
(E) Estimate, not from MSCI, 12/31/94

                  [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

EMERGING MARKETS' GROWTH POTENTIAL

Annual growth, as measured by Gross National Product, in the 1990s is projected
to be 6.5% in emerging markets as compared with 2.5% in industrial countries,
according to the World Bank. According to Morgan Stanley research, the economies
in this region are less mature and are expected to have a higher rate of
sustainable growth well into the next century. If the high savings in the
emerging markets countries as of 1991 are sustained, the savings will provide
much of the needed capital for economic growth:

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

The following replaces a bar graph that indicates percentage of growth from
0-50% on the vertical axis and countries on the horizontal axis:

                        GROWTH - HIGH SAVINGS RATE (1991)

               Singapore                                 45%
               China                                      43
               Korea                                      37
               Indonesia                                  37
               Thailand                                   34
               Japan                                      34
               Hong Kong                                  33
               Malaysia                                   33
               Taiwan                                     30
               EEC(1)                                     22
               India(1)                                   20
               Mexico                                     20
               Chile                                      18
               Philippines                                16
               Brazil                                     16
               Argentina                                  16
               USA                                        15

Source: World Bank
Note: (1) 1989 data.

                  [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]


                                       38
<PAGE>

Morgan Stanley believes that population growth projected by the World Bank for
the 1990s, particularly among the middle class, will create buying power and
fuel demand for products, leading to economic growth and industrial
sophistication:

                                   Total Population     Middle Classes
                                           (Percent Per Annum)

          Developed Countries            0.4%                1.1%
          Developing Countries           1.9%                5.9%
          SOURCE: WORLD BANK

A large percentage of the population is under the age of 15 in emerging
countries. As these children mature, they will greatly increase consumption of
goods and services.

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

The following replaces a bar graph that indicates the percentages of population
under the age of 15 ranging from 0-50% on the horizontal axis and countries on
the vertical axis.

                             YOUNG POPULATION (1991)
                              Source: The Economist
                               Note:(1) 1990 data.

               USA                                       22%
               Argentina(1)                               30
               Brazil(1)                                  35
               Chile(1)                                   31
               Mexico(1)                                  37
               Venezuela(1)                               38
               Indonesia                                  37
               S. Korea                                   27
               Malaysia                                   37
               Philippines                                39
               Taiwan                                     27
               Thailand                                   35
               India                                      36
               Turkey(1)                                  35
               Jordan(1)                                  44
               Nigeria(1)                                 47

     A large percentage of the population is under the age of 15 in emerging
countries. As these children mature, they will have a tremendous impact on
consumption of goods and services.

                  [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

     Historically, the average annual total return of emerging markets has
exceeded that of developed countries, and other indicators point to significant
future growth in the emerging markets:


                                       39
<PAGE>

                          THE CASE FOR EMERGING MARKETS

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            RETURNS   GROWTH       VALUE       UNDER-        DIVERSI-
                                               REPRESEN-     FICATION
                                               TATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            Annual    Real                           Foreign
            Returns   GNP     Real                   Inv.
            (1940-    Growth  EPS              Mkt   % of
            1993)     (1994-  Growth   P/E     Cap/  Institutional   Average
                      2000)   (1994)   1994E   GNP   Assets          Correlation

Emerging    17%       6.5%    15%      24.0x   30%   0.6%            0.07
Markets

Developed   13%       2.5%    5%       26.5x   70%   99.4%           0.51%
Markets

                         SOURCE: MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH

             THE RETURNS DO NOT REFLECT ANY ASSET-BASED CHARGES FOR
                    INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT OR OTHER EXPENSES.

              ASSUMES REINVESTMENT OF ALL DIVIDENDS/DISTRIBUTIONS.

      THE PAST PERFORMANCE OF EMERGING MARKETS, HOWEVER, IS NO GUARANTEE OF
                 THE EMERGING MARKETS FUND'S FUTURE PERFORMANCE.

MORGAN STANLEY: AN AUTHORITY IN LATIN AMERICA AND EMERGING MARKETS

     Over one-third of Morgan Stanley's 9,200 employees live and work outside
the United States, enabling them to recognize opportunities as they arise and,
more importantly, to act on them quickly.


     At Decmeber 31, 1995, MSAM, together with its affiliated asset management 
companies, had approximately $57.4 billion in assets under management and 
fiduciary advice, including over $8 billion invested in global emerging 
markets.

     Morgan Stanley portfolio managers have access to proprietary research 
through Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI), the generally recognized 
standard for measuring the performance of international securities worldwide. 
MSCI monitors approximately 4,000 of some of the world's leading companies, 
which account for about 80% of the total market value of the world's stock 
markets.

GROWTH POTENTIAL IN LATIN AMERICA

     An economic transformation is occurring in Latin America today, which we
believe is creating a positive environment for investors. Old (protected)
economies are being transformed into new (open) free market economies, as
evidenced by many changes, including:

          Old (Protected)                    New (Open)
          ---------------                    ----------
          High import tariffs                Low tariffs
          Regulated exchange rates           Free exchange rates
          Regulated interest rates           Market interest rates
          Investment restrictions            Open foreign investment
          High tax rates                     Competitive tax rates
          Command economy                    Market economy
          Employment priority                Efficiency priority


                                       40
<PAGE>

          Subsidies                          Competitive market prices
          State-owned industry               Privatization
          Deficit spending                   Fiscal austerity
          Capital flight                     Return capital
          High inflation                     Lower inflation

     According to Morgan Stanley research, the economies in this region are less
mature and are expected to have higher rates of sustainable growth well into the
next century. We believe the greatest potential for gain is when situations are
improving and not when they are mature.

            [THE FOLLOWING IS A TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

The following replaces a bell curve line graph that indicates development
increasing upward in the vertical axis and time of maturity increasing to the
right in the horizontal axis:

                           EMERGING MARKET LIFE CYCLE

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COUNTRIES       BEHIND-THE-     EMERGING       ESTABLISHED      MATURE
                SCENES          MARKETS        GROWTH           ECONOMIES
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany                                                         X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S.                                                            X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Japan                                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.K.                                                            X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spain                                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hong Kong                                      X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Singapore                                      X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portugal                                       X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Taiwan                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Greece                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Korea                           X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Malaysia                        X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Turkey                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thailand                        X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mexico                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chile                           X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Argentina                       X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Venezuela                       X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indonesia                       X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Philippines                     X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
India                           X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brazil                          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pakistan                        X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sri Lanka                       X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Peru                            X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Egypt           X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sub-Saharan
Africa          X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eastern Europe  X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cuba            X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vietnam         X


                                       41
<PAGE>

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Iran            X
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Source: Morgan Stanley Research

                  [END OF TABULAR REPRESENTATION THAT REPLACES
                  GRAPHIC MATERIAL FOR EDGAR FILING PURPOSES.]

     Historically, this region's economy has grown faster than the industrial
countries, as measured by Gross Domestic Product, and the World Bank projects it
to grow twice as fast as the industrial countries by the year 2000.

                                                   Real GDP Growth
                                             1965-93             1993-2000
                                                                 Forecast
          Latin America                        4.3%                 5.0%
          Industrial Countries                 3.1%                 2.5%
          SOURCE: WORLD BANK

PAST PERFORMANCE OF LATIN AMERICAN MARKETS, HOWEVER, IS NO GUARANTEE OF THE
LATIN AMERICAN FUND'S FUTURE PERFORMANCE.

     Morgan Stanley believes that the population growth projected by the World
Bank for the 1990s in these developing countries, particularly among the middle
class, will create buying power and fuel demand for products, leading to
economic growth and industrial sophistication:

                                              Growth of           Growth of
                                          Total Population      Middle Classes
                                                             (Percent Per Annum)

          Developed Countries                    0.4%                1.1%
          Developing Countries                   1.9%                5.9%
          SOURCE: WORLD BANK

     According to Morgan Stanley research, historically, annualized returns of
stock markets in this region have been superior, and on a relative basis, stock
prices in this region are significantly lower than developed markets as well as
other emerging markets, as measured by price/earnings ratios.

                                              1988-93               1993
                                         Annualized Return         Return
          S & P 500                            14.5%                10.0%
          T-Bills                               5.7%                 3.1%
          Emerging Growth Stocks               18.4%                21.0%
          U.S. Government Bonds                10.7%                 8.2%
          EAFE                                  2.0%                32.6%
          Japanese Stocks                      -7.0%                25.5%
          Emerging Market Equities             16.5%                67.5%
          MSCI LATIN AMERICAN                  42.4%                49.1%
          SOURCE: MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH

     The returns do not reflect any asset-based charges for investment
management or other expenses. Assumes reinvestment of all
dividends/distribution.  Past Performance is no guarantee of the Latin American
Fund's future performance.


                                       42
<PAGE>

                                         Price/Earnings Ratio

          Developed Markets*                    28.4X
          Emerging Markets*                     13.9X
          LATIN AMERICA**                       17.2X
          SOURCE: EMERGING MARKETS P/E REPRESENTED BY THE IFC INDEX, DEVELOPED
MARKETS BY MSCI WORLD
          *    PROSPECTIVE 1995
          **   TRAILING AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994

                                         Market Cap/GNP
                                     (As of March 3, 1994)

          Developed Markets                   .7
          Emerging Markets                    .3
          LATIN AMERICA                       .3
          SOURCE: EMERGING MARKETS P/E REPRESENTED BY THE IFC INDEX, DEVELOPED
MARKETS BY MSCI WORLD

                               GENERAL INFORMATION

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES AND VOTING RIGHTS


     The Fund's Articles of Incorporation permit the Directors to issue 
13.375 billion shares of common stock, par value $.001 per share, from an 
unlimited number of Investment Funds. Currently the Fund is authorized to 
offer shares of fifteen Investment Funds, fourteen of which have Class A, 
Class B and Class C shares.


     The shares of each Investment Fund of the Fund are fully paid and
non-assessable, and have no preference as to conversion, exchange, dividends,
retirement or other features. The shares of each Investment Fund of the Fund
have no pre-emptive rights. The shares of the Fund have non-cumulative voting
rights, which means that the holders of more than 50% of the shares voting for
the election of Directors can elect 100% of the Directors if they choose to do
so. A shareholder is entitled to one vote for each full share owned (and a
fractional vote for each fractional share owned), then standing in his name on
the books of the Fund.

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

     The Fund's policy is to distribute substantially all of each Investment
Fund's net investment income, if any. Each Investment Fund may choose to make
sufficient distributions of net capital gains to avoid liability for federal
excise tax. An Investment Fund will not be subject to federal income tax on
capital gains or ordinary income distributed to shareholders so long as it
qualifies as a RIC (see discussion under "Dividends and Distributions" and
"Taxes" in the Prospectus). However, the Fund may also choose to retain net
realized capital gains and pay taxes on such gains. The amounts of any income
dividends or distributions cannot be predicted.

     Any dividend or distribution paid shortly after an investor purchases
shares of an Investment Fund will reduce the per share net asset value of that
Investment Fund by the per share amount of the dividend or distribution.
Furthermore, such dividends or distributions, although in effect a return of
capital, are subject to income taxes to shareholders subject to taxes as set
forth in the Prospectus.

     As set forth in the Prospectus, unless the shareholder elects otherwise in
writing, all dividends and distributions of an Investment Fund are automatically
reinvested in additional shares of that Investment Fund at net asset value as of
the business day following the record date. This reinvestment policy will remain
in effect until the shareholder notifies the Transfer Agent in writing at least
three days prior to a record date that the shareholder has elected either the
Income Option (income dividends in cash and distributions in additional shares


                                       43
<PAGE>


at net asset value) or the Cash Option (both income dividends and distributions
in cash). No initial sales charge or CDSC is imposed on shares of any of the
Investment Funds, including the Non-Money Funds, that are purchased through the
automatic reinvestment of dividends and distributions of an Investment Fund.


     Each Investment Fund generally will be treated as a separate corporation
(and hence as a separate "regulated investment company") for federal tax
purposes. Any net capital gains of any Investment Fund, whether or not
distributed to investors, cannot be offset against net capital losses of any
other Investment Fund.

CUSTODY ARRANGEMENTS

     Chase serves as the Fund's domestic custodian.  Chase is not affiliated
with Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated. Morgan Stanley Trust Company, Brooklyn,
NY, acts as the Fund's custodian for foreign assets held outside the United
States and employs subcustodians who were approved by the Directors of the Fund
in accordance with Rule 17f-5 adopted by the SEC under the 1940 Act. Morgan
Stanley Trust Company is an affiliate of Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated. In
the selection of foreign subcustodians, the Directors consider a number of
factors, including, but not limited to, the reliability and financial stability
of the institution, the ability of the institution to provide efficiently the
custodial services required for the Fund, and the reputation of the institution
in the particular country or region.

                      DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES AND RATINGS

I.  DESCRIPTION OF COMMERCIAL PAPER AND BOND RATINGS

     EXCERPTS FROM MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. ("MOODY'S") DESCRIPTION OF
BOND RATINGS:  Aaa - Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be the best
quality. They carry the smallest degree of investment risk and are generally
referred to as "gilt-edged." Interest payments are protected by a large or by an
exceptionally stable margin, and principal is secure. While the various
protective elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized are
most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.  Aa -
Bonds which are rated Aa are judged to be of high quality by all standards.
Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as high grade
bonds. They are rated lower than the best bonds because margins of protection
may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective elements
may be of greater amplitude or there may be other elements present which make
the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities. Moody's
applies numerical modifiers 1, 2 and 3 in the Aa and A rating categories. The
modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks at a higher end of the rating
category, modifier 2 indicates a mid-range rating and the modifier 3 indicates
that the issue ranks at the lower end of the rating category.

     A - Bonds which are rated A possess many favorable investment attributes 
and are to be considered as upper medium grade obligations. Factors giving 
security to principal and interest are considered adequate but elements may 
be present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the 
future. Baa - Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium grade 
obligations, i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured. 
Interest payments and principal security appear adequate for the present but 
certain protective elements may be lacking or may be characteristically 
unreliable over any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding 
investment characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as 
well.  Ba - Bonds which are rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements; 
their future cannot be considered as well assured. Often the protection of 
interest and principal payments may be very moderate, and thereby not well 
safeguarded during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty of 
position characterizes bonds in this class.  B -Bonds which are rated B 
generally lack characteristics of the desirable investment. Assurance of 
interest and principal payments or of maintenance of other terms of the 
contract over any long period of time may be small.   Caa -Bonds which are 
rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in default or there may be 
present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest. Ca - Bonds 
which are rated Ca represent obligations which are speculative in a high 
degree. Such issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings. C 
- - Bonds which are rated C

                                       44
<PAGE>

are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues so rated can be regarded as
having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.

     EXCERPTS FROM STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION ("S&P") DESCRIPTION OF BOND
RATINGS: AAA - Bonds rated AAA have the highest rating assigned by Standard &
Poor's to a debt obligation and indicate an extremely strong capacity to pay
principal and interest.  AA - Bonds rated AA have a very strong capacity to pay
interest and repay principal and differ from the highest rated issues only to a
small degree.  A - Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay interest and
repay principal although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse
effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than bonds in higher
rated categories.  BBB - Debt rated BBB is regarded as having an adequate
capacity to pay interest and repay principal. Whereas it normally exhibits
adequate protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing
circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay interest and
repay principal for debt in this category than for debt in higher rated
categories.  BB, B, CCC, CC - Debt rated BB, B, CCC and CC is regarded, on
balance, as predominantly speculative with respect to capacity to pay interest
and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation. BB indicates
the lowest degree of speculation and CC the highest degree of speculation. While
such debt will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these
are outweighed by large uncertainties or major risk exposures to adverse
conditions.  C - The rating C is reserved for income bonds on which no interest
is being paid.  D - Debt rated D is in default, and payment of interest and/or
repayment of principal is in arrears.

     DESCRIPTION OF MOODY'S RATINGS OF STATE AND MUNICIPAL NOTES: Moody's
ratings for state and municipal notes and other short-term obligations are
designated Moody's Investment Grade ("MIG"). Symbols used are as follows: MIG-1
- - best quality, enjoying strong protection from established cash flows of funds
for their servicing or from established broad-based access to the market for
refinancing, or both; MIG-2 - high quality with margins of protection ample
although not so large as in the preceding group.

     DESCRIPTION OF MOODY'S HIGHEST COMMERCIAL PAPER RATING: Prime-1 ("P1") -
Judged to be of the best quality. Their short-term debt obligations carry the
smallest degree of investment risk.

     EXCERPT FROM S&P'S RATING OF MUNICIPAL NOTE ISSUES: S-1+ -  very strong
capacity to pay principal and interest; SP-1 - strong capacity to pay principal
and interest.

     DESCRIPTION OF S&P'S HIGHEST COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS: A-1+ - this
designation indicates the degree of safety regarding timely payment is
overwhelming. A-1 - this designation indicates the degree of safety regarding
timely payment is very strong.

     WITH RESPECT TO RATINGS BY IBCA LTD., the designation A1 by IBCA, Ltd.
indicates that the obligation is supported by a very strong capacity for timely
repayment. Those obligations rated A1+ are supported by the highest capacity for
timely repayment. Obligations rated A2 are supported by a strong capacity for
timely repayment, although such capacity may be susceptible to adverse changes
in business, economic or financial conditions.

II.  DESCRIPTION OF UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

     The term "United States Government securities" refers to a variety of
securities which are issued or guaranteed by the United States Government, and
by various instrumentalities which have been established or sponsored by the
United States Government.

     United States Treasury securities are backed by the "full faith and credit"
of the United States. Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies and
United States Government sponsored instrumentalities may or may not be backed by
the full faith and credit of the United States. In the case of securities not
backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, the investor must look
principally to the agency or instrumentality issuing or guaranteeing the
obligation for ultimate repayment, and may not be able to assert a claim against
the United States itself in the event the agency or instrumentality does not
meet its commitment. Agencies which are backed


                                       45
<PAGE>

by the full faith and credit of the United States include the Export-Import
Bank, Farmers Home Administration, Federal Financing Bank, and others. Certain
agencies and instrumentalities, such as the Government National Mortgage
Associates, are, in effect, backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States through provisions in their charters that they may make "indefinite and
unlimited" drawings on the Treasury, if needed to service debt. Debt from
certain other agencies and instrumentalities, including the Federal Home Loan
Bank and Federal National Mortgage Association, are not guaranteed by the United
States, but those institutions are protected by the discretionary authority for
the United States Treasury to purchase certain amounts of their securities to
assist the institution in meeting its debt obligations. Finally, other agencies
and instrumentalities, such as the Farm Credit System and the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation, are federally chartered institutions under Government
supervision, but their debt securities are backed only by the creditworthiness
of those institutions, not the United States Government.

     Some of the United States Government agencies that issue or guarantee
securities include the Export-Import Bank of the United States, Farmers Home
Administration, Federal Housing Administration, Maritime Administration, Small
Business Administration, and the Tennessee Valley Authority.

     An instrumentality of the United States Government is a Government agency
organized under Federal charter with Government supervision. Instrumentalities
issuing or guaranteeing securities include, among others, Federal Home Loan
Banks, the Federal Land Banks, Central Bank for Cooperatives, Federal Immediate
Credit Banks, and the Federal National Mortgage Association.

III.  FOREIGN INVESTMENTS

     The Investment Funds may invest in securities of foreign issuers. Investors
should recognize that investing in such foreign securities involves certain
special considerations which are not typically associated with investing in
United States issuers. For a description of the effect on the Investment Funds
of currency exchange rate fluctuations, see "Investment Objectives and 
Policies - Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts" above. As foreign 
issuers are not generally subject to uniform accounting, auditing and 
financial reporting standards and may have policies that are not comparable 
to those of domestic issuers, there may be less information available about 
certain foreign companies than about domestic issuers. Securities of some 
foreign issuers are generally less liquid and more volatile than securities 
of comparable domestic issuers. There is generally less government 
supervision and regulation of stock exchanges, brokers and listed issuers 
than in the United States. In addition, with respect to certain foreign 
countries, there is the possibility of expropriation or confiscatory 
taxation, political or social instability, or diplomatic developments which 
could affect United States investments in those countries. Foreign securities 
not listed on a recognized domestic or foreign exchange are regarded as not 
readily marketable and therefore such investments will be limited to 15% of 
an Investment Fund's net asset value at the time of purchase.

     Although the Investment Funds will endeavor to achieve the most favorable
execution costs in their portfolio transactions, fixed commissions on many
foreign stock exchanges are generally higher than negotiated commissions on
United States exchanges.

     Certain foreign governments levy withholding or other taxes on dividend and
interest income. Although in some countries a portion of these taxes are
recoverable, the non-recovered portion of foreign withholding taxes will reduce
the income received from investments in such countries. Except in the case of
the Global Fixed Income Fund, Asian Growth Fund, European Equity Fund and
Worldwide High Income Fund, it is not expected that an Investment Fund or its
shareholders would be able to claim a credit for U.S. tax purposes with respect
to any such foreign taxes. However, these foreign withholding taxes may not have
a significant impact on any such Investment Fund because its investment
objective is to seek long-term capital appreciation and any dividend or interest
income should be considered incidental.

IV.  EMERGING COUNTRY EQUITY AND DEBT SECURITIES


                                       46
<PAGE>

     The definition of emerging country equity or debt securities of each of the
Global Equity Allocation, Global Fixed Income, Asian Growth, Emerging Markets,
Latin American, European Equity and Worldwide High Income Funds includes
securities of companies that may have characteristics and business relationships
common to companies in a country or countries other than an emerging country. As
a result, the value of the securities of such companies may reflect economic and
market forces applicable to other countries, as well as to an emerging country.
The Adviser believes, however, that investment in such companies will be
appropriate because the Investment Fund will invest only in those companies
which, in its view, have sufficiently strong exposure to economic and market
forces in an emerging country such that their value will tend to reflect
developments in such emerging country to a greater extent than developments in
another country or countries.  The Investment Fund may invest in companies
organized and located in countries other than an emerging country, including
companies having their entire production facilities outside of an emerging
country, when securities of such companies meet one or more elements of the
Investment Fund's definition of an emerging country debt security and so long as
the Adviser believes at the time of investment that the value of the company's
securities will reflect principally conditions in such emerging country.

     The value of debt securities held by the Investment Fund generally will
vary inversely to changes in prevailing interest rates.  The Investment Fund's
investments in fixed-rated debt securities with longer terms to maturity are
subject to greater volatility than the Investment Fund's investments in shorter-
term obligations.  Debt obligations acquired at a discount are subject to
greater fluctuations of market value in response to changing interest rates than
debt obligations of comparable maturities which are not subject to such
discount.

     Investments in emerging country government debt securities involve special
risks.  Certain emerging countries have historically experienced, and may
continue to experience, high rates of inflation, high interest rates, exchange
rate fluctuations, large amounts of external debt, balance of payments and trade
difficulties and extreme poverty and unemployment. The issuer or governmental
authority that controls the repayment of an emerging country's debt may not be
able or willing to repay the principal and/or interest when due in accordance
with the terms of such debt.  As a result of the foregoing, a government obligor
may default on its obligations. If such an event occurs, the Investment Fund may
have limited legal recourse against the issuer and/or guarantor. Remedies must,
in some cases, be pursued in the courts of the defaulting party itself, and the
ability of the holder of foreign government debt securities to obtain recourse
may be subject to the political climate in the relevant country.  In addition,
no assurance can be given that the holders of commercial bank debt will not
contest payments to the holders of other foreign government debt obligations in
the event of default under their commercial bank loan agreements.

     The Investment Fund may invest in certain debt obligations customarily
referred to as "Brady Bonds," which are created through the exchange of existing
commercial bank loans to foreign entities for new obligations in connection with
debt restructurings under a plan introduced by former U.S. Secretary of the
Treasury Nicholas F. Brady (the "Brady Plan").  Brady Bonds have been issued
only recently, and, accordingly, do not have a long payment history. They may be
collateralized or uncollateralized and issued in various currencies (although
most are U.S. dollar-denominated) and they are actively traded in the over-the-
counter secondary market.  The Investment Fund may purchase Brady Bonds either
in the primary or secondary markets.  The price and yield of Brady Bonds
purchased in the secondary market will reflect the market conditions at the time
of purchase, regardless of the stated face amount and the stated interest rate.
With respect to Brady Bonds with no or limited collateralization, the Investment
Fund will rely for payment of interest and principal primarily on the
willingness and ability of the issuing government to make payment in accordance
with the terms of the bonds.

     U.S. dollar-denominated, collateralized Brady Bonds, which may be fixed
rate par bonds or floating rate discount bonds, are generally collateralized in
full as to principal due at maturity by U.S. Treasury zero coupon obligations
which have the same maturity as the Brady Bonds. Interest payments on these
Brady Bonds generally are collateralized by cash or securities in an amount
that, in the case of fixed rate bonds, is equal to at least one year of rolling
interest payments or, in the case of floating rate bonds, initially is equal to
at least one year's rolling interest payments based on the applicable interest
rate at that time and is adjusted at regular intervals


                                       47
<PAGE>

thereafter.  Certain Brady Bonds are entitled to "value recovery payments" in
certain circumstances, which in effect constitute supplemental interest payments
but generally are not collateralized. Brady Bonds are often viewed as having
three or four valuation components: (i) the collateralized repayment of
principal at final maturity; (ii) the collateralized interest payments; (iii)
the uncollateralized interest payments; and (iv) any uncollateralized repayment
of principal at maturity (these uncollateralized amounts constitute the
"residual risk"). In the event of a default with respect to collateralized Brady
Bonds as a result of which the payment obligations of the issuer are
accelerated, the U.S. Treasury zero coupon obligations held as collateral for
the payment of principal will not be distributed to investors, nor will such
obligations be sold and the proceeds distributed. The collateral will be held to
the scheduled maturity of the defaulted Brady Bonds by the collateral agent, at
which time the face amount of the collateral will equal the principal payments
which would have then been due on the Brady Bonds in the normal course. In
addition, in light of the residual risk of the Brady Bonds and, among other
factors, the history of defaults with respect to commercial bank loans by public
and private entities of countries issuing Brady Bonds, investments in Brady
Bonds should be viewed as speculative.

     Brady Plan debt restructurings totaling approximately $73 billion have been
implemented to date in Argentina, Costa Rica, Mexico, Nigeria, the Philippines,
Uruguay and Venezuela, with the largest proportion of Brady Bonds having been
issued to date by Mexico and Venezuela. Brazil and Poland have announced plans
to issue Brady Bonds aggregating approximately $52 billion, based on current
estimates. There can be no assurance that the circumstances regarding the
issuance of Brady Bonds by these countries will not change.

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

     The Fund's audited financial statements and notes thereto for the fiscal 
year ended June 30, 1995 , and the report thereon of Price Waterhouse LLP, 
independent accountants, which appear in the June 30, 1995 Annual Report to 
Shareholders  are on the following pages.  The High Yield Fund, U.S. Real 
Estate Fund, International Magnum Fund, Japanese Equity Fund, European Equity 
Fund, Aggressive Equity Fund, Growth and Income Fund and Money Market Fund 
were not operational as of the date of the Annual Report.

     The Fund's unaudited financial statements and notes thereto for the six 
months ended December 31, 1995 which appear in the December 31, 1995 
Semi-Annual Report to Shareholders are also on the following pages.  The High 
Yield Fund, U.S. Real Estate Fund, International Magnum Fund, Japanese Equity 
Fund, European Equity Fund, Aggressive Equity Fund, Growth and Income Fund 
and Money Market Fund were not operational as of the date of the Semi-Annual 
Report.

     The Aggressive Equity Fund's unaudited financial statements for the 
period ended March 31, 1996 are also on the following pages.

                                       48
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
COMMON STOCKS (96.9%)
AUSTRALIA (4.2%)
  21,500  Amcor Ltd. .......................................  $   159
   9,500  Ampolex Ltd. .....................................       22
  17,500  Australian National Industries Ltd. ..............       15
  40,100  Boral Ltd. .......................................      100
   7,400  Brambles Industries Ltd. .........................       70
  56,401  Broken Hill Proprietary Ltd. .....................      694
  18,472  Burns, Philip & Co. Ltd. .........................       39
  10,876  Coca-Cola Amatil Ltd. ............................       67
  47,800  Coles Myer Ltd. ..................................      150
  18,300  CRA Ltd. .........................................      249
  32,600  CSR Ltd. .........................................      102
 103,500  Foster Brewing Group Ltd. ........................       92
  23,930  General Property Trust ...........................       40
  43,400  Goodman Fielder Ltd. .............................       36
  11,800  ICI Australia Ltd. ...............................       77
   7,548  Lend Lease Corp. Ltd. ............................       96
  43,712  MIM Holdings Ltd. ................................       54
  43,500  National Australia Bank Ltd. .....................      344
  +8,700  Newcrest Mining Ltd. .............................       37
  53,795  News Corp. Ltd. ..................................      300
  23,400  North Broken Hill Peko Ltd. ......................       57
  35,300  Pacific Dunlop Ltd. ..............................       74
  30,400  Pioneer International Ltd. .......................       76
  10,486  Renison Goldfields Consolidated Ltd. .............       33
   2,432  Renison Goldfields Consolidated Ltd. (New) .......        6
  26,600  Santos Ltd. ......................................       64
  20,700  Southcorp Holdings Ltd. ..........................       41
 +12,700  TNT Ltd. .........................................       17
  29,700  Western Mining Corp. .............................      163
  60,000  Westpac Banking Corp. Ltd. .......................      217
                                                              -------
                                                                3,491
                                                              -------
BELGIUM (2.0%)
      70  Bekaert S.A. .....................................       55
     125  CBR ..............................................       51
   1,600  Delhaize Freres et Cie 'Le Lion' S.A. ............       72
   1,350  Electrabel S.A. ..................................      285
     300  Electrabel S.A. (New) ............................       64
   1,130  Fortis AG ........................................      120
     450  Generale de Banque ...............................      145
     775  Gevaert Photo-Production N.V. ....................       42
     156  Glaverbel S.A. ...................................       21
     700  Groupe Bruxelles Lambert S.A. ....................       94
     400  Kredietbank N.V. .................................       95
     720  Petrofina S.A. ...................................      217
     400  Reunies Electrobel & Tractebel S.A. ..............      145
     400  Royale Belge .....................................       75
     250  Solvay et Cie ....................................      138
    +800  Union Miniere S.A. ...............................       52
                                                              -------
                                                                1,671
                                                              -------
CANADA (5.1%)
   5,600  Alcan Aluminum Ltd. ..............................      169
   9,712  American Barrick Resources Corp. .................      246
   6,300  Bank of Montreal .................................      132
   5,900  Bank of Nova Scotia ..............................      127
   8,100  BCE, Inc. ........................................      260
   4,100  Bombardier, Inc. 'B' .............................      100
   2,600  Brascan Ltd. 'A' .................................       41
   5,600  Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce ...............      135
   2,200  Canadian Occidental Petroleum Ltd. ...............       68
   9,600  Canadian Pacific Ltd. ............................      165
   2,700  Canadian Tire Corp. 'A' ..........................       29
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
   2,800  Cominco Ltd. .....................................  $    51
   1,500  Cott Corp. .......................................       18
   2,800  Dofasco, Inc. ....................................       35
   1,200  Du Pont Canada, Inc. 'A' .........................       17
   3,200  Echo Bay Mines Ltd. ..............................       29
   2,000  George Weston Ltd. ...............................       67
   5,200  Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. .......................       21
   7,600  Imasco Ltd. ......................................      135
   6,000  Imperial Oil Ltd. ................................      223
   2,600  Inco Ltd. ........................................       73
   1,100  Interprovincial Pipeline ADR .....................       24
   5,600  Laidlaw, Inc. 'B' ................................       54
   5,200  MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. ...........................       73
   1,200  Magna International, Inc. 'A' ....................       53
   3,600  Moore Corp. Ltd. .................................       79
   2,200  Newbridge Networks Corp. .........................       77
  +5,200  Noranda, Inc. ....................................      102
   2,400  Norcen Energy Resources Ltd. .....................       32
   6,500  Northern Telecom Ltd. ............................      235
  13,800  Nova Corp. of Alberta ............................      117
   5,800  Placer Dome, Inc. ................................      152
   1,100  Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, Inc. ...............       61
   4,000  Ranger Oil Ltd. ..................................       25
  +2,300  Renaissance Energy Ltd. ..........................       48
  +4,200  Rogers Communications ............................       49
   7,700  Royal Bank of Canada .............................      172
  10,500  Seagram Co. Ltd. .................................      361
  +1,600  Talisman Energy, Inc. ............................       30
   2,400  Teck Corp. 'B' ...................................       47
  16,400  Thomson Corp. ....................................      224
   6,300  Transcanada Pipelines Ltd. .......................       84
                                                              -------
                                                                4,240
                                                              -------
FRANCE (4.0%)
     300  Accor S.A. .......................................       40
   1,850  Alcatel Alsthom...................................      167
   1,845  AXA S.A. .........................................      100
     105  AXA S.A. RFD......................................        6
   2,300  Banque Nationale de Paris ........................      111
     100  BIC ..............................................       16
     350  Bouygues .........................................       42
     300  Carrefour S.A. ...................................      154
      85  Chargeurs S.A. ...................................       17
     249  Cie Bancaire S.A. ................................       30
   1,350  Cie Generale des Eaux ............................      150
   1,350  Cie de Financiere de Paribas 'A' .................       81
   1,000  Cie de Saint-Gobain ..............................      121
   1,950  Cie de Suez S.A. .................................      108
   3,000  Elf Aquitaine ....................................      222
   1,000  Elf Sanofi S.A. ..................................       55
     400  Eridania Beghin-Say S.A. .........................       62
     950  Etablissements Economiques du Casion
            Guichard-Perrachon .............................       28
     950  Groupe Danone RFD ................................      160
     650  Havas S.A. .......................................       51
     850  L'Air Liquide ....................................      136
   1,100  Lafarge Coppee S.A. ..............................       86
     400  Legrand S.A. .....................................       63
     750  L'Oreal ..........................................      188
     950  LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton .................      171
     850  Lyonnaise des Eaux S.A. ..........................       80
  +1,350  Michelin (C.G.D.E.) 'B' ..........................       60
     135  Paribas S.A. RFD .................................        8
     650  Pernod-Ricard ....................................       43
    +225  Pinault S.A. .....................................       48
     250  Promodes .........................................       57
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       49
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
FRANCE (CONT.)
    +600  PSA Peugeot Citroen S.A. .........................  $    83
   3,000  Rhone-Poulenc S.A. 'A' ...........................       68
      60  Sagem ............................................       34
     130  Saint Louis ......................................       40
     650  Schneider S.A. ...................................       51
     350  Simco (Registered) ...............................       30
      60  Societe Eurafrance S.A. ..........................       20
   1,000  Societe Generale .................................      117
  +1,700  Thomson CSF S.A. .................................       38
   2,500  Total S.A. 'B' ...................................      150
                                                              -------
                                                                3,292
                                                              -------
GERMANY (2.0%)
      30  Agiv AG ..........................................       10
     110  Allianz AG Holding ...............................      197
      20  AMB Aachener & Muenchener Beteiligungs AG ........       14
      20  Asko Deutsche Kaufhaus AG ........................       12
     330  BASF AG ..........................................       70
     360  Bayer AG .........................................       89
     120  Bayer Hypotheken-und Wechsel-Bank AG .............       33
     130  Bayer Vereinsbank AG .............................       39
      25  Beiersdorf AG ....................................       20
      20  Brau und Brunnen AG ..............................        4
     270  Daimler-Benz AG ..................................      124
      50  Degussa AG .......................................       16
   2,420  Deutsche Bank AG .................................      118
    +180  Deutsche Lufthansa AG ............................       26
   2,230  Dresdner Bank AG .................................       64
      20  Heidelberger Zement AG ...........................       17
      60  Hochtief AG ......................................       34
      50  Karstadt AG ......................................       22
      30  Kaufhof Holding AG ...............................       11
     +90  Kloeckner-Humboldt-Deutz AG ......................        3
      50  Linde AG .........................................       30
      70  MAN AG ...........................................       18
     210  Mannesmann AG ....................................       64
      40  Muenchener Rueckversicherungs-Gesellschaft
            (Registered) ...................................       88
      80  Preussag AG ......................................       24
     180  RWE AG ...........................................       62
      30  SAP AG ...........................................       40
     350  Schering AG ......................................       24
     290  Siemens AG .......................................      144
    +170  Thyssen AG .......................................       32
     250  Veba AG ..........................................       98
     110  Viag AG ..........................................       43
     150  Volkswagen AG ....................................       43
                                                              -------
                                                                1,633
                                                              -------
HONG KONG (5.1%)
  18,000  Applied International Holdings Ltd................        2
  22,257  Bank of East Asia.................................       67
  84,000  Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd........................      123
  63,000  Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd..........................      312
  56,500  China Light and Power Co. Ltd.....................      291
  46,000  Chinese Estate Holdings Ltd.......................       33
  22,000  Dickson Concepts International Ltd................       13
   6,000  Giordano Holdings Ltd.............................        4
  12,000  Giordano International Ltd........................        9
  36,000  Hang Lung Development Corp........................       57
  54,600  Hang Seng Bank Ltd................................      416
  55,400  Hong Kong & China Gas Co..........................       88
  36,000  Hong Kong & Shanghai Hotels.......................       44
   5,600  Hong Kong Aircraft Engineering Co. Ltd............       15
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 308,400  Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd..................  $   610
 121,420  Hopewell Holdings Ltd.............................      103
 102,000  Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.............................      493
  30,000  Hysan Development Co..............................       69
  12,000  Johnson Electric Holdings Ltd.....................       24
  17,000  Miramar Hotel Investment Ltd......................       35
  44,335  New World Development Co. Ltd.....................      148
  40,000  Oriental Press Group..............................       16
  11,300  Peregrine Investment Holdings.....................       16
  30,905  Shangri-La Asia Ltd...............................       37
  46,000  Shun Tak Holdings Ltd.............................       37
  52,000  South China Morning Post..........................       31
  30,000  Stelux Holdings Ltd...............................        9
  65,000  Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd.......................      481
  46,000  Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A'............................      351
  12,000  Television Broadcasting Ltd.......................       42
  62,000  Wharf Holdings Ltd................................      202
  10,000  Windsor Industrial................................       13
   4,280  Wing Lung Bank....................................       24
                                                              -------
                                                                4,215
                                                              -------
ITALY (2.0%)
 +10,000  Alitalia S.p.A....................................        5
  12,975  Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A......................      305
  27,000  Banca Commerciale Italiana........................       61
  +6,500  Banca Nazionale dell'Agricoltura S.p.A............        5
   8,000  Banco Ambrosiano Veneto...........................       26
   3,000  Benetton Group S.p.A..............................       30
   2,000  Burgo Cartiere S.p.A..............................       13
  36,500  Credito Italiano S.p.A............................       42
  10,000  Edison S.p.A......................................       45
  +1,000  Falck Acciaierie & Ferriere Lombarde..............        1
 +52,000  Fiat S.p.A........................................      183
  12,000  Fiat S.p.A. Di Risp (NCS).........................       26
   4,000  Fidis Finanziaria di Sviluppo S.p.A...............        9
   3,000  Impreglio S.p.A...................................        3
  12,000  Istituto Bancario San Paolo di Torina S.p.A.......       65
  +3,500  Italcementi Fabbriche Riunit S.p.A................       24
  +1,500  Italcementi S.p.A.................................        5
  11,000  Italgas...........................................       29
   2,565  La Rinascente S.p.A...............................       15
   9,500  Magneti Marelli S.p.A.............................       18
   7,800  Mediobanca S.p.A..................................       57
 +90,000  Montedison S.p.A..................................       64
+15,000.. Montedison S.p.A. Di Risp (NCS)...................        9
 +20,000  Olivetti Group....................................       20
  19,200  Parmalat Finanziaria S.p.A........................       17
 +25,000  Pirelli S.p.A.....................................       33
   4,410  R.A.S.............................................       47
   1,690  R.A.S. di Risp....................................       11
     300  Risanamento Di Napoli S.p.A.......................        4
  +1,000  Saffa S.p.A. 'A'..................................        3
   1,500  S.A.I.............................................       16
   7,500  Saipem S.p.A......................................       15
   2,000  Sasib S.p.A.......................................        9
   4,000  Sirti S.p.A.......................................       30
   7,000  SME Meridionale...................................       17
+10,000.. Snia BPD S.p.A....................................       11
 107,200  Telecom Italia S.p.A..............................      291
  25,000  Telecom Italia Di Risp S.p.A......................       53
                                                              -------
                                                                1,617
                                                              -------
JAPAN (17.7%)
   1,000  Advantest Corp....................................       38
  11,000  Ajinomoto Co., Inc................................      113
   6,000  Aoki Corp.........................................       22
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       50
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
JAPAN (CONT.)
   1,000  Aoyama Trading Co. Ltd............................  $    17
  22,000  Asahi Bank Ltd....................................      235
   5,000  Asahi Breweries Ltd...............................       58
  16,000  Asahi Chemical Industry Co. Ltd...................      105
  16,000  Asahi Glass Co....................................      177
  17,000  Bank of Tokyo.....................................      273
   5,000  Bridgestone Co....................................       74
  10,000  Canon, Inc........................................      163
   3,000  Casio Computer Co. Ltd............................       27
  11,000  Chiba Bank........................................      100
   2,000  Chiyoda Corp......................................       17
   5,000  Chugai Pharmaceutical Ltd.........................       51
  25,000  Dai Ichi Kangyo Bank..............................      451
  11,000  Dai Nippon Printing Co. Ltd.......................      175
   6,000  Daikin Industries Ltd.............................       48
  +2,000  Daishowa Paper Manufacturing Co. Ltd..............        9
   5,000  Daiwa House Industry..............................       77
  11,000  Daiwa Securities Co., Ltd.........................      116
   4,000  Ebara Corp........................................       49
   3,200  Fanuc Co..........................................      138
  25,000  Fuji Bank.........................................      504
   5,000  Fuji Photo Film Ltd...............................      118
  18,000  Fujitsu Ltd.......................................      179
   9,000  Furukawa Electric.................................       42
  11,000  Hankyu Corp.......................................       66
   6,000  Hazama-Gumi.......................................       25
  33,000  Hitachi Ltd.......................................      329
   9,000  Honda Motor Co....................................      138
  19,000  Industrial Bank of Japan..........................      495
   4,000  Ito-Yokado Co. Ltd................................      211
 +22,000  Japan Airlines Co.................................      146
  14,000  Japan Energy Corp.................................       45
   6,000  Joyo Bank.........................................       51
   6,000  Jusco Co..........................................      124
  11,000  Kajima Corp.......................................      109
   3,600  Kansai Electric Power Co..........................       97
  11,000  KAO Corp..........................................      132
 +28,000  Kawasaki Steel Corp...............................       92
  16,000  Kinki Nippon Railway..............................      140
  11,000  Kirin Brewery Co. Ltd.............................      117
 +33,000  Kobe Steel Ltd....................................       78
  11,000  Komatsu Ltd.......................................       84
  16,000  Kubota Corp.......................................      102
  11,000  Kumagai Gumi Co. Ltd..............................       46
   6,000  Kyowa Hakko Kogyo.................................       58
  16,000  Marubeni Corp.....................................       81
   5,000  Marui Co..........................................       80
  17,000  Matsushita Electric Industries Ltd................      265
  15,000  Mitsubishi Corp...................................      171
  20,000  Mitsubishi Electric Corp..........................      141
  12,000  Mitsubishi Estate Co. Ltd.........................      135
  44,000  Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd...................      299
  16,000  Mitsubishi Kasei Co...............................       68
  11,000  Mitsubishi Materials Corp.........................       49
  11,000  Mitsubishi Trust and Banking Corp.................      156
  16,000  Mitsui & Co.......................................      125
 +11,000  Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co. Ltd.........       24
   9,000  Mitsui Fudosan Co. Ltd............................      103
  11,000  Mitsukoshi........................................       79
   1,200  Mochida Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd....................       18
  16,000  NEC Corp..........................................      175
   6,000  NGK Insulators Ltd................................       54
   5,000  Nippon Denso Co. Ltd..............................       91
  11,000  Nippon Express Co. Ltd............................      100
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
   6,000  Nippon Fire & Marine Insurance Co.................  $    38
   5,000  Nippon Light Metal Co.............................       23
   5,000  Nippon Meat Packers...............................       73
  16,000  Nippon Oil Co.....................................      101
  11,000  Nippon Paper Industries Co........................       71
  41,000  Nippon Steel Corp.................................      133
  16,000  Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha.....................       90
  21,000  Nissan Motor Co. Ltd..............................      134
 +32,000  NKK Corp..........................................       75
  17,000  Nomura Securities Co. Ltd.........................      297
  11,000  Obayashi Corp.....................................       85
  11,000  Odakyu Electric Railway Co........................       80
  11,000  Oji Paper Ltd.....................................      106
  33,000  Osaka Gas Co......................................      122
   6,000  Penta-Ocean Construction..........................       38
   1,000  Rohm Co...........................................       52
  27,000  Sakura Bank.......................................      282
   4,600  Sankyo Co. Ltd....................................      107
  16,000  Sanyo Electric Co. Ltd............................       79
   1,000  Secom Co..........................................       63
   1,300  Sega Enterprises..................................       46
   5,000  Sekisui House Ltd.................................       62
   3,000  Seven-Eleven Japan................................      215
  11,000  Sharp Corp........................................      145
   5,000  Shin-Etsu Chemical Co.............................       88
   8,000  Shinizu Corp......................................       77
   2,000  Shiseido Co. Ltd..................................       22
  11,000  Shizuoka Bank.....................................      137
 +11,000  Showa Denko K.K...................................       32
   3,000  Sony Corp.........................................      144
  28,000  Sumitomo Bank.....................................      485
  22,000  Sumitomo Chemical Co..............................       86
  11,000  Sumitomo Corp.....................................      100
   7,000  Sumitomo Electric Industries......................       83
   2,000  Sumitomo Forestry.................................       33
  38,000  Sumitomo Metal Industries.........................       99
   5,000  Sumitomo Metal Mining Co..........................       37
   6,000  Sumitomo Osaka Cement Co. Ltd.....................       22
  11,000  Taisei Corp., Ltd.................................       65
  11,000  Takeda Chemical Industries........................      145
  11,000  Teijin Ltd........................................       53
  11,000  Tobu Railway Co...................................       69
  17,000  Tokai Bank........................................      188
  16,000  Tokio Marine & Fire Industries....................      183
   3,000  Tokyo Dome Corp...................................       46
  12,100  Tokyo Electric Power Co...........................      371
   2,000  Tokyo Electron Ltd................................       68
  33,000  Tokyo Gas Co......................................      130
  11,000  Tokyu Corp........................................       70
   8,000  Toppan Printing Co. Ltd...........................      105
  16,000  Toray Industries, Inc.............................       99
   5,000  Toto Ltd..........................................       71
  11,000  Toyobo Ltd........................................       36
  25,000  Toyota Motor Corp.................................      495
 +11,000  Ube Industries Ltd................................       38
  11,000  Yamaichi Securities...............................       59
   5,000  Yamanuchi Pharmaceutical Co.......................      112
  11,000  Yasuda Trust & Banking............................       72
                                                              -------
                                                               14,712
                                                              -------
NETHERLANDS (4.0%)
   5,718  ABN-Amro Holdings N.V.............................      221
   1,350  Akzo Nobel........................................      161
  11,500  Elsevier N.V......................................      136
   1,100  Heineken N.V......................................      166
     578  Hoogovens N.V.....................................       23
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       51
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
NETHERLANDS (CONT.)
   5,058  Internationale Nederlanden Groep N.V..............  $   280
  +1,450  KLM Royal Dutch Airlines N.V......................       47
   2,200  Koninklijke Ahold N.V.............................       79
   8,700  Koninklijke PTT Nederland N.V.....................      313
     400  Nedlloyd Groep N.V................................       14
   1,800  N.V. Koninklijke KNP BT...........................       54
   5,800  Phillips Electronics N.V..........................      246
   9,400  Royal Dutch Petroleum Co..........................    1,148
     531  Stork N.V.........................................       14
   2,800  Unilever N.V......................................      364
   1,233  Wolters Kluwer N.V................................      109
                                                              -------
                                                                3,375
                                                              -------
SINGAPORE (3.9%)
  13,000  Amcol Holdings Ltd................................       38
  35,000  City Developments Ltd.............................      214
  10,000  Cycle & Carriage Ltd..............................       89
  37,000  DBS Land Ltd......................................      116
  29,000  Development Bank of Singapore.....................      330
   9,000  First Capital Corp................................       28
  11,000  Fraser & Neave Ltd................................      127
  28,000  Hai Sun Hup Group Ltd.............................       17
  19,000  Hotel Properties Ltd..............................       34
   8,000  Inchcape Bhd......................................       26
   5,000  Jurong Shipyard Ltd...............................       36
  23,000  Keppel Corp.......................................      188
  12,000  NatSteel Ltd......................................       25
  36,000  Neptune Orient Lines Ltd..........................       42
  39,000  Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp......................      432
   7,000  Overseas Union Enterprise Ltd.....................       43
  14,000  Parkway Holdings Ltd..............................       34
   2,000  Robinson & Co. Ltd................................        8
   8,000  Shangri-La Hotel Ltd..............................       32
  58,000  Singapore Airlines Ltd. (Foreign).................      535
  15,600  Singapore Press Holdings (Foreign)................      233
  27,000  Straits Steamship Land Ltd........................       94
  18,000  Straits Trading Co. Ltd...........................       45
  71,000  United Industrial Corp. Ltd.......................       68
  40,000  United Overseas Bank Ltd..........................      378
                                                              -------
                                                                3,212
                                                              -------
SPAIN (3.4%)
     400  Acerinox S.A......................................       49
   4,200  Argentaria S.A....................................      155
   6,800  Autopistas Concesionaria Espanola S.A.............       66
   8,100  Banco Bilbao Vizcaya (Registered).................      234
   5,300  Banco Central Hispanoamericano S.A................      112
  +3,466  Banco Espanol de Credito S.A......................       24
   5,200  Banco Santander S.A...............................      205
     700  Corporacion Financiera Alba S.A...................       36
     900  Corporacion Mapfre CIA Internacional de Reaseguros
            S.A.............................................       45
   2,600  Dragados & Construcciones S.A.....................       38
   1,950  Ebro Agricolas, Compania de Alimentacion S.A......       20
   8,900  Empresa Nacional de Electricidad S.A..............      440
    +317  Energia e Indsutrias Aragonesas...................        2
   3,500  Ercros S.A........................................        4
     850  Fabricacion de Automoviles Renault de Espana
            S.A.............................................       25
     500  Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas S.A.........       43
   1,300  Gas Natural SDG 'E'...............................      155
     200  Gines Navarro Construction Co.....................        3
  30,300  Iberdrola S.A.....................................      228
     125  Inmobiliaria Metropolitana Vasco Central S.A......        4
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
     400  Portland Vaderrivas S.A...........................  $    27
  10,800  Repsol S.A........................................      340
   1,300  Tabacalera S.A. 'A'...............................       49
  31,800  Telefonica de Espana..............................      410
  10,500  Union Electrica Fenosa S.A........................       49
  +1,400  Uralita S.A.......................................       17
   1,550  Vallehermoso S.A..................................       26
   1,000  Viscofan Industria Navarra De Envolturas
            Celulosicas S.A.................................       15
     300  Zardoya-Otis S.A..................................       31
                                                              -------
                                                                2,852
                                                              -------
SWITZERLAND (2.0%)
     +25  Adia S.A. (Bearer)................................        5
      25  Alusuisse-Lonza Holding AG (Bearer)...............       16
      50  Alusuisse-Lonza Holding AG (Registered)...........       31
      60  BBC Brown Boveri AG (Bearer)......................       62
      30  Ciba-Geigy AG (Bearer)............................       22
     160  Ciba-Geigy AG (Registered)........................      117
     800  CS Holding AG (Registered)........................       73
      10  Georg Fischer AG (Bearer).........................       14
      45  Holderbank Financiere Glaris AG (Bearer)..........       37
      30  Merkur Holding AG (Registered)....................        9
     250  Nestle S.A. (Registered)..........................      260
      10  Roche Holding AG (Bearer).........................      111
      45  Roche Holding AG-Genusshein.......................      290
      10  SGS Societe Generale de Surveillance Holding S.A.
            (Bearer)........................................       18
      25  SMH AG (Bearer)...................................       16
     100  SMH AG (Registered)...............................       14
     225  Sandoz AG (Registered)............................      155
     100  Schweizerische Rueckversicherungs-Gesellschaft
            (Registered)....................................       77
      25  Sulzer AG (Registered)............................       17
     150  Swiss Bank Corp. (Bearer).........................       53
     250  Swiss Bank Corp. (Registered).....................       44
     +25  SwissAir AG (Registered)..........................       17
     140  Union Bank of Switzerland (Bearer)................      145
     150  Union Bank of Switzerland (Registered)............       33
      50  Zurich Versicherungs-Gesellschaft (Registered)....       63
                                                              -------
                                                                1,699
                                                              -------
UNITED KINGDOM (8.7%)
  17,900  Abbey National plc ...............................      133
  13,000  Argyll Group plc .................................       69
  12,600  Arjo Wiggins Appleton plc ........................       52
   5,100  Associated British Foods plc .....................       54
  14,900  Barclays plc .....................................      160
   9,400  Bass plc .........................................       90
  30,675  BAT Industries plc ...............................      235
   6,000  BICC plc .........................................       28
  11,000  Blue Circle Industries plc .......................       49
   5,400  BOC Group plc ....................................       69
  11,000  Boots Co. plc ....................................       89
   5,000  Bowater plc ......................................       38
   7,600  BPB Industries plc ...............................       38
   4,400  British Aerospace plc ............................       39
  10,300  British Airways plc ..............................       68
  50,300  British Gas plc ..................................      232
  54,900  British Petroleum Co. plc ........................      393
  19,500  British Steel plc ................................       53
  59,600  British Telecommunications plc ...................      372
  37,200  BTR plc ..........................................      189
   2,518  Burmah Castrol plc ...............................       36
  22,300  Cable & Wireless plc .............................      153
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       52
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
UNITED KINGDOM (CONT.)
  10,600  Cadbury Schweppes plc ............................  $    77
   6,900  Caradon plc ......................................       26
   7,714  Coats Viyella plc ................................       23
   4,585  Commercial Union plc .............................       43
   4,400  Courtaulds plc ...................................       31
   3,100  De La Rue plc ....................................       46
   4,800  Eastern Group plc ................................       50
  11,100  Forte plc ........................................       40
   6,200  General Accident plc .............................       57
  33,600  General Electric plc .............................      164
   4,764  GKN plc ..........................................       49
  30,900  Glaxo Holdings plc ...............................      372
  24,200  Grand Metropolitan plc ...........................      151
  10,700  Great Universal Stores plc .......................      100
  14,575  Guardian Royal Exchange plc ......................       48
  18,300  Guinness plc .....................................      138
  53,526  Hanson plc .......................................      187
  10,700  Harrisons & Crosfield plc ........................       24
  21,151  HSBC Holdings plc ................................      273
   7,600  Imperial Chemical Industries plc .................       93
  14,991  Ladbroke Group plc ...............................       40
   6,600  Land Securities plc ..............................       64
   9,400  Lasmo plc ........................................       26
  12,674  Lloyds Bank plc ..................................      126
   7,788  Lonrho plc .......................................       18
  30,500  Marks & Spencer plc ..............................      211
   5,000  MEPC plc .........................................       30
  13,500  National Power plc ...............................       96
   5,700  North West Water plc .............................       50
   9,100  Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co. .......       84
  12,600  Pilkington plc ...................................       35
  22,677  Prudential Corp. plc .............................      121
   4,700  Rank Organisation plc ............................       30
   7,017  Redland plc ......................................       46
   8,300  Reed International plc ...........................      117
  16,500  Reuters Holdings plc .............................      138
   2,800  RMC Group plc ....................................       47
   9,400  Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc .................       64
   7,642  Royal Insurance Holdings plc .....................       38
  12,900  RTZ Corp. plc (Registered) .......................      168
  17,600  Sainsbury (J) plc ................................      124
   7,900  Scottish Power plc ...............................       41
  16,400  Sears plc ........................................       26
   5,200  Sedgwick Group plc ...............................       11
   2,800  S.G. Warburg Group plc ...........................       32
   3,800  Slough Estates plc ...............................       13
  12,800  SmithKline Beecham plc 'A' .......................      116
   3,400  Southern Electricity plc .........................       35
  11,860  Tarmac plc .......................................       21
   6,349  Taylor Woodrow plc ...............................       12
  16,825  Tesco plc ........................................       78
   6,000  Thames Water plc .................................       45
   5,300  Thorne EMI plc ...................................      110
   4,462  TI Group plc .....................................       28
  11,300  Trafalgar House plc ..............................        8
   6,800  Unilever plc .....................................      138
  11,000  Vodafone Group plc ...............................       41
   8,900  Zeneca Group plc .................................      150
                                                              -------
                                                                7,209
                                                              -------
UNITED STATES (32.8%)
   8,400  Abbott Laboratories ..............................      340
   2,700  Aluminum Co. of America ..........................      135
   5,400  American Express Co. .............................      190
   3,700  American Home Products Corp. .....................      286
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
   4,100  American International Group, Inc. ...............  $   467
  15,900  American Telephone & Telegraph Co. ...............      845
   5,700  Amoco Corp. ......................................      380
  +2,700  AMR Corp. ........................................      201
   2,000  Atlantic Richfield Co. ...........................      220
   2,700  Automatic Data Processing, Inc. ..................      170
   5,300  Banc One Corp. ...................................      171
   5,300  BankAmerica Corp. ................................      279
   4,900  Bell Atlantic Corp. ..............................      274
   5,700  BellSouth Corp. ..................................      362
   5,300  Boeing Co. .......................................      332
   5,200  Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. .........................      354
   4,500  Campbell Soup Co. ................................      221
     200  Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. .........................       22
   2,700  Caterpillar, Inc. ................................      173
   3,600  Chevron Corp. ....................................      168
   4,400  Chrysler Corp. ...................................      211
   2,700  Chubb Corp. ......................................      216
  +3,600  Cisco Systems, Inc. ..............................      182
   4,300  Citicorp .........................................      249
  11,300  Coca-Cola Co. ....................................      720
   4,800  Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. ....................      208
   2,700  Computer Associates International, Inc. ..........      183
   5,300  Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. ........      156
   2,700  Cooper Industries, Inc. ..........................      107
   2,700  Corning, Inc. ....................................       88
   1,900  CSX Corp. ........................................      143
   1,300  Deere & Co. ......................................      111
   3,900  Dow Chemical Co. .................................      280
   7,800  Du Pont (EI) de Nemours Co. ......................      536
   5,300  Duke Power Co. ...................................      220
   5,300  Eastman Kodak Co. ................................      321
   3,200  Eli Lilly & Co. ..................................      251
   3,500  Enron Corp. ......................................      123
   5,600  Entergy Corp. ....................................      135
  13,100  Exxon Corp. ......................................      925
   5,300  Federal National Mortgage Association ............      500
   5,300  FPL Group, Inc. ..................................      205
   2,000  Gannett Co., Inc. ................................      109
  17,000  General Electric Co. .............................      958
   8,500  General Motors Corp. .............................      399
   2,700  General Motors Corp. 'E' .........................      118
   1,600  General RE Corp. .................................      214
   2,700  Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. .......................      111
   5,300  Hewlett-Packard Co. ..............................      395
   4,900  H.J. Heinz Co. ...................................      218
   5,200  Home Depot, Inc. .................................      211
   7,900  Intel Corp. ......................................      500
   6,000  International Business Machines Corp. ............      576
   1,800  International Game Technology ....................       28
   2,700  International Paper Co. ..........................      232
   1,500  ITT Corp. ........................................      176
   3,100  J.C. Penney Co., Inc. ............................      149
   6,000  Johnson & Johnson ................................      406
   8,000  Kmart Corp. ......................................      117
   2,700  May Department Stores Co. ........................      112
   6,600  McDonald's Corp. .................................      258
   2,700  Melville Corp. ...................................       93
  13,200  Merck & Co., Inc. ................................      647
  +5,300  Microsoft Corp. ..................................      479
   5,300  Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. .............      303
   4,600  Mobil Corp. ......................................      442
   1,600  Monsanto .........................................      144
   2,700  Morgan (J.P.) & Co., Inc. ........................      189
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       53
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
  SHARES                                                        VALUE)
                                                                 (000
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  UNITED STATES (CONT.)
   6,400  Motorola, Inc. ...................................  $   430
   1,100  Nucor Corp. ......................................       59
   5,300  NationsBank Corp. ................................      284
   2,100  Norfolk Southern Corp. ...........................      141
   5,700  Norwest Corp. ....................................      164
  +4,100  Novell, Inc. .....................................       82
  +2,650  Oracle System Corp. ..............................      102
   7,700  Pacific Gas & Electric Co. .......................      223
   8,900  PepsiCo, Inc. ....................................      406
   2,800  Pfizer, Inc. .....................................      259
   8,400  Philip Morris Cos., Inc. .........................      625
   1,700  PPG Industries, Inc. .............................       73
   7,900  Procter & Gamble Co. .............................      568
  +1,400  Promus Co., Inc. .................................       55
   8,000  Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. ............      222
   5,300  Rockwell International Corp. .....................      242
   2,700  SCE Corp. ........................................       46
   5,100  Schering-Plough Corp. ............................      225
   5,200  Sprint Corp. .....................................      175
   5,300  Sears, Roebuck & Co. .............................      317
   8,000  Southern Co. .....................................      179
   6,000  Southwestern Bell Corp. ..........................      286
   2,700  Suntrust Banks, Inc. .............................      157
   5,300  Texas Utilities Co. ..............................      182
   2,700  The Dun & Bradstreet Corp. .......................      142
   5,300  The Limited, Inc. ................................      117
   5,300  Time Warner, Inc. ................................      218
  +5,300  Toys 'R' Us, Inc. ................................      155
   4,100  Travelers, Inc. ..................................      179
   2,600  Union Pacific Corp. ..............................      144
   1,350  U.S. Healthcare, Inc. ............................       41
     338  U.S. Industries, Inc. ............................        5
   3,000  Viacom, Inc. 'B' .................................      139
  15,900  Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. ............................      425
   5,700  Walt Disney Co. ..................................      317
     800  Wells Fargo & Co. ................................      144
   8,000  Westinghouse Electric Corp. ......................      117
   5,300  Weyerhaeuser Co. .................................      250
   4,800  WMX Technologies, Inc. ...........................      136
                                                              -------
                                                               27,275
                                                              -------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $75,752)..........................   80,493
                                                              -------
PREFERRED STOCKS (0.3%)
AUSTRALIA (0.2%)
  27,069  News Corp. Ltd. ..................................      134
                                                              -------
GERMANY (0.0%)
     100  RWE AG ...........................................       27
      20  SAP AG ...........................................       25
                                                              -------
                                                                   52
                                                              -------
ITALY (0.1%)
 +16,000  Fiat S.p.A. ......................................       35
                                                              -------
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $202)..........................      221
                                                              -------
  NO. OF                                                        VALUE
  RIGHTS                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
RIGHTS (0.0%)
AUSTRALIA (0.0%)
 *+2,719  Coca-Cola Amatil Ltd. ............................  $     3
                                                              -------
FRANCE (0.0%)
   *+664  Cie Bancaire S.A. ................................        8
                                                              -------
SPAIN (0.0%)
    +300  Zardoya-Otis S.A. ................................        3
                                                              -------
TOTAL RIGHTS (COST $0)......................................       14
                                                              -------
 
  NO. OF
   UNITS
- --------
UNITS (0.2%)
AUSTRALIA (0.1%)
  +1,622  Westfield Trust ..................................        2
  25,700  Westfield Trust ..................................       45
                                                              -------
                                                                   47
                                                              -------
UNITED KINGDOM (0.1%)
     119  British Aerospace (1 share cumulative loan stock
            plus 1 warrant) ................................        1
  12,400  SmithKline Beecham plc (1 'B' share common plus 1
            preferred share) ...............................      110
                                                              -------
                                                                  111
                                                              -------
TOTAL UNITS (COST $139).....................................      158
                                                              -------
 
  NO. OF
WARRANTS
- --------
WARRANTS (0.0%)
BELGIUM (0.0%)
     +61  Petrofina S.A., expiring 6/3/97 ..................        1
                                                              -------
CANADA (0.0%)
    +121  Trizec Corp., expiring 7/25/99 ...................       --
                                                              -------
HONG KONG (0.0%)
  +2,000  Applied International Holdings Ltd., expiring
            12/30/99 .......................................       --
                                                              -------
ITALY (0.0%)
    +420  R.A.S. S.p.A. Savings Shares, expiring
            12/31/97 .......................................        1
    +880  R.A.S. S.p.A., expiring 11/30/97 .................        4
                                                              -------
                                                                    5
                                                              -------
TOTAL WARRANTS (COST $4)....................................        6
                                                              -------
 
    FACE
  AMOUNT
   (000)
- --------
CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (0.0%)
FRANCE (0.0%)
$     29  Sanofi 4.00%, 1/1/00 (COST $18)...................       18
                                                              -------
TOTAL FOREIGN & U.S. SECURITIES (97.4%) (COST $76,115)......   80,910
                                                              -------
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       54
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
    FACE
  AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
   (000)                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (5.4%)
 REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
 UNITED STATES
  $4,465  U.S. Trust 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95, to be
            repurchased at $4,467, collateralized by $4,630
            United States Treasury Bills, due 7/27/95,
            valued at $4,612 (COST $4,465)..................  $ 4,465
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $80,580)...............   85,375
                                                              -------
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.1%)
 A$    9  Australian Dollar.................................        6
 BF  478  Belgian Franc.....................................       17
L      3  British Pound Sterling............................        5
 C$    5  Canadian Dollar...................................        4
  DM   1  Deutsche Mark.....................................        1
IL 22,189 Italian Lira......................................       13
Y  2,002  Japanese Yen......................................  $    24
 S$    6  Singapore Dollar..................................        5
 SP  842  Spanish Peseta....................................        7
  CHF  2  Swiss Franc.......................................        1
                                                              -------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $83)...........................       83
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (102.9%) (COST $80,663)...................   85,458
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-2.9%)...............   (2,412)
                                                              -------
Net Assets (100%)...........................................  $83,046
                                                              -------
                                                              -------
<TABLE>
<S>        <C>      <C>
- ---------------
+                 --
*                 --
ADR               --
NCS               --
RFD               --
 
<CAPTION>
- ---------
<S>        <C>
+          Non-income producing securities
 
*          Fair valued securities -- See Note A-1
 
ADR        American Depositary Receipt
 
NCS        Non Convertible Shares
 
RFD        Ranked for Dividends
 
</TABLE>
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
 
Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at June 30, 1995, the
Fund  is obligated to deliver or is  to receive foreign currency in exchange for
U.S. dollars as indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 CURRENCY                           IN EXCHANGE              NET UNREALIZED
TO DELIVER    VALUE    SETTLEMENT       FOR        VALUE          GAIN
  (000)       (000)       DATE         (000)       (000)          (000)
- ----------  ---------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------------
<S>         <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>
$    2,616  $   2,616      7/6/95    L   1,660   $   2,642      $      26
IL   2,385          1     7/31/95    $       1           1             --
BF 126,707      4,485     4/30/96    $   4,500       4,500             15
$    2,900      2,900     4/30/96    BF 82,839       2,932             32
 Y 796,000      9,781     4/30/96    $  10,000      10,000            219
            ---------                            ---------          -----
            $  19,783                            $  20,075      $     292
            ---------                            ---------          -----
            ---------                            ---------          -----
</TABLE>
 
BF     --   Belgian Franc
IL     --   Italian Lira
L      --   British Pound Sterling
Y      --   Japanese Yen
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
     SUMMARY OF FOREIGN & U.S. EQUITY SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     VALUE   PERCENT OF
INDUSTRY                                             (000)   NET ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------  -------  -----------
<S>                                                 <C>      <C>
Finance...........................................  $17,388        21.0%
Services..........................................   15,425        18.6
Consumer Goods....................................   15,364        18.5
Energy............................................   10,849        13.1
Capital Equipment.................................    9,650        11.6
Materials.........................................    8,243         9.9
Multi-Industry....................................    3,528         4.2
Mining............................................      463         0.5
                                                    -------         ---
                                                    $80,910        97.4%
                                                    -------         ---
                                                    -------         ---
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       55
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
       FACE
     AMOUNT                                                               VALUE
      (000)                                                               (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (94.8%)
  AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR (2.5%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND (2.5%)
A$       600 Government of Australia 9.00%, 9/15/04.................    $   422
                                                                      ---------
BRITISH POUND STERLING (5.6%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND (5.6%)
L        600 United Kingdom 8.00%, 12/7/00..........................        946
                                                                      ---------
CANADIAN DOLLAR (3.3%)
  EUROBOND (3.3%)
C$       800 The Export-Import Bank of Japan 7.75%, 10/8/02.........        566
                                                                      ---------
DANISH KRONE (5.0%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND (5.0%)
DK     5,050 Kingdom of Denmark 7.00%, 12/15/04.....................        843
                                                                      ---------
DEUTSCHE MARK (13.4%)
  EUROBONDS (10.9%)
DM      500  Treuhandanstalt 6.25%, 7/29/99.........................        364
        850  Treuhandanstalt 6.875%, 6/11/03........................        609
      1,250  Treuhandanstalt 6.75%, 5/13/04.........................        886
                                                                      ---------
                                                                          1,859
                                                                      ---------
  GOVERNMENT BOND (2.5%)
        600  Bundesrepublik 6.50%, 7/15/03..........................        420
                                                                      ---------
  TOTAL DEUTSCHE MARK...............................................      2,279
                                                                      ---------
FINNISH MARKKA (1.4%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND (1.4%)
FM     1,000 Republic of Finland 9.50%, 3/15/04.....................        244
                                                                      ---------
FRENCH FRANC (5.5%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND (5.5%)
FF     4,800 Government of France O.A.T. 6.75%, 10/25/03............        943
                                                                      ---------
ITALIAN LIRA (3.9%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND (3.9%)
IL  1,220,000 Republic of Italy 8.50%, 8/1/99........................       661
                                                                      ---------
JAPANESE YEN (9.5%)
  EUROBONDS (9.5%)
Y     70,000 Japan Development Bank 6.50%, 9/20/01..................      1,015
     45,000  Republic of Austria 4.75%, 12/20/04....................        611
                                                                      ---------
  TOTAL JAPANESE YEN................................................      1,626
                                                                      ---------
NETHERLANDS GUILDER (5.1%)
  GOVERNMENT BONDS (5.1%)
NG      650  Government of the Netherlands 7.25%, 10/1/04...........        427
        690  Government of the Netherlands 7.00%, 6/15/05...........        444
                                                                      ---------
  TOTAL NETHERLANDS GUILDER.........................................        871
                                                                      ---------
NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR (1.9%)
  GOVERNMENT BONDS (1.9%)
NZ$     250  Government of New Zealand 6.50%, 2/15/00...............        159
        250  Government of New Zealand 8.00%, 4/15/04...............        171
                                                                      ---------
  TOTAL NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR..........................................        330
                                                                      ---------
       FACE
     AMOUNT                                                               VALUE
      (000)                                                               (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPANISH PESETA (3.9%)
  GOVERNMENT BONDS (3.9%)
SP    65,000 Government of Spain 10.25%, 11/30/98...................    $   517
     20,000  Government of Spain 10.30%, 6/15/02....................        154
                                                                      ---------
  TOTAL SPANISH PESETA..............................................        671
                                                                      ---------
SWEDISH KRONA (1.6%)
  GOVERNMENT BONDS (1.6%)
SK     2,000 Government of Sweden 10.25%, 5/5/00....................        272
                                                                      ---------
UNITED STATES DOLLAR (32.2%)
  EUROBOND (1.0%)
$        200 Republic of Italy 6.875%, 9/27/23......................        178
                                                                      ---------
  U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (31.2%)
      FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION
        497  Gold 9.00%, 3/1/25.....................................        517
        350  Gold TBA 9.00%, 7/1/25.................................        365
                                                                      ---------
                                                                            882
                                                                      ---------
      GOVERNMENT NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION
        247  ARM 7.00%, 1/1/25......................................        252
         97  ARM 7.50%, 1/20/25.....................................        102
        150  TBA 30 Yr 9.00%, 7/15/25...............................        157
                                                                      ---------
                                                                            511
                                                                      ---------
      U.S. TREASURY BONDS
        140  8.875%, 8/15/17........................................        175
         30  8.125%, 8/15/19........................................         35
         20  8.00%, 11/15/21........................................         23
                                                                      ---------
                                                                            233
                                                                      ---------
      U.S. TREASURY NOTES
        475  7.875%, 2/15/96........................................        481
      1,865  7.50%, 11/15/01........................................      2,001
      1,210  6.25%, 2/15/03.........................................      1,213
                                                                      ---------
                                                                          3,695
                                                                      ---------
                                                                          5,321
                                                                      ---------
TOTAL UNITED STATES DOLLAR..........................................      5,499
                                                                      ---------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $15,661)........................     16,173
                                                                      ---------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (4.2%)
  DEUTSCHE MARK (0.8%)
    POOLED TIME DEPOSIT (0.8%)
DM      187  ING Bank 4.75%, 7/5/95.................................        135
                                                                      ---------
UNITED STATES DOLLAR (3.4%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (3.4%)
$        586 U.S. Trust, 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95, to be
               repurchased at $586, collateralized by $615 U.S.
               Treasury Bills, due 7/27/95, valued at $613..........        586
                                                                      ---------
TOTAL SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (COST $721)............................        721
                                                                      ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (99.0%) (COST $16,382)............................     16,894
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (1.0%)........................        163
                                                                      ---------
NET ASSETS (100%)...................................................    $17,057
                                                                      ---------
                                                                      ---------
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>   <C>
- ---------------
ARM   --    Adjustable Rate Mortgage
TBA   --    Security is subject to delayed delivery.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       56
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
 
Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at June 30, 1995, the
Fund  is obligated to deliver or is  to receive foreign currency in exchange for
U.S. dollars or foreign currency as indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
CURRENCY
   TO                              IN EXCHANGE
 DELIVER     VALUE    SETTLEMENT       FOR        VALUE     NET UNREALIZED
  (000)      (000)       DATE         (000)       (000)    GAIN(LOSS) (000)
- ---------  ---------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------------
<S>        <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>
 NG 1,300  $     839     7/13/95    $     821   $     822      $     (17)
 DM 1,000        725      9/6/95    $     701         701            (24)
 DK 2,800        518      9/7/95    $     508         508            (10)
A$    500        354     9/20/95    NZ$   546         362              8
           ---------                            ---------            ---
           $   2,436                            $   2,393      $     (43)
           ---------                            ---------            ---
           ---------                            ---------            ---
</TABLE>
 
A$    --    Australian Dollar
DK    --    Danish Krone
DM    --    Deutsche Mark
NG    --    Netherlands Guilder
NZ$   --    New Zealand Dollar
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       57
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                    VALUE
     SHARES                                                         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS (100.0%)
  AUSTRALIA (0.0%)
    +79,500  Odin Mining & Investment Co. Ltd. ................  $     24
                                                                 --------
  CHINA (2.0%)
    396,000  China Merchants Shokou Port Services 'B' .........       215
   *630,000  Chiwan Petroleum Supply 'B' ......................       230
     30,000  Jilin Chemical Industrial Co. ADR ................       578
    709,800  Jinqiao Export Processing Zone Development Co.
               Ltd. 'B' .......................................       341
  5,519,000  Maanshan Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. ...................     1,155
     59,000  Shandong Huaneng Power Co. Ltd. ..................       450
    568,100  Shanghai Diesel Engine Co. Ltd. 'B' ..............       352
    315,000  Shanghai Erfanji Co. Ltd. 'B' ....................        47
    500,000  Shanghai Industrial Sewing Machine Co. Ltd. ......        92
    215,670  Shanghai Jin Jiang Tower 'B' .....................        69
  1,000,000  Shanghai Narcissus Electric Appliances Industrial
               Co. Ltd. 'B' ...................................       260
      8,800  Shanghai Petrochemical Co. ADR ...................       276
    608,000  Shanghai Phoenix Bicycle 'B' .....................       131
   +221,000  Shanghai Refrigerator Compressor Co. Ltd. 'B' ....        79
    335,500  Shanghai Tire & Rubber 'B' .......................       101
     75,000  Shanghai Yaohua Pilkington Glass 'B' .............        75
     81,400  Shenzhen Chiwan Wharf Holdings 'B' ...............        41
 *1,100,000  Shenzhen North Jainshe Motorcycle ................       533
  3,670,000  Yizheng Chemical Fibre Co. 'H' ...................     1,281
                                                                 --------
                                                                    6,306
                                                                 --------
  HONG KONG (27.2%)
  8,020,000  Charoen Pokphand Co. .............................     2,824
  2,665,000  Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd. ........................    13,191
    593,000  China Light & Power Co. Ltd. .....................     3,050
  1,769,000  Citic Pacific Ltd. ...............................     4,447
 12,056,000  Guangdong Investments Ltd. .......................     6,583
  2,822,000  Harbin Power Equipment Co. .......................       903
    861,000  Hong Kong Electric Holdings ......................     2,926
    628,756  Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank ........................     8,065
  6,030,800  Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd. ................    11,925
  2,698,000  Hopewell Holdings Ltd. ...........................     2,284
  2,108,000  Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. ...........................    10,189
  1,645,000  New World Development Co. Ltd. ...................     5,474
    430,000  Peregrine Investment Holdings ....................       611
    300,000  Sum Cheong International .........................       171
    601,100  Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. .....................     4,447
    795,300  Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A' ...........................     6,064
    972,000  Varitronix International Ltd. ....................     1,702
    554,000  Wharf Holdings Ltd. ..............................     1,808
                                                                 --------
                                                                   86,664
                                                                 --------
  INDIA (0.8%)
     38,000  Grasim Industries Ltd. GDR .......................       912
     49,000  Hindalco Industries Ltd. .........................     1,421
                                                                 --------
                                                                    2,333
                                                                 --------
  INDONESIA (6.6%)
   *300,000  Asiana Imi Industries (Foreign) ..................       128
   *504,000  Bank International Indonesia (Foreign) ...........     1,556
   *770,000  Barito Pacific Timber (Foreign) ..................     1,106
 *5,600,000  Bimantara Citra ..................................     3,143
   *594,000  Charoen Pokphand Co. Ltd.(Foreign) ...............     1,294
   *375,000  Duta Pertiwi (Foreign) ...........................       379
   *462,000  Indocement Tunggal (Foreign) .....................     1,815
   *763,500  Indosat (Foreign) ................................     2,897
   *393,000  Kalbe Farma (Foreign) ............................     1,800
                                                                    VALUE
     SHARES                                                         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
   *378,500  Kermika Indonesia Associasi (Foreign) ............  $    510
 *1,000,000  Ometraco (Foreign) ...............................       719
   *962,400  Sona Topas Tourism Industry (Foreign) ............     1,296
   *311,000  Sorini Corp. (Foreign) ...........................     1,487
 *1,375,000  Ultra Jaya Milk IDR (Foreign) ....................     1,235
   *679,000  United Tractors (Foreign) ........................     1,448
                                                                 --------
                                                                   20,813
                                                                 --------
  KOREA (3.6%)
     49,560  Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co. ...........     2,307
     40,000  Korea Electric Power .............................     1,498
      *+900  Korea Mobile Telecommunications Corp. ............       949
     69,600  Pohang Iron & Steel Ltd. .........................     2,053
    *11,870  Samsung Electronics Co. ..........................     2,445
    #10,000  Samsung Electronics Co. GDR (New) ................       962
       #991  Samsung Electronics Co. GDS ......................        71
    #23,958  Samsung Electronics Co. GDS (Euro 1/2
               non-voting).....................................     1,264
                                                                 --------
                                                                   11,549
                                                                 --------
  MALAYSIA (21.9%)
    758,000  Bandar Raya Developments Bhd. ....................     1,648
    822,000  Genting Bhd. .....................................     8,126
    794,000  Land & General Bhd. ..............................     2,654
    420,000  Magnum Corp. Bhd. ................................       982
  1,495,500  Malayan Banking Bhd. .............................    11,839
  1,038,000  Malaysian International Shipping (Foreign) .......     3,044
  1,317,000  Malaysian Resources Corp. Bhd. ...................     2,323
    479,000  Mulpha International Bhd. ........................       582
  2,570,000  Renong Bhd. ......................................     4,786
  1,215,000  Resorts World Bhd. ...............................     7,127
    650,000  Sime Darby Bhd. ..................................     1,813
  1,024,000  Tan & Tan Development ............................     1,277
    233,000  Tanjong plc ......................................       803
   +564,000  Technology Resources Industries ..................     1,619
  1,171,000  Telekom Malaysia Bhd. ............................     8,886
  1,264,000  Tenaga Nasional Bhd. .............................     5,159
    460,000  Time Engineering Bhd. ............................     1,547
    864,000  United Engineers Bhd. ............................     5,493
                                                                 --------
                                                                   69,708
                                                                 --------
  PAKISTAN (0.2%)
      7,200  Pakistan Telecommunications ......................       731
                                                                 --------
  PHILIPPINES (5.9%)
   +321,200  Aboitiz Equity Ventures ..........................        65
    860,600  Ayala Corp. 'B' ..................................       960
  1,408,125  Ayala Land, Inc. 'B' .............................     1,626
  #+289,440  Benpres Holdings Corp. GDR .......................     2,460
  7,638,000  JG Summit Holding 'B' ............................     2,273
    402,465  Manilla Electric 'B' .............................     3,231
  4,981,500  Petron Corp. .....................................     3,218
     15,500  Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. ...........     1,108
      9,800  Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. ADR .......       703
     59,678  Philippine National Bank 'B' .....................       695
  *+228,000  Pilipino Telephone Corp. .........................       179
    289,380  San Miguel Corp. 'B' .............................     1,201
 +4,304,300  SM Prime Holdings, Inc. ..........................     1,180
                                                                 --------
                                                                   18,899
                                                                 --------
  SINGAPORE (14.8%)
    260,000  British-American Tobacco .........................     1,186
    871,800  City Developments Ltd. ...........................     5,334
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       58
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
<TABLE>
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
                                                                    VALUE
     SHARES                                                         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SINGAPORE (CONT.)
    749,000  DBS Land Ltd. ....................................  $  2,347
    421,500  Development Bank of Singapore ....................     4,796
    237,000  Fraser & Neave Ltd. ..............................     2,730
     87,500  Jurong Engineering Ltd. ..........................       513
    658,000  Keppel Corp. .....................................     5,368
    696,666  Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. ....................     7,727
    195,000  Overseas Union Bank Ltd. .........................     1,228
    391,000  Sembawang Corp. Ltd. .............................     2,378
    115,000  Singapore Airlines Ltd. (Foreign) ................     1,062
    200,400  Singapore Press Holdings (Foreign) ...............     2,997
  1,964,000  Singapore Technologies Industrial Corp. ..........     2,979
    400,000  Straits Steamship Land Ltd. ......................     1,385
    561,000  Straits Trading Co. Ltd. .........................     1,405
    397,000  United Overseas Bank Ltd. ........................     3,750
                                                                 --------
                                                                   47,185
                                                                 --------
  TAIWAN (2.4%)
   +612,000  Advanced Semiconductor Engineering, Inc. .........     1,777
   +738,000  Taiwan Semiconductor Co. .........................     3,586
   +445,000  United Micro Electronics Corp. Ltd. ..............     2,283
                                                                 --------
                                                                    7,646
                                                                 --------
  THAILAND (14.6%)
     24,300  Advanced Information Services Co. Ltd. ...........       360
     69,800  Advanced Information Services Co. Ltd.
               (Foreign) ......................................     1,035
    677,300  Bangkok Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ..................     7,463
    144,300  Charoen Pokphand Feedmill Co. Ltd. (Foreign) .....       859
     13,800  Charoen Popkhand Feedmill Co. Ltd. ...............        84
    752,044  Finance One Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ...................     5,545
    239,400  International Engineering Co. ....................     1,794
     69,400  Land & House Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ..................     1,462
    207,800  National Finance & Securities Co. Ltd.
               (Foreign) ......................................     1,027
    201,600  Phatra Thanakit Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ...............     1,682
     96,000  Shinawatra Computer Co. Ltd. .....................     2,380
     53,000  Siam Cement Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ...................     3,384
    315,500  Siam Commercial Bank Co. Ltd. ....................     3,016
  1,500,000  Telecomasia Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ...................     5,621
    511,200  Thai Farmer's Bank Co. ...........................     4,887
    466,400  Thai Telephone & Telecommunications ..............     3,817
     92,000  United Communication Industry (Foreign) ..........     1,386
    403,000  Wongpaitoon Footwear Co. Ltd. (Foreign) ..........       620
                                                                 --------
                                                                   46,422
                                                                 --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $289,705)............................  318,280
                                                                 --------
 
     NO. OF                                                         VALUE
     RIGHTS                                                         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIGHTS (0.0%)
  INDONESIA (0.0%)
  *+400,000  Ometraco, expiring 8/29/95 .......................  $     --
                                                                 --------
*+1,924,800  Sona Topas Tourism Industry, expiring 7/13/95 ....        --
                                                                 --------
TOTAL RIGHTS (COST $0).........................................        --
                                                                 --------
     NO. OF
      UNITS
- -----------
UNITS (0.1%)
  INDIA (0.1%)
     34,000  SIV Industries Ltd. (3 GDR's + 1 Warrant) (COST
               $649) ..........................................       357
                                                                 --------
     NO. OF
   WARRANTS
- -----------
WARRANTS (0.0%)
  THAILAND (0.0%)
  *+132,200  National Finance & Securities Co. Ltd., expiring
               11/15/99 (COST $0) .............................        --
                                                                 --------
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (100.1%) (COST $290,354)..............   318,637
                                                                 --------
       FACE
     AMOUNT
      (000)
- -----------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (0.3%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
  UNITED STATES
$        883 U.S. Trust, 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95, to
               be repurchased at $883, collateralized by $920
               United States Treasury Bills, due 7/27/95,
               valued at $916 (COST $883) .....................       883
                                                                 --------
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $291,237).................  319,520
                                                                 --------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.0%)
HK$     213  Hong Kong Dollar .................................        27
 MYR      4  Malaysian Ringgit ................................         2
S$        70 Singapore Dollar .................................        50
T$       519 Taiwan Dollar ....................................        20
                                                                 --------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $99)..............................  99
                                                                 --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (100.4%) (COST $291,336).....................  319,619
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-0.4%)..................   (1,455)
                                                                 --------
NET ASSETS (100%)..............................................  $318,164
                                                                 --------
                                                                 --------
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
+      --  Non income producing securities
*      --  Fair valued securities -- See Note A-1
#      --  144A Security -- Certain conditions for public
           sale may exist
ADR    --  American Depositary Receipt
GDR    --  Global Depositary Receipt
GDS    --  Global Depositary Shares
IDR    --  International Depositary Receipt
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
INDUSTRY                                   VALUE        PERCENTAGE OF
- -----------------------------------        (000)           NET ASSETS
                                        --------     ----------------
Banking............................     $ 56,141              17.6   %
Real Estate........................       51,417              16.2
Telecommunications.................       40,699              12.8
Services...........................       39,294              12.3
Multi-Industry.....................       34,572              10.9
Capital Equipment..................       30,291               9.5
Materials..........................       21,128               6.6
Energy.............................       18,974               6.0
Consumer Goods.....................       15,244               4.8
Financial Services.................       10,877               3.4
                                        --------             -----
                                        $318,637             100.1   %
                                        --------             -----
                                        --------             -----
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       59
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
COMMON STOCKS (91.8%)
  AEROSPACE (3.1%)
  24,400  AAR Corp..........................................  $   436
  10,800  Thiokol Corp......................................      327
  45,200  United Industrial Corp............................      322
                                                              -------
                                                                1,085
                                                              -------
  BANKING (9.4%)
  12,700  First Security Corp...............................      356
  16,000  Greenpoint Financial Corp.........................      378
  12,700  Onbankcorp., Inc..................................      360
  22,000  Peoples Heritage Financial Group, Inc.............      330
  11,200  Standard Federal Bank.............................      377
  18,120  Summit Bancorp., Inc..............................      385
   9,000  Union Bank of San Francisco.......................      380
  13,000  Union Planters Corp...............................      348
  14,000  Washington Mutual, Inc............................      328
                                                              -------
                                                                3,242
                                                              -------
  BUILDING (3.3%)
  10,200  Ameron, Inc.......................................      370
  31,000  Gilbert Associates, Inc. 'A'......................      403
  15,200  Pratt & Lambert, Inc..............................      355
                                                              -------
                                                                1,128
                                                              -------
  CAPITAL GOODS (2.8%)
  13,600  Binks Manufacturing Corp..........................      345
  19,400  Cascade Corp......................................      310
  13,900  Starret (L.S.) Co. 'A'............................      315
                                                              -------
                                                                  970
                                                              -------
  CHEMICALS (3.8%)
  20,400  Aceto Corp........................................      301
  16,500  Dexter Corp.......................................      390
  14,700  LeaRonal, Inc.....................................      310
  18,400  Quaker Chemical Corp..............................      299
                                                              -------
                                                                1,300
                                                              -------
  COMMUNICATIONS (1.1%)
  18,500  Comsat Corp.......................................      363
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--DURABLES (3.1%)
  17,900  Arvin Industries, Inc.............................      400
  23,320  Knape & Vogt Manufacturing Co.....................      350
  21,000  Oneida Ltd........................................      310
                                                              -------
                                                                1,060
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--RETAIL (6.3%)
  19,200  CPI Corp..........................................      367
   4,620  Dave & Busters, Inc...............................       92
  27,100  Deb Shops, Inc....................................       88
  23,100  Edison Brothers Stores............................      277
  14,300  Guilford Mills, Inc...............................      348
  29,000  Ross Stores, Inc..................................      341
   9,100  Springs Industries, Inc. 'A'......................      339
  33,000  Venture Stores, Inc...............................      326
                                                              -------
                                                                2,178
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--STAPLES (4.0%)
   9,798  Block Drug Co. 'A'................................      331
  19,000  Coors (Adolph) 'B'................................      311
  15,300  International Multifoods Corp.....................      344
  23,400  Nash Finch Co.....................................      380
                                                              -------
                                                                1,366
                                                              -------
ENERGY (2.0%)
  13,700  Diamond Shamrock, Inc.............................  $   353
  13,800  Ultramar Corp.....................................      348
                                                              -------
                                                                  701
                                                              -------
FINANCIAL--DIVERSIFIED (3.2%)
  10,900  FINOVA Group, Inc.................................      381
   8,100  GATX Corp.........................................      382
  22,900  Manufactured Home Communities, Inc................      352
                                                              -------
                                                                1,115
                                                              -------
HEALTH CARE (4.0%)
  12,700  Beckman Instruments, Inc..........................      354
  19,000  Bindley Western Industries, Inc...................      301
  52,600  Kinetic Concepts, Inc.............................      375
  18,500  United Wisconsin Services, Inc....................      370
                                                              -------
                                                                1,400
                                                              -------
INDUSTRIAL (5.6%)
   9,500  American Filtrona Corp............................      280
   6,900  Barnes Group, Inc.................................      278
  28,100  Gencorp, Inc......................................      302
  28,100  Kaman Corp. 'A'...................................      358
  27,600  Zero Corp.........................................      414
  15,700  Zurn Industries Inc...............................      314
                                                              -------
                                                                1,946
                                                              -------
INSURANCE (5.3%)
  12,100  Argonaut Group, Inc...............................      384
  20,000  Enhance Financial Services Group..................      387
  15,600  Provident Life & Accident Insurance Co............      363
  10,600  Selective Insurance Group, Inc....................      350
   8,900  US Life Corp......................................      358
                                                              -------
                                                                1,842
                                                              -------
METALS (2.2%)
   5,300  Carpenter Technology Corp.........................      361
  10,300  Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co..........................      397
                                                              -------
                                                                  758
                                                              -------
PAPER & PACKAGING (3.0%)
  11,300  Ball Corp.........................................      394
   7,700  Potlatch Corp.....................................      321
  18,600  Sealright Co., Inc................................      312
                                                              -------
                                                                1,027
                                                              -------
SERVICES (11.0%)
  15,400  ABM Industries, Inc...............................      356
  15,600  Angelica Corp.....................................      390
  19,300  Bowne & Co........................................      331
  22,200  Cross A.T. Co. 'A'................................      330
  28,900  Handleman Co......................................      278
  37,500  Jackpot Enterprises, Inc..........................      380
  11,400  National Service Industries, Inc..................      329
  17,100  New England Business Services, Inc................      338
  40,500  Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc........................      354
  26,500  Russ Berrie & Co., Inc............................      368
   9,200  Wallace Computer Services, Inc....................      353
                                                              -------
                                                                3,807
                                                              -------
TECHNOLOGY (9.7%)
  18,000  Augat, Inc........................................      369
   6,900  Avnet, Inc........................................      334
  35,000  Core Industries, Inc..............................      376
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       60
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  TECHNOLOGY (CONT.)
  15,400  Cubic Corp........................................  $   346
  21,000  Gerber Scientific, Inc............................      352
  15,000  Joslyn Corp.......................................      394
  13,100  MTS Systems Corp..................................      354
  20,900  National Computer Systems, Inc....................      434
  18,500  Scitex Corp.......................................      398
                                                              -------
                                                                3,357
                                                              -------
TRANSPORTATION (2.3%)
  18,600  Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc...................      386
  17,800  SkyWest, Inc......................................      403
                                                              -------
                                                                  789
                                                              -------
UTILITIES (6.6%)
  13,600  Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp................      367
   8,500  Commonwealth Energy Systems.......................      321
  11,000  Eastern Entreprises...............................      329
  17,100  Oneok, Inc........................................      366
   9,400  Orange & Rockland Utilities, Inc..................      317
   6,500  SJW Corp..........................................      233
  20,600  Washington Water Power Co.........................      330
                                                              -------
                                                                2,263
                                                              -------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $29,742)..........................   31,697
                                                              -------
 
    FACE
  AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
   (000)                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (7.7%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
$   2,677 U.S. Trust 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95, to be
            repurchased at $2,678, collateralized by $2,695
            United States Treasury Bills, due 7/20/95,
            valued at $2,687 (COST $2,677)..................  $ 2,677
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (99.5%) (COST $32,419)....................  34,374
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (0.5%)................      168
                                                              -------
NET ASSET VALUE (100%)......................................  $34,542
                                                              -------
                                                              -------
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                        61
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (100.0%)
  CORPORATE BONDS (23.9%)
    UNITED STATES (23.9%)
$        500  AES Corp. 9.75%, 6/15/00 .........................  $    511
         500  Armco, Inc. 9.375%, 11/1/00 ......................       481
       ++200  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 10.50%, 6/1/12 ........       292
         500  Comcast Corp. 9.50%, 1/15/08 .....................       501
       1,000  Marcus Cable Co. 0.00% to 6/15/00, 14.25% to
                12/15/05 .......................................       533
         500  Owens Illinois, Inc. 10.50%, 6/15/02 .............       519
         300  Plastic Specialties & Technologies, Inc. 11.25%,
                12/1/03 ........................................       282
         500  Primark Corp. 8.75%, 10/15/00 ....................       488
         500  Sherritt, Inc. 10.50%, 3/31/14 ...................       486
        #350  Six Flags Theme Park, Inc. 0.00% to 6/15/98,
                12.25% to 6/1/05 ...............................       254
         500  Tracor, Inc. 10.875%, 8/15/01 ....................       513
         518  Trump Taj Mahal PIK 11.35%, 11/15/99 .............       411
         500  Viacom International Subordinate Note 8.00%,
                7/7/06 .........................................       487
        #150  Weirton Steel 10.75%, 6/1/05 .....................       142
         500  Westpoint Stevens, Inc. 9.375%, 12/15/05 .........       484
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (COST $6,286)...........................     6,384
                                                                  --------
  EUROBONDS (57.8%)
    ARGENTINA (1.3%)
        #400  Transport de Gas del Sur 7.75%, 12/23/98 .........       354
                                                                  --------
    BRAZIL (27.5%)
       1,300  Ceval Overseas Ltd. 10.75%, 7/11/96 ..............     1,300
      #1,000  Compania Brasil de Projertos 12.50%, 12/22/97 ....       972
      +++780  Federal Republic of Brazil 'C' Bond PIK 8.00%,
                4/15/14 ........................................       385
    +++2,000  Federal Republic of Brazil New Money Bond 7.31%,
                4/15/09 ........................................     1,078
      #1,000  Iochpe Maxion S.A. 12.375%, 11/8/02 ..............       880
       1,500  Klabin Fabricadora Papel 10.00%, 12/20/01 ........     1,357
       1,750  Minas Gerais 'B' 8.25%, 2/10/00 ..................     1,365
                                                                  --------
                                                                     7,337
                                                                  --------
    BULGARIA (4.7%)
    +++3,000  Bulgaria IAB 7.56%, 7/28/11 ......................     1,268
                                                                  --------
    ECUADOR (4.2%)
    +++2,250  Republic of Ecuador 7.25%, 2/28/25 ...............     1,119
                                                                  --------
    MEXICO (9.4%)
       1,500  Cemex S.A. 8.875%, 6/10/98 .......................     1,297
        #200  Cemex S.A. 9.50%, 9/20/01 ........................       156
         500  Empresas La Moderna 10.25%, 11/12/97 .............       455
        #216  MC-Cuernavaca Trust 9.25%, 7/25/01 ...............       158
         750  Mexico Par Bond 'B' (Value Recovery Rights
                Attached) 6.25%, 12/31/19 ......................       457
                                                                  --------
                                                                     2,523
                                                                  --------
    NIGERIA (5.0%)
       3,000  Central Bank of Nigeria (Warrants Attached) 6.25%,
                11/15/20 .......................................     1,328
                                                                  --------
    VENEZUELA (5.7%)
    +++3,000  Republic of Venezuela 'B' (Oil Warrants Attached)
                6.75%, 3/31/20 .................................     1,511
                                                                  --------
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
  TOTAL EUROBONDS (COST $15,585)................................  $ 15,440
                                                                  --------
  LOAN AGREEMENTS (8.9%)
    MOROCCO (2.2%)
$   p+++1,000 Kingdom of Morocco Restructuring and Consolidation
                Agreement 'A' 1990 7.38%, 1/1/09 (Participation:
                Salomon Brothers)...............................       589
                                                                  --------
    RUSSIA (6.7%)
  ++/+++5,500 Bank for Foreign Economic Affairs.................     1,787
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL LOAN AGREEMENTS (COST $2,316) ..........................     2,376
                                                                  --------
  YANKEE BONDS (9.4%)
    ARGENTINA (1.2%)
        #350  Bridas Corp. 12.50%, 11/15/99 ....................       313
                                                                  --------
    INDONESIA (0.6%)
         150  Polysindo Eka Perkasa 13.00%, 6/15/01 ............       152
                                                                  --------
    MEXICO (5.9%)
      #1,500  Petro Mexicanos 8.625%, 12/1/23 ..................     1,018
         800  Tolmex S.A. 8.375%, 11/1/03 ......................       566
                                                                  --------
                                                                     1,584
                                                                  --------
    UNITED STATES (1.7%)
         500  Algoma Steel, Inc. 12.375%, 7/15/05 ..............       460
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL YANKEE BONDS (COST $2,552) .............................     2,509
                                                                  --------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $26,739) ...................    26,709
                                                                  --------
 
      NO. OF
       UNITS
- ------------
UNITS (0.4%)
  UNITED STATES (0.4%)
        #100  Gulf States Steel ($1 million 1st Mortgage Note +
                1 Warrant) 13.50%, 4/15/03 (COST $100) .........        97
                                                                  --------
 
TOTAL INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES (COST $26,839)..................    26,806
                                                                  --------
 
        FACE
      AMOUNT
       (000)
- ------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (26.2%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
  UNITED STATES
$       6,983 U.S. Trust 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95 to be
                repurchased at $6,986, collateralized by $7,235
                U.S. Treasury Bills, due 7/27/95, valued at
                $7,207 (COST $6,983) ...........................     6,983
                                                                  --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (126.6%) (COST $33,822).......................    33,789
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-26.6%)..................    (7,090)
                                                                  --------
NET ASSETS (100%)...............................................  $ 26,699
                                                                  --------
                                                                  --------
 
- ---------------
 
++    --   Non-income producing securities -- in
           default
+++   --   Variable or floating rate securities --
           rate disclosed is as of June 30, 1995.
#     --   144A Security -- Certain conditions for
           public sale may exist.
IAB   --   Interest Arrears Bond
PIK   --   Payment-in-kind. Income may be received
           in additional securities or cash at the
           discretion of the issuer.
p     --   Participation interests were acquired
           through the financial institutions
           indicated parenthetically.

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements. 

                                       62
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
         SUMMARY OF FIXED INCOME SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
                                                     PERCENT
                                           VALUE      OF NET
INDUSTRY                                   (000)      ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------  --------   --------
Foreign Government Bonds................  $  7,146        26.8%
Consumer Goods..........................     3,748        14.0
Energy..................................     3,343        12.5
Materials...............................     3,306        12.4
Loan Agreements.........................     2,376         8.9
Capital Equipment.......................     1,904         7.1
Telecommunications......................     1,520         5.7
Metals..................................     1,083         4.1
Services................................     1,153         4.3
Industrial..............................       972         3.6
Finance.................................       158         0.6
                                          --------   --------
                                          $ 26,709       100.0%
                                          --------   --------
                                          --------   --------
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       63
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         VALUE
     SHARES                                              (000)
<C>          <S>                                     <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS (60.2%)
  ARGENTINA (8.9%)
      1,851  Banco del Sud Argentina ..............  $      11
   +126,607  Banco del Suquia S.A. 'B' ............        184
        395  Buenos Aires Embotelladora ADR .......         10
     14,900  Capex S.A. 'A' .......................        116
    #22,865  Capex S.A. ADR .......................        352
     23,610  CIADEA (Renault) .....................        115
     13,545  Quilmes Industrial ...................        264
                                                     ---------
                                                         1,052
                                                     ---------
  BRAZIL (18.8%)
 25,550,000  Acesita ..............................        166
     15,119  Brahma ...............................          5
  6,340,820  Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo ..........        207
  1,108,000  Cia Paulista De Forca e Luz ..........         55
  9,400,000  Cia Siderurgica Nacional .............        214
     #6,313  Cemig GDR ............................        123
  1,770,000  Eletrobras ...........................        461
      8,300  Eletrobras ADR .......................        112
    305,000  Light ................................         96
    #15,930  Rhodia-Ster S.A. GDR .................        223
  4,600,000  Telebras .............................        131
      6,300  Telebras ADR .........................        208
  1,303,000  Telesp ...............................        166
     #3,907  Usiminas ADR .........................         43
                                                     ---------
                                                         2,210
                                                     ---------
  CHILE (2.6%)
      7,915  Empresa Nacional de Electricidad
               ADR ................................        210
      5,000  Maderas y Sinteticos S.A. ADR ........         94
                                                     ---------
                                                           304
                                                     ---------
  MEXICO (26.9%)
      9,600  ALFA S.A. de C.V. ....................        117
    +56,800  Apasco S.A. de C.V. ..................        225
     96,270  Banacci 'B' ..........................        148
    106,588  Banacci 'L' ..........................        162
    #24,080  Cemex ADR ............................        164
     19,400  Cemex 'CPO' ..........................         67
     16,150  Empresas ICA Sociedad Controladora
               S.A. de C.V. .......................        166
    186,250  FEMSA 'B' ............................        435
     #4,300  Grupo Carso S.A. ADR .................         47
   +157,000  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'B' ........         46
    +37,015  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'L' ........         10
    #49,790  Grupo Financiero Bancomer ADS ........        299
   +107,000  Grupo Financiero Probursa 'C' ........         47
    +12,950  Grupo Mexicano de Desarollo 'B'
               ADR ................................         50
     +5,000  Grupo Simec S.A. de C.V. 'B' ADR .....         49
     #9,550  Hylsamex ADR .........................        174
      8,275  Pan American Beverages, Inc. 'A' .....        248
     30,450  Sidek 'B' ............................         27
     10,660  Telefonos de Mexico 'L' ADR ..........        316
     89,450  Tolmex 'B2' ..........................        349
     +1,150  Tribasa ADR ..........................         10
                                                     ---------
                                                         3,156
                                                     ---------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                         VALUE
     SHARES                                              (000)
<C>          <S>                                     <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
 
  PERU (3.0%)
     67,600  Banco de Credito del Peru 'C' ........  $     119
    136,061  Telefonica del Peru 'B' ..............        232
                                                     ---------
                                                           351
                                                     ---------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $7,930)..................  7,073
                                                     ---------
PREFERRED STOCKS (36.2%)
  BRAZIL (36.2%)
    670,000  Acesita ..............................          5
 60,940,000  Banco Bradesco .......................        516
  2,790,000  Banco Nacional .......................         54
 15,950,000  Banco do Brasil ......................        191
  3,940,000  Banco do Estado ......................         22
        164  Bardella S.A. ........................         25
 +1,134,700  Brahma ...............................        372
    293,000  Brasmotor S.A. .......................         54
    800,000  Cemig ................................         16
     #3,539  Cemig ADR ............................         70
   +181,000  Centrais Eletricas de Santa Catarina
               'B' ................................        146
     65,400  Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo ..........          3
  6,040,000  Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz ..........        199
     20,000  Confab Industrial S.A. ...............         15
    400,000  Coteminas ............................        126
  3,200,000  Continental 2001 .....................         69
    144,064  Dixie Lalekla S.A. ...................        113
    939,000  Eletrobras 'B' .......................        250
  1,639,100  Itaubanco ............................        499
  8,166,000  Lojas Renner .........................        138
     85,000  Multibras S.A. .......................         70
  4,528,000  Petrobras ............................        384
 49,500,000  Refripar .............................         96
 10,000,000  Tec Toy Industria Brinquedos .........          6
  5,889,383  Telebras .............................        194
  1,867,000  Telesp ...............................        231
 62,800,000  Usiminas .............................         71
  1,080,000  Vale do Rio Doce .....................        163
   +325,000  WEG S.A. .............................        148
                                                     ---------
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $4,733)...............  4,246
                                                     ---------
PURCHASED OPTIONS (0.0%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
 +4,000,000  Cia Paulista De Forza e Luz call,
               expiring 10/16/95, strike price BR
               70.00 (COST $0).....................          6
                                                     ---------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     NO. OF
     RIGHTS
      (000)
<C>          <S>                                    <C>
- -----------
RIGHTS (0.0%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
*+1,100,455  Banco Bradesco (COST $0).............          1
                                                    ---------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       FACE
     AMOUNT
      (000)
<C>          <S>                                    <C>
- -----------
CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (3.2%)
  COLOMBIA (3.2%)
 $     #500  Banco de Colombia 5.20%, 2/1/99 (COST
               $489) .............................        380
                                                    ---------
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (99.6%) (COST $13,152)...     11,706
                                                    ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       64
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     AMOUNT                                             VALUE
      (000)                                             (000)
<C>          <S>                                    <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.7%)
 APS     33  Argentine Peso ......................  $      33
 BR      21  Brazilian Real ......................         22
  ME    136  Mexican New Peso ....................         22
 PS       2  Peruvian Sol ........................          1
                                                    ---------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $78).................  78
                                                    ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (100.3%) (COST $13,230).........  11,784
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-0.3%).....        (41)
                                                    ---------
NET ASSETS (100%).................................  $11,743
                                                    ---------
                                                    ---------
- ---------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>        <C>        <C>
+                 --  Non-income producing securities
*                 --  Fair valued securities -- See Note A-1
                      144A Security -- certain conditions for public sale
#                 --  may exist
ADR               --  American Depositary Receipt
ADS               --  American Depositary Shares
GDR               --  Global Depositary Receipt
</TABLE>
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
 
  Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at June 30, 1995,
  the Fund is obligated to deliver U.S. dollars in exchange for foreign currency
  as indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           NET
  CURRENCY                                IN EXCHANGE                  UNREALIZED
 TO DELIVER       VALUE     SETTLEMENT        FOR          VALUE       GAIN (LOSS)
    (000)         (000)        DATE          (000)         (000)          (000)
- -------------     -----     -----------  -------------     -----     ---------------
<S>            <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
  $  72         $      72       7/3/95         BR 66     $      72             --
                       --                                       --
                       --                                       --
                                              ------                          ---
                                              ------                          ---
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>        <C>      <C>
- ---------------
BR            --    Brazilian Real
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       VALUE     PERCENTAGE OF
INDUSTRY                                                               (000)      NET ASSETS
<S>                                                                  <C>        <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finance............................................................  $   2,738          23.3%
Consumer Goods.....................................................      2,009          17.1
Materials..........................................................      1,974          16.8
Utilities..........................................................      1,954          16.6
Services...........................................................      1,477          12.6
Energy Sources.....................................................        999           8.5
Multi-Industry.....................................................        329           2.8
Capital Equipment..................................................        226           1.9
                                                                     ---------         ---
                                                                     $  11,706          99.6%
                                                                     ---------         ---
                                                                     ---------         ---
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  

                                       65
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
      SHARES                                                       (000)
<C>            <S>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS (71.7%)
  ARGENTINA (2.1%)
       2,200   Banco Frances del Rio de la Plata.................  $13
         705   Banco Frances del Rio de la Plata ADR.............  13
       3,420   Banco de Galicia y Buenos Aires 'B'...............  14
       8,227   Banco de Galicia y Buenos Aires ADR...............  130
       1,410   Banco del Sud Argentina...........................   9
         960   Buenos Aires Embotelladora ADR....................  24
      32,467   CIADEA (Renault)..................................  157
       1,500   Capex S.A. 'A'....................................  12
      #6,575   Capex S.A. ADR....................................  101
      18,133   Cia Naviera Perez Companc S.A. 'B'................  76
      23,352   Quilmes Industrial................................  455
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,004
                                                                   --
  BRAZIL (5.4%)
      16,099   Brahma............................................   5
      #5,702   Cemig.............................................  111
   5,963,260   Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo.......................  194
   2,275,000   Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz.......................  114
   9,950,000   Cia Siderurgica Nacional..........................  227
   1,513,000   Eletrobras........................................  395
     404,000   Light.............................................  127
      #8,782   Rhodia-Ster S.A. GDR..............................  123
   5,260,000   Telebras..........................................  149
      28,070   Telebras ADR......................................  926
     740,000   Telesp............................................  94
     #15,100   Usiminas ADR......................................  168
                                                                   --
                                                                   2,633
                                                                   --
  CHINA (1.1%)
       4,300   Jilin Chemical Industrial Co. ADR.................  83
      50,000   Maanshan Iron & Steel Co. Ltd.....................  10
      50,000   Shanghai Diesel Engine Co. Ltd. 'B'...............  31
     150,000   Shenzhen Chiwan Wharf Holdings 'B'................  75
    *160,000   Shenzhen North Jainshe Motorcycle.................  78
     630,000   Yizheng Chemical Fibre 'H'........................  220
     +40,000   Zhuhai Pharmaceutical 'B'.........................  18
                                                                   --
                                                                   515
                                                                   --
  GREECE (3.1%)
      +7,500   Aegek.............................................  167
       6,000   Alpha Credit Bank.................................  333
      17,000   Delta Dairy S.A...................................  354
       7,000   Ergo Bank S.A.....................................  322
      11,000   Hellenic Bottling Co. S.A.........................  327
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,503
                                                                   --
  HONG KONG (8.2%)
     680,000   Charoen Pokphand Co...............................  239
      72,000   Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd..........................  356
      90,000   Citic Pacific Ltd.................................  226
     650,000   Guangdong Investments Ltd.........................  355
      46,000   Hang Seng Bank Ltd................................  351
     262,000   Harbin Power Equipment Co.........................  84
     132,800   Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd..................  263
     420,000   Hopewell Holdings Ltd.............................  355
     137,000   Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.............................  662
     113,000   New World Development Co. Ltd.....................  376
      11,000   Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd.......................  81
      49,000   Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A'............................  374
     140,000   Varitronix International Ltd......................  245
                                                                   --
                                                                   3,967
                                                                   --
  HUNGARY (0.2%)
       5,350   Gedeon Richter (Austrian Certificates)............  86
                                                                   --
  INDIA (6.1%)
       3,255   Century Textiles & Industries GDR.................  505
      90,000   Great Eastern Shipping GDR........................  641
      20,250   Indian Aluminum Co. GDR...........................  220
      #4,480   JCT Ltd. GDR......................................  80
    @108,700   Morgan Stanley India Investment Fund..............  1,114
      60,000   Tube Investments of India.........................  $405
                                                                   --
                                                                   2,965
                                                                   --
  INDONESIA (6.1%)
    *840,000   Bimantara Citra...................................  471
     *80,000   Bank International Indonesia (Foreign)............  247
     *55,500   Charoen Pokphand Co. Ltd.(Foreign)................  121
     *72,000   Duta Pertiwi (Foreign)............................  73
    *109,500   Indocement Tunggal (Foreign)......................  430
     *60,000   Indosat (Foreign).................................  228
       5,800   Indosat ADR.......................................  222
     *79,000   Kalbe Farma (Foreign).............................  362
     *16,000   Kermika Indonesia Association (Foreign)...........  21
     *35,166   Sorini Corp. (Foreign)............................  168
      44,800   Tempo Scan Pacific (Foreign)......................  231
    *173,000   United Tractors (Foreign).........................  369
                                                                   --
                                                                   2,943
                                                                   --
  ISRAEL (3.1%)
       4,000   Elbit Ltd.........................................  300
         680   First International Bank of Israel Ltd. '1'.......  84
       2,000   First International Bank of Israel Ltd. '5'.......  247
      44,327   Israel Land Development Co. Ltd...................  133
       5,100   Koor Industries Ltd...............................  434
      16,900   Osem Investment Ltd...............................  130
       9,000   Super Sol Ltd.....................................  172
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,500
                                                                   --
  KOREA (1.3%)
       1,000   Pohang Iron & Steel...............................  86
      *1,500   Samsung Electronics Co............................  309
       6,000   Shinhan Bank Co. Ltd..............................  123
       3,000   Yukong Ltd........................................  125
                                                                   --
                                                                   643
                                                                   --
  MEXICO (9.1%)
     +37,200   Apasco S.A. de C.V................................  148
     221,655   Banacci 'B'.......................................  340
     137,082   Banacci 'L'.......................................  208
     #70,021   Cemex 'CPO' ADR...................................  476
      51,500   Cemex 'CPO'.......................................  178
      34,625   Empresas ICA Sociedad Controladora S.A. de C.V....  355
    +214,000   Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'B'.....................  63
     +54,403   Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'L'.....................  14
     #95,510   Grupo Financiero Bancomer ADS.....................  573
     +59,000   Grupo Financiero Probursa 'C'.....................  26
     +17,200   Grupo Mexicano de Desarollo 'B' ADR...............  67
     #10,720   Hylsamex ADR......................................  196
      +4,800   Internacional de Ceramica ADR.....................  38
      14,280   Pan American Beverages, Inc. 'A'..................  428
      +7,200   Sidek 'A'.........................................   6
     +21,000   Sidek 'B'.........................................  19
       5,700   Sidek ADR.........................................  26
      17,325   Telefonos de Mexico 'L' ADR.......................  513
     129,850   Tolmex 'B2'.......................................  507
     +26,420   Tribasa ADR.......................................  225
                                                                   --
                                                                   4,406
                                                                   --
  MOROCCO (0.3%)
       2,000   ONA S.A...........................................  83
       2,000   Wafabank..........................................  82
                                                                   --
                                                                   165
                                                                   --
  PAKISTAN (3.2%)
      95,000   Dewan Salman Fibre................................  313
     143,000   D.G. Khan Cement Ltd..............................  202
     100,000   Fauji Fertilizer Co. Ltd..........................  197
     100,000   Karachi Electric..................................  86
      35,000   Nishat Mills Ltd..................................  32
      27,000   Pakistan State Oil Co. Ltd........................  327
       3,450   Pakistan Telecommunication Co.....................  368
      10,000   Sui Northern Gas Pipelines........................  10
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,535
                                                                   --
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       66
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
      SHARES                                                       (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>
  PHILIPPINES (3.5%)
     184,125   Ayala Land, Inc. 'B'..............................  $213
     749,000   JG Summit Holding 'B'.............................  223
      30,000   Manilla Electric 'B'..............................  241
     737,500   Petron Corp.......................................  476
         600   Philippine Long Distance Telephone ADR............  43
      32,000   Pilipino Telephone Corp...........................  25
     841,100   SM Prime Holdings, Inc............................  231
      57,900   San Miguel Corp. 'B'..............................  240
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,692
                                                                   --
  POLAND (1.9%)
      12,500   Bank Rozwoju Eksportu S.A.........................  200
      15,750   Debica S.A........................................  222
       1,650   E. Wedel S.A......................................  97
     +31,300   Electrim..........................................  110
     +48,000   Mostostal Export 'A'..............................  121
       2,100   Zywiec............................................  159
                                                                   --
                                                                   909
                                                                   --
  PORTUGAL (1.0%)
       6,500   Banco Totta & Acores 'B' (Registered).............  138
       6,000   Filmes Lusomundo..................................  66
      15,000   UNICER-Uniao Cervejeira S.A.......................  253
                                                                   --
                                                                   457
                                                                   --
  SINGAPORE (0.2%)
       6,600   Asia Pulp & Paper Co. Ltd. ADR....................  83
                                                                   --
  SOUTH AFRICA (2.9%)
       1,324   Anglo American Industrial Corp. Ltd...............  66
      69,000   Gencor Ltd........................................  237
      75,000   Murray & Roberts Holdings Ltd.....................  433
     400,000   SA Iron & Steel Corp. Ltd.........................  454
      17,933   SASOL Ltd.........................................  172
       5,530   Trans-Natal Coal..................................  43
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,405
                                                                   --
  TAIWAN (2.3%)
     +88,400   Advanced Semiconductor Engineering, Inc...........  257
     +82,800   Taiwan Semiconductor Co...........................  402
     +88,000   United Micro Electronics Corp. Ltd................  451
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,110
                                                                   --
  THAILAND (6.9%)
      14,800   Advanced Information Services Co. Ltd.
                 (Foreign).......................................  219
      63,400   Bangkok Bank Co. Ltd..............................  555
      68,000   Bangkok Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...................  749
      75,700   Finance One Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................  558
      22,000   Phatra Thanakit Co. Ltd. (Foreign)................  184
      10,300   Shinawatra Computer Co. Ltd.......................  255
       2,900   Siam Cement Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................  185
      67,000   Thai Farmer's Bank Public Co......................  641
                                                                   --
                                                                   3,346
                                                                   --
  TURKEY (3.7%)
     350,000   Aksa Akrilik Kimya Sanayii A.S....................  309
     300,000   Borusan Birmesik..................................  117
    +405,000   Ege Biracilik Ve Malt Sanayii.....................  476
     190,000   Ege Seramik Co., Inc..............................  92
     250,000   Koc Yatirim Ve Sanayii Mamulleri..................  78
     130,000   Migros Turk.......................................  146
     250,000   Tat Konserve......................................  195
    +230,000   Tofas Turk Otomobil Fabrikasi.....................  203
   2,428,400   Yapi Ve Kredi Bankasi.............................  156
                                                                   --
                                                                   1,772
                                                                   --
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $35,785)...............................  34,639
                                                                   --
PREFERRED STOCKS (11.6%)
  BRAZIL (10.3%)
   9,234,000   Acesita...........................................  60
  77,680,000   Banco Bradesco....................................  $658
  12,067,000   Banco Nacional....................................  235
  21,630,000   Banco do Brasil...................................  258
   6,400,000   Banco do Estado...................................  36
  +1,649,000   Brahma............................................  541
     386,000   Brasmotor.........................................  71
       2,847   Cemig ADR.........................................  56
     +19,000   Centrais Eletricas de Santa Catarina 'B'..........  15
   1,560,000   Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo.......................  62
     #18,110   Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo ADR...................  206
   1,350,000   Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz.......................  44
 +45,000,000   Cosipa 'B'........................................  75
   2,070,000   Eletrobras 'B'....................................  551
   1,935,200   Itaubanco.........................................  589
      93,000   Multibras S.A.....................................  77
   4,991,000   Petrobras.........................................  423
   2,105,000   Petrobras Distribuidora...........................  73
  11,698,390   Telebras..........................................  385
   1,991,000   Telesp............................................  247
  96,360,000   Usiminas..........................................  109
   1,480,000   Vale do Rio Doce..................................  224
                                                                   --
                                                                   4,995
                                                                   --
  MEXICO (1.1%)
     224,900   FEMSA 'B'.........................................  525
                                                                   --
  PORTUGAL (0.2%)
     *11,780   Filmes Lusomundo..................................  109
                                                                   --
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $6,477).............................  5,629
                                                                   --
<CAPTION>
      NO. OF
      RIGHTS
<C>            <S>
- ------------
RIGHTS (0.1%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
 *+1,402,746   Banco Bradesco....................................   2
                                                                   --
  PAKISTAN (0.0%)
       *+750   Dewan Salman Fibre................................  --
     *+5,250   Nishat Mills......................................   2
                                                                   --
                                                                    2
                                                                   --
  TURKEY (0.1%)
    *+65,000   Migros Turk.......................................  71
                                                                   --
TOTAL RIGHTS (COST $74)..........................................  75
                                                                   --
<CAPTION>
      NO. OF
    WARRANTS
<C>            <S>
- ------------
WARRANTS (0.0%)
  THAILAND
     *+3,800   National Finance & Securities Co. Ltd., expiring
                 11/15/99 (COST $0)..............................  --
                                                                   --
<CAPTION>
      SHARES
<C>            <S>
- ------------
PURCHASED OPTIONS (0.0%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
    +900,000   Cia Paulista De Forza e Luz call, expiring
                 10/16/95, strike price BR 70.00 (COST $0).......   1
                                                                   --
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT
       (000)
<C>            <S>
- ------------
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (4.9%)
  CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (0.5%)
  COLOMBIA (0.3%)
  $     #170   Banco de Colombia 5.20%, 2/1/99...................  129
                                                                   --
  INDIA (0.2%)
         120   Tata Iron & Steel Co. 2.25%, 4/1/99...............  112
                                                                   --
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (COST $303).........................  241
                                                                   --
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements. 

                                       67
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                       VALUE
       (000)                                                       (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>
LOAN AGREEMENTS (4.4%)
  RUSSIA (4.4%)
++/+++$6,500   Bank for Foreign Economic Affairs
                 (COST $1,741)...................................  $2,113
                                                                   --
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $2,044)......................  2,354
                                                                   --
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (88.3%) (COST $44,380)..................  42,698
                                                                   --
SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS (13.9%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
  UNITED STATES
       6,706   U.S. Trust 5.90%, dated 6/30/95, due 7/3/95, to be
                 repurchased at $6,709, collateralized by $6,950
                 United States Treasury Bills, due 7/27/95,
                 valued at $6,923 (COST $6,706)                    6,706
                                                                   --
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $51,086)....................  49,404
                                                                   --
FOREIGN CURRENCY (1.1%)
   APS    66   Argentine Peso....................................  66
   BR     58   Brazilian Real....................................  63
  GR  14,091   Greek Drachma.....................................  62
   HK$     3   Hong Kong Dollar..................................  --
 IDN 518,430   Indonesian Rupiah.................................  $233
    MXN    5   Mexican New Peso..................................   1
   PKR 2,660   Pakistani Rupee...................................  86
   PLZ    14   Polish Zloty......................................   6
  T$     198   Taiwan Dollar.....................................   8
   TB    369   Thai Baht.........................................  15
                                                                   --
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $540)...............................  540
                                                                   --
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (103.3%) (COST $51,626)........................  49,944
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-3.3%)....................  (1,608)
                                                                   --
NET ASSETS (100%)................................................  $48,336
                                                                   --
                                                                   --
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C> <C>
+       -- Non-income producing
          securities
++      -- Non-income producing
          securities -- in default
+++     -- Variable or floating rate
          securities.
*       -- Fair valued securities -- See
          Note A-1
@       -- The Fund is advised by an
          affiliate.
#       -- 144A Security -- certain
          conditions for pubic sale may
          exist.
ADR     -- American Depositary Receipt
ADS     -- American Depositary Shares
GDR     -- Global Depositary Receipt
</TABLE>
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
 
Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at June 30, 1995, the
Fund  is obligated to deliver  U.S. dollars in exchange  for foreign currency as
indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 CURRENCY                            IN EXCHANGE            NET UNREALIZED
TO DELIVER   VALUE    SETTLEMENT         FOR        VALUE        GAIN
  (000)      (000)       DATE           (000)       (000)       (000)
- ----------  -------   -----------   -------------- ------- ----------------
<S>         <C>       <C>           <C>            <C>     <C>
$     71    $   71        7/3/95        GR 16,193  $   72  $             1
$     51        51        7/3/95        PKR 1,573      51               --
$     77        77        7/3/95       PTE 11,198      77               --
$    150       150        7/3/95         ZAR  547     151                1
                                                                        --
            -------                                -------
            $  349                                 $  351  $             2
                                                                        --
                                                                        --
            -------                                -------
            -------                                -------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>   <C>
GR      --  Greek Drachma
PKR     --  Pakistani Rupee
PTE     --  Portuguese Escudo
ZAR     --  South African Rand
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           VALUE      PERCENT OF
INDUSTRY                                   (000)      NET ASSETS
<S>                                       <C>        <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
Finance.................................  $ 12,619           26.1%
Consumer Goods..........................     7,904           16.4
Materials...............................     5,533           11.4
Capital Equipment.......................     4,347            9.0
Services................................     4,323            8.9
Energy..................................     3,666            7.6
Multi-Industry..........................     2,193            4.5
Loan Agreements.........................     2,113            4.4
                                          --------            ---
                                          $ 42,698           88.3%
                                          --------            ---
                                          --------            ---
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       68
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       WORLDWIDE
                           GLOBAL EQUITY        GLOBAL         ASIAN      AMERICAN          HIGH         LATIN      EMERGING
                              ALLOCATION         FIXED        GROWTH         VALUE        INCOME      AMERICAN       MARKETS
                                    FUND   INCOME FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND
                                   (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)
<S>                        <C>             <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSETS:
  Investments in
   Securities, at Value*
   (Note 1) -- See
   accompanying
   portfolios              $      85,375   $    16,894   $   319,520   $    34,374   $    33,789   $    11,706   $    49,404
  Foreign Currency at
   Value                              83            --            99            --            --            78           540
  Cash                               134           399             1            --             1            --           332
  Receivable for:
    Investments Sold                 140            --           955            --         1,241           585           156
    Fund Shares Sold                 223             5           858           241           143           154           544
    Dividends                        278            --           714            57            --            21           103
    Interest                           1           410            --            --           522            11             5
    Foreign Withholding
     Tax Reclaim                      58            --            11            --            --            --            --
  Unrealized Gain on
   Forward Foreign
   Currency Contracts                292            --            --            --            --            --             2
  Deferred Organization
   Costs                              49            48            32            54            60            59            58
  Other                                4            --            26            --            --            --            --
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    Total Assets                  86,637        17,756       322,216        34,726        35,756        12,614        51,144
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
LIABILITIES:
  Payable for:
    Investments Purchased          2,903           524         1,509            --         8,762           432         2,531
    Fund Shares Redeemed             221            26           926            11            16           183            27
    Bank Overdraft                    83            --            --            --            --           174            --
    Dividends                         --            28            --            50           148            --            --
    Investment Advisory
     Fees                            127            --           762            30            30             2            78
    Administrative Fees               25             5            82             8             7             4            12
    Custody Fees                      26             5           126             4             3            13            31
    Professional Fees                 30            30            40            19            30            30            28
    Distribution Fees                126            21           435            42            36            14            61
    Shareholder Reporting
     Expenses                         37             5           135            10             9            --            11
    Directors' Fees and
     Expenses                          2             2             2             2             2             2             2
    Filing and
     Registration Fees                11            10            35             8            14            17            27
  Unrealized Loss on
   Forward Foreign
   Currency Contracts                 --            43            --            --            --            --            --
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    Total Liabilities              3,591           699         4,052           184         9,057           871         2,808
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS                 $      83,046   $    17,057   $   318,164   $    34,542   $    26,699   $    11,743   $    48,336
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
Net Assets Consist Of:
  Capital Stock at Par     $           6   $         2   $        19   $         3   $         2   $         1   $         5
  Paid in Capital in
   Excess of Par                  76,810        16,770       291,244        32,428        27,093        15,494        50,944
  Undistributed
   (Distribution in
   excess of) Net
   Investment Income                (990)          330            --            13           165            --            94
  Accumulated
   (Distribution in
   excess of) Net
   Realized Gain (Loss)            2,162          (524)       (1,382)          143          (528)       (2,306)       (1,025)
  Unrealized Appreciation
   (Depreciation) on
   Investments and
   Foreign Currency                5,058           479        28,283         1,955           (33)       (1,446)       (1,682)
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS                 $      83,046   $    17,057   $   318,164   $    34,542   $    26,699   $    11,743   $    48,336
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
CLASS A SHARES:
  Net Assets               $      42,586   $    11,092   $   178,667   $    20,675   $    14,819   $     7,658   $    26,091
  Shares Issued and
   Outstanding ($.001 par
   value) (Authorized
   2,625,000,000)                  3,379         1,084        10,878         1,604         1,281           844         2,459
  Net Asset Value and
   Redemption Price Per
   Share                   $       12.60   $     10.23   $     16.42   $     12.89   $     11.57   $      9.08   $     10.61
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
  Maximum Sales Charge             4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%
  Maximum Offering Price
   Per Share (Net Asset
   Value Per Share x
   100/95.25)              $       13.23   $     10.74   $     17.24   $     13.53   $     12.15   $      9.53   $     11.14
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
CLASS C SHARES:+
  Net Assets               $      40,460   $     5,965   $   139,497   $    13,867   $    11,880   $     4,085   $    22,245
  Shares Issued and
   Outstanding ($.001 par
   value) (Authorized
   2,625,000,000)                  3,256           585         8,615         1,076         1,026           454         2,112
  Net Asset Value and
   Offering Price Per
   Share                   $       12.43   $     10.20   $     16.19   $     12.89   $     11.58   $      8.99   $     10.53
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
  Investments at Cost,
   Including Foreign
   Currency                $      80,663   $    16,382   $   291,336   $    32,419   $    33,822   $    13,230   $    51,626
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
 
<FN>
 
*  Includes  repurchase agreements  aggregating $4,465,000,  $586,000, $883,000,
  $2,677,000, $6,983,000  and  $6,706,000  for Global  Equity  Allocation  Fund,
  Global  Fixed Income Fund,  Asian Growth Fund,  American Value Fund, Worldwide
  High Income Fund and Emerging Markets Fund, respectively.
+ Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       69
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                 LATIN     EMERGING
                                                                                              AMERICAN      MARKETS
                               GLOBAL       GLOBAL                              WORLDWIDE         FUND         FUND
                               EQUITY        FIXED        ASIAN     AMERICAN         HIGH       PERIOD       PERIOD
                           ALLOCATION       INCOME       GROWTH        VALUE       INCOME         FROM         FROM
                                 FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND      JULY 6,      JULY 6,
                           YEAR ENDED   YEAR ENDED   YEAR ENDED   YEAR ENDED   YEAR ENDED        1994*        1994*
                             JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,      TO JUNE      TO JUNE
                                 1995         1995         1995         1995         1995     30, 1995     30, 1995
                                (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)
<S>                        <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Dividends                $    2,067   $       --   $    5,353   $      819   $       --   $      156   $      376
  Interest                        219        1,147          740           82        2,648           35          440
  Less Foreign Taxes
   Withheld                      (231)          (9)        (500)          --           (3)         (12)         (30)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Total Income                2,055        1,138        5,593          901        2,645          179          786
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
EXPENSES:
  Investment Advisory
   Fees
    Basic Fee                     759          117        2,920          202          152          109          312
    Less: Fees Waived            (247)        (117)          --         (110)         (88)        (109)        (197)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
  Investment Advisory
   Fees -- Net                    512           --        2,920           92           64           --          115
  Administrative Fees             282           50          895           78           69           41           85
  Custodian Fees                  104           22          498           18           14           54          125
  Filing and Registration
   Fees                             5            2           12            4            4            6           17
  Directors' Fees and
   Expenses                        13           13           13           13            8            8            8
  Professional Fees                51           34           91           25           35           35           37
  Shareholder Reports              77           16          302           23           20           10           26
  Distribution Fees
    Class A                        98           25          403           36           28           15           34
    Class C+                      367           57        1,315           93           88           29          111
  Amortization of
   Organizational Costs            19           19           11           16           16           15           14
  Blue Sky Fees
    Class A                        16           16           25           13           16           16           16
    Class C+                       16           16           25           13           16           16           16
  Brazilian Tax Expense            --           --           --           --           --           32           46
  Other                             8            3           27            3            3           16           17
  Expenses Reimbursed by
   Adviser                         --           (4)          --           --           --          (56)          --
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Net Expenses                1,568          269        6,537          427          381          237          667
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
 
Net Investment Income
 (Loss)                           487          869         (944)         474        2,264          (58)         119
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
NET REALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
 ON INVESTMENTS
  Securities Sold               2,238         (502)       4,934          362         (494)      (2,306)        (996)
  Foreign Currency
   Transactions                (2,101)          67          318           --           24          (34)         (68)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Total Net Realized
     Gain (Loss)                  137         (435)       5,252          362         (470)      (2,340)      (1,064)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
CHANGE IN UNREALIZED
 APPRECIATION
 (DEPRECIATION)                 3,795        1,228       19,182        2,637           82       (1,446)      (1,682)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
Total Net Realized Gain
 (Loss) and Change in
 Unrealized Appreciation
 (Depreciation)                 3,932          793       24,434        2,999         (388)      (3,786)      (2,746)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE)
 IN NET ASSETS RESULTING
 FROM OPERATIONS           $    4,419   $    1,662   $   23,490   $    3,473   $    1,876   ($   3,844)  ($   2,627)
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
                           ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
*Commencement of operations
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       70
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              YEAR ENDED       YEAR ENDED
                                           JUNE 30, 1994    JUNE 30, 1995
                                                   (000)            (000)
<S>                                       <C>              <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                   $          262   $          487
  Net Realized Gain on Investments                   632              137
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation                   86            3,795
                                          --------------   --------------
  Net Increase in Net Assets from
   Operations                                        980            4,419
                                          --------------   --------------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                            (50)              --
  Class C +                                           --               --
  In Excess of Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                             --             (168)
  Class C+                                            --              (82)
                                          --------------   --------------
                                                     (50)            (250)
                                          --------------   --------------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                           (127)            (427)
  Class C +                                          (85)            (407)
                                          --------------   --------------
                                                    (212)            (834)
                                          --------------   --------------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting
   from Distributions                               (262)          (1,084)
                                          --------------   --------------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                          59,445           32,645
  Distributions Reinvested                           243              996
  Redeemed                                       (14,518)         (17,247)
                                          --------------   --------------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting
   from Capital Share Transactions                45,170           16,394
                                          --------------   --------------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                    45,888           19,729
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                 17,429           63,317
                                          --------------   --------------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including
  distributions in excess of net
  investment income of
  $104 and $990, respectively)            $       63,317   $       83,046
                                          --------------   --------------
                                          --------------   --------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                        2,528            1,341
     Distributions Reinvested                         14               45
     Redeemed                                       (696)            (794)
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares
   Outstanding                                     1,846              592
                                          --------------   --------------
                                          --------------   --------------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $       30,362   $       16,461
     Distributions Reinvested                        164              546
     Redeemed                                     (8,163)          (9,697)
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares
   Outstanding                            $       22,363   $        7,310
                                          --------------   --------------
                                          --------------   --------------
  Class C +
   Shares:
     Issued                                        2,421            1,329
     Distributions Reinvested                          6               38
     Redeemed                                       (548)            (623)
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares
   Outstanding                                     1,879              744
                                          --------------   --------------
                                          --------------   --------------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $       29,083   $       16,184
     Distributions Reinvested                         79              450
     Redeemed                                     (6,355)          (7,550)
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares
   Outstanding                            $       22,807   $        9,084
                                          --------------   --------------
                                          --------------   --------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       71
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              YEAR ENDED           YEAR ENDED
                                           JUNE 30, 1994        JUNE 30, 1995
                                                   (000)                (000)
<S>                                       <C>              <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                   $          619   $              869
  Net Realized Gain (Loss)                           504                 (435)
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation
   (Depreciation)                                 (1,219)               1,228
                                          --------------              -------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets
   Resulting from Operations                         (96)               1,662
                                          --------------              -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                           (371)                (369)
  Class C+                                          (248)                (173)
  In Excess of Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                            (93)                  --
  Class C+                                           (62)                  --
                                          --------------              -------
                                                    (774)                (542)
                                          --------------              -------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                           (267)                  --
  Class C+                                          (237)                  --
  In Excess of Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                            (14)                  --
  Class C+                                           (13)                  --
                                          --------------              -------
                                                    (531)                  --
                                          --------------              -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting
   from Distributions                             (1,305)                (542)
                                          --------------              -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                          15,880                8,903
  Distributions Reinvested                           737                  328
  Redeemed                                       (12,193)              (9,070)
                                          --------------              -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting
   from Capital Share Transactions                 4,424                  161
                                          --------------              -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                     3,023                1,281
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                 12,753               15,776
                                          --------------              -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including
  undistributed (distributions in excess
  of) net investment income of $(28) and
  $330, respectively)                     $       15,776   $           17,057
                                          --------------              -------
                                          --------------              -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                          989                  682
     Distributions Reinvested                         41                   27
     Redeemed                                       (572)                (712)
                                          --------------              -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class A
   Shares Outstanding                                458                   (3)
                                          --------------              -------
                                          --------------              -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $       10,128   $            6,628
     Distributions Reinvested                        426                  258
     Redeemed                                     (5,980)              (6,878)
                                          --------------              -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares
   Outstanding                            $        4,574   $                8
                                          --------------              -------
                                          --------------              -------
 Class C+:
   Shares:
     Issued                                          549                  239
     Distributions Reinvested                         30                    7
     Redeemed                                       (591)                (228)
                                          --------------              -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class C
   Shares Outstanding                                (12)                  18
                                          --------------              -------
                                          --------------              -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $        5,752   $            2,275
     Distributions Reinvested                        311                   70
     Redeemed                                     (6,213)              (2,192)
                                          --------------              -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class C
   Shares Outstanding                     $         (150)  $              153
                                          --------------              -------
                                          --------------              -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       72
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               YEAR ENDED            YEAR ENDED
                                            JUNE 30, 1994         JUNE 30, 1995
                                                    (000)                 (000)
<S>                                       <C>               <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Loss                     $          (984)  $              (944)
  Net Realized Gain on Investments                  4,723                 5,252
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation                 9,101                19,182
                                          ---------------              --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting
   from Operations                                 12,840                23,490
                                          ---------------              --------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                              --                (4,935)
  Class C+                                             --                (4,055)
  In Excess of Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                              --                  (241)
  Class C+                                             --                  (198)
                                          ---------------              --------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting
   from Distributions                                  --                (9,429)
                                          ---------------              --------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                          285,430               109,249
  Distributions Reinvested                             --                 8,260
  Redeemed                                        (63,430)              (68,507)
                                          ---------------              --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting
   from Capital Share Transactions                222,000                49,002
                                          ---------------              --------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                    234,840                63,063
 
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                  20,261               255,101
                                          ---------------              --------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period               $       255,101   $           318,164
                                          ---------------              --------
                                          ---------------              --------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                        10,025                 3,855
     Distributions Reinvested                          --                   299
     Redeemed                                      (2,090)               (2,192)
                                          ---------------              --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares
   Outstanding                                      7,935                 1,962
                                          ---------------              --------
                                          ---------------              --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $       150,145   $            62,609
     Distributions Reinvested                          --                 4,563
     Redeemed                                     (32,820)              (35,024)
                                          ---------------              --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares
   Outstanding                            $       117,325   $            32,148
                                          ---------------              --------
                                          ---------------              --------
  Class C+
   Shares:
     Issued                                         8,840                 2,904
     Distributions Reinvested                          --                   245
     Redeemed                                      (1,959)               (2,123)
                                          ---------------              --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares
   Outstanding                                      6,881                 1,026
                                          ---------------              --------
                                          ---------------              --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                               $       135,285   $            46,640
     Distributions Reinvested                          --                 3,697
     Redeemed                                     (30,610)              (33,483)
                                          ---------------              --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares
   Outstanding                            $       104,675   $            16,854
                                          ---------------              --------
                                          ---------------              --------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
+ Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       73
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
 
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       OCTOBER 18, 1993* TO         YEAR ENDED
                                                                                              JUNE 30, 1994      JUNE 30, 1995
                                                                                                      (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                    <C>                   <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                                                $                183  $             474
  Net Realized Gain                                                                                     208                362
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)                                                     (682)             2,637
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                      (291)             3,473
                                                                                                    -------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                              (120)              (350)
  Class C+                                                                                              (59)              (143)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                       (179)              (493)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                                --               (260)
  Class C+                                                                                               --               (167)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                         --               (427)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                              (179)              (920)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                             18,925             15,936
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                               55                472
  Redeemed                                                                                             (556)            (2,373)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                               18,424             14,035
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                       17,954             16,588
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                        --             17,954
                                                                                                    -------            -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including undistributed net investment income of $16 and
  $13, respectively)                                                                   $             17,954  $          34,542
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                    -------            -------
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             940                794
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                             4                 29
     Redeemed                                                                                           (28)              (135)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                           916                688
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                            $             11,269  $           9,738
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                            42                351
     Redeemed                                                                                          (336)            (1,647)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                          $             10,975  $           8,442
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                    -------            -------
  Class C+
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             636                506
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                             1                 11
     Redeemed                                                                                           (18)               (60)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                           619                457
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                            $              7,656  $           6,198
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                            13                121
     Redeemed                                                                                          (220)              (726)
                                                                                                    -------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                          $              7,449  $           5,593
                                                                                                    -------            -------
                                                                                                    -------            -------
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
*Commencement of operations
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       74
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
 
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                    YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED
                                                                                                 JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
                                                                                                         (000)          (000)
<S>                                                                                              <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                                                          $         183  $       2,264
  Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investments                                                                  192           (470)
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)                                                        (115)            82
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                                     260          1,876
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                                  (94)        (1,262)
  Class C+                                                                                                 (76)          (906)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                          (170)        (2,168)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                                   --           (104)
  Class C+                                                                                                  --            (97)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                            --           (201)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                                 (170)        (2,369)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                                12,701         21,132
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                                 161            918
  Redeemed                                                                                                 (14)        (7,796)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                                  12,848         14,254
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                          12,938         13,761
 
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                           --         12,938
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including undistributed net investment income of $15 and $165,
  respectively)                                                                                  $      12,938  $      26,699
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                                557          1,277
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                                7             51
     Redeemed                                                                                               --           (611)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                              564            717
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                      $       6,729  $      14,466
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                               88            542
     Redeemed                                                                                               (2)        (6,987)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                    $       6,815  $       8,021
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Class C+
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                                495            564
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                                6             35
     Redeemed                                                                                               (1)           (73)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                              500            526
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                      $       5,972  $       6,666
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                               73            376
     Redeemed                                                                                              (12)          (809)
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                    $       6,033  $       6,233
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
                                                                                                 -------------  -------------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
+ Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements. 

                                       75
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
 
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               JULY 6, 1994* TO
                                                                  JUNE 30, 1995
                                                                          (000)
<S>                                                           <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Loss                                         $             (58)
  Net Realized Loss on Investments                                       (2,340)
  Change in Unrealized Depreciation                                      (1,446)
                                                                        -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                   (3,844)
                                                                        -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Paid in Capital:
  Class A                                                                  (124)
  Class C+                                                                  (50)
                                                                        -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                  (174)
                                                                        -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                 21,076
  Distributions Reinvested                                                  135
  Redeemed                                                               (5,450)
                                                                        -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share
   Transactions                                                          15,761
                                                                        -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                           11,743
 
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                            --
                                                                        -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period                                   $          11,743
                                                                        -------
                                                                        -------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                                               1,235
     Distributions Reinvested                                                 9
     Redeemed                                                              (400)
                                                                        -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                               844
                                                                        -------
                                                                        -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                   $          14,271
     Distributions Reinvested                                               103
     Redeemed                                                            (3,781)
                                                                        -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                 $          10,593
                                                                        -------
                                                                        -------
  Class C+
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                 613
     Distributions Reinvested                                                 3
     Redeemed                                                              (162)
                                                                        -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                               454
                                                                        -------
                                                                        -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                   $           6,805
     Distributions Reinvested                                                32
     Redeemed                                                            (1,669)
                                                                        -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                 $           5,168
                                                                        -------
                                                                        -------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
*Commencement of operations
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       76
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
 
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            JULY 6, 1994* TO
                                                              JUNE 30, 1995
                                                                  (000)
<S>                                                         <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                     $             119
  Net Realized Loss on Investments                                     (1,064)
  Change in Unrealized Depreciation                                    (1,682)
                                                                      -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                 (2,627)
                                                                      -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                               57,700
  Redeemed                                                             (6,737)
                                                                      -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share
   Transactions                                                        50,963
                                                                      -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                         48,336
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                          --
                                                                      -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including undistributed net
  investment income of $94)                                 $          48,336
                                                                      -------
                                                                      -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
   Shares:
     Issued                                                             2,800
     Redeemed                                                            (341)
                                                                      -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                           2,459
                                                                      -------
                                                                      -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                 $          31,244
     Redeemed                                                          (3,679)
                                                                      -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding               $          27,565
                                                                      -------
                                                                      -------
   Class C+
   Shares:
     Issued                                                             2,392
     Redeemed                                                            (280)
                                                                      -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                           2,112
                                                                      -------
                                                                      -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                 $          26,456
     Redeemed                                                          (3,058)
                                                                      -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding               $          23,398
                                                                      -------
                                                                      -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
*Commencement of operations
+Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       77
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              CLASS A                                         CLASS C+
                           ----------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA    JANUARY 4, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED  JANUARY 4, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED
  AND RATIOS               TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                        <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>               <C>            <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE,
  BEGINNING OF PERIOD      $          10.00  $       11.09  $       11.99  $          10.00  $       11.05  $       11.90
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
  OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                0.04           0.10           0.12              0.01           0.06           0.04
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain                     1.05           0.90           0.67              1.04           0.86           0.65
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                          1.09           1.00           0.79              1.05           0.92           0.69
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                  --          (0.03)            --                --             --             --
  In Excess of Net
   Investment Income                     --             --          (0.05)               --             --          (0.03)
  Net Realized Gain                      --          (0.07)         (0.13)               --          (0.07)         (0.13)
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
  Total Distributions                    --          (0.10)         (0.18)               --          (0.07)         (0.16)
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF
  PERIOD                   $          11.09  $       11.99  $       12.60  $          11.05  $       11.90  $       12.43
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                       10.90%          9.02%          6.69%            10.50%          8.34%          5.84%
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
                                    -------  -------------  -------------            ------  -------------  -------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
  DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
  (000's)                  $         10,434  $      33,425  $      42,586  $          6,995  $      29,892  $      40,460
Ratio of Expenses to
  Average Net Assets                   1.70%**          1.70%          1.70%             2.45%**          2.45%          2.45%
Ratio of Net Investment
  Income to Average Net
  Assets                               1.04%**          0.98%          1.01%             0.29%**          0.23%          0.25%
Portfolio Turnover Rate                  14%            30%            39%               14%            30%            39%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to
   Net Investment Income   $           0.08  $        0.09  $        0.04  $           0.07  $        0.12  $        0.05
Ratios Before Expense
  Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                              3.65%**          2.58%          2.03%             4.40%**          3.34%          2.78%
  Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets                             (0.91 %**          0.10%          0.68%            (1.66 %**         (0.66)%         (0.08)%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   CLASS A                                         CLASS C+
                                ----------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND     JANUARY 4, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED  JANUARY 4, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED
  RATIOS                        TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                             <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>               <C>            <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
  PERIOD                        $          10.00  $       10.55  $        9.53  $          10.00  $       10.56  $        9.54
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
  OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                     0.25           0.52           0.56              0.21           0.43           0.49
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                              0.55          (0.42)          0.50              0.55          (0.40)          0.47
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                               0.80           0.10           1.06              0.76           0.03           0.96
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                    (0.25)         (0.50)         (0.36)            (0.20)         (0.44)         (0.30)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                     --          (0.12)            --                --          (0.11)            --
  Net Realized Gain                           --          (0.47)            --                --          (0.47)            --
  In Excess of Net Realized
   Gain                                       --          (0.03)            --                --          (0.03)            --
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
  Total Distributions                      (0.25)         (1.12)         (0.36)            (0.20)         (1.05)         (0.30)
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD  $          10.55  $        9.53  $       10.23  $          10.56  $        9.54  $       10.20
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                             8.02%          0.41%         11.41%             7.61%         (0.25)%         10.24%
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
                                          ------  -------------  -------------            ------         ------         ------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
  (000's)                       $          6,633  $      10,369  $      11,092  $          6,120  $       5,407  $       5,965
Ratio of Expenses to Average
  Net Assets                                1.45%**          1.45%          1.45%             2.20%**          2.20%          2.20%
Ratio of Net Investment Income
  to Average Net Assets                     5.00%**          4.70%          5.84%             4.25%**          3.95%          5.09%
Portfolio Turnover Rate                       55%           168%           169%               55%           168%           169%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income            $           0.07  $        0.11  $        0.07  $           0.07  $        0.12  $        0.08
Ratios Before Expense
  Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                   2.88%**          2.48%          2.22%             3.63%**          3.29%          2.97%
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                       3.57%**          3.67%          5.07%             2.82%**          2.86%          4.32%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
 * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
 + Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
   (1) Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
       charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not
       annualized.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       78
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A                                         CLASS C+
                      ----------------------------------------------  ----------------------------------------------
SELECTED PER SHARE      JUNE 23, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED    JUNE 23, 1993*     YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED
  DATA AND RATIOS     TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1993  JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                   <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>               <C>            <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE,
  BEGINNING OF
  PERIOD              $          12.00  $       12.00  $       15.50  $          12.00  $       12.00  $       15.40
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
INCOME FROM
  INVESTMENT
  OPERATIONS
  Net Investment
   Loss                             --          (0.03)            --                --          (0.10)         (0.12)
  Net Realized and
   Unrealized Gain                  --           3.53           1.43                --           3.50           1.42
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
  Total From
   Investment
   Operations                       --           3.50           1.43                --           3.40           1.30
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Realized Gain                 --             --          (0.49)               --             --          (0.49)
  In Excess of Net
   Realized Gain                    --             --          (0.02)               --             --          (0.02)
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
                                    --             --          (0.51)               --             --          (0.51)
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END
  OF PERIOD           $          12.00  $       15.50  $       16.42  $          12.00  $       15.40  $       16.19
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                   0.00%         29.17%          9.50%             0.00%         28.33%          8.71%
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
                               -------  -------------  -------------           -------  -------------  -------------
RATIOS AND
  SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of
  Period (000's)      $         11,770  $     138,212  $     178,667  $          8,491  $     116,889  $     139,497
Ratio of Expenses to
  Average Net Assets              1.90%**          1.90%          1.90%             2.65%**          2.65%          2.65%
Ratio of Net
  Investment Income
  (Loss) to Average
  Net Assets                     (0.81 %**         (0.24)%          0.04%            (1.56 %**         (0.99)%         (0.77)%
Portfolio Turnover
  Rate                               0%            34%            34%                0%            34%            34%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit
   to Net Investment
   Loss               $           0.01  $        0.03             --  $           0.02  $        0.03             --
Ratios Before
  Expense Limitation
  Expenses to
   Average Net
   Assets                        11.83%**          2.17%          1.90%            12.64%**          2.92%          2.65%
  Net Investment
   Income (Loss) to
   Average Net
   Assets                       (10.74 %**         (0.51)%          0.04%           (11.55 %**         (1.26)%         (0.77)%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           CLASS A                           CLASS C+
                                               --------------------------------  --------------------------------
                                               OCTOBER 18, 1993*     YEAR ENDED  OCTOBER 18, 1993*     YEAR ENDED
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND RATIOS              TO JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995   TO JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                                            <C>                <C>            <C>                <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD           $           12.00  $       11.70  $           12.00  $       11.69
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                                     0.17           0.27               0.11           0.17
  Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)                  (0.30)          1.44              (0.31)          1.44
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
  Total from Investment Operations                         (0.13)          1.71              (0.20)          1.61
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                                    (0.17)         (0.28)             (0.11)         (0.17)
  Net Realized Gain                                           --          (0.24)                --          (0.24)
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
  Total Distributions                                      (0.17)         (0.52)             (0.11)         (0.41)
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD                 $           11.70  $       12.89  $           11.69  $       12.89
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                            (1.12)%         15.01%             (1.70)%         14.13%
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
                                                         -------  -------------             ------  -------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000's)              $          10,717  $      20,675  $           7,237  $      13,867
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                     1.50%**          1.50%              2.25%**          2.25%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net
  Assets                                                    2.14%**          2.29%              1.39%**          1.54%
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                       17%            23%                17%            23%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net Investment Income   $            0.08  $        0.05  $            0.08  $        0.05
Ratios Before Expense Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets                            2.48%**          1.96%              3.28%**          2.71%
  Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets               1.16%**          1.83%              0.36%**          1.08%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
  * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
  +   Class  B   Shares  were   renamed  Class   C  Shares   on  May   1,  1995.
 (1) Total return  is calculated exclusive  of sales charges  or deferred  sales
charges.  Total returns for  periods of less  than one year  are not annualized.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements. 

                                       79
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      CLASS A                         CLASS C+
                                          -------------------------------  -------------------------------
                                           APRIL 21, 1994*     YEAR ENDED   APRIL 21, 1994*     YEAR ENDED
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND RATIOS        TO JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1994  JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                                       <C>               <C>            <C>               <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD      $          12.00  $       12.17  $          12.00  $       12.16
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                               0.18           1.26              0.17           1.17
  Net Realized and Unrealized Gain
   (Loss)                                             0.16          (0.52)             0.15          (0.50)
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
  Total From Investment Operations                    0.34           0.74              0.32           0.67
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                              (0.17)         (1.22)            (0.16)         (1.13)
  Net Realized Gain                                     --          (0.12)               --          (0.12)
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
  Total Distributions                                (0.17)         (1.34)            (0.16)         (1.25)
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD            $          12.17  $       11.57  $          12.16  $       11.58
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                       2.86%          6.87%             2.62%          6.20%
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
                                                    ------  -------------            ------  -------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000's)         $          6,857  $      14,819  $          6,081  $      11,880
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets               1.55%**          1.55%             2.30%**          2.30%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to
  Average Net Assets                                  8.29%**         11.53%             7.54%**         10.72%
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                 19%           178%               19%           178%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net Investment
   Income                                 $           0.02  $        0.05  $           0.06  $        0.05
Ratios Before Expense Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets                      3.23%**          1.97%             4.00%**          2.74%
  Net Investment Income to Average Net
   Assets                                             6.61%**         11.11%             5.84%**         10.28%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      CLASS A           CLASS C+
                                                                                  ----------------  ----------------
                                                                                     JULY 6, 1994*     JULY 6, 1994*
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND RATIOS                                                TO JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                                                                               <C>               <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                              $          12.00  $          12.00
                                                                                          --------          --------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Loss                                                                        (0.02)            (0.08)
  Net Realized and Unrealized Loss                                                           (2.70)            (2.73)
                                                                                          --------          --------
  Total From Investment Operations                                                           (2.72)            (2.81)
                                                                                          --------          --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Paid in Capital                                                                            (0.20)            (0.20)
                                                                                          --------          --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD                                                    $           9.08  $           8.99
                                                                                          --------          --------
                                                                                          --------          --------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                                                             (23.07)%           (23.83)%
                                                                                          --------          --------
                                                                                          --------          --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000's)                                                 $          7,658  $          4,085
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                                       2.46%**/\             3.20%**/\
Ratio of Net Investment Loss to Average Net Assets                                           (0.44 %**            (1.16)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                                        107%              107%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net Investment Loss                                        $           0.13  $           0.12
Ratios Before Expense Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets (Including Brazilian Tax Expense)                            4.30%**             5.20%**
  Net Investment Loss to Average Net Assets                                                  (2.26 %**            (3.16)%**
 /\ The ratio of expenses to average net assets includes Brazilian tax expense. Without the effect of the  Brazilian
    tax  expense, the ratio of expenses to  average net assets would have been  2.10%** and 2.85%**, for Class A and
    Class C+, respectively.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
 * Commencement of operations.
 ** Annualized
 + Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
   (1) Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
       charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not
       annualized.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       80
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            CLASS A           CLASS C+
                                                                        ----------------  ----------------
                                                                           JULY 6, 1994*     JULY 6, 1994*
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND RATIOS                                      TO JUNE 30, 1995  TO JUNE 30, 1995
<S>                                                                     <C>               <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                    $          12.00  $          12.00
                                                                                 -------           -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                                                             0.05                --
  Net Realized and Unrealized Loss                                                 (1.44)            (1.47)
                                                                                 -------           -------
  Total From Investment Operations                                                 (1.39)            (1.47)
                                                                                 -------           -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD                                          $          10.61  $          10.53
                                                                                 -------           -------
                                                                                 -------           -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                                                   (11.58)%           (12.25)%
                                                                                 -------           -------
                                                                                 -------           -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000's)                                       $         26,091  $         22,245
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                             2.33%**/\             3.08%**/\
Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets                                0.81%**             0.06%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                               32%               32%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net Investment Income                            $           0.04  $           0.04
Ratios Before Expense Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets                                                    3.10%**             3.90%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss) to Average Net Assets                                0.04%**            (0.76)%**
 
 /\ The ratio of expenses to average net assets includes Brazilian tax expense. Without the effect of  the
    Brazilian  tax  expense, the  ratio of  expenses to  average net  assets would  have been  2.15%** and
    2.90%**, for Class A and Class C, respectively.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<FN>
  * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
  + Class B Shares were renamed Class C Shares on May 1, 1995.
 (1) Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
     charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not
    annualized.
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                       81
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Morgan  Stanley  Fund, Inc.  (the  "Fund") was  incorporated  under the  laws of
Maryland on August  14, 1992 and  commenced operations on  January 4, 1993.  The
Fund  is registered under the Investment Company  Act of 1940, as amended, as an
open-end  management  investment  company  which  offers  redeemable  shares  of
diversified  and non-diversified investment portfolios. As of June 30, 1995, the
Fund had  seven separate  active investment  portfolios: Morgan  Stanley  Global
Equity  Allocation Fund, Morgan Stanley Global Fixed Income Fund, Morgan Stanley
Asian Growth Fund, Morgan Stanley American Value Fund, Morgan Stanley  Worldwide
High Income Fund, Morgan Stanley Latin American Fund and Morgan Stanley Emerging
Markets  Fund  (referred to  herein  respectively as  "Global  Equity Allocation
Fund", "Global Fixed Income Fund",  "Asian Growth Fund", "American Value  Fund",
"Worldwide  High  Income Fund",  "Latin  American Fund",  and  "Emerging Markets
Fund", and collectively as the "Portfolios"). The Fund currently offers Class  A
and  Class C  shares of each  Portfolio. The  current Class C  shares were named
Class B shares until May 1, 1995 when such shares were renamed Class C.
 
A. ACCOUNTING POLICIES:  The following  is a summary  of significant  accounting
policies  for the Fund. Such policies  are in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles for investment companies and are consistently followed  by
the Fund in the preparation of the financial statements.
 
1.  SECURITY  VALUATION:  Equity securities  listed  on an  exchange  and equity
securities traded on NASDAQ are valued at  the latest quoted sales price on  the
valuation  date. Securities  listed on  a foreign  exchange are  valued at their
closing price.  Unlisted securities  and  listed securities  not traded  on  the
valuation  date for which market quotations  are readily available are valued at
the average of the  mean between the  current bid and asked  prices, if any,  of
reputable  brokers. Bonds and other fixed income securities are valued according
to the broadest  and most representative  market. In addition,  bonds and  other
fixed  income securities are valued on the basis of prices provided by a pricing
service which  are based  primarily  on institutional  size trading  in  similar
groups  of securities. Debt securities purchased with remaining maturities of 60
days or less are valued at amortized cost, if it approximates market value.  All
other  securities and assets for which  market values are not readily available,
including restricted securities, are valued at fair value as determined in  good
faith by the Board of Directors, although the actual calculations may be done by
others.
 
2.  INCOME TAXES:  It is  each Portfolio's intention  to qualify  as a regulated
investment company and  distribute all  of its taxable  income. Accordingly,  no
provision for Federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.
 
The  Fund may be subject to taxes imposed by countries in which it invests. Such
taxes are  generally based  on either  income earned  or repatriated,  or  gains
realized. The Fund accrues such taxes when the related income is earned or gains
are  realized. In addition, effective January  1, 1994, the Brazilian government
announced a 0.25% tax on banking transaction debits (withdrawals). This tax  was
subsequently  repealed  as of  January 1,  1995.  The Brazilian  government also
assessed a 1% tax on all settlements of foreign currency used to purchase listed
equity securities. This tax was repealed on March 9, 1995.
 
Paid in capital in excess of par, undistributed (distributions in excess of) net
investment income and accumulated (distributions in excess of) net realized gain
have  been  adjusted  for  permanent  book-tax  differences,  if  any,  for  the
Portfolios.
 
At  June 30, 1995, Global Fixed Income  Fund had a capital loss carryforward for
Federal income tax purposes of approximately $366,000 which will expire June 30,
2003. To  the  extent  that  such carryforward  is  utilized,  no  capital  gain
distribution will be made.
 
For  the  year ended  June 30,  1995,  Emerging Markets  Fund and  Global Equity
Allocation Fund deferred for Federal income  tax purposes to July 1, 1995,  post
October  currency losses  of approximately  $44,000 and  $715,000, respectively.
Emerging Markets Fund,  American Value Fund  and Global Fixed  Income Fund  also
deferred to July 1, 1995, post October capital losses of approximately $928,000,
$60,000 and $154,000, respectively.
 
3.   REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS:  In  connection  with  transactions  in  repurchase
agreements, a bank  acting as  custodian for the  Fund takes  possession of  the
underlying  securities, the value  of which is  at least equal  to the principal
amount of the repurchase transaction, including accrued interest. To the  extent
that  any  repurchase transaction  exceeds one  business day,  the value  of the
collateral is marked-to-market on a daily basis to determine the adequacy of the
collateral. In the event  of default on the  obligation to repurchase, the  Fund
has the right to liquidate the collateral and apply the proceeds in satisfaction
of  the obligation. In the event of default  or bankruptcy by the other party to
the agreement, realization and/or retention of the collateral or proceeds may be
subject to legal proceedings.
 
                                       82
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
4. FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION AND  FOREIGN INVESTMENTS: The books and  records
of  the Fund are  maintained in United States  dollars. Foreign currency amounts
are translated into U.S. dollars at the mean of the bid and asked prices of such
currencies against U.S. dollars  last quoted by a  major bank. Although the  net
assets of the Fund are presented at the foreign exchange rates and market values
at  the close  of the  period, the  Fund does  not isolate  that portion  of the
results of operations  arising as a  result of changes  in the foreign  exchange
rates  from the fluctuations  arising from changes  in the market  prices of the
securities held at period end. Similarly,  the Fund does not isolate the  effect
of  changes in foreign exchange rates from the fluctuations arising from changes
in the market prices of securities sold during the period. Accordingly, realized
and unrealized foreign currency gains (losses) are included in the reported  net
realized  and unrealized gains  (losses) on security  transactions and balances.
However, pursuant to U.S. Federal income tax regulations, gains and losses  from
certain  foreign  currency transactions  and sales  of foreign  denominated debt
securities are treated as ordinary income for U.S. Federal income tax purposes.
 
Net realized  gains  (losses) on  foreign  currency transactions  represent  net
foreign  exchange  gains  (losses)  from  forward  foreign  currency  contracts,
disposition of foreign currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the
trade and settlement  dates on securities  transactions, the difference  between
the  amount of investment  income and foreign withholding  taxes recorded on the
Fund's books and the  U.S. dollar equivalent amount  actually received or  paid,
and  certain currency related amounts of realized  gains or losses from the sale
of foreign denominated debt securities.
 
Foreign security and  currency transactions may  involve certain  considerations
and  risks  not  typically  associated with  those  of  U.S.  dollar denominated
transactions as a result  of, among other factors,  the possibly lower level  of
governmental  supervision and regulation  of foreign securities  markets and the
possibility of political or economic instability.
 
Prior governmental  approval  for  foreign investments  may  be  required  under
certain  circumstances in  some emerging  countries, and  the extent  of foreign
investment in domestic companies may be subject to limitation in other  emerging
countries.  Foreign ownership limitations also may be imposed by the charters of
individual companies in  emerging countries  to prevent,  among other  concerns,
violation of foreign investment limitations. As a result, an additional class of
shares  (identified as "foreign" in the Portfolio of Investments) may be created
and offered for investment. The "local" and "foreign" shares' market values  may
vary.
5.  FORWARD FOREIGN  CURRENCY CONTRACTS: Each  Portfolio may  enter into forward
foreign  currency  contracts  to  attempt  to  protect  securities  and  related
receivables  and payables  against changes in  future foreign  exchange rates. A
forward currency contract  is an agreement  between two parties  to buy or  sell
currency  at a set price on a future date. The market value of the contract will
fluctuate  with   changes  in   currency  exchange   rates.  The   contract   is
marked-to-market  daily using the forward rate and the change in market value is
recorded by the  Portfolio as  unrealized gain  or loss.  The Portfolio  records
realized  gains or losses  when the contract  is closed equal  to the difference
between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the
time it was closed. Risk may arise  upon entering into these contracts from  the
potential  inability of counterparties to meet  the terms of their contracts and
is generally limited to the amount of unrealized gain on the contracts, if  any,
at the date of default. Risks may also arise from unanticipated movements in the
value of a foreign currency relative to the U.S. dollar.
 
6.  PURCHASED OPTIONS. Certain Portfolios may purchase call or put options which
are traded on  a recognized  securities or  futures exchange.  When a  Portfolio
purchases a call option, it acquires the right to buy a designated security at a
designated price ("exercise price"); when a Portfolio purchases a put option, it
acquires  the  right to  sell a  designated  security at  the exercise  price. A
Portfolio may purchase call options to close  out a covered call position or  to
protect  against  an  increase  in  the  price  of  a  security  it  anticipates
purchasing. A Portfolio may purchase put options on securities which it holds to
protect against a decline  in the value  of the security.  Risks may arise  from
imperfect  correlation between the change in market value of the securities held
by the Portfolio and the prices of options relating to the securities  purchased
or sold by the Portfolio and from the possible lack of a liquid secondary market
for  an option. The maximum exposure to loss for any purchased option is limited
to the premium initially paid for the option.
 
7. DELAYED DELIVERY  COMMITMENTS: Each  Portfolio may purchase  securities on  a
when-issued  or forward commitment basis. Payment  and delivery may take place a
month or more after  the date of  the transaction. The  price of the  underlying
securities  and the date when the securities  will be delivered and paid for are
fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated.
 
8. ORGANIZATIONAL COSTS: The  organizational costs of  the Portfolios are  being
amortized on a straight line basis
 
                                       83
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
over  a period  of five  years beginning  with each  Portfolio's commencement of
operations. Morgan Stanley Asset Management, Inc.  has agreed that in the  event
any  of  its  initial  shares  in a  Portfolio  are  redeemed,  the  proceeds on
redemption  will  be  reduced  by  the  pro-rata  portion  of  any   unamortized
organizational  costs in  the same proportion  as the number  of shares redeemed
bears to the initial shares held at time of redemption.
 
9. OTHER: Security transactions are accounted for on the date the securities are
purchased or sold. Costs  used in determining realized  gains and losses on  the
sale  of  investment  securities  are those  of  the  specific  securities sold.
Dividend income  is  recorded  on  the  ex-dividend  date.  Interest  income  is
recognized  on the accrual basis except  where collection is in doubt. Discounts
and premiums on securities  purchased are amortized  according to the  effective
yield  method over  their respective  lives. Most  expenses of  the Fund  can be
directly attributed to a particular Portfolio. Expenses which cannot be directly
attributed are apportioned among the Portfolios based upon relative net  assets.
Income,   expenses  (other  than  class  specific  expenses)  and  realized  and
unrealized gains or  losses are  allocated to each  class of  shares based  upon
their relative net assets. Distributions from the Portfolios are recorded on the
ex-distribution date.
 
Income  and capital  gain distributions are  determined in  accordance with U.S.
Federal  income  tax  regulations  which  may  differ  from  generally  accepted
accounting   principles.  These  differences  are  primarily  due  to  differing
treatments for  foreign currency  transactions  and deferral  of wash  sale  and
post-October losses.
 
B.  ADVISER: Morgan Stanley Asset Management,  Inc. (the "Adviser" or "MSAM"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan  Stanley Group, Inc.,  provides the Fund  with
investment  advisory  services at  a fee  paid quarterly  and calculated  at the
annual rates of average daily net assets indicated below. The Adviser has agreed
to reduce  operating fees  payable to  it and  to reimburse  the Portfolios,  if
necessary,  if  the  annual operating  expenses,  expressed as  a  percentage of
average daily net assets, exceed the maximum ratios indicated below.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                       CLASS A   CLASS C
                                                                                                       MAXIMUM   MAXIMUM
                                                                                                       OPERATING OPERATING
                                                                                            ADVISORY   EXPENSE   EXPENSE
FUND                                                                                          FEE       RATIO     RATIO
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------   -------   -------
<S>                                                                                         <C>        <C>       <C>
Global Equity Allocation Fund.............................................................      1.00%      1.70%     2.45%
Global Fixed Income Fund..................................................................      0.75%      1.45%     2.20%
Asian Growth Fund.........................................................................      1.00%      1.90%     2.65%
American Value Fund.......................................................................      0.85%      1.50%     2.25%
Worldwide High Income Fund................................................................      0.75%      1.55%     2.30%
Latin American Fund.......................................................................      1.25%      2.10%     2.85%
Emerging Markets Fund.....................................................................      1.25%      2.15%     2.90%
</TABLE>
 
C. ADMINISTRATOR:  MSAM  also provides  the  Fund with  administrative  services
pursuant  to an Administrative  Agreement for a  monthly fee which  on an annual
basis equals 0.25% of the average daily  net assets of each Portfolio. Under  an
agreement between MSAM and U.S. Trust Company of New York ("U.S. Trust"), Mutual
Funds  Service Company  ("MFSC"), a subsidiary  of U.S.  Trust, provides certain
administrative services to the  Fund. MFSC is compensated  for such services  by
MSAM  from the fee it receives from the Fund, subject to certain fee minimums as
defined in  the agreement,  which for  the  year ended  June 30,  1995,  totaled
$182,000  for Global  Equity Allocation  Fund, Global  Fixed Income  Fund, Asian
Growth Fund, American Value Fund, and  Worldwide High Income Fund, and  $178,000
for  Latin  American  Fund  and  Emerging  Markets  Fund,  respectively. Certain
employees of MFSC are officers of the Fund.
 
D. DISTRIBUTOR:  Morgan  Stanley  &  Co.  Incorporated  (the  "Distributor"),  a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., and an affiliate of MSAM,
serves  as  the  distributor of  the  Fund  and provides  both  classes  of each
Portfolio  with  distribution  services  pursuant  to  a  Distribution  Plan  in
accordance  with  Rule  12b-1 under  the  Investment  Company Act  of  1940. The
Distributor is entitled to receive from the Portfolios a distribution fee, which
is accrued daily and paid  quarterly, of up to 0.25%  for the Class A shares  of
each  Portfolio and up to 1.00%  of the Class C shares  of each Portfolio, on an
annualized basis, of the average daily net assets of such class.
 
The Distributor may  receive a deferred  sales charge for  certain purchases  of
Class  A and Class C shares of each Portfolio redeemed within one year following
such purchase. For the year ended June 30, 1995, the Distributor has advised the
Fund that it earned  deferred sales charges on  Class C shares of  approximately
$26,000,  $5,000, $130,000, $2,000, $4,000, $5,000 and $15,000 for Global Equity
Allocation Fund, Global  Fixed Income  Fund, Asian Growth  Fund, American  Value
Fund, Worldwide High Income Fund, Latin American Fund and Emerging Markets Fund,
respectively. There were no deferred sales charges earned on Class A shares.
 
E. PURCHASES AND SALES: For the year ended June 30, 1995, purchases and sales of
investment securities other than long-term U.S. Government securities and short-
term investments were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      PURCHASES    SALES
FUND                                                                                                    (000)      (000)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------   -------
<S>                                                                                                   <C>         <C>
Global Equity Allocation Fund.......................................................................  $ 42,019    $28,655
Global Fixed Income Fund............................................................................    12,889     17,056
Asian Growth Fund...................................................................................   158,562     93,194
American Value Fund.................................................................................    17,396      5,095
Worldwide High Income Fund..........................................................................    47,817     32,975
Latin American Fund.................................................................................    23,839      8,378
Emerging Markets Fund...............................................................................    50,907      5,528
</TABLE>
 
                                       84
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                                 JUNE 30, 1995
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Purchases  and  sales during  the year  ended  June 30,  1995 of  long-term U.S.
Government securities  occurred in  the  Global Fixed  Income Fund  and  totaled
$10,175,000 and $5,296,000, respectively.
 
F.  CUSTODIANS: Morgan Stanley Trust Company ("MSTC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary
of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., acts as custodian for the Fund's non-U.S.  assets
held  outside the United  States in accordance with  a custodian agreement. U.S.
Trust acts as  custodian for  the Fund's domestic  assets in  accordance with  a
custodian  agreement. Custodian fees  are computed and  payable monthly based on
assets held, investment  purchases and  sales activity,  an account  maintenance
fee,  plus reimbursement for  certain out-of-pocket expenses.  Fees incurred for
custody services provided  by MSTC  for the  year ended  June 30,  1995 were  as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                          MSTC
                                                                                              MSTC      CUSTODIAN
                                                                                            CUSTODIAN     FEES
                                                                                              FEES       PAYABLE
FUND                                                                                          (000)       (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------   ---------
<S>                                                                                         <C>         <C>
Global Equity Allocation Fund.............................................................    $ 96        $ 24
Global Fixed Income Fund..................................................................      12           3
Asian Growth Fund.........................................................................     487         126
Worldwide High Income Fund................................................................       4           1
Latin American Fund.......................................................................      52          13
Emerging Markets Fund.....................................................................     116          29
</TABLE>
 
G.  OTHER: At June 30, 1995, net assets of certain Portfolios were substantially
comprised of foreign  denominated securities and  currency. Changes in  currency
rates will affect the value of and investment income from such securities.
Portfolio  securities  and  foreign  currency holdings  were  translated  at the
following exchange rates as of June 30, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                         <C>            <C>  <C>
Argentine Peso............................................................................       0.999750  =    $1.00
Australian Dollar.........................................................................       1.407360  =    $1.00
Belgian Franc.............................................................................      28.460000  =    $1.00
Brazilian Real............................................................................       0.920500  =    $1.00
British Pound Sterling....................................................................       0.628540  =    $1.00
Canadian Dollar...........................................................................       1.373350  =    $1.00
Danish Krone..............................................................................       5.402000  =    $1.00
Deutsche Mark.............................................................................       1.383950  =    $1.00
Finnish Markka............................................................................       4.274500  =    $1.00
French Franc..............................................................................       4.850750  =    $1.00
Greek Drachma.............................................................................     225.040000  =    $1.00
Hong Kong Dollar..........................................................................       7.737800  =    $1.00
Indonesian Rupiah.........................................................................   2,227.000000  =    $1.00
Italian Lira..............................................................................   1,635.500000  =    $1.00
Israeli Shekel............................................................................       2.953500  =    $1.00
Japanese Yen..............................................................................      84.825000  =    $1.00
Korean Won................................................................................     758.250000  =    $1.00
Malaysian Ringgit.........................................................................       2.438000  =    $1.00
Mexican New Peso..........................................................................       6.250000  =    $1.00
Morocco Dhiram............................................................................       8.330500  =    $1.00
Netherlands Guilder.......................................................................       1.549400  =    $1.00
New Zealand Dollar........................................................................       1.496890  =    $1.00
Pakistani Rupee...........................................................................      30.979000  =    $1.00
Peruvian Sol..............................................................................       2.224500  =    $1.00
Philippine Peso...........................................................................      25.540000  =    $1.00
Polish Zloty..............................................................................       2.341000  =    $1.00
Portuguese Escudo.........................................................................     146.300000  =    $1.00
Singapore Dollar..........................................................................       1.397500  =    $1.00
South African Rand........................................................................       3.636250  =    $1.00
Spanish Peseta............................................................................     121.050000  =    $1.00
Swedish Krona.............................................................................       7.276850  =    $1.00
Swiss Franc...............................................................................       1.151500  =    $1.00
Taiwan Dollar.............................................................................      25.828000  =    $1.00
Thai Baht.................................................................................      24.685000  =    $1.00
Turkish Lira..............................................................................  44,215.000000  =    $1.00
</TABLE>
 
At June  30, 1995,  Global  Equity Allocation  Fund,  Asian Growth  Fund,  Latin
American Fund and Emerging Markets Fund incurred approximately $6,000, $107,000,
$1,000  and $2,000, respectively, as brokerage commissions with Morgan Stanley &
Co. Incorporated, an affiliated broker/dealer.
 
At June 30, 1995,  cost and unrealized  appreciation (depreciation) for  Federal
income tax purposes of the securities of each Portfolio were:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                      NET
                                                                                                                  APPRECIATION
                                                                                    COST    APPREC.  (DEPREC.)   (DEPRECIATION)
FUND                                                                               (000)     (000)     (000)         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------  -------  ---------   --------------
<S>                                                                               <C>       <C>      <C>         <C>
Global Equity Allocation Fund...................................................  $ 80,786  $6,661   $ (2,072)      $ 4,589
Global Fixed Income Fund........................................................    16,386     622       (114)          508
Asian Growth Fund...............................................................   292,284  41,905    (14,669)       27,236
American Value Fund.............................................................    32,419   2,824       (869)        1,955
Worldwide High Income Fund......................................................    33,822     676       (709)          (33)
Latin American Fund.............................................................    13,729     533     (2,556)       (2,023)
Emerging Markets Fund...........................................................    51,190   3,123     (4,909)       (1,786)
</TABLE>
 
                                       85


<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
 
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
SHAREHOLDER MEETING: (UNAUDITED)
 
During  the year  ended June  30, 1995,  Morgan Stanley  Fund, Inc. shareholders
voted on proposals at a special meeting  held on June 28, 1995. The  description
of each proposal and number of shares voted are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    VOTED FOR   WITHHOLD
                                                      (000)      (000)
                                                    ---------   --------
<S>                                                 <C>         <C>
1. To elect the following Directors to serve the
 Fund until such time as their successors have
 been duly appointed.
  Barton M. Biggs                                    21,814        294
  John D. Barrett II                                 21,814        294
  Gerald E. Jones                                    21,800        308
  Andrew McNally IV                                  21,806        302
  Warren J. Olsen                                    21,813        295
  Samuel T. Reeves                                   21,840        268
  Fergus Reid                                        21,817        291
  Frederick O. Robertshaw                            21,837        271
  Frederick B. Whittemore                            21,798        310
</TABLE>
 
FEDERAL INCOME TAX INFORMATION: (UNAUDITED)
 
For  the year ended June 30, 1995,  the percentage of dividends that qualify for
the 70% dividend  received deduction  for corporate shareholders  of the  Global
Equity   Allocation  Fund  and  American  Value  Fund  are  27.11%  and  87.17%,
respectively.
 
Global  Equity  Allocation   Fund  and   Asian  Growth   Fund  have   designated
approximately  $2,376,000 and $867,000 as long-term  capital gain for the fiscal
year ended June 30, 1995.
 
Foreign taxes  paid during  the fiscal  year ended  June 30,  1995 amounting  to
$9,000  and  $30,000 for  Global Fixed  Income Fund  and Emerging  Markets Fund,
respectively are expected to  be passed through to  shareholders as foreign  tax
credits  on Form 1099-DIV for  the year ending December  31, 1995, which will be
sent to shareholders in late January 1996.
 
                                                                             86



<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of
Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc.
 
In our opinion, the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities, including
the  portfolios of investments, and the  related statements of operations and of
changes in  net assets  and  the financial  highlights  present fairly,  in  all
material  respects, the financial position of the Global Equity Allocation Fund,
Global Fixed Income Fund, Asian Growth Fund, American Value Fund, Worldwide High
Income Fund, Latin  American Fund  and Emerging Markets  Fund (constituting  the
Morgan  Stanley Fund,  Inc., hereafter  referred to as  the "Fund")  at June 30,
1995, the results of each of their operations, the changes in each of their  net
assets  and  the financial  highlights for  each of  the Funds  for each  of the
respective periods presented, in  conformity with generally accepted  accounting
principles.  These  financial  statements  and  financial  highlights (hereafter
referred to  as "financial  statements") are  the responsibility  of the  Fund's
management;  our  responsibility is  to express  an  opinion on  these financial
statements based  on our  audits. We  conducted our  audits of  these  financial
statements  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing  standards which
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance  about
whether  the financial  statements are free  of material  misstatement. An audit
includes examining,  on  a  test  basis, evidence  supporting  the  amounts  and
disclosures  in the  financial statements,  assessing the  accounting principles
used and significant estimates  made by management,  and evaluating the  overall
financial  statement presentation.  We believe  that our  audits, which included
confirmation  of  securities  at  June  30,  1995  by  correspondence  with  the
custodians  and brokers and  the application of  alternative auditing procedures
where confirmations from brokers were  not received, provide a reasonable  basis
for the opinion expressed above.
 
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
 
August 11, 1995
 
                                       87
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
COMMON STOCKS (88.0%)
  AUSTRALIA (2.2%)
  10,400  Amcor Ltd. .......................................  $    73
   5,900  Ampolex Ltd. .....................................       13
   9,800  Australian National Industries Ltd. ..............        7
  16,700  Boral Ltd. .......................................       42
   4,100  Brambles Industries Ltd. .........................       46
  30,700  Broken Hill Proprietary Ltd. .....................      433
  10,800  Burns, Philip & Co. Ltd. .........................       24
   5,300  Coca-Cola Amatil Ltd. ............................       42
  22,256  Coles Myer Ltd. ..................................       69
  11,502  CRA Ltd. .........................................      169
  16,800  CSR Ltd. .........................................       55
  52,800  Foster Brewing Group Ltd. ........................       87
  13,851  General Property Trust ...........................       24
  +2,432  Goldfields Limited Ltd. ..........................        6
  22,200  Goodman Fielder Ltd. .............................       22
   5,900  ICI Australia Ltd. ...............................       45
   4,697  Lend Lease Corp. Ltd. ............................       68
  27,000  MIM Holdings Ltd. ................................       37
  22,900  National Australia Bank Ltd. .....................      206
   5,500  Newcrest Mining Ltd. .............................       23
  31,900  News Corp. Ltd. ..................................      170
  14,200  North Broken Hill Peko Ltd. ......................       40
  19,300  Pacific Dunlop Ltd. ..............................       45
  16,100  Pioneer International Ltd. .......................       42
   5,100  Renison Goldfields Consolidated Ltd. .............       25
  10,300  Santos Ltd. ......................................       30
  12,300  Southcorp Holdings Ltd. ..........................       29
  +8,000  TNT Ltd. .........................................       11
  17,400  Western Mining Corp. .............................      112
   1,128  Westfield Trust ..................................        2
  29,300  Westpac Banking Corp. Ltd. .......................      130
                                                              -------
                                                                2,127
                                                              -------
  BELGIUM (1.8%)
      70  Bekaert S.A. .....................................       58
     125  CBR ..............................................       50
   1,600  Delhaize Freres et Cie 'Le Lion' S.A. ............       66
   1,350  Electrabel S.A. ..................................      321
     300  Electrabel S.A. VVPR (New) .......................       72
      30  Fortis AG ........................................        4
   1,100  Fortis AG (Terme) ................................      134
     450  Generale de Banque VVPR ..........................      159
     775  Gevaert Photo-Production N.V. ....................       48
     160  Glaverbel S.A. ...................................       17
      +9  Glaverbel S.A. STRIP .............................       --
     700  Groupe Bruxelles Lambert S.A. ....................       97
     400  Kredietbank N.V. .................................      109
     720  Petrofina S.A. ...................................      220
     400  Royale Belge .....................................       80
     250  Solvay et Cie 'A' ................................      135
     400  Tractebel S.A. ...................................      165
    +800  Union Miniere S.A. ...............................       54
                                                              -------
                                                                1,789
                                                              -------
  FRANCE (1.8%)
     175  Accor S.A. .......................................       23
     850  Alcatel Alsthom ..................................       73
     950  AXA S.A. .........................................       64
   1,150  Banque Nationale de Paris ........................       52
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
     750  Banque Paribas ...................................  $    41
     100  BIC ..............................................       10
     182  Bouygues .........................................       18
     140  Canal Plus .......................................       26
     150  Carrefour S.A. ...................................       91
     500  Casino ...........................................       15
      50  Chargeurs S.A. ...................................       10
     165  Cie Bancaire S.A. ................................       18
     530  Cie de Saint-Gobain ..............................       59
   1,050  Cie de Suez S.A. .................................       43
     723  Cie Generale des Eaux ............................       72
   1,550  Elf Acquitaine ...................................      114
     605  Elf Sanofi S.A. ..................................       39
     200  Eridania Beghin-Say S.A. .........................       34
     440  Groupe Danone RFD ................................       73
     350  Havas S.A. .......................................       28
     667  Lafarge Coppee S.A. ..............................       43
     400  L'Air Liquide ....................................       66
     170  Legrand S.A. .....................................       26
     400  L'Oreal ..........................................      107
     525  LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton .................      109
     498  Lyonnaise des Eaux S.A. ..........................       48
     750  Michelin (C.G.D.E.) 'B' ..........................       30
     350  Pernod-Ricard ....................................       20
     120  Pinault S.A. .....................................       24
     100  Promodes .........................................       24
     330  PSA Peugeot Citroen S.A. .........................       44
   1,850  Rhone-Poulenc S.A. 'A' ...........................       40
      25  Sagem ............................................       14
      70  Saint Louis ......................................       19
     800  Schneider S.A. ...................................       27
      29  Simco  ...........................................        3
     200  Simco (Registered) ...............................       19
      30  Societe Eurafrance S.A. ..........................       10
     100  Societe Generale .................................       12
     900  Thomson CSF S.A. .................................       20
   1,300  Total S.A. 'B' ...................................       88
   1,750  Union des Assurances de Paris ....................       46
  +1,600  Usinor Sacilor ...................................       21
                                                              -------
                                                                1,763
                                                              -------
  GERMANY (3.6%)
      50  Aachener & Muenchener Beteiligungs AG ............       36
     550  Agiv AG ..........................................       12
     257  Allianz AG  ......................................      505
      50  Asko Deutsche Kaufhaus AG ........................       26
     650  BASF AG ..........................................      147
     700  Bayer AG .........................................      186
   2,400  Bayer Hypothecken-und Wechsel-Bank AG ............       61
   2,450  Bayer Vereinsbank AG .............................       74
      50  Beiersdorf AG ....................................       34
      50  Bilfinger & Berger Bau AG ........................       19
      50  Brau und Brunnen AG ..............................        8
    +200  Bremer Vulkan Verbund AG .........................        6
   1,100  Continental AG ...................................       16
     500  Daimler-Benz AG ..................................      253
     100  Degussa AG .......................................       34
   4,850  Deutsche Bank AG .................................      230
     350  Deutsche Lufthansa AG ............................       48
</TABLE>
 
    4
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  GERMANY (CONT.)
   4,150  Dresdner Bank AG .................................  $   111
      50  Heidelberger Zement AG ...........................       31
     100  Hochtief AG ......................................       43
     100  Karstadt AG ......................................       41
     100  Kaufhof Holding AG ...............................       30
    +500  Kloeckner-Humboldt-Deutz AG ......................        3
     100  Linde AG .........................................       59
     100  MAN AG ...........................................       28
     400  Mannesmann AG ....................................      127
  +1,700  Merck KGAA .......................................       69
     100  Muenchener Rueckver (Registered) .................      215
      +3  Muenchener Rueckver (New) ........................        6
     200  Preussag AG ......................................       56
     350  RWE AG ...........................................      127
     620  SAP AG ...........................................       96
     700  Schering AG ......................................       47
      50  Siemens AG .......................................      302
    +350  Thyssen AG .......................................       64
   4,900  Veba AG ..........................................      210
     200  Viag AG ..........................................       82
     300  Volkswagen AG ....................................      101
                                                              -------
                                                                3,543
                                                              -------
  HONG KONG (5.5%)
 +28,000  Applied International Holdings Ltd. ..............        3
  27,302  Bank of East Asia ................................       98
 101,000  Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. ......................      154
  76,000  Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd. ........................      463
  68,000  China Light and Power Co. Ltd. ...................      313
  58,000  Chinese Estate Holdings Ltd. .....................       38
  27,000  Dickson Concepts International Ltd. ..............       25
  22,000  Giordano Holdings Ltd. ...........................       19
  43,000  Hang Lung Development Corp. ......................       68
  66,100  Hang Seng Bank Ltd. ..............................      592
   6,400  Hong Kong Aircraft Engineering Co. Ltd. ..........       17
  67,400  Hong Kong & China Gas Co. ........................      109
  44,000  Hong Kong Shanghai Hotels ........................       64
 381,716  Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd. ................      681
 154,869  Hopewell Holdings Ltd. ...........................       89
 124,000  Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. ...........................      755
  35,000  Hysan Development Co. ............................       93
  14,000  Johnson Electric Holdings Ltd. ...................       25
  20,000  Miramar Hotel Investment Ltd. ....................       42
  53,335  New World Development Co. Ltd. ...................      233
  50,000  Oriental Press Group .............................       15
  13,300  Peregrine Investment Holdings ....................       17
  36,905  Shangri-La Asia Ltd. .............................       45
  56,000  Shun Tak Holdings Ltd. ...........................       39
  64,000  South China Morning Post .........................       39
  36,000  Stelux Holdings Ltd. .............................        9
  79,000  Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. .....................      646
  55,500  Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A' ...........................      431
  15,000  Television Broadcasting Ltd. .....................       53
  75,000  Wharf Holdings Ltd. ..............................      250
  12,000  Windsor Industrial ...............................       10
   5,180  Wing Lung Bank ...................................       29
                                                              -------
                                                                5,464
                                                              -------
  ITALY (1.7%)
  12,225  Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A. ....................      296
  24,000  Banca Commerciale Italiana .......................       51
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
   8,000  Banco Ambrosiano Veneto ..........................  $    22
   2,500  Benetton Group S.p.A. ............................       30
   2,000  Burgo Cartiere S.p.A. ............................       10
  34,000  Credito Italiano S.p.A. ..........................       40
  10,000  Edison S.p.A. ....................................       43
  +1,000  Falck  ...........................................        2
  48,000  Fiat S.p.A. ......................................      156
  12,000  Fiat S.p.A. Di Risp NCS ..........................       21
   6,000  Fidis Finanziaria di Sviluppo S.p.A. .............       11
  +3,000  Impreglio S.p.A. .................................        3
  12,000  Istituto Bancario San Paolo di Torina S.p.A. .....       71
   9,400  Istituto Mobiliare Italiano S.p.A. ...............       59
  61,600  Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni (INA) .....       82
   1,750  Italcementi S.p.A. ...............................        4
   4,000  Italcementi S.p.A. NCS ...........................       24
  11,000  Italgas ..........................................       33
   4,500  Magneti Marelli S.p.A. ...........................        6
   7,300  Mediobanca S.p.A. ................................       51
 +80,000  Montedison S.p.A. ................................       53
 +10,000  Montedison S.p.A. Di Risp NCS ....................        6
 +56,250  Olivetti Group ...................................       45
  19,300  Parmalat Finanziaria S.p.A. ......................       17
 +25,000  Pirelli S.p.A. ...................................       32
   3,910  R.A.S. ...........................................       44
   1,690  R.A.S. di Risp ...................................       10
   2,565  Rinascente S.p.A. ................................       16
  +1,000  Saffa S.p.A. 'A' .................................        3
   2,000  S.A.I. ...........................................       20
   7,500  Saipem S.p.A. ....................................       17
   2,000  Sasib S.p.A. .....................................        9
   3,500  Sirti S.p.A. .....................................       20
 +10,000  Snia BPD S.p.A. ..................................        8
 102,200  Telecom Italia S.p.A. ............................      159
  25,000  Telecom Italia Di Risp S.p.A. ....................       31
 +99,500  Telecom Italia Mobile S.p.A ......................      175
                                                              -------
                                                                1,680
                                                              -------
  JAPAN (26.2%)
   2,000  Advantest Corp. ..................................      103
  18,000  Ajinomoto Co., Inc. ..............................      200
   9,000  Aoki Corp. .......................................       38
   1,000  Aoyama Trading Co. Ltd. ..........................       32
  36,000  Asahi Bank Ltd. ..................................      453
   9,000  Asahi Breweries Ltd. .............................      106
  27,000  Asahi Chemical Industry Co. Ltd. .................      207
  27,000  Asahi Glass Co. ..................................      301
  27,000  Bank of Tokyo ....................................      473
   9,000  Bridgestone Co. ..................................      143
  16,000  Canon, Inc. ......................................      290
   5,000  Casio Computer Co. Ltd. ..........................       49
  14,000  Chiba Bank .......................................      126
   4,000  Chiyoda Corp. ....................................       40
   9,000  Chugai Pharmaceutical Ltd. .......................       86
  41,000  Dai Ichi Kangyo Bank .............................      806
  18,000  Dai Nippon Printing Co. Ltd. .....................      305
  12,000  Daiei Inc. .......................................      145
   9,000  Daikin Industries Ltd. ...........................       88
  +4,000  Daishowa Paper Manufacturing Co. Ltd. ............       31
   9,000  Daiwa House Industry .............................      148
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                           5
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  JAPAN (CONT.)
  18,000  Daiwa Securities Co., Ltd. .......................  $   275
   6,000  Ebara Corp. ......................................       88
   4,100  Fanuc Co. ........................................      178
  40,000  Fuji Bank ........................................      883
   9,000  Fuji Photo Film Ltd. .............................      260
  29,000  Fujitsu Ltd. .....................................      323
  15,000  Furukawa Electric ................................       73
  18,000  Hankyu Corp. .....................................       98
   9,000  Hazama-Gumi ......................................       38
  54,000  Hitachi Ltd. .....................................      544
  14,000  Honda Motor Co. ..................................      289
  29,000  Industrial Bank of Japan .........................      879
   5,000  Ito-Yokado Co. Ltd. ..............................      308
 +36,000  Japan Airlines ...................................      239
  22,000  Japan Energy Corp. ...............................       74
  10,000  Joyo Bank ........................................       80
   7,000  Jusco Co. ........................................      182
  18,000  Kajima Corp. .....................................      178
  12,754  Kansai Electric Power Co. ........................      309
  18,000  KAO Corp. ........................................      223
  46,000  Kawasaki Steel Corp. .............................      160
  27,000  Kinki Nippon Railway .............................      204
  18,000  Kirin Brewery Co. Ltd. ...........................      213
 +53,000  Kobe Steel Ltd. ..................................      164
  18,000  Komatsu Ltd. .....................................      148
  27,000  Kubota Corp. .....................................      174
  18,000  Kumagai Gumi Co. Ltd. ............................       72
   9,000  Kyowa Hakko Kogyo ................................       85
  27,000  Marubeni Corp. ...................................      146
   8,000  Marui Co. ........................................      166
  27,000  Matsushita Electric Industries Ltd. ..............      439
  27,000  Mitsubishi Chemical Corp. ........................      131
  25,000  Mitsubishi Corp. .................................      307
  31,000  Mitsubishi Electric Corp. ........................      223
  19,000  Mitsubishi Estate Co. Ltd. .......................      237
  49,000  Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. .................      391
  18,000  Mitsubishi Materials Corp. .......................       93
  17,000  Mitsubishi Trust and Banking Corp. ...............      283
  27,000  Mitsui & Co. .....................................      237
 +18,000  Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. .......       50
  15,000  Mitsui Fudosan Co. Ltd. ..........................      185
  10,000  Mitsukoshi .......................................       94
   2,000  Mochida Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. ..................       28
   4,000  Murata Manufacturing .............................      147
  21,000  NEC Corp. ........................................      256
   9,000  NGK Insulators Ltd ...............................       90
  18,000  New OJI Paper Co., Ltd. ..........................      163
   9,000  Nippon Denko Co. Ltd. ............................      168
  18,000  Nippon Express Co. Ltd. ..........................      173
   9,000  Nippon Fire & Marine Insurance Co. ...............       61
   9,000  Nippon Light Metal Co. ...........................       52
   9,000  Nippon Meat Packers ..............................      131
  27,000  Nippon Oil Co. ...................................      169
  67,000  Nippon Steel Corp. ...............................      230
  27,000  Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha ....................      157
  34,000  Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. ............................      261
 +52,000  NKK Corp. ........................................      140
  27,000  Nomura Securities Co. Ltd. .......................      588
  18,000  Odakyu Electric Railway Co. ......................      123
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  53,000  Osaka Gas Co. ....................................  $   183
   9,000  Penta-Ocean Construction .........................       70
   4,000  Pioneer Electronic Corp. .........................       73
  44,000  Sakura Bank ......................................      558
   9,000  Sankyo Co. Ltd. ..................................      202
  27,000  Sanyo Electric Co. Ltd. ..........................      156
   2,000  Secom Co. ........................................      139
   2,100  Sega Enterprises .................................      116
   9,000  Sekisui House Ltd. ...............................      115
   5,000  Seven-Eleven Japan ...............................      353
  18,000  Sharp Corp. ......................................      288
   3,000  Shimano Inc. .....................................       53
   4,000  Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. ...........................       83
  13,000  Shinizu Corp. ....................................      132
   4,000  Shiseido Co. Ltd. ................................       48
  11,000  Shizuoka Bank ....................................      138
 +18,000  Showa Denko K.K. .................................       56
   4,000  Sony Corp. .......................................      240
  45,000  Sumitomo Bank ....................................      954
  36,000  Sumitomo Chemical Co. ............................      180
  18,000  Sumitomo Corp. ...................................      183
  12,000  Sumitomo Electric Industries .....................      144
   4,000  Sumitomo Forestry ................................       61
  62,000  Sumitomo Metal Industries ........................      188
   9,000  Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. ........................       81
   9,000  Sumitomo Osaka Cement Co. Ltd. ...................       42
  18,000  Taisei Corp., Ltd. ...............................      120
  18,000  Takeda Chemical Industries .......................      296
  18,000  Teijin Ltd. ......................................       92
  18,000  Tobu Railway Co. .................................      113
   8,800  Tohoku Electric Power ............................      212
  28,000  Tokai Bank .......................................      391
  27,000  Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance Co. ................      353
   4,000  Tokyo Dome Corp. .................................       69
  17,681  Tokyo Electric Power Co. .........................      473
   3,000  Tokyo Electron Ltd. ..............................      116
  47,000  Tokyo Gas Co. ....................................      166
  18,000  Tokyu Corp. ......................................      127
  12,000  Toppan Printing Co. Ltd. .........................      158
  27,000  Toray Industries, Inc. ...........................      178
   9,000  Toto Ltd. ........................................      126
  18,000  Toyobo Ltd. ......................................       65
  41,000  Toyota Motor Corp. ...............................      870
 +18,000  Ube Industries Ltd. ..............................       68
  18,000  Yamaichi Securities ..............................      140
  18,000  Yasuda Trust & Banking ...........................      107
                                                              -------
                                                               25,906
                                                              -------
  NETHERLANDS (2.0%)
   2,762  ABN-Amro Holdings N.V. ...........................      126
     700  Akzo Nobel .......................................       81
   5,800  Elsevier N.V. ....................................       77
     350  Heineken N.V. ....................................       62
   2,714  Internationale Nederlanden Groep N.V. ............      181
     785  KLM Royal Dutch Airlines N.V. ....................       28
   1,215  Koninklijke Ahold N.V. ...........................       49
     278  Koninklijke Hoogovens ............................        9
   8,835  Koninklijke PTT Nederland N.V. ...................      321
     900  N.V. Koninklijke KNP BT ..........................       23
     200  Nedlloyd Groep N.V. ..............................        5
   2,900  Phillips Electronics N.V. ........................      105
</TABLE>
 
    6
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  NETHERLANDS (CONT.)
   4,700  Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. ........................  $   657
     281  Stork N.V. .......................................        7
   1,400  Unilever N.V. ....................................      197
     633  Wolters Kluwer N.V. ..............................       60
                                                              -------
                                                                1,988
                                                              -------
  SINGAPORE (3.5%)
  13,000  Amcol Holdings Ltd. ..............................       36
  35,000  City Developments Ltd. ...........................      255
  10,000  Cycle & Carriage Ltd. ............................      100
  37,000  DBS Land Ltd. ....................................      125
  29,000  Development Bank of Singapore ....................      361
   9,000  First Capital Corp. ..............................       25
  11,000  Fraser & Neave Ltd. ..............................      140
  28,000  Hai Sun Hup Group Ltd. ...........................       19
  19,000  Hotel Properties Ltd. ............................       29
   8,000  Inchcape Bhd. ....................................       26
   5,000  Jurong Shipyard Ltd. .............................       38
  23,000  Keppel Corp. .....................................      205
  12,000  NatSteel Ltd. ....................................       25
  36,000  Neptune Orient Lines Ltd. ........................       40
  39,000  Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. ....................      488
   7,000  Overseas Union Enterprise Ltd. ...................       35
  14,000  Parkway Holdings Ltd. ............................       38
   2,000  Robinson & Co. Ltd. ..............................        8
   8,000  Shangri-La Hotel Ltd. ............................       31
  58,000  Singapore Airlines Ltd. (Foreign) ................      541
  15,600  Singapore Press Holdings (Foreign) ...............      276
  27,000  Straits Steamship Land Ltd. ......................       91
  18,000  Straits Trading Co. Ltd. .........................       42
  71,000  United Industrial Corp. Ltd. .....................       70
  40,000  United Overseas Bank Ltd. ........................      385
                                                              -------
                                                                3,429
                                                              -------
  SPAIN (3.2%)
     440  Acerinox S. ......................................       45
   4,200  Argentaria S.A. ..................................      173
   7,253  Autopistas Concesionaria Espanola S.A. ...........       83
   8,100  Banco Bilbao Vizcaya (Registered) ................      292
   5,300  Banco Central Hispanoamericano S.A. ..............      108
  +3,466  Banco Espanol de Credito S.A. ....................       24
   5,200  Banco Santander S.A. .............................      261
     700  Corporacion Financiera Alba S.A. .................       43
     900  Corporacion Mapfre CIA S.A. ......................       50
   2,600  Dragados & Construcciones S.A. ...................       34
   1,950  Ebro Agricolas, Compania de Alimentacion S.A. ....       20
   8,900  Endesa ...........................................      504
     317  Energia e Indsutrias Aragonesas ..................        1
  +3,500  Ercros S.A. ......................................        2
     850  Fasa Renault .....................................       14
     500  Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas S.A. .......       38
   1,300  Gas Natural SDG 'E' ..............................      203
     200  Gines Navarro Construction Co. ...................        2
  30,300  Iberdrola S.A. ...................................      277
     125  Metrovacesa ......................................        4
     400  Portland Vaderrivas S.A. .........................       25
  10,800  Repsol S.A. ......................................      354
   1,300  Tabacalera S.A. 'A' ..............................       49
  31,800  Telefonica de Espana .............................      441
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  10,500  Union Electrica Fenosa S.A. ......................  $    63
   1,400  Uralita S.A. .....................................       13
   1,550  Vallehermoso S.A. ................................       29
   1,000  Viscofan Industria Navarra De Envolturas
            Celulosicas S.A. ...............................       12
     330  Zardoya-Otis S.A. ................................       36
                                                              -------
                                                                3,200
                                                              -------
  SWITZERLAND (2.0%)
     +25  Adia S.A. (Bearer) ...............................        4
      25  Alusuisse-Lonza Holding AG (Bearer) ..............       20
      50  Alusuisse-Lonza Holding AG (Registered) ..........       40
      60  BBC Brown Boveri AG (Bearer) .....................       70
      30  Ciba-Geigy AG (Bearer) ...........................       26
     160  Ciba-Geigy AG (Registered) .......................      141
     800  CS Holding AG (Registered) .......................       82
      10  Georg Fischer AG (Bearer) ........................       13
      45  Holderbank Financiere Glaris AG, 'B' (Bearer) ....       34
      30  Merkur Holding AG (Registered) ...................        7
     250  Nestle S.A. (Registered) .........................      276
      10  Roche Holding AG (Bearer) ........................      140
      45  Roche Holding AG-Genusshein ......................      356
      10  SGS Societe Generale de Surveillance Holding S.A
            (Bearer) .......................................       20
     225  Sandoz AG (Registered) ...........................      206
     100  Schweizerische Rueckver (Registered) .............      116
      25  SMH AG (Bearer) ..................................       15
     100  SMH AG (Registered) ..............................       13
      25  Sulzer AG (Registered) ...........................       14
     150  Swiss Bank Corp. (Bearer) ........................       61
     250  Swiss Bank Corp. (Registered) ....................       51
     +25  SwissAir AG (Registered) .........................       18
     140  Union Bank of Switzerland (Bearer) ...............      152
     150  Union Bank of Switzerland (Registered) ...........       34
     250  Zuerich Versicherungs-Gesellschaft
            (Registered) ...................................       75
                                                              -------
                                                                1,984
                                                              -------
  UNITED KINGDOM (3.1%)
   6,900  Abbey National plc ...............................       68
   5,000  Argyll Group plc .................................       26
   4,900  Arjo Wiggins Appleton plc ........................       13
   4,000  Associated British Foods plc .....................       23
   5,800  Barclays plc .....................................       66
   3,600  Bass plc .........................................       40
  12,349  BAT Industries plc ...............................      109
   2,300  BICC plc .........................................       10
   4,300  Blue Circle Industries plc .......................       23
   2,100  BOC Group plc ....................................       29
   4,300  Boots Co. plc ....................................       39
   2,900  BPB Industries plc ...............................       14
   1,700  British Aerospace plc ............................       21
   4,000  British Airways plc ..............................       29
  19,500  British Gas plc ..................................       77
  20,500  British Petroleum Co. plc ........................      172
   7,400  British Steel plc ................................       19
  18,700  British Telecommunications plc ...................      103
  14,400  BTR plc ..........................................       73
   1,018  Burmah Castrol plc ...............................       15
   8,698  Cable & Wireless plc .............................       62
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                           7
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  UNITED KINGDOM (CONT.)
   4,100  Cadbury Schweppes plc ............................  $    34
   2,700  Caradon plc ......................................        8
   2,900  Coats Viyella plc ................................        8
   1,800  Commercial Union plc .............................       18
   1,700  Courtaulds plc ...................................       11
   1,212  De La Rue plc ....................................       12
   4,300  Forte plc ........................................       22
   1,700  General Accident plc .............................       17
  13,000  General Electric plc .............................       72
   1,800  GKN plc ..........................................       22
  12,000  Glaxo Wellcome plc ...............................      170
   9,729  Grand Metropolitan plc ...........................       70
   4,200  Great Universal Stores plc .......................       45
   5,722  Guardian Royal Exchange plc ......................       25
   7,100  Guinness plc .....................................       52
  20,600  Hanson plc .......................................       62
   4,100  Harrisons & Crosfield plc ........................       10
   8,000  HSBC Holdings plc ................................      122
   2,900  Imperial Chemical Industries plc .................       34
   5,700  Ladbroke Group plc ...............................       13
   2,600  Land Securities plc ..............................       25
   3,700  Lasmo plc ........................................       10
  21,983  Lloyds TSB Group plc .............................      113
   3,050  Lonrho plc .......................................        8
  11,800  Marks & Spencer plc ..............................       82
   2,000  MEPC plc .........................................       12
   5,200  National Power plc ...............................       36
   2,327  North West Water plc .............................       22
   3,500  Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co. .......       26
   4,900  Pilkington plc ...................................       15
  +1,225  Pilkington plc (New) .............................        4
   8,600  Prudential Corp. plc .............................       55
   1,800  Rank Organisation plc ............................       13
   2,766  Redland plc ......................................       17
   3,200  Reed International plc ...........................       49
   6,400  Reuters Holdings plc .............................       59
   2,000  Rexam plc ........................................       11
   1,550  RMC Group plc ....................................       24
   3,700  Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc .................       34
   2,900  Royal Insurance Holdings plc .....................       17
   5,000  RTZ Corp. plc (Registered) .......................       73
   6,859  Sainsbury (J) plc ................................       42
   1,000  Schroders plc ....................................       21
   3,100  Scottish Power plc ...............................       18
   6,300  Sears plc ........................................       10
   2,000  Sedwick Group plc ................................        4
   1,500  Slough Estates plc ...............................        5
   5,000  SmithKline Beecham plc 'A' .......................       55
   1,300  Southern Electric plc ............................       18
   4,746  Tarmac plc .......................................        8
   2,400  Taylor Woodrow plc ...............................        4
   6,400  Tesco plc ........................................       30
   2,300  Thames Water plc .................................       20
   2,100  Thorne EMI plc ...................................       49
   1,700  TI Group plc .....................................       12
  +4,400  Trafalgar House plc ..............................        2
   2,600  Unilever plc .....................................       53
  12,200  Vodafone Group plc ...............................       44
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
   3,000  Zeneca Group plc .................................  $    58
                                                              -------
                                                                3,016
                                                              -------
  UNITED STATES (31.4%)
   8,700  Abbott Laboratories ..............................      363
   2,700  Aluminum Co. of America ..........................      143
   5,600  American Express Co. .............................      232
   3,800  American Home Products Corp. .....................      369
   4,200  American International Group, Inc. ...............      388
  16,400  American Telephone & Telegraph Co. ...............    1,062
   5,900  Amoco Corp. ......................................      424
  +2,700  AMR Corp. ........................................      200
   2,000  Atlantic Richfield Co. ...........................      221
   2,700  Automatic Data Processing, Inc. ..................      201
   5,500  Banc One Corp. ...................................      208
   5,500  BankAmerica Corp. ................................      356
   5,000  Bell Atlantic Corp. ..............................      334
   5,900  BellSouth Corp. ..................................      257
   5,500  Boeing Co. .......................................      431
   5,400  Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. .........................      464
   4,600  Campbell Soup Co. ................................      276
     200  Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. .........................       25
   2,700  Caterpillar, Inc. ................................      159
   3,700  Chevron Corp. ....................................      194
   4,500  Chrysler Corp. ...................................      249
   2,700  Chubb Corp. ......................................      261
  +3,700  Cisco Systems, Inc. ..............................      276
   4,500  Citicorp .........................................      303
  11,700  Coca-Cola Co. ....................................      869
   4,900  Columbia HCA/Healthcare Corp. ....................      249
   2,700  Computer Associates International, Inc. ..........      154
   5,500  Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. ........      176
   2,700  Cooper Industries, Inc. ..........................       99
   2,700  Corning, Inc. ....................................       86
   3,800  CSX Corp. ........................................      173
   1,400  Deere & Co. ......................................       49
   4,000  Dow Chemical Co. .................................      281
   8,100  Du Pont (EI) de Nemours Co. ......................      566
   5,500  Duke Power Co. ...................................      261
   5,500  Eastman Kodak Co. ................................      367
   6,848  Eli Lilly & Co. ..................................      385
   3,700  Enron Corp. ......................................      141
   5,800  Entergy Corp. ....................................      170
  13,500  Exxon Corp. ......................................    1,082
   5,500  Federal National Mortgage Association ............      683
   5,500  FPL Group, Inc. ..................................      255
   2,100  Gannett Co., Inc. ................................      129
  17,500  General Electric Co. .............................    1,260
   8,800  General Motors Corp. .............................      465
   2,700  General Motors Corp. 'E' .........................      140
   1,700  General RE Corp. .................................      264
   2,700  Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. .......................      123
  +1,400  Harrah's Entertainment, Inc. .....................       34
   5,500  Hewlett-Packard Co. ..............................      461
   5,150  H.J. Heinz Co. ...................................      171
   5,400  Home Depot, Inc. .................................      259
   8,100  Intel Corp. ......................................      460
   6,200  International Business Machines Corp. ............      569
   1,900  International Game Technology ....................       21
   2,700  International Paper Co. ..........................      102
</TABLE>
 
    8
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  UNITED STATES (CONT.)
  +1,600  ITT Corp .........................................  $    85
  +1,600  ITT Hartford Group, Inc. .........................       77
   1,600  ITT Industries, Inc. .............................       38
   3,200  J.C. Penney Co., Inc. ............................      152
   6,200  Johnson & Johnson ................................      531
   8,200  Kmart Corp. ......................................       59
   2,700  May Department Stores Co. ........................      114
   6,800  McDonald's Corp. .................................      307
   2,700  Melville Corp. ...................................       83
  13,600  Merck & Co., Inc. ................................      894
  +5,500  Microsoft Corp. ..................................      483
   5,500  Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. .............      364
   4,700  Mobil Corp. ......................................      526
   1,700  Monsanto .........................................      208
   2,700  Morgan (J.P.) & Co., Inc. ........................      217
   6,700  Motorola, Inc. ...................................      382
   5,500  NationsBank Corp. ................................      383
   2,200  Norfolk Southern Corp. ...........................      175
   5,900  Norwest Corp. ....................................      195
  +4,200  Novell, Inc. .....................................       60
   1,200  Nucor Corp. ......................................       69
  +2,700  Oracle System Corp. ..............................      114
   7,900  Pacific Gas & Electric Co. .......................      224
   9,200  PepsiCo, Inc. ....................................      514
   2,900  Pfizer, Inc. .....................................      183
   8,700  Philip Morris Cos., Inc. .........................      787
   1,700  PPG Industries, Inc. .............................       78
   8,100  Procter & Gamble Co. .............................      672
   8,200  Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. ............      251
   5,500  Rockwell International Corp. .....................      291
   6,200  SBC Communications, Inc. .........................      357
   2,800  SCE Corp. ........................................       50
   5,300  Schering-Plough Corp. ............................      290
   5,500  Sears, Roebuck & Co. .............................      214
   8,200  Southern Co. .....................................      202
   5,400  Sprint Corp. .....................................      215
   2,700  Suntrust Banks, Inc. .............................      185
  +9,100  Tele-Communications, Inc., 'A' ...................      181
   5,500  Texas Utilities Co. ..............................      226
   2,700  The Dun & Bradstreet Corp. .......................      175
   5,500  The Limited, Inc. ................................       96
   5,500  Time Warner, Inc. ................................      208
  +5,500  Toys 'R' Us, Inc. ................................      120
     +20  Transport Holdings, Inc., 'A' ....................        1
   4,300  Travelers, Inc. ..................................      270
   1,400  U.S. Healthcare, Inc. ............................       65
   2,600  Union Pacific Corp. ..............................      172
  +3,100  Viacom, Inc. 'B' .................................      147
  16,400  Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. ............................      367
   5,900  Walt Disney Co. ..................................      348
     800  Wells Fargo & Co. ................................      173
   8,200  Westinghouse Electric Corp. ......................      135
   5,500  Weyerhaeuser Co. .................................      238
   4,900  WMX Technologies, Inc. ...........................      146
                                                              -------
                                                               30,997
                                                              -------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $76,549)..........................   86,886
                                                              -------
PREFERRED STOCKS (0.2%)
  AUSTRALIA (0.1%)
  16,100  News Corp. Ltd. ..................................       75
                                                              -------
  GERMANY (0.1%)
     200  RWE AG  ..........................................       56
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
     400  SAP AG ...........................................  $    61
                                                              -------
                                                                  117
                                                              -------
  ITALY (0.0%)
  15,000  Fiat S.p.A.  .....................................       27
                                                              -------
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $213)..........................      219
                                                              -------
INVESTMENT COMPANIES (4.0%)
  UNITED STATES (4.0%)
@136,000  Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Fund, Inc. .......    2,142
@+100,000 Morgan Stanley India Investment Fund, Inc. .......      913
 @20,000  Thai Fund, Inc. ..................................      447
  20,000  The Korea Fund, Inc. .............................      440
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENT COMPANIES (COST $3,978)....................    3,942
                                                              -------
<CAPTION>
  NO. OF
  RIGHTS
- --------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
RIGHTS (0.0%)
  SPAIN (0.0%)
  +3,500  Ercros S.A., expiring 1/5/96 (COST $0) ...........       --
                                                              -------
<CAPTION>
  NO. OF
WARRANTS
- --------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
WARRANTS (0.0%)
  BELGIUM (0.0%)
     +61  Petrofina S.A., expiring 6/3/97 ..................        1
                                                              -------
  HONG KONG (0.0%)
  +2,000  Applied International Holdings Ltd. expiring
            12/30/99 .......................................       --
                                                              -------
  ITALY (0.0%)
    +420  R.A.S. S.p.A. Savings Shares, expiring
            12/31/97 .......................................        1
    +880  R.A.S. S.p.A., expiring 11/30/97 .................        4
                                                              -------
                                                                    5
                                                              -------
  UNITED KINGDOM (0.0%)
    +119  British Aerospace plc, expiring 11/15/00 .........        1
                                                              -------
TOTAL WARRANTS (COST $0)....................................        7
                                                              -------
<CAPTION>
  NO. OF
   UNITS
- --------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
UNITS (0.1%)
  AUSTRALIA (0.0%)
  15,447  Westfield Trust ..................................       28
                                                              -------
  UNITED KINGDOM (0.1%)
   4,800  SmithKline Beecham (1 'B' share common plus 1
            preferred share) ...............................       52
                                                              -------
TOTAL UNITS (COST $70)......................................       80
                                                              -------
<CAPTION>
    FACE
  AMOUNT
   (000)
- --------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (0.0%)
  FRANCE (0.0%)
$       29 Sanofi S.A. 4.00%, 1/1/00.........................      22
                                                              -------
  ITALY (0.0%)
ITL  2,125 Mediobanca S.p.A. 6.00%, 12/31/02 ................       1
     1,575 Saffa S.p.A. 9.25%, 1/1/01 .......................       1
                                                              -------
                                                                    2
                                                              -------
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (COST $21).....................       24
                                                              -------
TOTAL FOREIGN & U.S. SECURITIES (92.3%) (COST $80,831)......   91,158
                                                              -------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                           9
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    FACE
  AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
   (000)                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (2.4%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (2.4%)
    UNITED STATES
$    2,340 The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
            12/29/95 due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
            $2,342, collateralized by $2,155 U.S. Treasury
            Notes, 7.50%, due 11/15/01, valued at $2,389
            (COST $2,340) ..................................  $ 2,340
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $83,171)...............   93,498
                                                              -------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.1%)
AUD   25  Australian Dollar.................................       19
BEF   401 Belgian Franc.....................................       14
GBP    6  British Pound.....................................        9
CAD   46  Canadian Dollar...................................       34
DEM    8  Deutsche Mark.....................................        6
FRF    26 French Franc......................................        5
<CAPTION>
    FACE
  AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
   (000)                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
HKD   49  Hong Kong Dollar..................................  $     6
NLG   20  Netherland Guilder................................       12
SGD   31  Singapore Dollar..................................       22
ESP   119 Spanish Peseta....................................        1
CHF    2  Swiss Franc.......................................        2
                                                              -------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $129)..........................      130
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (94.8%) (COST $83,300)....................   93,628
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (5.2%)................    5,146
                                                              -------
NET ASSETS (100%)...........................................  $98,774
                                                              -------
                                                              -------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>
- ---------------
+     -- Non-income producing securities
@     -- The Fund is Advised by an Affiliate
NCS   -- Non Convertible Shares
RFD   -- Ranked for Dividends
ITL   -- Italian Lira
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at December 31, 1995,
the  Fund is obligated to deliver or  is to receive foreign currency in exchange
for U.S. dollars or foreign currency as indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            NET
                                                                         UNREALIZED
   CURRENCY                                   IN EXCHANGE                  GAIN
  TO DELIVER       VALUE     SETTLEMENT           FOR          VALUE      (LOSS)
    (000)          (000)        DATE             (000)         (000)       (000)
- --------------    -------    -----------     -------------    -------    ---------
<S>               <C>        <C>             <C>              <C>        <C>
DEM      2,462    $ 1,717       1/4/96       $      1,725     $ 1,725    $      8
FRF      8,572      1,750       1/4/96       $      1,725       1,725         (25)
CHF      2,173      1,896      2/28/96       $      1,795       1,795        (101)
DEM      2,153      1,506       4/3/96       $      1,500       1,500          (6)
BEF    131,233      4,467      4/30/96       $      4,650       4,650         183
DEM        429        301      4/30/96       $        300         300          (1)
JPY  2,358,846     23,423      4/30/96       $     27,463      27,463       4,040
$        2,900      2,900      4/30/96         BEF 82,839       2,820         (80)
$        1,030      1,030      7/31/96          NLG 1,685       1,061          31
NLG      4,577      2,882      7/31/96       $      3,000       3,000         118
JPY        391      4,195      8/14/96       $      4,565       4,565         370
$        3,325      3,325      8/30/96        JPY 292,833       2,928        (397)
                  -------                                     -------    ---------
                  $49,392                                     $53,532    $  4,140
                  -------                                     -------    ---------
                  -------                                     -------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>
- ------------
BEF   -- Belgian Franc
DEM   -- Deutsche Mark
FRF   -- French Franc
JPY   -- Japanese Yen
NLG   -- Netherland Guilder
CHF   -- Swiss Franc
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        SUMMARY OF FOREIGN & U.S. SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PERCENT
                                                     VALUE    OF NET
INDUSTRY                                             (000)    ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------  --------  ------
<S>                                                 <C>       <C>
Finance...........................................  $ 22,050   22.4%
Consumer Goods....................................    17,802   18.0
Services..........................................    15,267   15.5
Capital Equipment.................................    11,365   11.5
Energy............................................    10,596   10.7
Multi-Industry....................................     7,159    7.2
Materials.........................................     6,825    6.9
Mining............................................        94    0.1
                                                    --------  ------
                                                    $ 91,158   92.3%
                                                    --------  ------
                                                    --------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    10
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>                    <C>
Australian Dollar           1.5%
British Pound
Sterling                    5.8%
Canadian Dollar             5.1%
Danish Krone                6.1%
Deutsche Mark              15.8%
French Franc                6.3%
Irish Punts                 1.1%
Italian Lira                4.4%
Japanese Yen                8.3%
Netherland Guilder          1.7%
New Zealand Dollar          2.0%
Spanish Peseta              5.2%
Swedish Krona               3.1%
United States Dollar       29.5%
Other                       4.1%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                                      VALUE
SECURITY                                           CURRENCY           (000)
- ----------------------------------------  --------------------------  ------
<S>                                       <C>                         <C>
United States Treasury Notes 7.50%,
 11/15/01                                    United States Dollar     $2,000
Treuhandanstalt 6.75%, 5/13/04                  Deutsche Mark          1,463
Government National Mortgage Association
 TBA 8.50%, 1/15/26                          United States Dollar      1,050
French Treasury Bill 7.75%, 4/12/00              French Franc          1,007
United Kingdom 7.00%, 11/6/01                   British Pound            933
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE CURRENCY DENOMINATIONS
                                    PERCENT
                                       OF
                          VALUE       NET
CURRENCY                  (000)      ASSETS
- ---------------------    -------    --------
<S>                      <C>        <C>
United States Dollar     $ 4,702       29.5%
Deutsche Mark              2,529       15.8
Japanese Yen               1,326        8.3
French Franc               1,007        6.3
Danish Krone                 976        6.1
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               TOTAL RETURNS**
                        -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     AVERAGE ANNUAL
                               YTD                ONE YEAR           SINCE INCEPTION
                        -----------------     -----------------     -----------------
                         WITH      WITHOUT     WITH      WITHOUT     WITH      WITHOUT
                        SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES
                        CHARGE*    CHARGE     CHARGE*    CHARGE     CHARGE*    CHARGE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                     <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares           0.68%      5.71%     12.06%     17.65%      6.78%      8.54%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+ Shares         -0.42%      4.58%      N/A        N/A        N/A        N/A
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares           4.30%      5.30%     15.63%     16.63%      7.63%      7.63%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
J.P. Morgan Traded
Global Bond Index        N/A        3.24%      N/A       19.31%      N/A       10.74%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The J.P. Morgan Traded Global Bond Index is an unmanaged index of government
bond issues that include Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United
States excluding withholding tax.
 
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The Global Fixed Income Fund  seeks to produce an  attractive
real  rate of return while preserving capital by investing in
fixed  income  securities   of  U.S.   and  foreign   issuers
denominated in U.S. dollars and in other currencies.
 
For  the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the Fund
had a total return exclusive of sales charge of 5.71% for the
Class A shares, 4.58%  for the Class B  shares and 5.30%  for
the  Class C shares, and a  total return with sales charge of
0.68% for the Class A shares,  -0.42% for the Class B  shares
and  4.30% for  the Class  C shares,  as compared  to a total
return of 3.24% for the J.P. Morgan Traded Global Bond  Index
(the  "Index"). For  the one  year period  ended December 31,
1995, the Fund had a total return exclusive of sales  charges
of  17.65% for the Class A shares  and 16.63% for the Class C
shares, and a total  return with sales  charge of 12.06%  for
the  Class  A shares  and 15.63%  for the  Class C  shares as
compared with 19.31% for the  Index for the same period.  For
the period from inception on January 4, 1993 through December
31,  1995,  the  average  annual  total  return  of  the Fund
exclusive of sales charge  was 8.54% for  the Class A  shares
and  7.63% for the Class C shares,  and 6.78% for the Class A
shares with sales charge, as compared to 10.74% for the Index
for the same period. Class B shares held prior to May 1, 1995
were renamed  Class C  shares. The  Fund began  offering  the
current Class B shares on August 1, 1995.
 
All  global  fixed income  markets registered  positive local
currency returns in the second half of 1995, ranging from  1%
in  Japan to over 15% in  Sweden. The dominant factor fueling
the rally was a continued drop in short rate expectations  in
response to weaker than anticipated economic data and subdued
inflationary pressures.
 
U.S. Treasury bonds steadily rallied during the period and by
year  end the  30-year long  bond was  trading around  a 6.0%
yield level,  the  lowest  since October  1993.  The  average
return was 5.9%
THE PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES
ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE FUND'S FUTURE
PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE SO THAT AN
INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL
COST. PLEASE SEE THE PROSPECTUS FOR A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN RISK CONSIDERATIONS
ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNATIONAL INVESTING.
 
                                                                          11
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   and the highest returns came from longer duration securities.
                   The  yield spreads  on mortgage bonds  typically widened over
                   Treasuries as  they  lagged  the rally  and  prepayment  risk
                   increased.  However,  corporate spreads  remained  tight. The
                   market continued to expect a relaxation of monetary policy by
                   the Federal  Reserve  as various  indicators  confirmed  that
                   economic  activity  was declining  from the  pace experienced
                   earlier in the year. This  easing initially occurred in  July
                   when  the Fed Funds rate was  lowered by 0.25% to 5.75%, with
                   another  0.25%   reduction   occurring   in   December.   The
                   authorities  cited the continued  benign inflation outlook in
                   justifying their moves. The market shrugged off the continued
                   impasse over the  budget deficit  negotiations, believing  an
                   eventual  agreement involving  a reduced  deficit would  be a
                   positive factor  for  the  market. Expectations  of  the  Fed
                   moving  to  a slightly  less  restrictive stance  remained in
                   place as evidenced by ten-year  yields finishing the year  no
                   higher  than  cash rates.  The Fund  maintained a  neutral to
                   slightly  longer  than  benchmark  duration  throughout   the
                   period,  with tactical  shifts into  the mortgage  sector. An
                   underweight  allocation  was  maintained  in  preference   to
                   European bonds.
 
                   Canadian  bonds outperformed  their U.S.  counterparts across
                   the maturity  spectrum  and  the market  offered  an  average
                   return  of 7.9%. The  narrow defeat of  the Quebec separatist
                   movement  in  the  September  referendum  removed  some  risk
                   premium,  allowing an  immediate rally  in the  market and an
                   easing of  interest  rates by  the  Bank of  Canada.  Subdued
                   inflation,  credible  fiscal tightening,  high  real interest
                   rates  and  the  scope  for  further  rate  cuts  also  aided
                   performance. The Fund increased its exposure to an overweight
                   position  after  the referendum.  An overweight  position was
                   held in the  Australian and  New Zealand  markets, where  the
                   former  returned an overall 8.5%. Economic activity continued
                   to moderate over the period but the Reserve Bank resisted the
                   pressure to lower rates  as underlying inflation broke  above
                   their  target ranges.  New Zealand  bonds returned  5.2%. The
                   yield curve  remained inverse  as the  Reserve Bank  remained
                   hawkish on inflation and increased rates in December.
 
                   The  Japanese market performed  poorly in the  second half of
                   the year with benchmark yields rising from the all-time  lows
                   of  2.5%  they had  reached  in July.  Although  the Official
                   Discount Rate had fallen to a record low of 0.5% by September
                   the market succumbed to yen weakness, a recovery in the stock
                   market and the authorities finally acknowledging the need  to
                   reliquify and stimulate the economy. The yield curve moved to
                   an  historically steep  position as longer  dated yields rose
                   relative  to  shorts.  The  impact  of  fiscal  stimulus,   a
                   deteriorating budget deficit and the weaker yen will probably
                   put  further  upward  pressure on  yields  although  they are
                   likely to be capped by the prospect of only moderate economic
                   recovery with continued disinflation.  The Fund maintained  a
                   low   allocation  to  the  market  but  tactically  increased
                   duration slightly in November in anticipation of yield  curve
                   flattening.
"1995 HAS PROVEN TO BE AN EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD YEAR FOR BOND INVESTORS WHO HAVE
ENJOYED DOUBLE DIGIT RETURNS ACROSS ALL MARKETS."
 
                   European  bonds  performed well,  particularly in  the latter
                   part of the year, as short rate expectations fell in response
                   to  increasingly  disappointing  economic  data.  The  German
                   market  produced a  return of 8.5%  as deteriorating business
                   surveys  and   industrial  production   data  together   with
                   declining  inflation encouraged  the Bundesbank  to allow its
                   money market repo rates to fall below 4.0%. The discount rate
                   was reduced in August and then December when it fell to 3.0%,
                   the lowest level since 1987. The German yield curve steepened
                   to a historic  extreme, but longer  dated bonds produced  the
                   highest  returns. After underperforming in  the first part of
                   the year, most other European markets recovered strongly  and
                   narrowed  their  yield  spread over  German  bonds. Improving
                   fundamentals and the general  bond friendly environment  gave
                   investors   confidence  to  diversify  into  higher  yielding
                   assets.  The  best  performer  was  Sweden,  boosted  by  the
                   prospects  of a lower budget deficit, lower short rates and a
                   positive inflation outlook. The prospects for Monetary  Union
                   cast   uncertainty  over  European   markets,  although  most
                   countries reaffirmed  their commitment  to the  concept at  a
                   November  summit  meeting.  The Fund  remained  overweight in
                   Europe throughout the  period, with a  long overall  duration
                   reflecting  attractive  valuations  and  steep  yield curves.
                   Holdings were  actively  switched  between  markets  and  the
                   overweight  total  position  in  the  higher  yielders  was a
                   positive for performance.
 
    12
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   On the foreign  exchanges the  dollar ended  the period  4.0%
                   stronger  against the deutschemark and 20% higher against the
                   yen, with most of the  gains occurring in the third  quarter.
                   It   recovered  sharply   from  the   lows  of   early  1995,
                   particularly against  the yen,  following aggressive  central
                   bank   intervention.  This  generated  speculation  of  a  G7
                   agreement  to   bring  the   dollar  more   into  line   with
                   fundamentals  and  an  acknowledgment of  the  dangers  of an
                   implosion of  the Japanese  economy. The  Fund maintained  an
                   overweight  exposure to  the dollar by  hedging some European
                   currency exposure. This also earned a hedging premium due  to
                   interest rate differentials. The Fund was underweight the yen
                   throughout  the  period. The  Fund  also hedged  some  of its
                   Canadian dollar  exposure  because  of  an  erosion  of  rate
                   differentials  with the U.S.  and the Bank  of Canada's overt
                   desire to  stimulate  the  economy  through  looser  monetary
                   policy  and a  trade competitiveness.  On the  European cross
                   rates, the general trend  was for higher yielding  currencies
                   to  recover from their depreciations in the first half of the
                   year. Sterling was the weakest European currency, falling  to
                   new  all-time lows on  a trade weighted  basis, undermined by
                   weaker  economic  data,  poor  trade  figures  and  political
                   worries.  Monetary Union uncertainties  continued to give the
                   Swiss franc a strong  bid, despite official protestations  of
                   the resultant damage to the Swiss economy.
 
                   1995  has proved  to be an  exceptionally good  year for bond
                   investors who have  enjoyed double digit  returns across  all
                   markets.  The  current  environment  of  structurally subdued
                   inflation, stable  or slightly  lower interest  rates,  below
                   potential  economic  growth  and  restrained  fiscal policies
                   would suggest there is  little on the  horizon to threaten  a
                   significant  reversal  of recent  gains  in the  near future.
                   Parallels are naturally being drawn with the situation at the
                   end of 1993, but a repeat of 1994's simultaneous growth surge
                   and bond  market carnage  seems  unlikely this  time  around.
                   Market  valuations are less stretched  than in late 1993 with
                   real yields higher, the overhang  of leverage less of a  risk
                   and the global environment of slow nominal growth more firmly
                   entrenched than two years ago. The policy priorities of major
                   nations  are  also  different  from  late  1993  with greater
                   emphasis on the need for medium term fiscal responsibility in
                   the U.S. and  Europe and  a stronger commitment  in Japan  to
                   fighting deflation.
 
                   Despite  this benign background it  is clear that 1995's fall
                   in yields is most unlikely to be repeated this year. Any pick
                   up in  economic prospects  later  in the  year is  likely  to
                   result in a move to higher yields. In relative terms European
                   markets  appear to offer better  protection that the U.S. and
                   Japan.
 
                   Starting from  reasonably cheap  valuation levels,  prospects
                   for the dollar seem quite encouraging for 1996. There appears
                   an international desire to push the dollar higher to ease the
                   strain  on growth  in European economies  and Japan. Although
                   the current U.S. budget negotiations are unlikely to offer  a
                   quick  solution  to U.S.  fiscal problems,  the deficit  as a
                   percentage of GDP is the lowest for fifteen years and  better
                   than  most other  nations. A falling  current account deficit
                   with Japan should further aid the USD/JPY rate. Arguably  the
                   value  of the dollar has yet to fully reflect the competitive
                   advances of the U.S. corporate sector and the recent strength
                   of U.S. financial markets.
 
                                                                          13
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         FACE
       AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
        (000)                                                        (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (95.9%)
  AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR (1.5%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
   AUD    300  Government of Australia 9.50%, 8/15/03............  $   241
                                                                   -------
  BRITISH POUND STERLING (5.8%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
  GBP     600  United Kingdom 7.00%, 11/6/01.....................      933
                                                                   -------
  CANADIAN DOLLAR (5.1%)
    EUROBOND
  CAD     600  Export-Import Bank of Japan 7.75%, 10/8/02........      454
                                                                   -------
    GOVERNMENT BOND
          475  Government of Canada 7.50%, 12/1/03...............      359
                                                                   -------
  TOTAL CANADIAN DOLLAR..........................................      813
                                                                   -------
  DANISH KRONE (6.1%)
    GOVERNMENT BONDS
  DKK   2,200  Kingdom of Denmark 8.00%, 11/15/01................      424
        2,550  Kingdom of Denmark 7.00%, 12/15/04................      457
          500  Kingdom of Denmark 8.00%, 3/15/06.................       95
                                                                   -------
  TOTAL DANISH KRONE.............................................      976
                                                                   -------
  DEUTSCHE MARK (15.8%)
    GOVERNMENT BONDS
   DEM    850  Treuhandanstalt 6.875%, 6/11/03...................      630
          600  Bundesrepublik 6.50%, 7/15/03.....................      436
        2,000  Treuhandanstalt 6.75%, 5/13/04....................    1,463
                                                                   -------
  TOTAL DEUTSCHE MARK............................................    2,529
                                                                   -------
  FRENCH FRANC (6.3%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
 FRF    4,600  French Treasury Bill 7.75%, 4/12/00...............    1,007
                                                                   -------
  IRISH PUNTS (1.1%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
 IEP      100  Republic of Ireland 9.25%, 7/11/03................      178
                                                                   -------
  ITALIAN LIRA (4.4%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
ITL 1,100,000  Republic of Italy 10.50%, 11/1/00.................      698
                                                                   -------
  JAPANESE YEN (8.3%)
    EUROBONDS
 JPY   70,000  Japan Development Bank 6.50%, 9/20/01.............      828
       45,000  World Bank 4.75%, 12/20/04........................      498
                                                                   -------
  TOTAL JAPANESE YEN.............................................    1,326
                                                                   -------
  NETHERLANDS GUILDER (1.7%)
    GOVERNMENT BOND
  NLG     400  Government of the Netherlands 7.75%, 1/15/00......      275
                                                                   -------
  NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR (2.0%)
    GOVERNMENT BONDS
  NZD     250  Government of New Zealand 8.00%, 7/15/98..........      164
          250  Government of New Zealand 6.50%, 2/15/00..........      158
                                                                   -------
  TOTAL NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR.......................................      322
                                                                   -------
 
<CAPTION>
         FACE
       AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
        (000)                                                        (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
SPANISH PESETA (5.2%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND
ESP     97,000 Government of Spain 10.30%, 6/15/02...............  $   827
                                                                   -------
SWEDISH KRONA (3.1%)
  GOVERNMENT BOND
SEK      3,100 Government of Sweden 10.25%, 5/5/00...............      501
                                                                   -------
UNITED STATES DOLLAR (29.5%)
  CORPORATE BOND (1.4%)
$         #200 Prudential Insurance Co. 8.30%, 7/1/25............      215
                                                                   -------
  U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (28.1%)
      GOVERNMENT NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION
           99  Pool #341930 8.00%, 7/15/08.......................      104
        1,000  TBA 8.50%, 1/15/26................................    1,050
          100  TBA ARM 6.00%, 1/20/26............................      101
                                                                   -------
                                                                     1,255
                                                                   -------
      U.S. TREASURY BOND
          100  8.875%, 8/15/17...................................      134
                                                                   -------
      U.S. TREASURY NOTES
        ++360  5.00%, 1/31/99....................................      357
      ++1,815  7.50%, 11/15/01...................................    2,000
          710  6.25%, 2/15/03....................................      741
                                                                   -------
                                                                     3,098
                                                                   -------
                                                                     4,487
                                                                   -------
TOTAL UNITED STATES DOLLAR.......................................    4,702
                                                                   -------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $14,763).....................   15,328
                                                                   -------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (8.5%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (8.5%)
    UNITED STATES DOLLAR
        1,365  The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
                 12/29/95, due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
                 $1,366, collateralized by $1,255 U.S. Treasury
                 Notes, 7.50%, due 11/15/01, valued at $1,391
                 (COST $1,365)...................................    1,365
                                                                   -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES (COST $16,128)...................   16,693
                                                                   -------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.1%)
JPY      1,069 Japanese Yen (COST $10)...........................       10
                                                                   -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (104.5%) (COST $16,138)........................   16,703
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-4.5%)....................     (722)
                                                                   -------
NET ASSETS (100%)................................................  $15,981
                                                                   -------
                                                                   -------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>   <C>
- ---------------
++    --    A   portion  of  this   security  was  pledged  as
            collateral for delayed delivery securities.
#     --    144A Security -- certain conditions for public
            sale may exist.
ARM   --    Adjustable Rate Mortgages
TBA   --    Security is subject to delayed delivery.
</TABLE>
 
    14
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE INFORMATION:
 
Under the terms of forward foreign currency contracts open at December 31, 1995,
the Fund is obligated to deliver or  is to receive foreign currency in  exchange
for U.S. dollars or as indicated below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  CURRENCY                             IN EXCHANGE
 TO DELIVER      VALUE    SETTLEMENT       FOR        VALUE    NET UNREALIZED GAIN
    (000)        (000)       DATE         (000)       (000)       (LOSS) (000)
- -------------  ---------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -------------------
<S>            <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>
JPY    1,069   $      10      1/4/96    $       11  $      11       $       1
NLG      900         562     2/13/96    $      567        567               5
$        312         312     2/13/96    NLG   500         312              --
CAD      400         293     2/14/96    $     295         295               2
JPY   40,000         390     2/14/96    $     405         405              15
$        198         198     2/14/96    JPY 20,000        195              (3)
DEM      500         349     2/20/96    $     357         357               8
DEM    1,000         699      3/6/96    $     699         699              --
FRF    2,300         470      3/7/96    $     462         462              (8)
               ---------                            ---------             ---
               $3,283                               $   3,303       $      20
               ---------                            ---------             ---
               ---------                            ---------             ---
</TABLE>
 
- ---------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>   <C>
CAD   --    Canadian Dollar
DEM   --    Deutsche Mark
FRF   --    French Franc
JPY   --    Japanese Yen
NLG   --    Netherlands Guilder
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                          15
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>          <C>
China             1.2%
Hong Kong        26.7%
India             0.7%
Indonesia         5.4%
Korea             3.9%
Malaysia         19.0%
Philippines       5.8%
Singapore        12.8%
Taiwan            1.8%
Thailand         13.3%
Other             9.4%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                         VALUE
SECURITY                                    COUNTRY      (000)
- ----------------------------------------  ------------  --------
<S>                                       <C>           <C>
Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd.                  Hong Kong    $ 14,832
Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.                     Hong Kong      11,927
Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank                  Hong Kong      10,799
Malayan Banking Bhd.                        Malaysia      10,790
Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd.          Hong Kong       9,700
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE SECTORS
                                    PERCENT
                                      OF
                          VALUE       NET
INDUSTRY                  (000)     ASSETS
- ---------------------    -------    -------
<S>                      <C>        <C>
Services                 $67,910      20.3%
Finance                   67,806      20.3
Real Estate               59,680      17.8
Multi-Industry            31,429       9.4
Capital Equipment         25,380       7.6
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 TOTAL RETURNS**
                          -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       AVERAGE ANNUAL
                                 YTD                ONE YEAR           SINCE INCEPTION
                          -----------------     -----------------     -----------------
                           WITH      WITHOUT     WITH      WITHOUT     WITH      WITHOUT
                          SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES      SALES
                          CHARGE*    CHARGE     CHARGE*    CHARGE     CHARGE*    CHARGE
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares            -5.85%     -1.16%      1.30%      6.36%     12.02%     14.20%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+ Shares           -8.11%     -3.27%       N/A        N/A        N/A        N/A
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares            -2.53%     -1.54%      4.49%      5.49%     13.40%     13.40%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSCI CFEF ex-Japan
index                       N/A      -0.17%       N/A       6.81%       N/A      17.52%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) Combined Far East Free (CFEF)
ex-Japan Index is an unmanaged index of common stocks and includes Indonesia,
Hong Kong, Malaysia, the Philippines, Korea, Taiwan and Thailand (assumes
dividends reinvested).
 
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The  investment  objective  of  the  Asian  Growth  Fund   is
long-term  capital  appreciation  through  investment  in the
stock markets  of Asia  excluding  Japan. The  benchmark  for
investment   performance  is   the  Morgan   Stanley  Capital
International (MSCI) Combined Far East Free ex-Japan Index.
 
For the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the  Fund
had  a total return  exclusive of sales  charge of -1.16% for
the Class A shares, -3.27% for the Class B shares and  -1.54%
for  the Class C shares, and a total return with sales charge
of -5.85% for  the Class  A shares,  -8.11% for  the Class  B
shares  and -2.53% for  the Class C shares,  as compared to a
total  return  of  -0.17%  for  the  Morgan  Stanley  Capital
International  (MSCI) Combined  Far East  Free ex-Japan Index
(the "Index"). For  the one  year period  ended December  31,
1995,  the Fund had a total  return exclusive of sales charge
of 6.36% for  the Class A  shares and 5.49%  for the Class  C
shares,  and a  total return with  sales charge  of 1.30% for
Class A shares and 4.49% for  the Class C shares as  compared
with  6.81% for the Index for the same period. For the period
from inception on  June 23, 1993  through December 31,  1995,
the  average annual  total return  for the  Fund exclusive of
sales charge was 14.20% for the Class A shares and 13.40% for
the Class C  shares and 12.02%  for the Class  A shares  with
sales  charge, as  compared to 17.52%  for the  Index for the
same period. Class B  shares held prior to  May 1, 1995  were
renamed  Class C shares. The  Fund began offering the current
Class B shares on August 1, 1995.
 
The Asian markets  as represented  by the  MSCI Combined  Far
East  Free  ex-Japan Index  increased by  a moderate  6.8% in
1995, which was  largely an extension  of the correction  and
consolidation  that  took  place since  early  1994  when the
liquidity bubble was pricked. The performance, however, paled
in comparison  with  the  developed markets,  many  of  which
achieved  double-digit market appreciation  of between 15-35%
in 1995. With the exception of Hong Kong which rose 18%,  the
Asian  markets generally did  not benefit from  a more benign
external economic environment  which led to  a surge in  bond
and  equity  prices in  many  parts of  the  world. Portfolio
investment flows into  Asia in 1995  were down  significantly
from  the  1993/94  level,  as funds  were  attracted  to the
developed markets  led by  the U.S.  where unexpectedly  weak
economies  and low inflation resulted in significant declines
in  interest  rates.  Investors  had  also  largely   avoided
emerging  markets following  the Mexico  crisis which  led to
higher risk premiums  being attached to  countries with  weak
economic fundamentals.
THE COUNTRY SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE AS
MEASURED BY THE MSCI COMBINED FAR EAST FREE EX-JAPAN INDEX AND ARE FOR
INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE
FUND'S FUTURE PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE
SO THAT AN INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN
THEIR ORIGINAL COST. PLEASE SEE THE PROSPECTUS FOR A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN RISK
CONSIDERATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNATIONAL INVESTING.
 
    16
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   Hong  Kong emerged as the best performing market in Asia as a
                   result of its currency peg which benefitted directly from the
                   U.S.  monetary  easing.  Singapore  also  performed  strongly
                   because  of  its  strong economic  fundamentals  and relative
                   valuation  attractions.  Concerns  over  overheating,  higher
                   inflation  and growing external  deficits after several years
                   of strong  GDP growth  had put  upward pressure  on  interest
                   rates in some Asian markets such as Thailand, Philippines and
                   Malaysia.  The  subsequent  downgrading  of  earnings  growth
                   forecasts caused a sell-off in these markets and resulted  in
                   their  underperformance.  The  Taiwanese  and  Korean markets
                   benefitted strongly from a  boom in sales of  semiconductors,
                   electronics  and  computer-related  products.  However, these
                   positive factors were overwhelmed by political concerns which
                   caused stock prices to plummet.  Taiwan was one of the  worst
                   performing markets in the world last year as tensions between
                   China  and Taiwan escalated following Taiwanese President Lee
                   Teng Hui's high-profile visit to the U.S.
 
                   1996 has got  off to  an encouraging start,  with many  Asian
                   markets  recovering strongly  from their  low levels  seen in
                   1995. The rally was to a large extent triggered by the return
                   of foreign funds. According to Salomon Brothers, U.S.  mutual
                   fund  cash flows into non-Japan Asia for the first 3 weeks of
                   1996 have already exceeded the total inflow for the whole  of
                   1995.
 
                   We expect the Asian markets to revert to their secular growth
                   rate  of  between  15% to  20%  in  1996 after  two  years of
                   correction and  below-trend  performance.  While  a  moderate
                   slowdown in economic growth is expected in 1996 (from 7.5% to
                   7.1%), the Asian economies are generally in better shape than
                   they  were  last year.  With  cyclical pressure  beginning to
                   unwind in many Asian countries, inflation should ease from an
                   estimated 7%  in 1995  to  slightly below  6% in  1996.  This
                   should  give rise  to less restrictive  monetary policies and
                   make interest rate cuts  possible. While lower U.S.  interest
                   rates  will  support  liquidity flows  into  Asia, attractive
                   equity valuations should lend  further credence to the  Asian
                   story.
 
                   Politics  is  likely to  be the  major potential  concern for
                   1996. Tensions between China and Taiwan could build up  again
                   ahead  of Taiwan's first ever presidential election in March,
                   although the  prospect  for a  major  military  confrontation
                   seems  remote.  In South  Korea,  uncertainties ahead  of the
                   National Assembly elections scheduled for April do not  augur
                   well for the stock market.
"WE EXPECT THE ASIAN MARKETS TO REVERT TO THEIR SECULAR GROWTH RATE..."
 
                   As  the  largest and  most  liquid Asian  market  with modest
                   equity valuation, we expect Hong Kong to continue to do  well
                   in  1996. The market  is underpinned by  a favorable interest
                   rate trend, the  bottoming of  the economic  and real  estate
                   cycle.  The expected relaxation  of China's austerity program
                   should benefit Hong Kong  further. Singapore should  continue
                   to  attract its fair share  of international fund flows given
                   its robust economy  and currency attraction.  We remain  very
                   selective   in   Malaysia,   Thailand,   Indonesia   and  the
                   Philippines, where  economic  and  interest  rate  risks  are
                   relatively  higher. Their overall  market risk-reward profile
                   has deteriorated following their recent strong showing. Their
                   relative  attraction  should  improve  once  their   economic
                   imbalance  is  contained. Elsewhere,  Taiwan and  South Korea
                   have borne  the brunt  of political  tensions last  year.  As
                   these  markets are  trading near  their respective historical
                   low multiples,  we  expect  a significant  rebound  from  the
                   current  low  levels  once  we get  over  the  height  of the
                   political uncertainties.
 
                                                                          17
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      VALUE
       SHARES                                                         (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
COMMON STOCKS (90.6%)
  AUSTRALIA (0.0%)
      +12,000  Odin Mining & Investment Co. Ltd. ................  $      2
                                                                   --------
  CHINA (1.2%)
      435,600  China Merchants Shokou Port Services 'B'..........       158
    3,032,000  Harbin Power Equipment Co. .......................       447
      +30,000  Jilin Chemical Industrial Co. ADR ................       645
      709,800  Jinqiao Export Processing Zone Development Co.
                 Ltd. 'B' .......................................       265
    5,519,000  Maanshan Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. ...................       771
     +188,800  Shanghai Refrigerator Compressor Co. Ltd. 'B' ....        67
      165,500  Shanghai Tire & Rubber 'B' .......................        34
   +1,967,700  Shenzhen North Jainshe Motorcycle Co. Ltd. .......       814
    4,052,000  Yizheng Chemical Fibre Co. 'H' ...................       912
                                                                   --------
                                                                      4,113
                                                                   --------
  HONG KONG (26.7%)
    8,020,000  Charoen Pokphand Co. .............................     3,215
    2,435,000  Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd. ........................    14,832
      573,000  China Light and Power Co. Ltd. ...................     2,638
    1,433,000  Citic Pacific Ltd. ...............................     4,902
   12,056,000  Guangdong Investments Ltd. .......................     7,250
      713,724  Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank ........................    10,799
      821,000  Hong Kong Electric Holdings ......................     2,691
    5,435,200  Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd. ................     9,700
    3,157,000  Hopewell Holdings Ltd. ...........................     1,817
    1,958,000  Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. ...........................    11,927
    1,565,000  New World Development Co. Ltd. ...................     6,821
       +2,741  New World Infrastructure Ltd. ....................         5
      +59,000  Shandong Huaneng Power Development ...............       398
      601,100  Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. .....................     4,917
      730,300  Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A'............................     5,667
      972,000  Varitronix International Ltd. ....................     1,804
                                                                   --------
                                                                     89,383
                                                                   --------
  INDIA (0.7%)
       38,000  Grasim Industries Ltd. GDR........................       779
      #49,000  Hindalco Industries Ltd. .........................     1,666
                                                                   --------
                                                                      2,445
                                                                   --------
  INDONESIA (5.4%)
     *300,000  Asiana Imi Industries (Foreign)...................       157
     *350,000  Bank Bali (Foreign)...............................       689
     *920,000  Barito Pacific Timber (Foreign)...................       674
    *+750,000  Bimantara Citra (Foreign).........................       623
     *594,000  Charoen Pokphand Co. Ltd.(Foreign)................     1,208
     *143,600  Hanjaya Mandala Sampoerna (Foreign)...............     1,495
     *462,000  Indocement Tunggal (Foreign)......................     1,551
     *781,000  Indosat (Foreign).................................     2,835
     *393,000  Kalbe Farma (Foreign).............................     1,332
     *378,500  Kermika Indonesia Associasi (Foreign).............       182
   *1,400,000  Ometraco (Foreign)................................       689
     *334,000  Semen Gresik (Foreign)............................       935
  *+2,887,200  Sona Topas Tourism Industry (Foreign).............       821
     *311,000  Sorini Corp. (Foreign)............................     1,510
      *41,000  Suba Indah (Foreign)..............................        27
  *+1,257,500  Telekomunikasi (Foreign)..........................     1,650
     *656,000  Ultra Jaya Milk IDR (Foreign).....................       315
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                      VALUE
       SHARES                                                         (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
     *729,000  United Tractors (Foreign).........................  $  1,371
                                                                   --------
                                                                     18,064
                                                                   --------
  KOREA (3.9%)
       +2,367  Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co.............       109
      +34,560  Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co.
                 (Foreign).......................................     1,586
      *40,000  Korea Electric Power..............................     1,715
       *1,700  Korea Mobile Telecommunications Corp. ............     1,878
      +69,600  Pohang Iron & Steel Ltd...........................     1,523
      *22,330  Samsung Electronics Co............................     4,059
        *+147  Samsung Electronics Co. (Foreign).................        27
        #+222  Samsung Electronics Co. ADS.......................        21
         +188  Samsung Electronics Co. GDR (New).................        11
     #+10,000  Samsung Electronics Co. GDS (New).................       970
      #+1,127  Samsung Electronics Co. GDS (Euro 1/2
                 non-voting).....................................       108
      *45,530  Shinhan Bank......................................       999
                                                                   --------
                                                                     13,006
                                                                   --------
  MALAYSIA (19.0%)
       73,000  AMMB Holdings Bhd. ...............................       834
      649,000  Bandar Raya Developments Bhd. ....................       925
   *1,015,000  Genting Bhd. .....................................     8,473
      927,000  Land & General Bhd. ..............................     2,007
      769,000  Magnum Corp. Bhd. ................................     1,453
    1,280,500  Malayan Banking Bhd. .............................    10,790
    1,256,000  Malaysian International Shipping (Foreign)........     3,289
     +507,000  Petronas Gas Bhd. ................................     1,727
    2,670,000  Renong Bhd. ......................................     3,953
    1,481,000  Resorts World Bhd. ...............................     7,931
      650,000  Sime Darby Bhd. ..................................     1,727
    1,319,000  Tan & Tan Development.............................     1,127
     +601,000  Technology Resources Industries...................     1,775
      830,000  Telekom Malaysia Bhd. ............................     6,471
    1,414,000  Tenaga Nasional Bhd. .............................     5,568
      282,000  Time Engineering Bhd. ............................       655
      774,000  United Engineers Bhd. ............................     4,937
                                                                   --------
                                                                     63,642
                                                                   --------
  PHILIPPINES (5.8%)
    1,081,872  Ayala Corp. 'B'...................................     1,320
    1,238,125  Ayala Land, Inc. 'B'..............................     1,510
     #+18,384  Benpres Holdings Corp. GDR........................     1,592
   +1,738,400  C&P Homes, Inc. ..................................     1,276
   +1,926,000  DMCI Holdings, Inc. ..............................       690
     +609,600  Fil-Estate Land, Inc. ............................       459
    7,986,600  JG Summit Holding 'B'.............................     2,192
      384,865  Manilla Electric 'B'..............................     3,140
    5,282,500  Petron Corp. .....................................     2,719
       20,500  Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co.............     1,114
        9,800  Philippines Long Distance Telephone Co. ADR.......       530
      +37,978  Philippine National Bank 'B'......................       420
      289,380  San Miguel Corp. 'B'..............................       987
   +4,435,300  SM Prime Holdings, Inc. ..........................     1,268
                                                                   --------
                                                                     19,217
                                                                   --------
  SINGAPORE (12.8%)
      226,000  British-American Tobacco..........................       871
      659,800  City Developments Ltd. ...........................     4,804
</TABLE>
 
    18
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      VALUE
       SHARES                                                         (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
  SINGAPORE (CONT.)
      967,000  DBS Land Ltd. ....................................  $  3,268
      383,500  Development Bank of Singapore.....................     4,772
      158,000  Fraser & Neave Ltd. ..............................     2,011
      726,000  Keppel Corp. .....................................     6,467
      541,666  Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. ....................     6,778
      259,000  Sembawang Corp. Ltd. .............................     1,437
      115,000  Singapore Airlines Ltd. (Foreign).................     1,073
       95,400  Singapore Press Holdings (Foreign)................     1,686
    1,556,000  Singapore Technologies Industrial Corp. ..........     3,520
      400,000  Straits Steamship Land Ltd. ......................     1,352
      561,000  Straits Trading Co. Ltd. .........................     1,317
      353,000  United Overseas Bank Ltd. ........................     3,394
                                                                   --------
                                                                     42,750
                                                                   --------
  TAIWAN (1.8%)
     +337,000  Acer, Inc. .......................................       778
     +228,000  Advanced Semiconductor Engineering, Inc. .........       552
     +918,000  Taiwan Semiconductor Co...........................     2,876
      667,500  United Micro Electronics Corp. Ltd. ..............     1,676
                                                                   --------
                                                                      5,882
                                                                   --------
  THAILAND (13.3%)
       94,100  Advanced Information Services Co. Ltd.
                 (Foreign).......................................     1,666
      614,800  Bangkok Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...................     7,468
      144,300  Charoen Pokphand Feedmill Co. Ltd. (Foreign)......       676
      739,244  Finance One Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................     5,135
       69,400  Land & House Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...................     1,140
      207,800  National Finance & Securities Co. Ltd.
                 (Foreign).......................................     1,114
      201,600  Phatra Thanakit Co. Ltd. (Foreign)................     1,729
       96,000  Shinawatra Computer Co. Ltd. (Foreign)............     2,363
       40,900  Siam Cement Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................     2,267
      360,100  Siam Commercial Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...........     4,746
   +1,500,000  Telecomasia Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................     4,585
      738,900  Thai Farmer's Bank Co. (Foreign)..................     7,451
     +366,400  Thai Telephone & Telecommunications (Foreign).....     2,633
       92,000  United Communication Industry (Foreign)...........     1,176
      403,000  Wongpaitoon Footwear Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...........       436
                                                                   --------
                                                                     44,585
                                                                   --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $279,735)..............................   303,089
                                                                   --------
 
<CAPTION>
       NO. OF                                                         VALUE
     WARRANTS                                                         (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>            <S>                                                 <C>
WARRANTS (0.0%)
  INDONESIA (0.0%)
    *+150,000  Ometraco Corp. expiring 7/12/00 (COST $0).........  $     --
                                                                   --------
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (90.6%) (COST $279,735).................   303,089
                                                                   --------
         FACE
       AMOUNT
        (000)
- -------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (3.6%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (3.6%)
    UNITED STATES
 $     12,076  The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
                 12/29/95, due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
                 $12,084, collateralized by $9,815, U.S. Treasury
                 Bonds, 7.875%, due 2/15/21, valued at $12,318
                 (COST $12,076) .................................    12,076
                                                                   --------
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $291,811)...................   315,165
                                                                   --------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.3%)
  HKD   2,805  Hong Kong Dollar .................................       363
IDR 1,014,320  Indonesian Rupiah ................................       444
   MYR      4  Malaysian Ringgit ................................         1
  TWD   6,880  Taiwan Dollar ....................................       252
                                                                   --------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $1,058).............................     1,060
                                                                   --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (94.5%) (COST $292,869)........................   316,225
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (5.5%).....................    18,349
                                                                   --------
NET ASSETS (100%)................................................  $334,574
                                                                   --------
                                                                   --------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>  <C>
- ---------------
+      --  Non-income producing securities
*      --  Fair valued securities (totaling U.S. $35,215 or
           10.5% of net assets at December 31, 1995.) -- See
           Note A-1
#      --  144A Security -- Certain conditions for public
           sale may exist
ADR    --  American Depositary Receipt
ADS    --  American Depositary Shares
GDR    --  Global Depositary Receipt
GDS    --  Global Depositary Shares
IDR    --  International Depositary Receipt
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         VALUE        PERCENTAGE OF
INDUSTRY                                 (000)          NET ASSETS
- -----------------------------------     --------     ----------------
<S>                                     <C>          <C>
Services...........................     $ 67,910              20.3  %
Finance............................       67,806              20.3
Real Estate........................       59,680              17.8
Multi-Industry.....................       31,429               9.4
Capital Equipment..................       25,380               7.6
Energy.............................       19,671               5.9
Materials..........................       17,389               5.2
Consumer Goods.....................       13,824               4.1
                                        --------             -----
                                        $303,089              90.6  %
                                        --------             -----
                                        --------             -----
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                          19
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>                          <C>
Aerospace                         2.0%
Banking                          10.1%
Building                          2.0%
Capital Goods                     4.1%
Chemicals                         4.7%
Communications                    1.1%
Consumer - Durables               4.2%
Consumer - Retail                 4.0%
Consumer - Staples                4.5%
Energy                            3.3%
Financial - Diversified           1.9%
Health Care                       6.7%
Industrial                        5.7%
Insurance                         5.8%
Metals                            2.0%
Paper & Packaging                 2.8%
Real Estate Investment
Trust                             2.6%
Services                         11.3%
Technology                        7.5%
Transportation                    2.8%
Utilities                         7.0%
Other                             3.9%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                               VALUE
SECURITY                                       INDUSTRY        (000)
- ----------------------------------------  -------------------  ------
<S>                                       <C>                  <C>
Coors (Adolph) 'B'                         Consumer-Staples    $ 597
Greenpoint Financial Corp.                      Banking          575
Tecumseh Products 'A'                        Capital Goods       564
Provident Companies, Inc.                      Insurance         562
Enhance Financial Services Group               Insurance         559
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE SECTORS
                                   PERCENT
                                      OF
                         VALUE       NET
INDUSTRY                 (000)      ASSETS
- ---------------------    ------    --------
<S>                      <C>       <C>
Services                 $4,895      11.3%
Banking                   4,375      10.1
Technology                3,253       7.5
Utilities                 3,031       7.0
Health Care               2,896       6.7
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        TOTAL RETURNS**
                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   AVERAGE ANNUAL
                                  YTD                     ONE YEAR                 SINCE INCEPTION
                          -------------------     ------------------------     -----------------------
                          WITH       WITHOUT         WITH         WITHOUT        WITH         WITHOUT
                          SALES       SALES         SALES          SALES         SALES         SALES
                          CHARGE*    CHARGE        CHARGE*        CHARGE        CHARGE*       CHARGE
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>       <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>           <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------
Class A
Shares                      2.18%       7.28%         13.67%        19.34%         7.05%         9.44%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+
Shares                     -1.98%       3.02%        N/A            N/A           N/A           N/A
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C
Shares                      5.83%       6.83%         17.43%        18.43%         8.57%         8.57%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Russell 2500
Small Company Index        N/A         12.61%        N/A            31.69%        N/A           12.72%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P 500 Index              N/A         14.43%        N/A            37.53%        N/A           16.38%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B Shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The Russell 2500 Small Company Index and S&P 500 Index are unmanaged indices of
common stocks. The S&P 500 assumes dividends are reinvested.
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The  American  Value  Fund  invests  in  domestic  small-  to
medium-sized   companies  that  our  research  indicates  are
undervalued, of high quality, and will reward the shareholder
through high current dividend income. The Fund's  disciplined
value  approach seeks  to outperform  the Russell  2500 Small
Company Index in the longer term. We believe our emphasis  on
high quality companies and high yielding securities will help
the Fund perform particularly well in difficult markets.
The  Fund selects companies that  can be purchased at bargain
prices.  Bargains  mostly  arise   as  a  result  of   public
overreactions   to  temporary  problems  associated  with  an
otherwise healthy company, or because a company is  neglected
and  currently out-of-the  limelight of  investors' interest.
Often, these  companies  operate  as major  players  in  very
focused markets and are not widely followed by the investment
community.
For  the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the Fund
had a total return exclusive of sales charge of 7.28% for the
Class A shares, 3.02%  for the Class B  shares and 6.83%  for
the  Class C shares, and a  total return with sales charge of
2.18% for the Class A shares,  -1.98% for the Class B  shares
and  5.83% for  the Class  C shares,  as compared  to a total
return of 12.61% for the Russell 2500 Small Company Index and
14.43% for the S&P 500 Index for the same period. For the one
year period ended  December 31,  1995, the Fund  had a  total
return  exclusive of sales  charge of 19.34%  for the Class A
shares and 18.43% for the Class C shares, and a total  return
with sales charge of 13.67% for Class A shares and 17.43% for
the  Class C shares  as compared with  31.69% for the Russell
2500 Small Company Index and 37.53% for the S&P 500 Index for
the same period.  For the period  since inception on  October
18,  1993 through December 31, 1995, the average annual total
return of the Fund  exclusive of sales  charge was 9.44%  for
the Class A shares and 8.57% for the Class C shares and 7.05%
for  the Class A shares with  sales charge as compared to the
average annual total  return of 12.72%  for the Russell  2500
Small  Company Index and 16.38% for the S&P 500 Index for the
same period. Class B  shares held prior to  May 1, 1995  were
renamed  Class C shares. The  Fund began offering the current
Class B shares August 1, 1995.
THE PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES
ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE FUND'S FUTURE
PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE SO THAT AN
INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL
COST.
 
    20
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   PERFORMANCE REVIEW
                   One investment theme dominated  the direction of U.S.  equity
                   market  returns during 1995: the considerable slowdown of the
                   strong  economic  growth  experienced  in  1994.  During  the
                   summer,  the slowdown was severe enough as to awaken talks of
                   a recession  pending.  By year-end,  however,  the  consensus
                   focused  on a  successful 'soft landing'  and moderate growth
                   expectations for 1996. The slowdown in economic growth led to
                   a sharp drop in long term interest rates during 1995.  Equity
                   markets  in the United States  responded with enthusiasm. The
                   bellwether S&P 500 Index  rose 37.5% for  the full year  1995
                   and 14.4% during the second half of the year. Since the rally
                   in equities was interest rate driven, interest rate sensitive
                   "growth"  companies  rose  most  sharply.  The  most dramatic
                   example of this could be seen in the areas of technology  and
                   health   care.  By  mid-year  1995   the  average  small  cap
                   technology  company  was   trading  at  a   price-to-earnings
                   multiple  of 30.2 times, more than  twice as expensive as the
                   average stock in  your American Value  Fund. Periods of  such
                   market  ebullience  are  expected  to  produce  high absolute
                   returns for the American Value  Fund. They are, however,  the
                   most  difficult time for the small  cap value style to better
                   the small cap averages since  the market's normal desire  for
                   dividend  income and deep bargain values is superseded by its
                   willingness to count on extraordinarily high future  earnings
                   growth. Going forward, we expect increasing market valuation,
                   absolutely  low interest rates,  and a steady  economy to set
                   the  stage  for  a   positive  environment  for  the   Fund's
                   out-of-the-limelight companies.
"OUR OUTLOOK ON THE FUNDAMENTAL STRENGTH OF THE FUND'S COMPANIES REMAINS
POSITIVE..."
 
                   The  best performing industries  in the Fund  during the past
                   six months were  health care,  followed by  companies in  the
                   banking  and  insurance  industries,  aerospace  and electric
                   utilities. The  Fund's health  care companies  returned  more
                   than  30%  during the  second  half of  1995.  In particular,
                   Kinetic Concepts Inc.  whose major source  of revenues  comes
                   from  rental  of hospital  beds advanced  by 70%  during that
                   period. The overall return impact  on the Fund's health  care
                   issues  was  somewhat  muted,  since  the  Fund--true  to its
                   mission of seeking 'value' companies--has been underweight in
                   this high flying industry. The Fund's banking stocks returned
                   29.8% for the second half of 1995. Since banks began the year
                   as truly undervalued securities  with good growth  prospects,
                   the Fund benefited from an overweight in that industry. While
                   falling  interest  rates  provided  for  healthy  fundamental
                   earnings growth, the sharp rally in banking stocks was fueled
                   by  announced  mergers  and  acquisitions  affecting   highly
                   visible  money center banks, midsize  regional banks, as well
                   as small  community  banks. The  Fund's  insurance  companies
                   returned  29.2% during  the past  six months.  We believe the
                   success in the  industry was the  result of falling  interest
                   rates  which led to strongly improved earnings for the Fund's
                   companies. The Fund's aerospace  companies averaged a  return
                   of  22% for the second half of 1995. Good performance in that
                   industry was  mainly driven  by the  resurgence of  the  U.S.
                   commercial  airline  industry  which  improved  strongly  the
                   business conditions for the Fund's airline service companies.
                   Another bright spot during the  past six months proved to  be
                   companies  in the electric utility industry. At the beginning
                   of the year confidence in U.S. utilities was badly shaken  by
                   the  specter of  loss of their  monopoly status  which led to
                   extremely attractive valuations in that industry. However, as
                   utilities  prepared  for   increased  wholesale  and   retail
                   competition  by dramatically  improving their  cost structure
                   they managed to show positive earnings surprises as the  year
                   progressed.
 
                   The  weakest areas in the Fund  turned out to be companies in
                   cyclical industries. The slowdown in economic growth and  the
                   mid-year   fear  of  slipping   into  a  recession  penalized
                   companies in deep cyclical  industries. The slowdown in  U.S.
                   automobile  sales and production  had a ripple  effect on the
                   Fund's auto part suppliers.  Weakening steel prices,  falling
                   prices  for paper products and  chemicals were interpreted as
                   harbingers of  a  looming recession  and  not simply  as  the
                   result  of a mid-cycle inventory  correction. Another area of
                   mixed performance  proved  to be  the  retail sector.  As  it
 
                                                                          21
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   became  evident mid-year  that the  expected strengthening of
                   consumer retail spending would not materialize, we decided to
                   significantly upgrade the  quality of the  Fund holdings.  We
                   sold  Venture Stores, the midwest  discount retail chain, and
                   Edison Brothers, a  chain of high  fashion men's stores,  and
                   purchased  Ross  Stores. Ross  Stores, an  off-price retailer
                   based in California, displays a  clean balance sheet and  was
                   managed  in a  cautious and most  conservative manner. Unlike
                   its competitors in the  apparel retail business, Ross  Stores
                   managed to increase same store sales for the remainder of the
                   year and the stock price nearly doubled since purchase.
 
                   As  we  look  for inexpensive  companies  with  rich dividend
                   yields  in  specialty  niche   markets,  we  added   Tecumseh
                   Products, a Michigan company, to the Fund. Tecumseh is one of
                   the  leading  domestic  companies  in  the  manufacturing  of
                   compressors for refrigerators and  air conditioners. We  were
                   able  to purchase the company at  an inexpensive 130% of book
                   value and 8.4x  earnings. We believe  this low price  ignores
                   the  company's extensive  operations overseas  that show high
                   growth potential. The  Fund also  purchased Airborne  Freight
                   Corp.,  an air courier company based in Seattle. We purchased
                   Airborne Freight  at a  price close  to its  book value.  The
                   company  has shown 20% growth in total delivery volume during
                   the previous six months. However, since a large percentage of
                   the increased  volume  came  from  less  profitable  deferred
                   deliveries   (two-day  instead  of  next-day)  the  company's
                   earnings are  currently  lower  than last  year.  We  believe
                   Airborne's  earnings  are  only temporarily  lower  since the
                   company has  had  a  successful record  of  restoring  profit
                   margins   by   increasing   operating   efficiencies.  Hence,
                   Airborne's current stock price constitutes a bargain purchase
                   for the Fund. During the fourth quarter, we took advantage of
                   attractive valuations of  deep cyclical  companies and  added
                   Smith  (A.O.) Corp., a  manufacturer of automobile structural
                   components, to the Fund. We  purchased Smith (A.O.) at  seven
                   times   trailing  earnings.  The  company  has  improved  its
                   earnings every year since 1991  and is estimated to grow  its
                   earnings by 15% in 1996.
 
                   In  September  we  increased  our  holdings  in  Real  Estate
                   Investment Trusts  (REITs). At  the time  of purchase,  REITs
                   were  valued at the largest discount relative to the yield on
                   U.S. Treasury bonds since 1990. Unlike in 1990,  fundamentals
                   in  the real  estate sector  appear very  promising: interest
                   rates are low, internal  growth is solid,  and there are  few
                   new  equity  offerings  in  the making.  The  Fund  has taken
                   positions in two financially conservatively managed apartment
                   REITs (Wellsford Residential Property Trust and  Southwestern
                   Property  Trust) that also trade at significant price-to-cash
                   flow discounts relative to their peers.
 
                   Four of  the  Fund's  companies  were  involved  in  takeover
                   activities  during the  second half of  1995 and subsequently
                   sold out  of  the Fund:  Joslyn  Corp., a  Chicago  maker  of
                   electric   components,  Wallace  Computer  Services  Inc.,  a
                   printer of business forms, Summit Bancorp in New Jersey,  and
                   most  recently  Pratt &  Lambert, United  Co. The  latter was
                   acquired by Sherwin Williams Co., which paid a 70% premium to
                   market  value  to  obtain  Pratt  &  Lambert's  franchise  in
                   architectural  finishes  (paint).  While  we  do  not  aim to
                   construct a  Fund  of takeover  candidates,  these  companies
                   shared  in common an undervalued  stock price and a franchise
                   that made them special to their acquisitors.
 
                   Our  outlook  on  the  fundamental  strength  of  the  Fund's
                   companies  remains positive  as reflected  by recent earnings
                   reports.  In  addition,  many   U.S.  industrial  small   cap
                   companies see strongly rising demand from overseas. Thanks to
                   past  efficiency gains  and a favorable  U.S. currency, small
                   industrial companies  have  emerged  as  worldwide  low  cost
                   producers of goods.
 
                   The  Fund offers the consistent  application of a disciplined
                   value driven investment process to its participants. As such,
                   we will  pursue our  search for  smaller companies  that  our
                   research  shows are undervalued, are  of high quality and pay
                   above average dividend yield. We believe these companies will
                   be well positioned to achieve  superior total return for  the
                   longer term.
 
    22
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
COMMON STOCKS (96.1%)
  AEROSPACE (2.0%)
  20,400  AAR Corp..........................................  $   449
  12,300  Thiokol Corp......................................      416
                                                              -------
                                                                  865
                                                              -------
  BANKING (10.1%)
  13,500  First Security Corp...............................      520
  21,500  Greenpoint Financial Corp.........................      575
  15,100  Onbankcorp., Inc..................................      504
  20,000  Peoples Heritage Financial Group, Inc.............      455
  12,200  Standard Federal Bank.............................      480
  10,000  Summit Bancorp., Inc..............................      315
  23,500  Trustmark Corp....................................      534
  14,800  Union Planters Corp...............................      472
  18,000  Washington Mutual, Inc............................      520
                                                              -------
                                                                4,375
                                                              -------
  BUILDING (2.0%)
  13,200  Ameron, Inc.......................................      496
  31,000  Gilbert Associates, Inc. 'A'......................      388
                                                              -------
                                                                  884
                                                              -------
  CAPITAL GOODS (4.1%)
  13,600  Binks Manufacturing Corp..........................      319
  30,400  Cascade Corp......................................      426
  18,900  Starret (L.S.) Co. 'A'............................      489
  10,900  Tecumseh Products 'A'.............................      564
                                                              -------
                                                                1,798
                                                              -------
  CHEMICALS (4.7%)
  22,440  Aceto Corp........................................      359
  20,500  Dexter Corp.......................................      484
  15,000  LeaRonal, Inc.....................................      345
  27,400  Quaker Chemical Corp..............................      370
  17,000  Witco Corp........................................      497
                                                              -------
                                                                2,055
                                                              -------
  COMMUNICATIONS (1.1%)
  25,500  Comsat Corp.......................................      475
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--DURABLES (4.2%)
  24,700  A.O. Smith Corp...................................      513
  29,900  Arvin Industries, Inc.............................      493
  26,820  Knape & Vogt Manufacturing Co.....................      466
  21,000  Oneida Ltd........................................      370
                                                              -------
                                                                1,842
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--RETAIL (4.0%)
  26,200  CPI Corp..........................................      419
  16,700  Deb Shops, Inc....................................       58
  22,800  Guilford Mills, Inc...............................      465
  18,000  Ross Stores, Inc..................................      344
  11,100  Springs Industries, Inc. 'A'......................      459
                                                              -------
                                                                1,745
                                                              -------
  CONSUMER--STAPLES (4.5%)
  14,122  Block Drug Co. 'A'................................      491
  27,000  Coors (Adolph) 'B'................................      597
  22,300  International Multifoods Corp.....................      449
  23,400  Nash Finch Co.....................................      427
                                                              -------
                                                                1,964
                                                              -------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
 
  ENERGY (3.3%)
  20,300  Ashland Coal, Inc.................................  $   434
  18,500  Diamond Shamrock, Inc.............................      479
  20,100  Ultramar Corp.....................................      517
                                                              -------
                                                                1,430
                                                              -------
  FINANCIAL--DIVERSIFIED (1.9%)
   8,900  FINOVA Group, Inc.................................      429
   8,100  GATX Corp.........................................      394
                                                              -------
                                                                  823
                                                              -------
  HEALTH CARE (6.7%)
  28,000  Analogic Corp.....................................      518
  12,200  Beckman Instruments, Inc..........................      432
  21,000  Bergen Brunswig Corp. 'A'.........................      522
  30,000  Bindley Western Industries, Inc...................      510
  38,600  Kinetic Concepts, Inc.............................      463
  20,500  United Wisconsin Services, Inc....................      451
                                                              -------
                                                                2,896
                                                              -------
  INDUSTRIAL (5.7%)
  12,200  American Filtrona Corp............................      409
  11,700  Barnes Group, Inc.................................      421
  39,100  Gencorp, Inc......................................      479
  41,100  Kaman Corp. 'A'...................................      457
  27,600  Zero Corp.........................................      490
  10,000  Zurn Industries, Inc..............................      214
                                                              -------
                                                                2,470
                                                              -------
  INSURANCE (5.8%)
  14,600  Argonaut Group, Inc...............................      475
  21,000  Enhance Financial Services Group..................      559
  16,600  Provident Companies, Inc..........................      562
  12,600  Selective Insurance Group, Inc....................      447
  16,250  US Life Corp......................................      486
                                                              -------
                                                                2,529
                                                              -------
  METALS (2.0%)
  31,500  Birmingham Steel Corp.............................      469
  10,300  Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co..........................      422
                                                              -------
                                                                  891
                                                              -------
  PAPER & PACKAGING (2.8%)
  17,500  Ball Corp.........................................      481
  10,900  Potlatch Corp.....................................      436
  25,600  Sealright Co., Inc................................      285
                                                              -------
                                                                1,202
                                                              -------
  REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST (2.6%)
  30,400  Manufactured Home Communities, Inc................      532
  25,000  South West Property Trust.........................      338
  12,000  Wellsford Residential Property Trust..............      276
                                                              -------
                                                                1,146
                                                              -------
  SERVICES (11.3%)
  15,400  ABM Industries, Inc...............................      427
  18,200  Angelica Corp.....................................      373
  25,600  Bowne & Co........................................      512
  26,200  Cross A.T. Co. 'A'................................      396
  33,500  Jackpot Enterprises, Inc..........................      390
  14,000  National Service Industries, Inc..................      453
  18,100  New England Business Services, Inc................      394
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
                                                                          23
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                VALUE
  SHARES                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
  SERVICES (CONT.)
  24,800  Ogden Corp........................................  $   530
  52,500  Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc........................      499
  35,500  Russ Berrie & Co., Inc............................      448
  22,000  Sbarro, Inc.......................................      473
                                                              -------
                                                                4,895
                                                              -------
  TECHNOLOGY (7.5%)
  30,500  Augat, Inc........................................      522
  37,000  Core Industries, Inc..............................      477
  16,900  Cubic Corp........................................      482
  28,000  Gerber Scientific, Inc............................      455
  11,100  MTS Systems Corp..................................      366
  26,900  National Computer Systems, Inc....................      508
  32,500  Scitex Corp.......................................      443
                                                              -------
                                                                3,253
                                                              -------
  TRANSPORTATION (2.8%)
  18,000  Airborne Freight Corp.............................      479
  20,600  Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc...................      391
  28,000  SkyWest, Inc......................................      361
                                                              -------
                                                                1,231
                                                              -------
  UTILITIES (7.0%)
  15,100  Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp................      466
  11,500  Commonwealth Energy Systems.......................      515
  13,500  Eastern Entreprises...............................      476
  18,300  Oneok, Inc........................................      419
  13,900  Orange & Rockland Utilities, Inc..................      497
   6,500  SJW Corp..........................................      245
  23,600  Washington Water Power Co.........................      413
                                                              -------
                                                                3,031
                                                              -------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $38,287)..........................   41,800
                                                              -------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    FACE
  AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
   (000)                                                        (000)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>       <S>                                                 <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (3.5%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (3.5%)
$   1,517 The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
            12/29/95, due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
            $1,518, collateralized by $1,085 U.S. Treasury
            Bonds, 13.375%, due 8/15/01, valued at $1,549
            (COST $1,517)...................................  $ 1,517
                                                              -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (99.6%) (COST $39,804)....................  43,317
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (0.4%)................      158
                                                              -------
NET ASSET VALUE (100%)......................................  $43,475
                                                              -------
                                                              -------
</TABLE>
 
    24
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>            <C>
Argentina          18.7%
Brazil             16.5%
Bulgaria            1.6%
Canada              2.6%
Ecuador             4.3%
Indonesia           0.2%
Mexico             12.3%
Morocco             8.2%
Nigeria             0.5%
Panama              4.7%
Russia              5.4%
United States      21.8%
Venezuela           0.4%
Other               2.8%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                         VALUE
SECURITY                                     COUNTRY     (000)
- ----------------------------------------  -------------  ------
<S>                                       <C>            <C>
Kingdom of Morocco Restructuring and
 Consolidation Agreement `A' 1990 6.69%,
 1/1/09                                      Morocco     $5,973
Republic of Argentina `L' 5.00%, 3/31/05    Argentina     4,275
Bank for Foreign Economic Affairs            Russia       3,924
Republic of Panama 6.75%, 5/10/02            Panama       3,418
Minas Gerais 'B' 8.25%, 2/10/00              Brazil       3,320
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE SECTORS
                                    PERCENT
                          VALUE      OF NET
INDUSTRY                  (000)      ASSETS
- ---------------------    -------    --------
<S>                      <C>        <C>
Foreign Government
 Bonds                   $18,357       25.1%
Loan Agreements            9,897       13.5
Consumer Goods             9,344       12.8
Energy                     9,047       12.3
Materials                  7,771       10.6
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          TOTAL RETURNS**
                          -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   AVERAGE ANNUAL SINCE
                                    YTD                      ONE YEAR                    INCEPTION
                          -----------------------     -----------------------     -----------------------
                            WITH         WITHOUT        WITH         WITHOUT        WITH         WITHOUT
                            SALES         SALES         SALES         SALES         SALES         SALES
                           CHARGE*       CHARGE        CHARGE*       CHARGE        CHARGE*       CHARGE
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares               5.06%        10.30%        14.08%        19.77%         8.86%        12.03%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+ Shares              3.38%         8.38%         N/A           N/A           N/A           N/A
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares               8.82%         9.82%        17.88%        18.88%        11.18%        11.18%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lehman Aggregate Bond
Index                        N/A           6.32%         N/A          18.48%         N/A          11.01%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The Lehman Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged index comprised of the
Government Corporate Index, the Mortgage-Backed Securities Index and the
Asset-Backed Securities Index.
 
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The Worldwide High  Income Fund  seeks to  offer investors  a
high  current  income consistent  with relative  stability of
principal and potential for capital appreciation. To  achieve
this objective, the Fund will invest across three broad asset
classes,  namely U.S. high yield,  emerging country debt, and
global fixed income.
For the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the  Fund
had  a total return  exclusive of sales  charge of 10.30% for
the Class A shares,  8.38% for the Class  B shares and  9.82%
for  the Class C shares, and a total return with sales charge
of 5.06% for the Class A shares, 3.38% for the Class B shares
and 8.82% for  the Class  C shares,  as compared  to a  total
return  of 6.32% for the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index. For the
one year period ended December 31, 1995, the Fund had a total
return exclusive of sales  charge of 19.77%  for the Class  A
shares  and 18.88% for the Class  C shares and a total return
with sales charge of 14.08% for Class A shares and 17.88% for
Class C  shares  as  compared  with  18.48%  for  the  Lehman
Aggregate Bond Index for the same period. For the period from
inception  on April 21,  1994 through December  31, 1995, the
Fund had an  average annual total  return exclusive of  sales
charge  of 12.03% for  the Class A shares  and 11.18% for the
Class C shares, and an average annual total return with sales
charge of 8.86%  for the  Class A  shares as  compared to  an
average   annual  total  return  of  11.01%  for  the  Lehman
Aggregate Bond Index for the same period. Class B shares held
prior to May 1,  1995 were renamed Class  C shares. The  Fund
began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995.
Following a bout of profit taking early in the fourth quarter
of  1995, the  emerging markets  resumed their  upward climb.
Profit  taking  was  triggered  by  broker/dealers  who  were
reducing  positions due to fiscal year-end considerations. An
improvement  in  the  markets'  sentiment  toward   Argentina
prompted   all  market   participants  to   increase  capital
committed to this  asset class.  Hopes of  a balanced  budget
agreement  in the U.S.  provided a favorable  backdrop to the
currency and  fixed  income  markets  in  general  over  this
period.
THE PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES
ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE FUND'S FUTURE
PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE SO THAT AN
INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL
COST. PLEASE SEE THE PROSPECTUS FOR A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN RISK CONSIDERATIONS
ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNATIONAL INVESTING.
 
                                                                          25
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   The  fourth  quarter was  characterized by  a high  degree of
                   dispersion  in  the   individual  country  performances,   as
                   investors  re-positioned their  portfolios. Panama, Argentina
                   and Venezuela were the outperformers and Poland, Philippines,
                   South Africa, Mexico and Russia were the underperformers  for
                   the quarter.
                   The  markets  perception of  Argentina's credit  risk changed
                   dramatically  as  the  political  infighting  between   rival
                   contenders  for  power came  to  an end,  as  President Menem
                   seized the political initiative.  Aggressive moves to  tackle
                   the  federal budget,  remedial measures to  tackle the fiscal
                   problems in  the  provinces  and  the  privatization  of  the
                   remaining  state assets  pulled Argentina out  of the vicious
                   circle of declining confidence and poor economic  performance
                   following the tequila crisis of the first quarter.
                   Brazilian  assets  recovered quite  strongly during  the last
                   weeks of the quarter as President Cardoso re-established  the
                   political   momentum  for  the  reform  program.  The  fiscal
                   condition of  the  federal  government will  continue  to  be
                   strained  as the  current constitution  does not  provide the
                   government with sufficient degrees of freedom. Any long  term
                   corrective  measures will have  to wait until  such time when
                   reforms  (including  the   administrative,  tax  and   social
                   security  reform  measures  currently  being  discussed)  are
                   passed and implemented  in the future.  We remain  optimistic
                   that the political process will deliver reforms eventually.
"OUR OUTLOOK FOR EMERGING MARKETS DEBT REMAINS POSITIVE."
                   Mexico  once  again  proved  to  be  a  difficult  credit  to
                   understand. Concerns over the state of the banking system and
                   the lack of a pick-up  in domestic growth caused  nervousness
                   in  the foreign exchange  markets in the  fourth quarter. The
                   markets believed  that the  government lacked  the  political
                   will  and  economic policy  alternatives to  meeting year-end
                   demand for dollars. Fears about  another peso crisis and  the
                   lack  of a clear and timely strategic response on the part of
                   the policy  makers  to  combat  the  speculative  demand  for
                   dollars  produced the second peso  crisis within the space of
                   less than  twelve months.  Our holdings  in peso  denominated
                   local   treasury  bills  were   affected  as  interest  rates
                   eventually increased and the  peso weakened dramatically.  We
                   continued to hold our positions as we believed that this time
                   around  the  pressures  on  the  currency  were  seasonal and
                   temporary and a drastic  tightening of monetary policy  would
                   reverse  the slide in  the currency. Our  outlook for 1996 is
                   one of cautious optimism.
                   Russia, one of  our relatively large  bets against the  Index
                   finally reached an agreement with its external creditors. The
                   non-performing   loans,  based  on   the  parameters  of  the
                   announced restructuring,  trade  at spreads  close  to  2,000
                   basis  points above  U.S. Treasuries, 700  basis points wider
                   than the  assets  of  Ecuador,  Bulgaria  and  Venezuela.  We
                   believe   that  given  the  current   state  of  the  economy
                   (declining inflation, trade  surpluses, a  low external  debt
                   burden and a resumption in growth) and the willingness of any
                   future  administration to  service their  external debts, the
                   market is mis-pricing Russian risk.  The prices of the  asset
                   should  increase on the announcement  of an IMF Extended Fund
                   Facility and continued compliance by the government under the
                   terms of the restructuring agreement. We do not envisage  any
                   changes in our exposure to Russia at this point.
                   Our  outlook for  emerging markets  debt remains  positive. A
                   slowdown in  growth  in the  U.S.  and Europe  and  signs  of
                   inflation  should result in a decline in market rates. Credit
                   stories unfolding in  Latin America and  Eastern Europe  show
                   dramatic  improvements over 1995. Policy makers commitment to
                   reform has only been strengthened  in the post tequila  days.
                   The perfect line up of interest rates, spreads and fund flows
                   should  result in price appreciation. We will remain vigilant
                   however for  the  first  signs  of  a  turnaround  in  market
                   sentiment or fundamentals.
                   As  1995 closed, the U.S. high yield market wrapped up one of
                   its finest years. While market returns were excellent,  there
                   were  several undercurrents  that one had  to be  aware of to
                   stay ahead  of the  competition.  While the  market  rallied,
                   spreads to Treasuries widened. More importantly, intra-market
                   quality  spreads  widened as  well. Market  participants were
                   concerned that the economy was entering an economic downturn.
                   This  view  was  supported   by  an  extremely  weak   retail
                   environment.  Several  major retailers  filed  for bankruptcy
                   during the year. Also auto  sales seemed to be softening  and
                   steel  and paper prices  were reported to  be declining after
                   strong run-ups in late 1994 and early 1995.
 
    26
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   The Fund's  strong performance  in the  U.S. portion  of  the
                   portfolio was a result of overweight positions in the casino,
                   communications,  cable  television and  chemical  sectors. As
                   important as investing in  winning ideas is avoiding  trouble
                   situations.  Two  of  the  weakest  industries  in  1995 were
                   retailers and  restaurants, sectors  which the  Fund  avoided
                   entirely.
                   It  is difficult to formulate a strategy for 1996. Other than
                   retailers, which  have had  a horrible  history in  the  high
                   yield  market,  it  is  hard to  find  a  clearly undervalued
                   industry. Steel and auto-related companies have cheapened  to
                   the  rest of  the market,  but timing  the market  to catch a
                   rebound in their bond prices and earnings momentum is  always
                   difficult.  Treasury  rates  have  dropped  precipitously and
                   therefore cushion bonds have some appeal. Long-term  interest
                   rates  are near the lows achieved at the end of 1993, however
                   the shape of  the yield curve  is very different.  Short-term
                   rates are much higher than at the end of 1993 and it does not
                   appear that a tightening is likely in the near future. We are
                   also  faced  with the  uncertainty  of an  election  year. We
                   expect to play it fairly close  to the vest in 1996. We  will
                   be  searching for bonds that generate good current income but
                   do not represent undue credit risk.
 
                                                                          27
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (96.8%)
  CORPORATE BONDS (24.3%)
    ARGENTINA (2.4%)
$       2,000 Banco Rio de la Plata 8.75%, 12/15/03 ............  $  1,766
                                                                  --------
    MEXICO (0.5%)
         500  Banco Nacional de Comercio Exterior 7.25%,
                2/2/04 .........................................       392
                                                                  --------
    UNITED STATES (21.4%)
         450  AES Corp. 9.75%, 6/15/00 .........................       465
         500  Armco, Inc. 9.375%, 11/1/00 ......................       495
          29  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'A' 6.39%, 11/28/00 ...        29
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'B' 6.61%, 11/28/02 ...        28
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'C' 6.80%, 11/28/05 ...        27
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'D' 7.05%, 11/28/07 ...        27
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'E' 7.32%, 11/28/10 ...        27
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'F' 7.42%, 11/28/15 ...        27
          27  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 'G' 7.62%, 11/28/25 ...        27
         500  Comcast Corp. 9.50%, 1/15/08 .....................       522
         250  Corporate Express, Inc. 'B' 9.125%, 3/15/04 ......       254
         450  Grand Union Co. 12.00%, 9/1/04 ...................       387
       1,000  Lenfest Communications, Inc. 8.375%, 11/1/05 .....     1,004
       1,000  Marcus Cable Co. 0.00% to 8/1/99, 13.50% to
                8/1/04 .........................................       753
         500  Owens Illinois, Inc. 10.50%, 6/15/02 .............       531
       1,000  Owens Illinois, Inc. 9.75%, 8/15/04 ..............     1,053
         400  PM Holdings Corp. 0.00% to 9/1/00, 11.50% to
                9/1/05 .........................................       206
         500  Paging Network, Inc. 10.125%, 8/1/07 .............       543
         300  Plastic Specialties & Technologies, Inc. 11.25%,
                12/1/03 ........................................       276
         500  Primark Corp. 8.75%, 10/15/00 ....................       502
       1,600  Quorum Health Group, Inc. 8.75%, 11/1/05 .........     1,656
         100  Sheffield Steel Corp. 12.00%, 11/1/01 ............        87
         500  Sherritt, Inc. 10.50%, 3/31/14 ...................       534
       1,100  Six Flags Theme Park, Inc. 'A' 0.00% to 6/15/98,
                12.25% to 6/15/05 ..............................       858
         900  Stone Container Corp. 10.75%, 10/1/02 ............       929
         500  Tenet Healthcare Corp. 8.625%, 12/1/03 ...........       524
       1,850  Viacom International Subordinate Note 8.00%,
                7/7/06 .........................................     1,882
       2,000  Westpoint Stevens, Inc. 9.375%, 12/15/05 .........     1,985
                                                                  --------
                                                                    15,638
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (COST $20,991)..........................    17,796
                                                                  --------
  EUROBONDS (45.8%)
    ARGENTINA (9.7%)
       2,500  Banco De Galicia 9.00%, 11/1/03 ..................     2,191
    +++6,000  Republic of Argentina 'L' 5.00%, 3/31/05 .........     4,275
    +++1,000  Republic of Argentina 6.56%, 3/31/23 .............       656
                                                                  --------
                                                                     7,122
                                                                  --------
    BRAZIL (16.5%)
       1,000  Aracruz Celulose S.A. 10.375%, 1/31/02 ...........       957
    +++3,000  Brazil Discount 6.81%, 4/15/24 ...................     1,853
       1,350  Compania Brasil de Projertos 12.50%, 12/22/97 ....     1,337
 
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
$    +++2,000 Federal Republic of Brazil New Money Bond 6.88%,
                4/15/09 ........................................  $  1,243
  /\+++2,918  Federal Republic of Brazil 'C' Bond PIK 8.00%,
                4/15/14 ........................................     1,674
       2,000  Iochpe Maxion S.A. 12.375%, 11/8/02 ..............     1,710
       4,000  Minas Gerais 'B' 8.25%, 2/10/00 ..................     3,320
                                                                  --------
                                                                    12,094
                                                                  --------
    BULGARIA (1.6%)
    +++2,500  Bulgaria IAB 6.75%, 7/28/11 ......................     1,163
                                                                  --------
    ECUADOR (4.3%)
      +++950  Republic of Ecuador 6.50%, 12/21/04 ..............       580
    +++2,043  Republic of Equador 6.81%, 2/27/15 ...............       684
    +++3,750  Republic of Ecuador 6.81%, 2/28/25 ...............     1,901
                                                                  --------
                                                                     3,165
                                                                  --------
    MEXICO (8.1%)
 MXP  32,143  Banamex Pagare Zero Coupon, 10/9/97 ..............     2,293
$       1,500 Cemex S.A. 8.875%, 6/10/98 .......................     1,453
        #200  Cemex S.A. 9.50%, 9/20/01 ........................       186
        #206  MC-Cuernavaca Trust 9.25%, 7/25/01 ...............       142
         750  Mexico Par Bond 'A' (Value Recovery Rights
                Attached) 6.25%, 12/31/19 ......................       492
       1,600  Tolmex S.A. 8.375%, 11/1/03 ......................     1,350
                                                                  --------
                                                                     5,916
                                                                  --------
    NIGERIA (0.5%)
         750  Central Bank of Nigeria (Warrants Attached) 6.25%,
                11/15/20 .......................................       369
                                                                  --------
    PANAMA (4.7%)
    +++4,000  Republic of Panama 6.75%, 5/10/02 ................     3,418
                                                                  --------
    VENEZUELA (0.4%)
      +++500  Republic of Venezuela DCB 6.56%, 12/18/07 ........       276
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL EUROBONDS (COST $32,874)................................    33,523
                                                                  --------
  LOAN AGREEMENTS (13.6%)
    MOROCCO (8.2%)
      ~8,800  Kingdom of Morocco Restucturing and Consolidation
                Agreement 'A' 1990 1/1/09 (Participation: The
                Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. J.P. Morgan, Lehman
                Brothers, Salomon Brothers).....................     5,973
                                                                  --------
    RUSSIA (5.4%)
     ++11,500 Bank for Foreign Ecomomic Affairs.................     3,924
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL LOAN AGREEMENTS (COST $9,230) ..........................     9,897
                                                                  --------
  YANKEE BONDS (13.1%)
    ARGENTINA (6.6%)
      #1,850  Bridas Corp. 12.50%, 11/15/99 ....................     1,836
       1,900  Metrogas S.A. 'A' 12.00%, 8/15/00 ................     1,933
       1,000  Telecomm Argentina S.A. 12.00%, 11/15/02 .........     1,065
                                                                  --------
                                                                     4,834
                                                                  --------
    CANADA (2.6%)
       1,000  Algoma Steel, Inc. 12.375%, 7/15/05 ..............       900
       1,000  Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. 9.25%, 1/15/04 ........     1,016
                                                                  --------
                                                                     1,916
                                                                  --------
    INDONESIA (0.2%)
         150  Polysindo Eka Perkasa 13.00%, 6/15/01 ............       155
                                                                  --------
    MEXICO (3.7%)
       2,200  Grupo Industrial Durango 12.00%, 7/15/01 .........     1,954
</TABLE>
 
28  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
    MEXICO (CONT.)
$     #1,000  Petro Mexicanos 8.625%, 12/1/23 ..................  $    750
                                                                  --------
                                                                     2,704
                                                                  --------
  TOTAL YANKEE BONDS (COST $5,842) .............................     9,609
                                                                  --------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $68,937) ...................    70,825
                                                                  --------
<CAPTION>
      SHARES
- ------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
EQUITY SECURITIES (0.0%)
  CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK (0.0%)
    UNITED STATES (0.0%)
         468  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc. 5.22%, 11/28/00 .......        19
                                                                  --------
  PREFERRED STOCK (0.0%)
    UNITED STATES (0.0%)
         765  Columbia Gas Systems, Inc.........................        19
                                                                  --------
<CAPTION>
      NO. OF
    WARRANTS
- ------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
  WARRANTS (0.0%)
    UNITED STATES (0.0%)
        +500  Sheffield Steel Corp., expiring 2001 .............         3
                                                                  --------
TOTAL EQUITY SECURITIES (COST $40)..............................        41
                                                                  --------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      NO. OF
       UNITS
- ------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
UNITS (0.4%)
    UNITED STATES (0.4%)
       ##268  Trump Taj Mahal PIK (Bond + 1 Taj Mahal Holding
                Corp. 'B' Common Stock) 11.35%, 11/15/99 (COST
                $253)...........................................       258
                                                                  --------
TOTAL FOREIGN & U.S. SECURITIES (97.2%) (COST $69,230)..........    71,124
                                                                  --------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (6.8%)
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (6.8%)
    UNITED STATES
$       4,939 The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
                12/29/95, due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
                $4,939, collateralized by $3,530 U.S. Treasury
                Bonds, 13.375%, due 8/15/01, valued at $5,039
                (COST $4,939) ..................................  $  4,939
                                                                  --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (104.0%) (COST $74,169).......................    76,063
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS (-4.0%)...................    (2,947)
                                                                  --------
NET ASSETS (100%)...............................................  $ 73,116
                                                                  --------
                                                                  --------
- ---------------
+     --   Non-income producing securities
++    --   Non-income producing securities -- in
           default
+++   --   Variable or floating rate securities --
           rate disclosed is as of December 31,
           1995
#     --   144A Security -- certain conditions for
           public sale may exist
##    --   9.375% of 11.35% represents amount paid
           in cash. The remainder is Payment in
           Kind.
/\    --   4.00% of 8.00% represents amount paid in
           cash. Cash payment rate is low for an
           initial period and then increases in
           increments to maturity. The remainder is
           Payment in Kind.
~     --   Participation interests were acquired
           through the financial institutions
           indicated parenthetically; all other
           loan agreement are assignments.
DCB   --   Debt Convertible Bond
IAB   --   Interest Arrears Bond
PIK   --   Payment-in-Kind. Income may be received
           in additional securities or cash at the
           discretion of the issuer.
MXP   --   Mexican Pesos
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         SUMMARY OF FIXED INCOME SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     PERCENT
                                           VALUE      OF NET
INDUSTRY                                   (000)      ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------  --------   --------
<S>                                       <C>        <C>
Foreign Government Bonds................  $ 18,357        25.1%
Loan Agreements.........................     9,897        13.5
Consumer Goods..........................     9,344        12.8
Energy..................................     9,047        12.3
Materials...............................     7,771        10.6
Finance.................................     7,217         9.9
Services................................     7,017         9.6
Capital Equipment.......................     2,175         3.0
                                          --------   --------
                                          $ 70,825        96.8%
                                          --------   --------
                                          --------   --------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  29
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>         <C>
Argentina        9.8%
Brazil          51.0%
Colombia         2.5%
Mexico          30.8%
Venezuela        2.7%
Other            3.2%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                       VALUE
SECURITY                                    COUNTRY    (000)
- ----------------------------------------  -----------  ------
<S>                                       <C>          <C>
Telebras (Preferred)                        Brazil     $1,126
Eletrobras                                  Brazil        831
Telebras (Preferred) ADR                    Brazil        802
Brahma (Preferred)                          Brazil        780
Telefonos de Mexico 'L' ADR                 Mexico        674
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE SECTORS
                                    PERCENT
                                       OF
                          VALUE       NET
INDUSTRY                  (000)      ASSETS
- ---------------------    -------    --------
<S>                      <C>        <C>
Services                 $ 3,644       23.5%
Finance                    2,961       19.0
Consumer Goods             2,733       17.6
Energy                     2,675       17.2
Materials                  1,521        9.8
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         TOTAL RETURNS**
                          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    AVERAGE ANNUAL
                                   YTD                     ONE YEAR                 SINCE INCEPTION
                          ---------------------     -----------------------     -----------------------
                            WITH       WITHOUT        WITH         WITHOUT        WITH         WITHOUT
                           SALES        SALES         SALES         SALES         SALES         SALES
                          CHARGE*       CHARGE       CHARGE*       CHARGE        CHARGE*       CHARGE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares              -1.01%        3.93%       -24.21%       -20.43%       -16.73%       -13.96%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+ Shares             -7.58%       -2.71%        N/A           N/A           N/A           N/A
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares               2.45%        3.45%       -21.97%       -21.19%       -14.80%       -14.80%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSCI Latin America
Global Index                N/A          -0.05%        N/A          -13.53%        N/A          -10.26%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The MCSI Latin America Global Index is a broad-based market cap weighted
composite index covering at least 60% of markets in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela (assumes dividends are reinvested).
 
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The investment objective  of the  Latin American  Fund is  to
provide long-term capital appreciation by investing in common
stocks of Latin American issuers.
 
For  the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the Fund
had a total return exclusive of sales charge of 3.93% for the
Class A shares, -2.71% for the  Class B shares and 3.45%  for
the  Class C shares, and a  total return with sales charge of
- -1.01% for the Class A shares, -7.58% for the Class B  shares
and  2.45% for  the Class  C shares,  as compared  to a total
return of -0.05% for the Morgan Stanley Capital International
("MSCI") Latin  America Global  Index (the  "Index") for  the
same period. For the one year period ended December 31, 1995,
the  Fund had  a total  return exclusive  of sales  charge of
- -20.43% for the Class  A shares and -21.19%  for the Class  C
shares,  and a total return with  sales charge of -24.21% for
Class A shares and -21.97% for the Class C shares as compared
with -13.53%  for the  Index  for the  same period.  For  the
period  from inception on  July 6, 1994  through December 31,
1995, the average annual total return for the Fund  exclusive
of  sales  charge  was -13.96%  for  the Class  A  shares and
- -14.80% for the Class  C shares and -16.73%  for the Class  A
shares with sales charge as compared to -10.26% for the Index
for the same period. Class B shares held prior to May 1, 1995
were  renamed  Class C  shares. The  Fund began  offering the
current class B shares on August 1, 1995.
 
Latin American markets continued their mid-year rally in  the
3rd  quarter  of  1995  only to  fall  back  in  October. The
negative performance  of  the  Latin  markets  in  the  final
quarter was attributable primarily to peso weakness in Mexico
and  political infighting that stalled reforms in Brazil. The
markets were also subject to tax-loss selling. By the end  of
November,  however,  the markets  stabilized and  commenced a
rally driven by short-covering and bottom fishing in view  of
the region's improving fundamentals.
 
The Fund outperformed for the second half of 1995 as a result
of  its  underweighting of  Chile. While  1995 overall  was a
difficult year, the  Fund's strategy  is to  invest in  Latin
American  equities based  on secular driving  forces which we
believe will  produce  absolute and  relative  outperformance
over  the medium  term. To  this end,  we believe  that going
forward, Brazil  and Mexico  will rebound  more  dramatically
than the more defensive markets such as Chile.
THE COUNTRY SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE AS
MEASURED BY THE MSCI LATIN AMERICA GLOBAL INDEX AND ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL
PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE FUND'S FUTURE
PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE SO THAT AN
INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL
COST. PLEASE SEE THE PROSPECTUS FOR A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN RISK CONSIDERATIONS
ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNATIONAL INVESTING.
 
    30
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   Over  the second half, the MSCI Index for Brazil increased 1%
                   in U.S. dollars resulting in a net decrease of 21% for  1995.
                   The  government was successful in breaking the constitutional
                   monopolies in the oil  and telecom sectors. Year-end  foreign
                   reserves  reached  a  record level  of  U.S.$50  billion. The
                   government engineered a cooling  of the economy, slowing  GDP
                   growth  from 10.4% in the first  quarter to 4.5% for the full
                   year. 1995 saw a spectacular reduction in the inflation  rate
                   to 22% for the year from 900% in 1994. All the while, Cardoso
                   maintained approval ratings of over 50%.
 
                   Nevertheless,  the negative sentiment  from the Mexico crisis
                   and disappointment in the pace of reform led to a decline  in
                   the   Brazilian   market   for   the   year.   The   market's
                   underperformance has been driven by the tight monetary policy
                   necessary to control inflation. Real interest rates well over
                   20% slowed down the economy and kept financial assets out  of
                   the  equity  market.  In  the final  quarter  of  the  year a
                   political  scandal  spooked  investors  regarding   Cardoso's
                   ability to maintain the momentum for reform.
 
                   The  key  task in  1996 will  be  the implementation  of tax,
                   social  security  and  administrative  changes  necessary  to
                   reduce  the growing fiscal  imbalance. Government expenses on
                   personnel are too high. We believe that with Cardoso's strong
                   approval   ratings,   the   pro-reform   forces   will   make
                   significant,  albeit  not  steady  progress  on  these issues
                   throughout 1996. With the fall in inflation and the desire to
                   reactivate the  economy,  monetary  authorities  will  likely
                   guide  short-term  interest  rates  markedly  lower  over the
                   course of the year, and we are expecting the economy to  pick
                   up  noticeably in the second  half of 1996. Overall, economic
                   growth should  be robust,  led  by consumption  and  domestic
                   credit  expansion and, subsequently,  investment spending. We
                   are particularly excited by a) the telecommunications sector,
                   which should  demonstrate explosive  earnings growth  and  is
                   still quite inexpensively valued, b) the beer company Brahma,
                   which  is implementing a huge capacity expansion to keep pace
                   with booming demand growth, and c) the banking sector,  which
                   should   benefit  by   the  decline  in   interest  rates  as
                   provisioning levels  decline  and loan  volumes  expand,  and
                   which trades at the most attractive valuation levels in Latin
                   America. Thus, the Fund will continue to overweight Brazilian
                   equities  into 1996 with an  emphasis on telecom, banking and
                   beverage stocks.
 
                   The Mexican stock market increased 3% in U.S. dollars for the
                   second half of 1995, resulting in  a decrease of 23% for  the
                   year.  The  year's  performance  was  driven  by  an economic
                   contraction necessary to stabilize the economy after Mexico's
                   poorly implemented  devaluation  at  the  end  of  1994.  The
                   Zedillo administration's stabilization program included tight
                   monetary  and fiscal policy that led to a deep recession over
                   the first three quarters of 1995, but managed to prevent  the
                   outbreak of uncontrolled inflation that had followed previous
                   devaluations.   The   result   was   a   steep   increase  in
                   unemployment, a plunge in domestic demand and,  consequently,
                   a financial system crisis.
 
                   The  shock  therapy,  while painful,  has  been  effective in
                   stabilizing the economy in  the short-term and  restructuring
                   it  for a higher level  of sustainable growth. Mexico's trade
                   accounts have turned from  U.S.$18.5 billion deficit in  1994
                   to  an  estimated  U.S.$7.3  billion  surplus  for  1995. The
                   current account is  likely to  be slightly  positive for  the
                   year  versus  a  negative U.S.$28  billion  in  1994. Foreign
                   exchange reserves,  which  had  reached  a  low  of  U.S.$3.5
                   billion  in January, grew to  an estimated U.S.$16 billion by
                   year-end, mostly  as a  result of  the U.S.  and IMF  support
                   programs.
 
                   Weak  fourth quarter performance was  the result of increased
                   currency volatility. The  peso's weakness  resulted from  the
                   circular  interplay  of  technical  and  fundamental  factors
                   arising from Mexico's  balance sheet. Weak  peso demand  from
                   investors  led to a weakening  outlook for recovery, which in
                   turn further reduced  peso demand which  further reduced  the
                   outlook  for  recovery.  The  vicious  circle  was  broken by
                   central  bank  intervention  in  the  currency  markets   and
                   continued support by the government for the banking system.
 
                   For 1996, the Fund is positioned to take advantage of resumed
                   economic  growth,  decreasing interest  rates and  a stronger
                   peso in  real  terms.  Sentiment has  begun  to  improve  and
                   valuations  are not demanding for  an economy emerging from a
                   depression.  While  monetary  policy  is  likely  to   remain
 
                                                                          31
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   tight  to control inflation, it will be less restrictive than
                   in  1995.  Further,  Mexico's   debt  profile  has   improved
                   significantly as debt amortizations for 1996 are projected at
                   US$10  billion versus  U.S.$41 billion  in 1995.  The banking
                   system rescue package is estimated  to cost between 5-10%  of
                   GDP  and,  thus, will  create a  drag  on growth  for several
                   years, yet the system  is likely to  resume lending in  1996.
                   Fears  of a  generalized financial  collapse have  faded. The
                   Fund is overweight  bank, cement  and construction  companies
                   and  underweight stocks  dependent on  consumer spending. One
                   exception is Femsa, a very attractively valued beer company.
 
                   The MSCI Index  for Argentina increased  17% in U.S.  dollars
                   for  the  second  half and  is  up 9%  for  1995. Argentina's
                   performance is the result  of its demonstrated commitment  to
                   its  currency convertibility  system. In  response to capital
                   outflows  as  a  consequence  of  the  Mexican  crises,   the
                   government  bravely chose fiscal austerity. Inflation for the
                   year came in at 1.8%, a lifetime low for most Argentines. The
                   currency held firm against the  dollar. Due to the return  of
                   confidence  and capital flows,  economic growth should resume
                   in 1996 after  falling 3%  in 1995. While  bullish about  the
                   macrofundamentals, the Fund is neutral on the market in light
                   of  uninspiring  earnings  growth  forecasts  for  the listed
                   companies.
 
                   The Chilean market decreased 17%  in the second half of  1995
                   for   a  twelve  month   decline  of  6%.   Given  its  stong
                   macrofundamentals and  capital restrictions,  the market  was
                   initially  insulated  from  the  general  sell-off  in  Latin
                   America. In the  third quarter, however,  the market fell  as
                   the  currency weakened and the  potential arose for increased
                   competition in  the  electricity  sector. In  light  of  high
                   relative  valuations and  an unpromising  outlook on interest
                   rates, currency and earnings  growth, the Fund will  continue
                   its underweighting of the market.
"...THE FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK REMAINS POSITIVE FOR LATIN AMERICAN COMPANIES..."
 
                   Peru  increased 10% for the second  half of 1995 bringing its
                   net full  year  appreciation  to  22%.  At  this  point,  the
                   equities seem fully valued and prospective returns are likely
                   to  be weak, especially if  commodity prices continue to roll
                   over.
 
                   Colombia declined 21%  for the second  half of 1995  bringing
                   its  net  performance  to a  decrease  of 28%  for  1995. The
                   market's  performance  was  attributable  to  a  presidential
                   election  scandal  involving illegal  campaign contributions.
                   While Colombian equities are not expensive, the central  bank
                   is likely to maintain a restrictive monetary policy to combat
                   stubborn inflation.
 
                   Venezuela decreased 17% in the fourth quarter of 1995 leaving
                   the  market  down  29%  for the  year.  Faced  with dwindling
                   foreign  exchange   reserves  and   mounting  debt   arrears,
                   Venezuela   devalued   its  currency   in  response   to  IMF
                   preconditions for financial  assistance. While the  country's
                   role  as a major oil supplier provides long-term support, the
                   country is currently stagnating under a huge fiscal  deficit.
                   The   equity  market  also  suffers  from  continued  foreign
                   exchange restrictions.
 
                   The performance of Latin American equity markets in 1995  was
                   driven  by the fallout from the Mexican currency crisis. This
                   crisis presented a clear challenge and raised the question of
                   whether Latin  America  would continue,  unlike  in  previous
                   crises,   along   the   path   of   political   and  economic
                   modernization. The  answer was  a  clear "Yes",  as  orthodox
                   economic policies prevailed in all countries, save Venezuela,
                   in  managing the crisis. 1995 represented an extreme cyclical
                   test of  the  Latin  America story.  The  long-term,  secular
                   trends  driving  equity appreciation  and earnings  growth of
                   Latin American  companies remain  intact: 1)  sound  economic
                   policies  continue to enhance competitiveness, improve living
                   standards and increase political stability throughout most of
                   the region; 2)  accelerating global trade  continues to  open
                   new  markets  to  Latin American  producers;  3) professional
                   management  of  economic  resources  by  the  private  sector
                   continues  to  increase the  efficiency  of companies  in the
                   region. In short,  the fundamental  outlook remains  positive
                   for  Latin  American companies  to  continue to  achieve high
                   earnings growth and, thus,  for the stock markets'  prospects
                   for  continuing  to  deliver  superior,  long-term investment
                   performance.
 
    32
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     VALUE
      SHARES                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
COMMON STOCKS (58.1%)
  ARGENTINA (9.8%)
       3,610  Banco de Galicia y Buenos Aires ADR ..............  $     75
     133,720  Banco del Suquia S.A. 'B' ........................       180
       3,174  Banco Frances del Rio de la Plata ADR ............        85
      14,900  Capex S.A. 'A' ...................................       109
     #11,405  Capex S.A. ADR ...................................       167
       8,800  Quilmes Industrial ...............................       137
       3,650  Telecom Argentina Stet-France Telecom S.A. ADR ...       174
      22,157  Telefonica de Argentina S.A. ADR .................       604
                                                                  --------
                                                                     1,531
                                                                  --------
  BRAZIL (17.0%)
  18,213,000  Acesita ..........................................        86
      #5,693  Cia Energetica de Minas GDR ......................       126
       3,119  Cia Energetica de Minas Gerais ADR ...............        69
    +#13,190  Companhia Brasileira ADR .........................       132
   3,069,000  Eletrobras .......................................       831
       4,460  Eletrobras ADR ...................................        61
       2,000  Eletrobras ADR 'B' ...............................        27
     136,000  Itausa Investimentos S.A. ........................        74
     475,000  Light ............................................       152
     +#3,216  Lojas Arapua S.A. ADR ............................        27
  +6,962,000  Refripar .........................................        12
      #5,780  Rhodia-Ster S.A. GDR .............................        52
   3,283,000  Telebras .........................................       127
      16,930  Telebras ADR .....................................       802
     431,000  Telesp ...........................................        62
                                                                  --------
                                                                     2,640
                                                                  --------
  COLOMBIA (0.5%)
     #14,670  Banco de Colombia GDR ............................        77
                                                                  --------
  MEXICO (30.8%)
      12,490  ALFA S.A. de C.V. ................................       161
      79,850  Apasco S.A. de C.V. ..............................       328
     157,388  Banacci 'L' ......................................       234
     180,384  Cemex 'CPO' ......................................       595
      +7,880  Cemex S.A. de C.V. ADR ...........................        52
    +135,000  Cifra S.A. 'B' ...................................       141
      23,400  Empresas ICA Sociedad Controladora S.A. de
                C.V. ...........................................       240
     297,850  FEMSA 'B' ........................................       671
     +#6,635  Grupo Carso S.A. ADR .............................        71
     122,770  Grupo Financiero Banamex 'B' .....................       206
    +423,000  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'B' ....................       118
      +5,814  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'L' ....................         2
     #93,265  Grupo Financiero Bancomer ADS ....................       542
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                     VALUE
      SHARES                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
      14,738  Grupo Televisa S.A. GDR ..........................  $    332
      10,470  Kimberly-Clark de Mexico S.A. 'A' ................       158
       8,075  Pan American Beverages, Inc. 'A' .................       258
      21,155  Telefonos de Mexico 'L' ADR ......................       674
                                                                  --------
                                                                     4,783
                                                                  --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $9,103)...............................     9,031
                                                                  --------
PREFERRED STOCKS (34.0%)
  BRAZIL (NON-VOTING STOCKS) (34.0%)
  64,891,455  Banco Bradesco ...................................       567
 +19,517,000  Banco do Brasil ..................................       221
 *+8,115,000  Banco Nacional ...................................        17
   1,894,819  Brahma ...........................................       780
    +116,500  Centrais Eletricas de Santa Catarina 'B' .........        56
   3,249,000  Cia Energetica de Minas Gerais ...................        72
     +65,400  Cia Energetica de Sao Paulo ......................         2
   7,235,000  Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz ......................       194
   3,285,000  Continental 2001 .................................        40
     462,000  Coteminas ........................................       154
    +161,293  Dixie Toga S.A. ..................................       141
   2,055,000  Eletrobras 'B' ...................................       556
   1,153,100  Itaubanco ........................................       322
   7,466,000  Lojas Renner .....................................       200
      56,000  Multibras S.A. ...................................        41
   3,288,000  Petrobras ........................................       281
  36,326,000  Refripar .........................................        73
  23,393,383  Telebras .........................................     1,126
     508,000  Telesp ...........................................        75
   1,517,000  Vale do Rio Doce .................................       250
     302,000  WEG S.A. .........................................       124
                                                                  --------
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $5,469)............................     5,292
                                                                  --------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      NO. OF
      RIGHTS
- ------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
RIGHTS (0.0%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
 *+1,903,283  Banco Bradesco, expiring 1/31/96 (COST $0)........         3
                                                                  --------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT
       (000)
- ------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURE (2.0%)
  COLOMBIA (2.0%)
  $     #410  Banco de Colombia 5.20%, 2/1/99 (COST $395) ......       312
                                                                  --------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  33
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                          PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
FOREIGN GOVERNMENT BOND (2.7%)
  VENEZUELA (2.7%)
 $     ++750  Republic of Venezuela 6.563%, 12/18/07 (COST
                $398)...........................................  $    413
                                                                  --------
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (96.8%) (COST $15,365).................    15,051
                                                                  --------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT (2.3%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (2.3%)
    UNITED STATES
         366  The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
                12/29/95 due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at $366,
                collateralized by $340 U.S. Treasury Notes
                7.50%, due 11/15/01, valued at $377 (COST
                $366)...........................................       366
                                                                  --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES (COST $15,731)..................    15,417
                                                                  --------
 
<CAPTION>
        FACE
      AMOUNT                                                         VALUE
       (000)                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>                                                 <C>
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.3%)
   ARP    16  Argentine Peso ...................................  $     16
   BRC    13  Brazilian Real ...................................        13
   MXP    91  Mexican Pesos ....................................        12
  PSS      4  Peruvian Sol .....................................         2
                                                                  --------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $43)...............................        43
                                                                  --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (99.4%) (COST $15,774)........................    15,460
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (0.6%)....................        95
                                                                  --------
NET ASSETS (100%)...............................................  $ 15,555
                                                                  --------
                                                                  --------
- ---------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>  <C><C>
+     -- Non-income producing securities
++    -- Variable or floating rate securities -- rate
        disclosed is as of December 31, 1995.
*     -- Fair valued securities -- See Note A-1
#     -- 144A Security -- certain conditions for public
        sale may exist.
ADR   -- American Depositary Receipt
ADS   -- American Depositary Shares
GDR   -- Global Depositary Receipt
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       VALUE     PERCENTAGE OF
INDUSTRY                                                               (000)      NET ASSETS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------  ---------------
<S>                                                                  <C>        <C>
Services...........................................................  $   3,644          23.5%
Finance............................................................      2,961          19.0
Consumer Goods.....................................................      2,733          17.6
Energy.............................................................      2,675          17.2
Materials..........................................................      1,521           9.8
Multi-Industry.....................................................        505           3.2
Foreign Government Bond............................................        413           2.7
Broadcasting & Publishing..........................................        332           2.1
Capital Equipment..................................................        267           1.7
                                                                     ---------         ---
                                                                     $  15,051          96.8%
                                                                     ---------         ---
                                                                     ---------         ---
</TABLE>
 
34  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                              INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS (AT DECEMBER 31, 1995)
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<S>            <C>
Argentina           0.8%
Brazil             13.5%
China               0.9%
Colombia            0.2%
Greece              2.6%
Hong Kong           9.5%
India               6.9%
Indonesia           4.4%
Israel              3.0%
Korea               2.2%
Mexico              7.5%
Morocco             0.3%
Pakistan            2.4%
Philippines         4.7%
Poland              1.3%
Portugal            0.4%
Russia              6.8%
South Africa        2.4%
Taiwan              3.3%
Thailand            3.6%
Turkey              5.5%
Other              17.8%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE HOLDINGS
                                                        VALUE
SECURITY                                    COUNTRY     (000)
- ----------------------------------------  ------------  ------
<S>                                       <C>           <C>
Bank for Foreign Economic Affairs            Russia     $2,218
Telebras ADR                                 Brazil      1,358
Cia Cervejaria Brahma (Preferred)            Brazil      1,045
New World Development Co. Ltd.             Hong Kong       998
Morgan Stanley India Investment Fund,
 Inc.                                        India         992
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOP FIVE SECTORS
                                    PERCENT
                                       OF
                          VALUE       NET
INDUSTRY                  (000)      ASSETS
- ---------------------    -------    --------
<S>                      <C>        <C>
Finance                  $12,246       19.5%
Consumer Goods             9,928       15.9
Services                   6,689       10.7
Capital Equipment          5,671        9.1
Energy                     5,296        8.5
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 TOTAL RETURNS**
                        ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         AVERAGE ANNUAL
                               YTD                  ONE YEAR             SINCE INCEPTION
                        ------------------     -------------------     -------------------
                         WITH       WITHOUT     WITH       WITHOUT      WITH       WITHOUT
                         SALES      SALES       SALES       SALES       SALES       SALES
                        CHARGE*     CHARGE     CHARGE*     CHARGE      CHARGE*     CHARGE
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                     <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------
Class A
Shares                  -7.85%      -3.26%     -11.52%     -7.11%      -12.87%     -9.97%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B+
Shares                  -11.61%     -6.96%       N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C
Shares                  -4.57%      -3.60%     -8.73%      -7.80%      -10.64%     -10.64%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IFC Global
Total Return
Composite Index           N/A       -4.26%       N/A       -12.32%       N/A        -3.71%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * The  returns above  with sales  charge are  calculated using  the 4.75% sales
   charge for Class A shares, the 5% contingent deferred sales charge for  Class
   B shares, and the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for Class C shares.
** Total  returns  for  the  Fund reflect  expenses  waived  and  reimbursed, if
   applicable, by the  Adviser. Without such  waivers and reimbursements,  total
   returns would be lower.
 + Class  B shares were renamed  Class C shares on May  1, 1995. Current Class B
   shares have been offered since August 1, 1995.
The IFC Global Total Return Composite Index is an unmanaged index of common
stocks and includes developing countries in Latin America, East and South Asia,
Europe, the Middle East and Africa (assuming dividends are reinvested).
 
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT PREDICTIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
 
The investment objective of the  Emerging Markets Fund is  to
provide long-term capital appreciation by investing in common
stocks of emerging country issuers.
 
For  the six month  period ended December  31, 1995, the Fund
had a total return  exclusive of sales  charge of -3.26%  for
the  Class A shares, -6.96% for the Class B shares and -3.60%
for the Class C shares, and a total return with sales  charge
of  -7.85% for  the Class A  shares, -11.61% for  the Class B
shares, and -4.57% for the Class  C shares, as compared to  a
total  return  of  -4.26%  for the  IFC  Global  Total Return
Composite Index for  the same period  (the "Index"). For  the
one year period ended December 31, 1995, the Fund had a total
return  exclusive of sales  charge of -7.11%  for the Class A
shares and -7.80% for the Class C shares, and a total  return
with  sales charge of  -11.52% for Class  A shares and -8.73%
for the Class C shares as compared with -12.32% for the Index
for the same period. For the period from inception on July 6,
1994 through  December 31,  1995,  the average  annual  total
return  for the Fund exclusive of sales charge was -9.97% for
the Class A  shares and -10.64%  for the Class  C shares  and
- -12.87%  for the Class A shares with sales charge as compared
to -3.71% for the Index for  the same period. Class B  shares
held  prior to May  1, 1995 were renamed  Class C shares. The
Fund began offering the current  Class B shares on August  1,
1995.
 
Only  eight emerging markets included in the EMF Index showed
positive returns  in  dollar  terms in  1995:  Peru  (22.1%),
Israel   (21.8%),  South  Africa   (17.3%),  Greece  (10.2%),
Argentina  (8.7%),  Indonesia   (7.5%),  Jordan  (5.4%)   and
Malaysia (4.0%).
 
The  Fund's performance relative to  the Index was negatively
impacted in part to an  overweight position in Latin  America
during  the first quarter of 1995  and to a large underweight
position in South Africa. Also dampening relative performance
was the Fund's small exposure to Malaysia -- 16.7% of the EMF
Index -- which  had an  above average return  in 1995.  Other
negatives  were Brazil,  India and Turkey  -- all over-weight
positions which produced disappointing performance. In dollar
terms Brazil was off 21.3%, India off 31.9%, and Turkey  fell
5.9%.  On a  positive note,  however, the  Hong Kong exposure
added significantly  to performance  with  a rise  of  18.2%.
Russian, Israel and Greece were also positive contributors.
THE COUNTRY SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE RESULTS PROVIDED IN THIS OVERVIEW ARE AS
MEASURED BY THE IFC GLOBAL TOTAL RETURN REGIONAL OR COUNTRY INDICES AND ARE FOR
INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A GUARANTEE OF THE
FUND'S FUTURE PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENT RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE
SO THAT AN INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN
THEIR ORIGINAL COST. PLEASE SEE THE PROSPECTUS FOR A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN RISK
CONSIDERATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNATIONAL INVESTING.
 
                                                                          35
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             INVESTMENT OVERVIEW (CONT.)
 
                   Negative  sentiment was  fueled by worries  about the Mexican
                   peso devaluation, interest rates, politics and an anticipated
                   major slowdown of  international capital  inflows. While  the
                   devaluation  took center  stage in  Latin America,  the Asian
                   markets were  influenced  by U.S.  interest  rates.  Although
                   interest rates fell marginally in 1995, many anticipated that
                   the U.S. Federal Reserve would increase rates, as the economy
                   was  at or near the bottom of the economic cycle. This tended
                   to keep money at home in the U.S. In addition, there was some
                   speculation that the reversal  of the strong yen\weak  dollar
                   would disadvantage countries such as Korea whose exports have
                   taken  market share from the  Japanese. However, Korean labor
                   costs are still  only 1/4th  of Japan's and  we believe  that
                   this  will not have a  marked impact on Korean profitability.
                   Also, in Thailand and Malaysia monetary conditions had to  be
                   tightened   to  cool   these  fast   growing  economies  with
                   problematic  trade  deficits.   Looking  through  into   1996
                   however,  some  policy  reversal  may  be  possible  in  both
                   countries assuming U.S. interest  rate rises are as  moderate
                   as we anticipate.
 
                   Politics  across the  emerging markets gave  rise to investor
                   concern in  1995.  In  Korea, avarice  charges  were  leveled
                   against  former  President  Roh  Tae  Woo.  Meanwhile,  China
                   applied pressure to  Taiwan by testing  missiles offshore  in
                   response  to  the U.S.  visit of  President Lee  and Taiwan's
                   continued  move  toward   independence.  Turkey's   coalition
                   government  of Tansu Ciller collapsed and the country remains
                   in a political no-man's land  after the failure of any  party
                   to  win an absolute majority  in the December elections. This
                   is not  as  bad as  it  seems--the equity  market  has  since
                   recovered,  recognizing the value in  stocks and the improved
                   economic stability from two  years ago. The Russian  election
                   in December produced no surprises but underlined the need for
                   Boris  Yeltsin (assuming he stands  again in the Presidential
                   elections in  June)  to  canvas the  communist  vote  by  de-
                   emphasizing  reform  in the  next few  months. On  the bright
                   side, Russia has undergone an economic transformation towards
                   positive economic  growth  in  1996  coupled  with  continued
                   progress on inflation, a positive current account balance and
                   more progress on the budget deficit.
"...DIRECT CAPITAL INVESTMENT HAS CONTINUED IN THE EMERGING MARKETS."
 
                   India  has  experienced economic  growth  in its  fiscal year
                   ending March 31, 1996 of 6.0%, yet the stock market  suffered
                   from   a  combination  of  local  selling  and  international
                   avoidance. Politics influenced  overseas investors away  from
                   the  market in anticipation of a  change in government in the
                   April 1996  elections. The  slow pace  of reform  of  India's
                   laborious  settlement system  and the  cancellation (recently
                   reinstated) of  the  Enron  power  contract  exacerbated  the
                   situation.  In  the meantime,  the  30% plus  earnings growth
                   makes India  one  of the  cheapest  emerging markets  in  the
                   world. We remain overweight.
 
                   Politics in Brazil have been the most settled for many years.
                   Despite  the  major  success  of the  Real  Plan  in bringing
                   inflation down from above 2,000%  per annum to around 22%  by
                   the  end of  1995 and less  than 20% predicted  for 1996, the
                   stock market suffered  from the spill  over from the  Mexican
                   crisis  and  a  degree  of  impatience  at  the  pace  of the
                   restructuring  of  local   and  state  government   spending.
                   However,  with a strong currency,  tight monetary policy, and
                   low fiscal and  current account deficits,  Brazil is  setting
                   itself  up  as a  potential  economic success  story  for the
                   remainder of the decade.
 
                   Despite doom and gloom  forecasts, direct capital  investment
                   has  continued in the emerging  markets. Direct investment by
                   multinationals is  the  positive,  long  term  investment  in
                   infrastructure,  factories  etc. which  will  generate future
                   economic growth. Not surprisingly, in view of the strong U.S.
                   market and  the aftermath  of  the Mexico  crisis,  portfolio
                   flows  were  much  lower  in  1995.  Portfolio  flows  to the
                   emerging markets showed  signs of recovery  in late 1995  and
                   continue  in 1996 to date. Compelling valuations will attract
                   capital and the outlook is excellent.
 
                   The emerging markets endured a tough 1995, both  economically
                   and  politically. Yet,  virtually all  emerging nations moved
                   forward with  needed  reforms, seeking  to  promote  economic
                   growth  and  efficiency. The  basic  market-oriented economic
                   model (with  variations) not  only  endures in  the  emerging
                   markets,  it continues  to be reinforced  as today's economic
                   success story becomes a model for others. It is important not
                   to forget that despite  politics and economic  uncertainties,
                   at  the end  of the  day we  are investing  in companies with
                   strong earnings  prospects.  The  markets  should  eventually
                   catch  up  to economic  reality. It  is undoubtedly  a roller
                   coaster ride but the returns will repay persistent  investors
                   who have a long-term horizon.
 
    36
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                            PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
     SHARES                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
COMMON STOCKS (68.7%)
  ARGENTINA (0.8%)
      1,500  Capex S.A. 'A'....................................  $    11
     #6,575  Capex S.A. ADR....................................       96
     23,352  Quilmes Industrial................................      364
                                                                 -------
                                                                     471
                                                                 -------
  BRAZIL (4.8%)
  9,634,000  Acesita...........................................       46
       #747  Cia Energetica de Minas Gerais ADR................       17
   #++4,302  Cia Energetica de Minas Gerais GDR................       95
  2,275,000  Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz.......................      110
     #8,865  Companhia Brasileira ADR..........................       89
  2,874,000  Eletrobras........................................      778
    380,000  Light.............................................      122
    #11,642  Rhodia-Ster S.A. ADS..............................      105
  5,260,000  Telebras..........................................      203
     28,675  Telebras ADR......................................    1,358
    740,000  Telesp............................................      107
                                                                 -------
                                                                   3,030
                                                                 -------
  CHINA (0.9%)
    454,000  Harbin Power Equipment Co.........................       67
     +4,300  Jilin Chemical Industrial Co. ADR.................       93
     50,000  Maanshan Iron & Steel Co. Ltd.....................        7
    170,000  Shanghai Diesel Engine Co. Ltd. 'B'...............       63
     14,200  Shanghai Yaohua Pilkington Glass 'B'..............       12
    245,200  Shenzhen Chiwan Wharf Holdings 'B'................       92
    870,000  Yizheng Chemical Fibre Co. 'H'....................      196
     89,000  Zhuhai Pharmaceutical 'B'.........................       29
                                                                 -------
                                                                     559
                                                                 -------
  GREECE (2.6%)
     16,500  Aegek.............................................      142
      6,000  Alpha Credit Bank.................................      347
     24,400  Delta Dairy S.A...................................      458
     10,850  Ergo Bank S.A.....................................      432
      8,500  Hellenic Bottling Co. S.A.........................      278
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,657
                                                                 -------
  HONG KONG (9.5%)
    698,000  Charoen Pokphand Co...............................      280
     96,000  Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd..........................      585
    189,000  Citic Pacific Ltd.................................      647
    270,000  Florens Group Ltd.................................      176
    684,000  Guangdong Investments Ltd.........................      411
     48,100  Hang Seng Bank Ltd................................      431
    162,000  Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd..................      289
    682,000  Hopewell Holdings Ltd.............................      392
    123,000  Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.............................      749
    229,000  New World Development Co. Ltd.....................      998
   +234,000  Shenzhen North Jianshe Motorcycle Co. Ltd.........       97
     33,000  Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd.......................      270
     37,000  Swire Pacific Ltd. 'A'............................      287
    166,000  Varitronix International Ltd......................      308
    230,000  Zhenhai Refining and Chemical Co..................       43
                                                                 -------
                                                                   5,963
                                                                 -------
  INDIA (6.7%)
     +6,655  Century Textiles & Industries GDR.................      898
   #157,950  E.I.D. Parry GDR..................................      474
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
     SHARES                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
     90,000  Great Eastern Shipping GDR........................  $   776
      #+160  JCT Ltd...........................................        1
      4,320  JCT Ltd. GDR......................................       29
   @108,700  Morgan Stanley India Investment Fund, Inc.........      992
     50,000  Raymond Limited Ltd. GDR..........................      850
     80,000  Tube Investments of India.........................      180
                                                                 -------
                                                                   4,200
                                                                 -------
  INDONESIA (4.4%)
   *100,000  Bank Bali (Foreign)...............................      197
    *51,000  Bank International Indonesia (Foreign)............      169
  *+112,000  Bimantara Citra (Foreign).........................       93
    *55,500  Charoen Pokphand Co. Ltd.(Foreign)................      113
    *22,000  Duta Pertiwi Property (Foreign)...................       22
    *24,000  Hanjaya Mandala Sampoerna (Foreign)...............      250
   *109,500  Indocement Tunggal (Foreign)......................      368
    *67,000  Indosat (Foreign).................................      243
    *79,000  Kalbe Farma (Foreign).............................      268
    *16,000  Kermika Indonesia Association (Foreign)...........        8
    *61,500  Semen Gresik (Foreign)............................      172
    *35,166  Sorini Corp. (Foreign)............................      171
   *+95,000  Telekomunikasi (Foreign)..........................      125
    *89,600  Tempo Scan Pacific (Foreign)......................      243
   *173,000  United Tractors (Foreign).........................      325
                                                                 -------
                                                                   2,767
                                                                 -------
  ISRAEL (3.0%)
      4,000  Elbit Ltd.........................................      213
        680  First International Bank of Israel Ltd. '1'.......       80
      2,000  First International Bank of Israel Ltd. '5'.......      241
     44,327  Israel Land Development Co. Ltd...................      128
      5,100  Koor Industries Ltd...............................      506
     34,432  Osem Investment Ltd...............................      206
      9,000  Super Sol Ltd.....................................      189
      7,000  Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. ADR...........      325
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,888
                                                                 -------
  KOREA (2.2%)
      2,800  Pohang Iron & Steel (Foreign).....................      183
    *+4,220  Samsung Electronics Co. (Foreign).................      767
       *+18  Samsung Electronics Co. (Foreign) 2nd Issue.......        3
    *14,200  Shinhan Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...................      312
      3,000  Yukong Ltd. (Foreign).............................      104
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,369
                                                                 -------
  MEXICO (7.5%)
      9,400  ALFA S.A. de C.V..................................      121
     35,900  Apasco S.A. de C.V................................      147
    229,055  Banacci 'B'.......................................      385
    137,082  Banacci 'L'.......................................      204
    147,662  Cemex 'CPO'.......................................      487
    #34,819  Cemex 'CPO' ADR...................................      230
   +105,500  Cifra S.A. de C.V.................................      107
      5,530  Coca Cola Femsa S.A...............................      102
     22,025  Empresas ICA Sociedad Controladora S.A. de C.V....      226
    295,850  FESMA 'B'.........................................      667
    #+9,300  Grupo Carso S.A. ADR..............................       99
   +158,000  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'B'.....................       44
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  37
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
     SHARES                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
  MEXICO (CONT.)
     +7,925  Grupo Financiero Bancomer 'L'.....................  $     2
   #104,900  Grupo Financiero Bancomer ADR.....................      610
     12,560  Grupo Televisa S.A. GDR...........................      283
    #+7,630  Hylsamex ADR......................................      164
      9,493  Pan American Beverages, Inc. 'A'..................      304
     14,430  Telefonos de Mexico 'L' ADR.......................      460
                                                                 -------
                                                                   4,642
                                                                 -------
  MOROCCO (0.3%)
      2,000  ONA S.A...........................................       77
      2,000  Wafabank..........................................       86
                                                                 -------
                                                                     163
                                                                 -------
  PAKISTAN (2.4%)
    +95,000  Dewan Salman Fibre................................      229
   +157,300  D.G. Khan Cement Ltd..............................      138
    100,000  Fauji Fertilizer Co. Ltd..........................      150
   +165,000  Karachi Electric..................................      128
   +144,750  Nishat Mills Ltd..................................      124
     35,100  Pakistan State Oil Co. Ltd........................      272
     +3,750  Pakistan Telecommunication Co. (Vouchers).........      337
   +162,000  Sui Northern Gas Pipelines........................      141
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,519
                                                                 -------
  PHILIPPINES (4.7%)
    249,225  Ayala Land, Inc. 'B'..............................      304
   +456,900  C&P Homes, Inc....................................      335
   +346,000  DMCI Holdings, Inc................................      124
    965,000  JG Summit Holding 'B'.............................      265
     54,800  Manilla Electric 'B'..............................      447
    840,900  Petron Corp.......................................      433
      6,200  Philippine Long Distance Telephone ADR............      337
 +1,025,100  SM Prime Holdings, Inc............................      293
    113,900  San Miguel Corp. 'B'..............................      389
                                                                 -------
                                                                   2,927
                                                                 -------
  POLAND (1.3%)
     12,500  Bank Rozwoju Eksportu S.A.........................      190
    *15,750  Debica S.A........................................      238
      1,800  E. Wedel S.A......................................       59
     31,300  Electrim..........................................      106
   +748,000  Mostostal-Export..................................       94
      2,100  Zywiec............................................      145
                                                                 -------
                                                                     832
                                                                 -------
  PORTUGAL (0.2%)
      5,000  Banco Totta & Acores..............................       83
      6,000  Filmes Lusomundo..................................       64
                                                                 -------
                                                                     147
                                                                 -------
  RUSSIA (2.6%)
    +72,500  Irkutskenergo.....................................      359
    +22,000  Lukoil Holdings...................................      101
 +1,050,000  Moscow Energy (Mosenergo).........................      278
    +90,000  Rostelecom........................................      421
+14,582,500  United Energy System..............................      444
    +47,500  United Energy System 1st Issue....................        1
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,604
                                                                 -------
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
     SHARES                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
  SOUTH AFRICA (2.4%)
     43,500  Gencor Ltd........................................  $   152
    250,000  ISCOR.............................................      225
    @34,265  Morgan Stanley Africa Investment Fund, Inc........      440
     76,170  Murray & Roberts Holdings Ltd.....................      538
     18,274  SASOL Ltd.........................................      150
                                                                 -------
                                                                   1,505
                                                                 -------
  TAIWAN (3.3%)
    +50,400  Advanced Semiconductor Engineering, Inc...........      122
    355,000  China Steel Corp..................................      284
  *+140,040  Mosel Vitelic Ltd.................................      416
   +109,999  Shinkong Synthetic Fibers.........................       95
   +209,800  Taiwan Semiconductor Co...........................      657
    122,000  United Micro Electronics Corp. Ltd................      306
    +19,000  Walsin Lihwa Electric Wire & Cable Corp. GDR......      190
                                                                 -------
                                                                   2,070
                                                                 -------
  THAILAND (3.6%)
     14,800  Advanced Information Services Co. Ltd.
               (Foreign).......................................      262
     48,600  Bangkok Bank Co. Ltd. (Foreign)...................      590
     75,700  Finance One Co. Ltd. (Foreign)....................      526
     10,300  Shinawatra Computer Co. Ltd. (Foreign)............      254
     59,900  Thai Farmer's Bank Public Co. (Foreign)...........      604
                                                                 -------
                                                                   2,236
                                                                 -------
  TURKEY (5.5%)
    927,660  Aksa Akrilik Kimya Sanayii A.S....................      286
    355,000  Bagfas Bandirma Gubre Fabrikalari A.S.............      109
    755,000  Borusan Birmesik..................................      152
 +1,550,000  Bossa Ticaret ve Sanayii Isletmeleri T.A.S........      111
 +2,000,000  Demirbank Tas.....................................      121
  1,429,500  Ege Biracilik Ve Malt Sanayii.....................      493
    470,000  Ege Seramik Co., Inc..............................      112
    314,000  Erciyas Biracilik Ve Malt Sanayii.................      147
  2,320,000  Eregli Demir Ve Celik Fabrikalari T.A.S...........      190
    485,000  Guney Biraculik Ve Malt Sana......................       71
    258,000  Migros Turk.......................................      197
  7,776,000  Sabah.............................................      153
    627,000  Tat Konserve......................................      396
  2,545,000  Tofas Turk Otomobil Fabrikasi.....................      247
  2,380,000  Trakya Cam Sanayii A.S............................      242
  1,965,000  Turkiye Garanti Bankasi...........................      165
  5,609,400  Yapi Ve Kredi Bankasi.............................      230
                                                                 -------
                                                                   3,422
                                                                 -------
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (COST $44,436).............................   42,971
                                                                 -------
PREFERRED STOCKS (8.9%)
  BRAZIL (NON-VOTING STOCKS) (8.7%)
106,545,746  Banco Bradesco....................................      932
+34,601,000  Banco do Brasil...................................      392
*11,156,000  Banco Nacional....................................       23
  2,540,099  Cia Cervejaria Brahma.............................    1,045
 +4,190,000  Cia Energetica de Minas Gerais....................       93
  1,350,000  Cia Paulista de Forca e Luz.......................       36
  3,298,000  Eletrobras 'B'....................................      892
</TABLE>
 
38  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                                 MORGAN STANLEY
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONT.)
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   VALUE
     SHARES                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
  BRAZIL (CONT.)
  1,968,200  Itaubanco.........................................  $   549
  2,690,000  Petrobras.........................................      230
    200,000  Petrobras Distribuidora...........................        5
 16,828,390  Telebras..........................................      810
  1,754,000  Telesp............................................      258
  1,095,000  Vale do Rio Doce..................................      180
                                                                 -------
                                                                   5,445
                                                                 -------
  GREECE (0.0%)
      3,000  Aegek Ltd. GDR....................................       16
                                                                 -------
  PORTUGAL (0.2%)
     11,780  Filmes Lusomundo..................................      110
                                                                 -------
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (COST $5,778)...........................    5,571
                                                                 -------
<CAPTION>
     NO. OF
     RIGHTS
- -----------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
RIGHTS (0.0%)
  BRAZIL (0.0%)
 +2,566,000  Banco Bradesco, expiring 1/31/96..................       21
                                                                 -------
  PAKISTAN (0.0%)
    +47,190  D.G. Khan Cement Ltd..............................       16
      *+750  Dewan Salman Modaraba.............................       --
     +5,250  Nishat Mills Ltd..................................        4
                                                                 -------
                                                                      20
                                                                 -------
TOTAL RIGHTS (COST $0).........................................       41
                                                                 -------
<CAPTION>
       FACE
     AMOUNT
      (000)
- -----------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (4.6%)
  CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (1.0%)
  COLOMBIA (0.2%)
 $     #170  Banco de Colombia 5.20%, 2/1/99...................      129
                                                                 -------
  INDIA (0.2%)
        120  Tata Iron & Steel Co. 2.25%, 4/1/99...............      107
                                                                 -------
  RUSSIA (0.6)%
       +482  Lukoil Holdings Zero Coupon, 4/6/96...............      386
                                                                 -------
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES (COST $802).......................      622
                                                                 -------
<CAPTION>
       FACE
     AMOUNT                                                        VALUE
      (000)                                                        (000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                                                 <C>
LOAN AGREEMENT (3.6%)
  RUSSIA (3.6%)
$   ++6,500  Bank for Foreign Economic Affairs
               (COST $1,741)...................................  $ 2,218
                                                                 -------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (COST $2,543)....................    2,840
                                                                 -------
TOTAL FOREIGN SECURITIES (82.2%) (COST $52,757)................   51,423
                                                                 -------
SHORT TERM INVESTMENT (16.5%)
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (16.5%)
    UNITED STATES
     10,339  The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 5.35%, dated
               12/29/95, due 1/2/96, to be repurchased at
               $10,345, collateralized by $7,720 U.S. Treasury
               Bonds, 8.875%, due 8/15/17, valued at $10,547
               (COST $10,339)..................................   10,339
                                                                 -------
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES (COST $63,096)..................   61,762
                                                                 -------
FOREIGN CURRENCY (0.1%)
  ARP     2  Argentine Peso....................................        2
  BRC     5  Brazilian Real....................................        5
  MXP     6  Mexican Peso......................................        1
  PKR   949  Pakistani Rupee...................................       28
   TWD  692  Taiwan Dollar.....................................       25
  THB   369  Thailand Baht.....................................       15
                                                                 -------
TOTAL FOREIGN CURRENCY (COST $78)..............................       76
                                                                 -------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (98.8%) (COST $63,174).......................   61,838
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (1.2%)...................      723
                                                                 -------
NET ASSETS (100%)..............................................  $62,561
                                                                 -------
                                                                 -------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C> <C>
- ------------
+       -- Non-income producing securities
++      -- Non-income producing security -- in default
*       -- Fair valued securities (totaling U.S.$4,526 or
          7.2% of net assets at December 31, 1995.) -- See
          Note A-1
@       -- The fund is advised by an affiliate
#       -- 144A Security -- certain conditions for public
          sale may exist
ADR     -- American Depositary Receipt
ADS     -- American Depositary Shares
GDR     -- Global Depositary Receipt
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
            SUMMARY OF FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           VALUE     PERCENTAGE OF
INDUSTRY                                   (000)      NET ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------  --------   -------------
<S>                                       <C>        <C>
Finance.................................  $ 12,246           19.5%
Consumer Goods..........................     9,928           15.9
Services................................     6,689           10.7
Capital Equipment.......................     5,671            9.1
Energy..................................     5,296            8.5
Materials...............................     4,930            7.9
Multi-Industry..........................     4,445            7.1
Loan Agreements.........................     2,218            3.5
                                          --------            ---
                                            51,423           82.2%
                                          --------            ---
                                          --------            ---
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  39
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  GLOBAL        GLOBAL                                 WORLDWIDE
                                  EQUITY         FIXED         ASIAN      AMERICAN          HIGH         LATIN      EMERGING
                              ALLOCATION        INCOME        GROWTH         VALUE        INCOME      AMERICAN       MARKETS
                                    FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND          FUND
                                   (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)         (000)
<S>                        <C>             <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSETS:
  Investments in
   Securities, at Value*
   (Note 1) -- See
   accompanying
   portfolios              $      93,498   $    16,693   $   315,165   $    43,317   $    76,063   $    15,417   $    61,762
  Foreign Currency at
   Value                             130            10         1,060            --            --            43            76
  Cash                                --            78        15,582            --            --             2            --
  Receivable for:
    Investments Sold                  --            --         1,926            86            --            55           114
    Fund Shares Sold               1,364            22         2,733           193         1,038           484         1,051
    Dividends                        171            --           489            90            --            41            86
    Interest                           1           380             5             1         1,484            11            10
    Foreign Withholding
     Tax Reclaim                      46             1            21            --            --            --             2
  Unrealized Gain on
   Forward Foreign
   Currency Contracts              4,140            20            --            --            --            --            --
  Deferred Organization
   Costs                              39            39            27            46            52            51            51
  Receivable from
   Investment Adviser                 --            --            --            --            --            16            --
  Other                                7            --            28             1            --            --             6
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    Total Assets                  99,396        17,243       337,036        43,734        78,637        16,120        63,158
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
LIABILITIES:
  Payable for:
    Investments Purchased              6         1,149           421            --         5,091           402           122
    Fund Shares Redeemed             218            52           511            98           131           100           197
    Dividends Declared                26            --            --            --             4            --             1
    Investment Advisory
     Fees                            136            23           783            65            96            --            58
    Administrative Fees               31             4            85            11            16             7            15
    Custody Fees                      29             5           105             4             7            23            54
    Professional Fees                 12             5            28             6             9             5             9
    Distribution Fees                145            21           451            61            90            17            87
    Shareholder Reporting
     Expenses                         19             3            60             8            15             2            11
    Filing and
     Registration Fees                --            --            17             6            19             9            11
    Bank Overdraft                    --            --            --            --            43            --            15
  Other                               --            --             1            --            --            --            --
  Deferred India Tax                                --            --            --            --            --            17
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    Total Liabilities                622         1,262         2,462           259         5,521           565           597
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS                 $      98,774   $    15,981   $   334,574   $    43,475   $    73,116   $    15,555   $    62,561
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
Net Assets Consist Of:
  Capital Stock at Par     $           7   $         2   $        21   $         3   $         6   $         2   $         6
  Paid in Capital in
   Excess of Par                  86,556        15,782       311,536        39,635        71,340        18,955        67,717
  Undistributed
   (Distribution in
   Excess of) Net
   Investment Income              (3,482)         (207)       (1,343)            9           (69)          (18)         (197)
  Accumulated
   (Distribution in
   Excess of) Net
   Realized Gain (Loss)            1,273          (183)        1,004           315           (55)       (3,069)       (3,611)
  Unrealized Appreciation
   (Depreciation) on
   Investments and
   Foreign Currency
   Translations**                 14,420           587        23,356         3,513         1,894          (315)       (1,354)
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS                 $      98,774   $    15,981   $   334,574   $    43,475   $    73,116   $    15,555   $    62,561
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
CLASS A SHARES:
  Net Assets               $      47,839   $    10,090   $   183,658   $    23,975   $    38,728   $    10,076   $    33,562
  Shares Issued and
   Outstanding ($.001 par
   value) (Authorized
   2,625,000,000)                  3,540           991        11,317         1,774         3,208         1,070         3,285
  Net Asset Value and
   Redemption Price Per
   Share                   $       13.51   $     10.18   $     16.23   $     13.51   $     12.07   $      9.42   $     10.22
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
  Maximum Sales Charge             4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%         4.75%
  Maximum Offering Price
   Per Share (Net Asset
   Value Per Share x
   100/95.25)              $       14.18   $     10.69   $     17.04   $     14.18   $     12.67   $      9.89   $     10.73
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
CLASS B SHARES:
  Net Assets               $       3,056   $       279   $    11,398   $     1,467   $    10,620   $       424   $     2,500
  Shares Issued and
   Outstanding ($.001 par
   value) (Authorized
   2,625,000,000)                    230            28           714           109           881            46           246
  Net Asset Value and
   Offering Price Per
   Share                   $       13.29   $     10.15   $     15.97   $     13.50   $     12.06   $      9.32   $     10.15
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
CLASS C SHARES:
  Net Assets               $      47,879   $     5,612   $   139,518   $    18,033   $    23,768   $     5,055   $    26,499
  Shares Issued and
   Outstanding ($.001 par
   value) (Authorized
   2,625,000,000)                  3,593           553         8,752         1,335         1,970           544         2,612
  Net Asset Value and
   Offering Price Per
   Share                   $       13.32   $     10.14   $     15.94   $     13.50   $     12.06   $      9.30   $     10.15
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
  Investments at Cost,
   Including Foreign
   Currency                $      83,300   $    16,138   $   292,869   $    39,804   $    74,169   $    15,774   $    63,174
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                           -------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
</TABLE>
 
 * Includes    repurchase   agreements   aggregating   $2,340,000,   $1,365,000,
   $12,076,000, $1,517,000,  $4,939,000, $366,000,  and $10,339,000  for  Global
   Equity Allocation Fund, Global Fixed Income Fund, Asian Growth Fund, American
   Value  Fund, Worldwide  High Income Fund,  Latin American  Fund, and Emerging
   Markets Fund, respectively.
** Net of accrual for Indian tax of U.S. $17,000 for Emerging Markets Fund.
 
40  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               GLOBAL       GLOBAL                              WORLDWIDE
                               EQUITY        FIXED        ASIAN     AMERICAN         HIGH        LATIN     EMERGING
                           ALLOCATION       INCOME       GROWTH        VALUE       INCOME     AMERICAN      MARKETS
                                 FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND
                           SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS
                                ENDED        ENDED        ENDED        ENDED        ENDED        ENDED        ENDED
                             DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER
                             31, 1995     31, 1995     31, 1995     31, 1995     31, 1995     31, 1995     31, 1995
                                (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)        (000)
<S>                        <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Dividends                $      919   $       --   $    2,253   $      627   $       --   $      117   $      417
  Interest                         31          550          159           67        3,286           55          169
  Less: Foreign Taxes
   Withheld                       (38)          --         (187)          --           --           (7)         (34)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Total Income                  912          550        2,225          694        3,286          165          552
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
EXPENSES:
  Investment Advisory
   Fees
    Basic Fee                     452           60        1,580          173          197           87          348
    Less: Fees Waived            (171)         (44)          --          (59)         (43)         (87)        (172)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
  Investment Advisory
   Fees -- Net                    281           16        1,580          114          154           --          176
  Administrative Fees             179           30          490           66           82           31           95
  Custodian Fees                   91           10          256           11           17           72          143
  Filing and Registration
   Fees                             3            2            6            2           16            3            6
  Directors' Fees and
   Expenses                         3            1            9            2            2            1           20
  Professional Fees                27            5           57           12           18            8           24
  Shareholder Reports              37            8          143           19           24           10           27
  Distribution Fees
    Class A                        57           13          220           29           39           11           36
    Class B                         5            1           18            4           19            1            6
    Class C                       218           29          682           84           88           24          130
  Amortization of
   Organizational Costs            10           10            6            8            8            7            7
  Blue Sky Fees
    Class A                         5            4            3            5            4            4            3
    Class B                        --           --           --           --           --           --           --
    Class C                         5            2            3            4            3            1            3
  Other                            14            8           95           10           12           16           26
  Expenses Reimbursed by
   Adviser                         --           --           --           --           --          (24)          --
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Net Expenses                  935          139        3,568          370          486          165          702
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
 
Net Investment Income
 (Loss)                           (23)         411       (1,343)         324        2,800           --         (150)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
NET REALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
 ON:
  Investments                   2,456          215        2,372          775          473         (762)      (2,560)
  Foreign Currency
   Transactions                   (33)         126           14           --           --           (1)         (21)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Net Realized Gain
     (Loss)                     2,423          341        2,386          775          473         (763)      (2,581)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
CHANGE IN UNREALIZED
APPRECIATION/DEPRECIATION
 ON:
  Investments                   5,532           53       (4,929)       1,558        1,927        1,132          348
  Foreign Currency
   Translations                 3,830           55            2           --           --           (1)         (20)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
    Change in Unrealized
Appreciation/Depreciation       9,362          108       (4,927)       1,558        1,927        1,131          328
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
Net Realized Gain (Loss)
 and Change in Unrealized
Appreciation/Depreciation      11,785          449       (2,541)       2,333        2,400          368       (2,253)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE)
 IN NET ASSETS RESULTING
 FROM OPERATIONS           $   11,762   $      860   $   (3,884)  $    2,657   $    5,200   $      368   $   (2,403)
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
                           ----------        -----   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  41
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income (Loss)                                                               $         487  $             (23)
  Net Realized Gain                                                                                    137              2,423
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                     3,795              9,362
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets from Operations                                                         4,419             11,762
                                                                                             -------------           --------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                               --             (1,293)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                (69)
  Class C                                                                                               --             (1,107)
  In Excess of Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                             (168)                --
  Class C                                                                                              (82)                --
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                                      (250)            (2,469)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                             (427)            (1,592)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                (96)
  Class C                                                                                             (407)            (1,624)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                                      (834)            (3,312)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                           (1,084)            (5,781)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                            32,645             15,988
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                             996              5,242
  Redeemed                                                                                         (17,247)           (11,483)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              16,394              9,747
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      19,729             15,728
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                   63,317             83,046
                                                                                             -------------           --------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including distributions in excess of net investment income of
 $990 and $3,482, respectively)                                                              $      83,046  $          98,774
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          1,341                484
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           45                196
     Redeemed                                                                                         (794)              (519)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                          592                161
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      16,461  $           6,582
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          546              2,640
     Redeemed                                                                                       (9,697)            (7,090)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $       7,310  $           2,132
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                218
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                 12
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                230
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $           2,923
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                156
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $           3,079
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          1,329                485
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           38                184
     Redeemed                                                                                         (623)              (332)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                          744                337
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      16,184  $           6,483
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          450              2,446
     Redeemed                                                                                       (7,550)            (4,393)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $       9,084  $           4,536
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+ The  Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
42  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                                                      $         869  $             411
  Net Realized Gain (Loss)                                                                            (435)               341
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                     1,228                108
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                               1,662                860
                                                                                             -------------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                             (369)              (605)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                (13)
  Class C                                                                                             (173)              (330)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                             (542)              (948)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                             8,903              2,123
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                             328                505
  Redeemed                                                                                          (9,070)            (3,616)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                      161               (988)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Total Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets                                                            1,281             (1,076)
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                   15,776             17,057
                                                                                             -------------            -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including undistributed (distributions in excess of) net
  investment income of $330 and $(207), respectively)                                        $      17,057  $          15,981
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            682                146
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           27                 37
     Redeemed                                                                                         (712)              (276)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Decrease in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                           (3)               (93)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       6,628  $           1,508
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          258                375
     Redeemed                                                                                       (6,878)            (2,829)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class A Shares Outstanding                                     $           8  $            (946)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                 27
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                  1
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                 28
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $             274
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                  7
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $             281
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            239                 33
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                            7                 12
     Redeemed                                                                                         (228)               (77)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                18                (32)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       2,275  $             341
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           70                123
     Redeemed                                                                                       (2,192)              (787)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase (Decrease) in Class C Shares Outstanding                                     $         153  $            (323)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+ The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class  B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  43
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Loss                                                                        $        (944) $          (1,343)
  Net Realized Gain                                                                                  5,252              2,386
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                    19,182             (4,927)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                   23,490             (3,884)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                           (4,935)                --
  Class C                                                                                           (4,055)                --
  In Excess of Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                             (241)                --
  Class C                                                                                             (198)                --
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting From Distributions                                           (9,429)                --
                                                                                             -------------           --------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                           109,249             62,328
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                           8,260                 --
  Redeemed                                                                                         (68,507)           (42,034)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              49,002             20,294
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      63,063             16,410
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                  255,101            318,164
                                                                                             -------------           --------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including distributions in excess of net investment income of
  $1,343 at December 31, 1995.)                                                              $     318,164  $         334,574
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          3,855              1,962
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          299                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                       (2,192)            (1,523)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                        1,962                439
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      62,609  $          31,398
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                        4,563                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                      (35,024)           (24,347)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $      32,148  $           7,051
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                716
     Redeemed                                                                                           --                 (2)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                714
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $          11,132
     Redeemed                                                                                           --                (29)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $          11,103
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          2,904              1,260
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          245                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                       (2,123)            (1,123)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                        1,026                137
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      46,640  $          19,798
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                        3,697                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                      (33,483)           (17,658)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $      16,854  $           2,140
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+ The  Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
44  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                                                      $         474  $             324
  Net Realized Gain                                                                                    362                775
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                     2,637              1,558
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                               3,473              2,657
                                                                                             -------------           --------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                             (350)              (220)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                 (6)
  Class C                                                                                             (143)              (102)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                                      (493)              (328)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                             (260)              (331)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                (20)
  Class C                                                                                             (167)              (252)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                                      (427)              (603)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                             (920)              (931)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                            15,936              9,856
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                             472                622
  Redeemed                                                                                          (2,373)            (3,271)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              14,035              7,207
                                                                                             -------------           --------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      16,588              8,933
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                   17,954             34,542
                                                                                             -------------           --------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (Including undistributed net investment income of $13 and $9,
 respectively)                                                                               $      34,542  $          43,475
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            794                293
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           29                 29
     Redeemed                                                                                         (135)              (152)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                          688                170
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       9,738  $           3,957
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          351                388
     Redeemed                                                                                       (1,647)            (2,067)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $       8,442  $           2,278
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                107
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                  2
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                109
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $           1,441
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                 25
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $           1,466
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            506                333
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           11                 15
     Redeemed                                                                                          (60)               (89)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                          457                259
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       6,198  $           4,458
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          121                209
     Redeemed                                                                                         (726)            (1,204)
                                                                                             -------------           --------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $       5,593  $           3,463
                                                                                             -------------           --------
                                                                                             -------------           --------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+ The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class  B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  45
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income                                                                      $       2,264  $           2,800
  Net Realized Gain (Loss)                                                                            (470)               473
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                        82              1,927
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                               1,876              5,200
                                                                                             -------------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                           (1,262)            (1,793)
  Class B+                                                                                              --               (256)
  Class C                                                                                             (906)              (985)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                                    (2,168)            (3,034)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                             (104)                --
  Class C                                                                                              (97)                --
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                                      (201)                --
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                           (2,369)            (3,034)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                            21,132             52,358
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                             918              1,657
  Redeemed                                                                                          (7,796)            (9,764)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              14,254             44,251
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      13,761             46,417
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                   12,938             26,699
                                                                                             -------------            -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including undistributed (distributions in excess of) net
  investment income of $165 and $(69), respectively.)                                        $      26,699  $          73,116
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          1,277              2,585
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           51                 92
     Redeemed                                                                                         (611)              (750)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                          717              1,927
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      14,466  $          30,377
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          542              1,080
     Redeemed                                                                                       (6,987)            (8,718)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $       8,021  $          22,739
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                873
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                 11
     Redeemed                                                                                           --                 (3)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                881
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $          10,297
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                129
     Redeemed                                                                                           --                (37)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $          10,389
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            564                992
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           35                 38
     Redeemed                                                                                          (73)               (86)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                          526                944
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       6,666  $          11,684
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          376                448
     Redeemed                                                                                         (809)            (1,009)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $       6,233  $          11,123
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
+ The  Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
46  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             JULY 6, 1994*   SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                        TO  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Loss                                                                        $         (58) $              --
  Net Realized Loss                                                                                 (2,340)              (763)
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                    (1,446)             1,131
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                   (3,844)               368
                                                                                             -------------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                               --                (18)
  Paid in Capital:
  Class A                                                                                             (124)                --
  Class C                                                                                              (50)                --
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                                      (174)                --
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                             (174)               (18)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                            21,076              7,163
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                             135                 15
  Redeemed                                                                                          (5,450)            (3,716)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              15,761              3,462
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      11,743              3,812
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                       --             11,743
                                                                                             -------------            -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including distributions in excess of net investment income of
  $18 at December 31, 1995.)                                                                 $      11,743  $          15,555
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          1,235                532
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                            9                  1
     Redeemed                                                                                         (400)              (307)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                          844                226
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      14,271  $           5,154
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                          103                 15
     Redeemed                                                                                       (3,781)            (2,996)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $      10,593  $           2,173
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                 46
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                 46
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $             438
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $             438
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                            613                165
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                            3                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                         (162)               (75)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                          454                 90
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $       6,805  $           1,571
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           32                 --
     Redeemed                                                                                       (1,669)              (720)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $       5,168  $             851
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
* Commencement of operations
+ The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class  B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  47
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             JULY 6, 1994*   SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                        TO  DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                                             JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                     (000)              (000)
<S>                                                                                          <C>            <C>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income (Loss)                                                               $         119  $            (150)
  Net Realized Loss                                                                                 (1,064)            (2,581)
  Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation                                                    (1,682)               328
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                                              (2,627)            (2,403)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Net Investment Income:
  Class A                                                                                               --               (141)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Realized Gain:
  Class A                                                                                               --                 (2)
  Class B+                                                                                              --                 (1)
  Class C                                                                                               --                 (2)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                                        --                 (5)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions                                                 --               (146)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
  Issued                                                                                            57,700             27,391
  Distributions Reinvested                                                                              --                132
  Redeemed                                                                                          (6,737)           (10,749)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions                              50,963             16,774
                                                                                             -------------            -------
  Total Increase in Net Assets                                                                      48,336             14,225
NET ASSETS -- Beginning of Period                                                                       --             48,336
                                                                                             -------------            -------
NET ASSETS -- End of Period (including undistributed (distribution in excess of) net
  investment income of $94 and $(197), respectively.)                                        $      48,336  $          62,561
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Share Transactions:
(1) Class A:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          2,800              1,521
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                 13
     Redeemed                                                                                         (341)              (708)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                        2,459                826
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      31,244  $          15,940
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                130
     Redeemed                                                                                       (3,679)            (7,417)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                                                $      27,565  $           8,653
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class B+:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                             --                246
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                           --                246
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $          --  $           2,646
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                                                $          --  $           2,646
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Class C:
    --------
   Shares:
     Issued                                                                                          2,392                822
     Redeemed                                                                                         (280)              (322)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                        2,112                500
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Dollars:
     Issued                                                                                  $      26,456  $           8,805
     Distributions Reinvested                                                                           --                  2
     Redeemed                                                                                       (3,058)            (3,332)
                                                                                             -------------            -------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                                                $      23,398  $           5,475
                                                                                             -------------            -------
                                                                                             -------------            -------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
* Commencement of operations
+ The  Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
  shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
48  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         GLOBAL EQUITY ALLOCATION FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   CLASS A                                         CLASS B+
                                   ------------------------------------------------------------------------    ----------------
                                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED     AUGUST 1, 1995*
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND        JANUARY 4, 1993*        YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED        DECEMBER 31,     TO DECEMBER 31,
   RATIOS                          TO JUNE 30, 1993     JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995    1995 (UNAUDITED)    1995 (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>               <C>               <C>                 <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          10.00    $        11.09    $        11.99    $          12.60    $          13.01
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income (Loss)                 0.04              0.10              0.12                0.05               (0.04)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain                                        1.05              0.90              0.67                1.73                1.15
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                  1.09              1.00              0.79                1.78                1.11
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                          --             (0.03)               --               (0.39)              (0.35)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                        --                --             (0.05)                 --                  --
  Net Realized Gain                              --             (0.07)            (0.13)              (0.48)              (0.48)
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
  Total Distributions                            --             (0.10)            (0.18)              (0.87)              (0.83)
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          11.09    $        11.99    $        12.60    $          13.51    $          13.29
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               10.90%             9.02%             6.69%              14.14%               8.53%
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
                                           --------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $         10,434    $       33,425    $       42,586    $         47,839    $          3,056
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      1.70%**           1.70%             1.70%               1.70%**             2.45%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net Assets                1.04%**           0.98%             1.01%               0.31%**            (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                          14%               30%               39%                 22%                 22%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income (Loss)        $           0.08    $         0.09    $         0.04    $           0.06    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               3.65%**           2.58%             2.03%               2.08%**             2.83%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss)
   to Average Net Assets                      (0.91)%**           0.10%            0.68%              (0.07)%**            (0.82)%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                     CLASS C
                                   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               SIX MONTHS ENDED
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND        JANUARY 4, 1993*          YEAR ENDED          YEAR ENDED        DECEMBER 31,
   RATIOS                          TO JUNE 30, 1993       JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995    1995 (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- --------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          10.00    $          11.05    $          11.90    $          12.43
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income (Loss)                 0.01                0.06                0.04               (0.03)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain                                        1.04                0.86                0.65                1.73
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                  1.05                0.92                0.69                1.70
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                          --                  --                  --               (0.33)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                        --                  --               (0.03)                 --
  Net Realized Gain                              --               (0.07)              (0.13)              (0.48)
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
  Total Distributions                            --               (0.07)              (0.16)              (0.81)
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          11.05    $          11.90    $          12.43    $          13.32
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               10.50%               8.34%               5.84%              13.67%
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
                                            -------            --------            --------            --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,995    $         29,892    $         40,460    $         47,879
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      2.45%**             2.45%               2.45%               2.45%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net Assets                0.29%**             0.23%               0.25%              (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                          14%                 30%                 39%                 22%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income (Loss)        $           0.07    $           0.12    $           0.05    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               4.40%**             3.34%               2.78%               2.83%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss)
   to Average Net Assets                      (1.66)%**            (0.66)%            (0.08)%             (0.82)%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
</TABLE>
 
                            GLOBAL FIXED INCOME FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                  CLASS B+
                                                                  CLASS A                                     ----------------
                                  ------------------------------------------------------------------------     AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                                          SIX MONTHS ENDED                  TO
                                                                                              DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND       JANUARY 4, 1993*        YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED                1995                1995
   RATIOS                         TO JUNE 30, 1993     JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                               <C>                 <C>               <C>               <C>                 <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                         $          10.00    $        10.55    $         9.53    $          10.23    $          10.24
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                       0.25              0.52              0.56                0.30                0.61
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                0.55             (0.42)             0.50                0.27               (0.15)
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                 0.80              0.10              1.06                0.57                0.46
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      (0.25)            (0.50)            (0.36)              (0.62)              (0.55)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                       --             (0.12)               --                  --                  --
  Net Realized Gain                             --             (0.47)               --                  --                  --
  In Excess of Realized Gain                    --             (0.03)               --                  --                  --
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
  Total Distributions                        (0.25)            (1.12)            (0.36)              (0.62)              (0.55)
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD    $          10.55    $         9.53    $        10.23    $          10.18    $          10.15
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               8.02%             0.41%            11.41%               5.71%               4.58%
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
                                           -------    --------------    --------------            --------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Asets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,633    $       10,369    $       11,092    $         10,090    $            279
Ratio of Expenses to Average
   Net Assets                                 1.45%**           1.45%             1.45%               1.45%**             2.20%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   to Average Net Assets                      5.00%**           4.70%             5.84%               5.36%**             4.61%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                         55%              168%              169%                 81%                 81%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income              $           0.07    $         0.11    $         0.07    $           0.03    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                     2.88%**           2.48%             2.22%               2.00%**             2.75%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                         3.57%**           3.67%             5.07%               4.81%**             4.06%**
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                    CLASS C
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                  DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND       JANUARY 4, 1993*          YEAR ENDED          YEAR ENDED                1995
   RATIOS                         TO JUNE 30, 1993       JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                               <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- -------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                         $          10.00    $          10.56    $           9.54    $          10.20
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                       0.21                0.43                0.49                0.24
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                0.55               (0.40)               0.47                0.29
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                 0.76                0.03                0.96                0.53
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      (0.20)              (0.44)              (0.30)              (0.59)
  In Excess of Net Investment
   Income                                       --               (0.11)                 --                  --
  Net Realized Gain                             --               (0.47)                 --                  --
  In Excess of Realized Gain                    --               (0.03)                 --                  --
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
  Total Distributions                        (0.20)              (1.05)              (0.30)              (0.59)
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD    $          10.56    $           9.54    $          10.20    $          10.14
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                               7.61%              (0.25)%             10.24%               5.30%
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
                                           -------             -------             -------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Asets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,120    $          5,407    $          5,965    $          5,612
Ratio of Expenses to Average
   Net Assets                                 2.20%**             2.20%               2.20%               2.20%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   to Average Net Assets                      4.25%**             3.95%               5.09%               4.61%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                         55%                168%                169%                 81%
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income              $           0.07    $           0.12    $           0.08    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                     3.63%**             3.29%               2.97%               2.75%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                         2.82%**             2.86%               4.32%               4.06%**
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
</TABLE>
 
 * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
 + The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
   shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
(1) Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
    charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not
    annualized.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  49
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                               ASIAN GROWTH FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   CLASS B+
                                                                   CLASS A                                     ----------------
                                   ------------------------------------------------------------------------     AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED                  TO
                                                                                               DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND          JUNE 23, 1993*        YEAR ENDED        YEAR ENDED                1995                1995
   RATIOS                          TO JUNE 30, 1993     JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>               <C>               <C>                 <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          12.00    $        12.00    $        15.50    $          16.42    $          16.51
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Loss                            --             (0.03)               --               (0.04)              (0.03)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                   --              3.53              1.43               (0.15)              (0.51)
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                    --              3.50              1.43               (0.19)              (0.54)
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Realized Gain                              --                --             (0.49)                 --                  --
  In Excess of Net Realized Gain                 --                --             (0.02)                 --                  --
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
                                                 --                --             (0.51)                 --                  --
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          12.00    $        15.50    $        16.42    $          16.23    $          15.97
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
TOTAL RETURN (1)                               0.00%            29.17%             9.50%              (1.16)%             (3.27)%
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
                                           --------    --------------    --------------    ----------------            --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $         11,770    $      138,212    $      178,667    $        183,658    $         11,398
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      1.90%**           1.90%             1.90%               1.90%**             2.65%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net Assets               (0.81)%**          (0.24)%           0.04%              (0.46)%**            (1.21)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                           0%               34%               34%                 10%                 10%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Loss                 $           0.01    $         0.03                --                  --                  --
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets              11.83%**           2.17%             1.90%               1.90%**             2.65%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss)
   to Average Net Assets                     (10.74)%**          (0.51)%           0.04%              (0.46)%**            (1.21)%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                     CLASS C
                                   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                   DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND          JUNE 23, 1993*          YEAR ENDED          YEAR ENDED                1995
   RATIOS                          TO JUNE 30, 1993       JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- --------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          12.00    $          12.00    $          15.40    $          16.19
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Loss                            --               (0.10)              (0.12)              (0.10)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                   --                3.50                1.42               (0.15)
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                    --                3.40                1.30               (0.25)
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Realized Gain                              --                  --               (0.49)                 --
  In Excess of Net Realized Gain                 --                  --               (0.02)                 --
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                                 --                  --               (0.51)                 --
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          12.00    $          15.40    $          16.19    $          15.94
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
TOTAL RETURN (1)                               0.00%              28.33%               8.71%              (1.54)%
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                            -------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $          8,491    $        116,889    $        139,497    $        139,518
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      2.65%**             2.65%               2.65%               2.65%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net Assets               (1.56)%**            (0.99)%            (0.77)%             (1.21)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                           0%                 34%                 34%                 10%
- --------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Loss                 $           0.02    $           0.03                  --                  --
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets              12.64%**             2.92%               2.65%               2.65%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss)
   to Average Net Assets                     (11.55)%**            (1.26)%            (0.77)%             (1.21)%**
- --------------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                              AMERICAN VALUE FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   CLASS B+
                                                           CLASS A                             ----------------
                                   --------------------------------------------------------     AUGUST 1, 1995*
                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED                  TO
                                        OCTOBER 18,                            DECEMBER 31,        DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND                   1993*          YEAR ENDED                1995                1995
 RATIOS                            TO JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD                            $          12.00    $          11.70    $          12.89    $          13.37
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                        0.17                0.27                0.13                0.06
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                (0.30)               1.44                0.81                0.34
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
  Total from Investment
   Operations                                 (0.13)               1.71                0.94                0.40
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                       (0.17)              (0.28)              (0.13)              (0.08)
  Net Realized Gain                              --               (0.24)              (0.19)              (0.19)
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
  Total Distributions                         (0.17)              (0.52)              (0.32)              (0.27)
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          11.70    $          12.89    $          13.51    $          13.50
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
TOTAL RETURN (1)                              (1.12)%             15.01%               7.28%               3.02%
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
                                           --------            --------            --------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $         10,717    $         20,675    $         23,975    $          1,467
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets                                        1.50%**             1.50%               1.50%**             2.25%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets                         2.14%**             2.29%               1.90%**             1.15%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                          17%                 23%                 15%                 15%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income               $           0.08    $           0.05    $           0.02    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               2.48%**             1.96%               1.79%**             2.54%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                          1.16%**             1.83%               1.61%**             0.86%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                           CLASS C
                                   --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                        OCTOBER 18,                            DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND                   1993*          YEAR ENDED                1995
 RATIOS                            TO JUNE 30, 1994       JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>                 <C>
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
 PERIOD                            $          12.00    $          11.69    $          12.89
                                            -------            --------            --------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                        0.11                0.17                0.07
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                (0.31)               1.44                0.81
                                            -------            --------            --------
  Total from Investment
   Operations                                 (0.20)               1.61                0.88
                                            -------            --------            --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                       (0.11)              (0.17)              (0.08)
  Net Realized Gain                              --               (0.24)              (0.19)
                                            -------            --------            --------
  Total Distributions                         (0.11)              (0.41)              (0.27)
                                            -------            --------            --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          11.69    $          12.89    $          13.50
                                            -------            --------            --------
                                            -------            --------            --------
TOTAL RETURN (1)                              (1.70)%             14.13%               6.83%
                                            -------            --------            --------
                                            -------            --------            --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $          7,237    $         13,867    $         18,033
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
 Assets                                        2.25%**             2.25%               2.25%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
 to Average Net Assets                         1.39%**             1.54%               1.15%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                          17%                 23%                 15%
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
 Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income               $           0.08    $           0.05    $           0.03
Ratios Before Expense
 Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               3.28%**             2.71%               2.54%**
  Net Investment Income to
   Average Net Assets                          0.36%**             1.08%               0.86%**
- --------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * Commencement of operations
 ** Annualized
 + The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
   shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
(1) Total  return is  calculated exclusive  of sales  charges or  deferred sales
    charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
 
50  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           WORLDWIDE HIGH INCOME FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          CLASS A                              CLASS B+
                                   -----------------------------------------------------    ---------------        CLASS C
                                                                              SIX MONTHS    AUGUST 1, 1995*    ----------------
                                                                                   ENDED                 TO
                                                                            DECEMBER 31,       DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND         APRIL 21, 1994*        YEAR ENDED               1995               1995     APRIL 21, 1994*
   RATIOS                          TO JUNE 30, 1994     JUNE 30, 1995        (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)    TO JUNE 30, 1994
<S>                                <C>                 <C>               <C>                <C>                <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          12.00    $        12.17    $         11.57    $         11.63    $          12.00
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                        0.18              1.26               0.60               0.46                0.17
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                 0.16             (0.52)              0.56               0.49                0.15
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                  0.34              0.74               1.16               0.95                0.32
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                       (0.17)            (1.22)             (0.66)             (0.52)              (0.16)
  Net Realized Gain                              --             (0.12)                --                 --                  --
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
  Total Distributions                         (0.17)            (1.34)             (0.66)             (0.52)              (0.16)
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          12.17    $        11.57    $         12.07    $         12.06    $          12.16
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                2.86%             6.87%             10.30%              8.38%               2.62%
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
                                            -------    --------------    ---------------    ---------------             -------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $          6,857    $       14,819    $        38,728    $        10,620    $          6,081
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      1.55%**           1.55%              1.55%**            2.30%**             2.30%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   to Average Net Assets                       8.29%**          11.53%             10.94%**           10.19%**             7.54%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                          19%              178%                60%                60%                 19%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income               $           0.02    $         0.05    $          0.01    $          0.01    $           0.06
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               3.23%**           1.97%              1.70%**            2.45%**             4.00%**
  Net Invesment Income to
   Average Net Assets                          6.61%**          11.11%             10.79%**           10.04%**             5.84%**
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                       SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                           DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND              YEAR ENDED                1995
   RATIOS                             JUNE 30, 1995         (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                <C>                 <C>
- --------------------------------   ------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                          $          12.16    $          11.58
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income                        1.17                0.55
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                                (0.50)               0.56
                                           --------            --------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                                  0.67                1.11
                                           --------            --------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                       (1.13)              (0.63)
  Net Realized Gain                           (0.12)                 --
                                           --------            --------
  Total Distributions                         (1.25)              (0.63)
                                           --------            --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD     $          11.58    $          12.06
                                           --------            --------
                                           --------            --------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                                6.20%               9.82%
                                           --------            --------
                                           --------            --------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000s)   $         11,880    $         23,768
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                      2.30%               2.30%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   to Average Net Assets                      10.72%              10.19%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                         178%                 60%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income               $           0.05    $           0.01
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net Assets               2.74%               2.45%**
  Net Invesment Income to
   Average Net Assets                         10.28%              10.04%**
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                              LATIN AMERICAN FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             CLASS A                                                  CLASS C
                                ----------------------------------       CLASS B+        ----------------------------------
                                                        SIX MONTHS    ---------------                            SIX MONTHS
                                                             ENDED    AUGUST 1, 1995*                                 ENDED
                                  JULY 6, 1994*       DECEMBER 31,    TO DECEMBER 31,      JULY 6, 1994*       DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND         TO JUNE 30,               1995               1995        TO JUNE 30,               1995
   RATIOS                                  1995        (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)               1995        (UNAUDITED)
<S>                             <C>                <C>                <C>                <C>                <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                       $         12.00    $          9.08    $          9.58    $         12.00    $          8.99
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income (Loss)            (0.02)              0.03              (0.02)             (0.08)             (0.02)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Gain (Loss)                            (2.70)              0.33              (0.24)             (2.73)              0.33
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                             (2.72)              0.36              (0.26)             (2.81)              0.31
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      --              (0.02)                --                 --                 --
  Paid in Capital                         (0.20)                --                 --              (0.20)                --
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
  Total Distributions                     (0.20)             (0.02)                --              (0.20)                --
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD  $          9.08    $          9.42    $          9.32    $          8.99    $          9.30
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                          (23.07)%             3.93%             (2.71)%           (23.83)%             3.45%
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
                                        -------    ---------------            -------            -------    ---------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
   (000s)                       $         7,658    $        10,076    $           424    $         4,085    $         5,055
Ratio of Expenses to Average
   Net Assets                              2.46%**            2.10%**            2.85%**            3.20%**            2.85%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net
   Assets                                 (0.44)%**            0.31%**           (0.44)%**           (1.16)%**           (0.44)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                     107%                64%                64%               107%                64%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the
   Period
  Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Loss              $          0.13    $          0.15    $          0.02    $          0.12    $          0.07
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets (Including Brazilian
   Tax Expense)                            4.30%**            3.66%              4.41%**            5.20%**            4.41%**
  Net Investment Loss to
   Average Net Assets                     (2.26)%**           (1.25)%**           (2.00)%**           (3.16)%**           (2.00)%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
 * Commencement of operations.
 ** Annualized
 + The Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B
shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
(1) Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.  51
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                             EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              CLASS A                    CLASS B+                     CLASS C
                                  --------------------------------    ---------------    ----------------------------------
                                                        SIX MONTHS    AUGUST 1, 1995*                            SIX MONTHS
                                                             ENDED                 TO                                 ENDED
                                  JULY 6, 1994*       DECEMBER 31,       DECEMBER 31,      JULY 6, 1994*       DECEMBER 31,
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND         TO JUNE 30,               1995               1995        TO JUNE 30,               1995
   RATIOS                                  1995        (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)               1995        (UNAUDITED)
<S>                               <C>              <C>                <C>                <C>                <C>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF
   PERIOD                         $       12.00    $         10.61    $         10.91    $         12.00    $         10.53
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
   OPERATIONS
  Net Investment Income (Loss)             0.05              (0.01)             (0.03)                --              (0.05)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
   Loss                                   (1.44)             (0.33)             (0.73)             (1.47)             (0.33)
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
  Total From Investment
   Operations                             (1.39)             (0.34)             (0.76)             (1.47)             (0.38)
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
DISTRIBUTIONS
  Net Investment Income                      --              (0.05)                --                 --                 --
  Net Realized Gain                          --                 --#                --#                --                 --#
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
  Total Distributions                        --              (0.05)                --                 --                 --
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
 
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD    $       10.61    $         10.22    $         10.15    $         10.53    $         10.15
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
TOTAL RETURN(1)                          (11.58)%            (3.26)%            (6.96)%           (12.25)%            (3.60)%
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
                                  -------------    ---------------            -------    ---------------    ---------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period
   (000s)                         $      26,091    $        33,562    $         2,500    $        22,245    $        26,499
Ratio of Expenses to Average
   Net Assets                              2.33%**            2.15%**            2.90%**            3.08%**            2.90%**
Ratio of Net Investment Income
   (Loss) to Average Net Assets            0.81%**           (0.26)%**           (1.01)%**            0.06%**           (1.01)%**
Portfolio Turnover Rate                      32%                22%                22%                32%                22%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effect of Voluntary Expense
   Limitation During the Period
   Per Share Benefit to Net
   Investment Income (Loss)       $        0.04    $          0.11    $          0.02    $          0.04    $          0.03
Ratios Before Expense
   Limitation:
  Expenses to Average Net
   Assets                                  3.10%**            2.77%**            3.52%**            3.90%**            3.52%**
  Net Investment Income (Loss)
   to Average Net Assets                   0.04%**           (0.88)%**           (1.63)%**           (0.76)%**           (1.63)%**
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
  # Amount less than $0.01 per share.
  * Commencement of operations.
 ** Annualized
   The  Fund began offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995.
  + Class B shares held prior to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
   Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred
   sales charges. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not
(1) annualized.
 
52  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         DECEMBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Morgan  Stanley  Fund, Inc.  (the  "Fund") was  incorporated  under the  laws of
Maryland on August  14, 1992 and  commenced operations on  January 4, 1993.  The
Fund  is registered under the Investment Company  Act of 1940, as amended, as an
open-end  management  investment  company  which  offers  redeemable  shares  of
diversified  and non-diversified investment portfolios. As of December 31, 1995,
the Fund had seven separate active investment portfolios: Morgan Stanley  Global
Equity  Allocation Fund, Morgan Stanley Global Fixed Income Fund, Morgan Stanley
Asian Growth Fund, Morgan Stanley American Value Fund, Morgan Stanley  Worldwide
High Income Fund, Morgan Stanley Latin American Fund and Morgan Stanley Emerging
Markets  Fund  (referred to  herein  respectively as  "Global  Equity Allocation
Fund", "Global Fixed Income Fund",  "Asian Growth Fund", "American Value  Fund",
"Worldwide  High  Income Fund",  "Latin  American Fund",  and  "Emerging Markets
Fund", and collectively as  the "Portfolios"). The  Fund currently offers  three
classes  of shares, Class A, Class B and Class C shares. Class A shares are sold
with a front-end sales  charge of up to  4.75%. Class B shares  are sold with  a
contingent  deferred sales charge on redemptions made within 6 years of purchase
which declines annually from 5% for redemptions made in year one, down to 1%  in
year  six. Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A shares after the
seventh year  following purchase.  Class C  shares are  sold with  a  contingent
deferred  sales charge at the rate of  1.00% for shares that are redeemed within
one year of  purchase based on  the lesser of  the current market  value of  the
shares  redeemed or the total  cost of such shares.  All three classes of shares
have identical voting, dividend,  liquidation and other  rights. The Fund  began
offering the current Class B shares on August 1, 1995. Class B shares held prior
to May 1, 1995 were renamed Class C shares.
 
A.  ACCOUNTING POLICIES:  The following is  a summary  of significant accounting
policies for the Fund. Such policies  are in conformity with generally  accepted
accounting  principles for investment companies and are consistently followed by
the Fund  in the  preparation of  the financial  statements. Generally  accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect  the reported amounts and disclosures on the financial statements. Actual
results could differ from those estimates.
 
1. SECURITY  VALUATION:  Equity securities  listed  on an  exchange  and  equity
securities  traded on NASDAQ are valued at  the latest quoted sales price on the
valuation date. Securities  listed on  a foreign  exchange are  valued at  their
closing  price.  Unlisted securities  and listed  securities  not traded  on the
valuation date for which market quotations  are readily available are valued  at
the  average of the  mean between the current  bid and asked  prices, if any, of
reputable brokers. Bonds and other fixed income securities are valued  according
to  the broadest  and most representative  market. In addition,  bonds and other
fixed income securities are valued on the basis of prices provided by a  pricing
service  which  are based  primarily on  institutional  size trading  in similar
groups of securities. Debt securities purchased with remaining maturities of  60
days  or less are valued at amortized cost, if it approximates market value. All
other securities and assets for which  market values are not readily  available,
including  restricted securities, are valued at fair value as determined in good
faith by the Board of Directors, although the actual calculations may be done by
others.
 
2. TAXES: It is each Portfolio's intention to continue to qualify as a regulated
investment company and  distribute all  of its taxable  income. Accordingly,  no
provision  for Federal income taxes is required in the financial statements. The
Fund may be  subject to taxes  imposed by  countries in which  it invests.  Such
taxes are generally based on income and/or capital gains earned or repatriated.
 
Paid in capital in excess of par, undistributed (distributions in excess of) net
investment income and accumulated (distributions in excess of) net realized gain
have  been adjusted for prior period permanent book-tax differences, if any, for
the Portfolios.
 
At June 30, 1995, Global Fixed Income  Fund had a capital loss carryforward  for
Federal income tax purposes of approximately $366,000 which will expire June 30,
2003.  To  the  extent  that  such carryforward  is  utilized,  no  capital gain
distribution will be made.  For the year ended  June 30, 1995, Emerging  Markets
Fund  and Global Equity Allocation Fund deferred for Federal income tax purposes
to July  1, 1995,  post October  currency losses  of approximately  $44,000  and
$715,000,  respectively. Emerging Markets  Fund, American Value  Fund and Global
Fixed Income Fund also deferred to July 1, 1995, post October capital losses  of
approximately $928,000, $60,000 and $154,000, respectively.
 
3.   REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS:  In  connection  with  transactions  in  repurchase
agreements, a bank  acting as  custodian for the  Fund takes  possession of  the
underlying  securities, the value  of which is  at least equal  to the principal
amount of the repurchase transaction, including accrued interest. To the  extent
that  any  repurchase transaction  exceeds one  business day,  the value  of the
collateral is marked-to-market on a daily basis to determine the adequacy of the
collateral. In the event  of default on the  obligation to repurchase, the  Fund
has the right to liquidate the collateral and apply the proceeds in satisfaction
of  the obligation. In the event of default  or bankruptcy by the other party to
the agreement, realization and/or retention of the collateral or proceeds may be
subject to legal proceedings.
 
                                                                              53
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                         DECEMBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
4. FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION AND  FOREIGN INVESTMENTS: The books and  records
of  the Fund are  maintained in United States  dollars. Foreign currency amounts
are translated into U.S. dollars at the mean of the bid and asked prices of such
currencies against U.S. dollars last quoted by a major bank as follows:
- - investments, other assets and liabilities at the prevailing rates of  exchange
  on the valuation date;
- - investment  transactions  and investment  income  at the  prevailing  rates of
  exchange on the dates of such transactions.
 
Although the net assets of the Fund are presented at the foreign exchange  rates
and  market values at  the close of the  period, the Fund  does not isolate that
portion of the  results of  operations arising  as a  result of  changes in  the
foreign  exchange rates from the fluctuations arising from changes in the market
prices of  the securities  held at  period  end. Similarly,  the Fund  does  not
isolate  the effect of  changes in foreign exchange  rates from the fluctuations
arising from changes in the market prices of securities sold during the  period.
Accordingly,  realized  and  unrealized  foreign  currency  gains  (losses)  are
included in the reported net realized and unrealized gains (losses) on  security
transactions  and  balances.  However,  pursuant  to  U.S.  Federal  income  tax
regulations, gains and losses from certain foreign currency transactions and the
foreign currency portion of gain and losses realized on sales and maturities  of
foreign  denominated debt  securities are  treated as  ordinary income  for U.S.
Federal income tax purposes.
 
Net realized  gains  (losses) on  foreign  currency transactions  represent  net
foreign  exchange  gains  (losses)  from  forward  foreign  currency  contracts,
disposition of foreign currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the
trade and settlement  dates on securities  transactions, the difference  between
the  amount of investment  income and foreign withholding  taxes recorded on the
Fund's books and the  U.S. dollar equivalent amount  actually received or  paid,
and  certain currency related amounts of realized  gains or losses from the sale
of foreign denominated debt securities.  Net unrealized currency gains  (losses)
from  valuing foreign currency denominated assets  and liabilities at period end
exchange  rates  are  reflected  as  a  component  of  unrealized   appreciation
(depreciation)  in the  Statement of Assets  and Liabilities. The  change in net
unrealized currency gains (losses) for the period is reflected in the  Statement
of Operations.
 
Foreign  security and  currency transactions may  involve certain considerations
and risks  not  typically  associated  with those  of  U.S.  dollar  denominated
transactions  as a result of,  among other factors, the  possibly lower level of
governmental supervision and  regulation of foreign  securities markets and  the
possibility of political or economic instability.
 
Prior  governmental  approval  for  foreign investments  may  be  required under
certain circumstances  in some  emerging countries,  and the  extent of  foreign
investment  in domestic companies may be subject to limitation in other emerging
countries. Foreign ownership limitations also may be imposed by the charters  of
individual  companies in  emerging countries  to prevent,  among other concerns,
violation of foreign investment limitations. As a result, an additional class of
shares (identified as "foreign" in the Portfolio of Investments) may be  created
and  offered for investment. The "local" and "foreign" shares' market values may
vary.
 
5. FORWARD FOREIGN  CURRENCY CONTRACTS:  Each Portfolio may  enter into  forward
foreign  currency  contracts  to  attempt  to  protect  securities  and  related
receivables and payables  against changes  in future foreign  exchange rates.  A
forward  currency contract is  an agreement between  two parties to  buy or sell
currency at a set price on a future date. The market value of the contract  will
fluctuate   with   changes  in   currency  exchange   rates.  The   contract  is
marked-to-market daily using the forward rate and the change in market value  is
recorded  by the  Portfolio as  unrealized gain  or loss.  The Portfolio records
realized gains or  losses when the  contract is closed  equal to the  difference
between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the
time  it was closed. Risk may arise  upon entering into these contracts from the
potential inability of counterparties to meet  the terms of their contracts  and
is  generally limited to the amount of unrealized gain on the contracts, if any,
at the date of default. Risks may also arise from unanticipated movements in the
value of a foreign currency relative to the U.S. dollar.
 
6. PURCHASED OPTIONS. Certain Portfolios may purchase call or put options  which
are  traded on  a recognized  securities or  futures exchange.  When a Portfolio
purchases a call option, it acquires the right to buy a designated security at a
designated price ("exercise price"); when a Portfolio purchases a put option, it
acquires the  right to  sell a  designated  security at  the exercise  price.  A
Portfolio  may purchase call options to close  out a covered call position or to
protect  against  an  increase  in  the  price  of  a  security  it  anticipates
purchasing. A Portfolio may purchase put options on securities which it holds to
protect  against a decline  in the value  of the security.  Risks may arise from
imperfect correlation between the change in market value of the securities  held
by  the Portfolio and the prices of options relating to the securities purchased
or sold by the Portfolio and from the
 
54
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                         DECEMBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
possible lack of a liquid secondary  market for an option. The maximum  exposure
to  loss for any purchased  option is limited to  the premium initially paid for
the option.
 
7. DELAYED DELIVERY  COMMITMENTS: Each  Portfolio may purchase  securities on  a
when-issued  or forward commitment basis. Payment  and delivery may take place a
month or more after  the date of  the transaction. The  price of the  underlying
securities  and the date when the securities  will be delivered and paid for are
fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated.
 
8. ORGANIZATIONAL COSTS: The  organizational costs of  the Portfolios are  being
amortized  on a straight line  basis over a period  of five years beginning with
each Portfolio's commencement  of operations. Morgan  Stanley Asset  Management,
Inc.  has agreed that in the event any  of its initial shares in a Portfolio are
redeemed, the proceeds on redemption will be reduced by the pro-rata portion  of
any  unamortized organizational  costs in the  same proportion as  the number of
shares redeemed bears to the initial shares held at time of redemption.
 
9. OTHER: Security transactions are accounted for on the date the securities are
purchased or sold. Costs  used in determining realized  gains and losses on  the
sale  of  investment  securities  are those  of  the  specific  securities sold.
Dividend income is recorded  on the ex-dividend  date (except certain  dividends
which  may be recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of such dividends) net of
applicable withholding  taxes where  recovery of  such taxes  is not  reasonably
assured.  Interest  income  is  recognized on  the  accrual  basis  except where
collection is  in doubt.  Discounts  and premiums  on securities  purchased  are
amortized  according to the effective yield  method over their respective lives.
Most expenses of the Fund can be directly attributed to a particular  Portfolio.
Expenses   which  cannot  be  directly  attributed  are  apportioned  among  the
Portfolios based upon relative  net assets. Income,  expenses (other than  class
specific  expenses) and realized and unrealized gains or losses are allocated to
each class of shares  based upon their relative  net assets. Distributions  from
the Portfolios are recorded on the ex-distribution date.
 
Income  and capital  gain distributions are  determined in  accordance with U.S.
Federal  income  tax  regulations  which  may  differ  from  generally  accepted
accounting principles.
 
B.  ADVISER: Morgan Stanley Asset Management,  Inc. (the "Adviser" or "MSAM"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan  Stanley Group, Inc.,  provides the Fund  with
investment  advisory  services at  a fee  paid quarterly  and calculated  at the
annual rates of average daily net assets indicated below. The Adviser has agreed
to reduce  advisory fees  payable to  it  and to  reimburse the  Portfolios,  if
necessary,  if  the  annual  operating  expenses,  as  defined,  expressed  as a
percentage of  average daily  net assets,  exceed the  maximum ratios  indicated
below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   CLASS B
                                                                                     AND
                                                                      CLASS A      CLASS C
                                                                      MAXIMUM      MAXIMUM
                                                                      OPERATING    OPERATING
                                                         ADVISORY     EXPENSE      EXPENSE
FUND                                                       FEE         RATIO        RATIO
- -------------------------------------------------------  --------     --------     --------
<S>                                                      <C>          <C>          <C>
Global Equity Allocation...............................   1.00%        1.70%        2.45%
Global Fixed Income....................................   0.75%        1.45%        2.20%
Asian Growth...........................................   1.00%        1.90%        2.65%
American Value.........................................   0.85%        1.50%        2.25%
Worldwide High Income..................................   0.75%        1.55%        2.30%
Latin American.........................................   1.25%        2.10%        2.85%
Emerging Markets.......................................   1.25%        2.15%        2.90%
</TABLE>
 
C.  ADMINISTRATOR:  MSAM also  provides  the Fund  with  administrative services
pursuant to an  Administrative Agreement for  a monthly fee  which on an  annual
basis  equals 0.25% of the average daily net assets of each Portfolio. Effective
September 1, 1995, The  Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.  through its affiliate  Chase
Global  Funds Services Company ("CGFSC"),  formerly Mutual Funds Service Company
("MFSC"),  provides  certain  administrative  services  to  the  Fund  under  an
agreement with MSAM. CGFSC is compensated for such services by MSAM from the fee
it  receives from the  Fund, subject to  certain fee minimums  as defined in the
agreement, which for the six months ended December 31, 1995, totaled $91,000 for
Global Equity  Allocation Fund,  Global Fixed  Income Fund,  Asian Growth  Fund,
American  Value  Fund, and  Worldwide High  Income Fund,  and $89,000  for Latin
American Fund  and Emerging  Markets Fund,  respectively. Certain  employees  of
CGFSC  are  officers  of the  Fund.  Prior to  September  1, 1995,  MFSC  was an
affiliate  of  the  United  States  Trust  Company  of  New  York  and  provided
administrative services to the Fund under the same terms, conditions and fees as
stated above.
 
D.  DISTRIBUTOR:  Morgan  Stanley  &  Co.  Incorporated  (the  "Distributor"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., and an affiliate of MSAM,
serves as  the  distributor  of the  Fund  and  provides both  classes  of  each
Portfolio  with  distribution  services  pursuant  to  a  Distribution  Plan  in
accordance with  Rule  12b-1 under  the  Investment  Company Act  of  1940.  The
Distributor is entitled to receive from the Portfolios a distribution fee, which
is  accrued daily and paid quarterly,  of up to 0.25% for  the Class A shares of
each Portfolio  and up  to 1.00%  of the  Class B  and Class  C shares  of  each
Portfolio,  on an  annualized basis,  of the  average daily  net assets  of such
class.
 
The Distributor  may receive  a  contingent deferred  sales charge  for  certain
purchases  of Class  A, Class B  and Class  C shares of  each Portfolio redeemed
within one
 
                                                                              55
<PAGE>
                              MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                     NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONT.)
                         DECEMBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
year following such purchase.  For the six months  ended December 31, 1995,  the
Distributor has advised the Fund that it earned deferred sales charges of:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          CLASS A       CLASS B       CLASS C
FUND                                                       (000)         (000)         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------  ---------     ---------     ---------
<S>                                                      <C>           <C>           <C>
Global Equity Allocation...............................      --            --           $ 6
Asian Growth...........................................      --             1            20
American Value.........................................      --            --             3
Worldwide High Income..................................      --             1             5
Latin American.........................................      --            --             3
Emerging Markets.......................................      --            --            12
</TABLE>
 
E.  CUSTODIANS: Morgan Stanley Trust Company ("MSTC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary
of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., acts as custodian for the Fund's non-U.S.  assets
held  outside  the  United  States in  accordance  with  a  Custodian Agreement.
Effective September 1, 1995, The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. serves as  custodian
for  the  Fund's  domestic  assets in  accordance  with  a  Custodian Agreement.
Custodian fees are computed and payable monthly based on assets held, investment
purchases and sales activity, an account maintenance fee, plus reimbursement for
certain out-of-pocket expenses. Fees incurred  for custody services provided  by
MSTC for the six months ended December 31, 1995 were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         MSTC
                                                           MSTC        CUSTODIAN
                                                         CUSTODIAN       FEES
                                                           FEES         PAYABLE
FUND                                                       (000)         (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------  ---------     ---------
<S>                                                      <C>           <C>
Global Equity Allocation...............................    $ 87          $ 28
Global Fixed Income....................................       7             3
Asian Growth...........................................     253           104
Worldwide High Income..................................      11             5
Latin American.........................................      68            21
Emerging Markets.......................................     137            52
</TABLE>
 
Prior  to September 1, 1995, the United  States Trust Company of New York served
as custodian for the  Fund's domestic assets under  the same terms,  conditions,
and fees as stated above.
 
F.  PURCHASES AND SALES: For  the six months ended  December 31, 1995, purchases
and  sales  of  investment  securities  other  than  long-term  U.S.  Government
securities and short-term investments were:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         PURCHASES    SALES
FUND                                                      (000)       (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------  --------    --------
<S>                                                      <C>         <C>
Global Equity Allocation...............................  $20,868     $ 18,554
Global Fixed Income....................................    8,732        8,986
Asian Growth...........................................   31,536       44,526
American Value.........................................   13,582        5,812
Worldwide High Income..................................   69,676       28,431
Latin American.........................................   11,287        8,323
Emerging Markets.......................................   20,877       10,438
</TABLE>
 
Purchases  and  sales of  long-term U.S.  Government  securities during  the six
months ended December  31, 1995  occurred in the  Global Fixed  Income Fund  and
totaled $3,667,000 and $4,145,000, respectively.
 
G.  OTHER:  At  December  31,  1995,  net  assets  of  certain  Portfolios  were
substantially comprised of foreign denominated securities and currency.  Changes
in  currency rates  will affect  the value  of and  investment income  from such
securities.
 
Portfolio securities  and  foreign  currency holdings  were  translated  at  the
following exchange rates as of December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                      <C>              <C>      <C>
Argentine Peso.........................................         1.00015   =        $1.00
Australian Dollar......................................         1.34544   =        $1.00
Belgian Franc..........................................        29.43000   =        $1.00
Brazilian Real.........................................         0.97190   =        $1.00
British Pound..........................................         0.64412   =        $1.00
Canadian Dollar........................................         1.36505   =        $1.00
Danish Krone...........................................         5.55680   =        $1.00
Deutsche Mark..........................................         1.43390   =        $1.00
French Franc...........................................         4.89700   =        $1.00
Greek Drachma..........................................       236.99000   =        $1.00
Hong Kong Dollar.......................................         7.73250   =        $1.00
Indonesian Rupiah......................................     2,286.50000   =        $1.00
Irish Punts............................................         0.62441   =        $1.00
Israeli Shekel.........................................         3.13850   =        $1.00
Italian Lira...........................................     1,588.25000   =        $1.00
Japanese Yen...........................................       103.25000   =        $1.00
Korean Won.............................................       775.75000   =        $1.00
Malaysian Ringgit......................................         2.53970   =        $1.00
Mexican Peso...........................................         7.69500   =        $1.00
Moroccan Dirham........................................         8.46890   =        $1.00
Netherland Guilder.....................................         1.60470   =        $1.00
New Zealand Dollar.....................................         1.52964   =        $1.00
Pakistani Rupee........................................        34.21580   =        $1.00
Peruvian Sol...........................................         2.31000   =        $1.00
Philippine Peso........................................        26.23000   =        $1.00
Polish Zloty...........................................         2.46550   =        $1.00
Portuguese Escudo......................................       146.67500   =        $1.00
Singapore Dollar.......................................         1.41450   =        $1.00
South African Rand.....................................         3.64550   =        $1.00
Spanish Peseta.........................................       121.30000   =        $1.00
Swedish Krona..........................................         6.63965   =        $1.00
Swiss Franc............................................         1.15350   =        $1.00
Taiwan Dollar..........................................        27.28700   =        $1.00
Thailand Baht..........................................        25.19000   =        $1.00
Turkish Lira...........................................    60,900.00000   =        $1.00
</TABLE>
 
For  the six months ended  December 31, 1995, Asian  Growth Fund, Latin American
Fund and  Emerging  Markets  Fund incurred  approximately  $27,076,  $1,021  and
$6,168,  respectively,  as  brokerage  commissions  with  Morgan  Stanley  & Co.
Incorporated, an affiliated broker/ dealer.
 
At December  31,  1995,  cost and  unrealized  appreciation  (depreciation)  for
Federal income tax purposes of the securities of each Portfolio were:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   NET
                                                                                               APPRECIATION
                                                           COST      APPREC.    (DEPREC.)     (DEPRECIATION)
FUND                                                      (000)       (000)       (000)           (000)
- -------------------------------------------------------  --------    -------    ---------     --------------
<S>                                                      <C>         <C>        <C>           <C>
Global Equity Allocation...............................  $ 83,171    $11,794    $ (1,467)        $10,327
Global Fixed Income....................................    16,128       700         (135)            565
Asian Growth...........................................   291,811    47,312      (23,958)         23,354
American Value.........................................    39,804     5,030       (1,517)          3,513
Worldwide High Income..................................    74,169     2,907       (1,013)          1,894
Latin American.........................................    15,731       971       (1,285)           (314)
Emerging Markets.......................................    63,096     3,967       (5,301)         (1,334)
</TABLE>
 
56
<PAGE>




                                    MORGAN STANLEY
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                               PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                    MARCH 31, 1996
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                         
                                                          VALUE
SHARES                                                    (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                       <C>
COMMON STOCK   (117.2%)
  CAPITAL GOODS / CONSTRUCTION  (10.0%)
     AEROSPACE  & DEFENSE  (10.0%)
    2,300   McDonnell Douglas Corp.                        $        211
    4,100   United Technologies Corp.                               460
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    671
                                                           --------------------
  CONSUMER CYCLICAL  (20.2%)
     AUTOMOTIVE  (1.9%)
    3,700   Autozone, Inc.                                          125
                                                           --------------------
     FOOD SERVICE & LODGING  (15.8%)
    8,500   Boston Chicken, Inc.                                    289
   12,200   HFS, Inc.                                               593
      600   Hilton Hotels Corp.                                      56
    4,200   La Quinta Inns, Inc.                                    123
                                                           --------------------
                                                                  1,061
                                                           --------------------
     PUBLISHING  (1.4%)
    8,300   K-III Communications                                     96
                                                           --------------------
     RETAIL - GENERAL  (1.1%)
    2,100   Petsmart, Inc.                                           76
                                                           --------------------
                                                           
  TOTAL CONSUMER CYCLICAL                                         1,358
                                                           --------------------

  CONSUMER STAPLES  (33.6%)
     BEVERAGES & TOBACCO  (4.8%)
   10,500   Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.                             324
                                                           --------------------
     CIGARETTES  (22.0%)
   16,200   Philip Morris Cos., Inc.                              1,422
    1,900   UST, Inc.                                                61
                                                           --------------------
                                                                  1,483
                                                           --------------------
     DRUGS  (2.3%)
    2,700   Schering-Plough Corp.                                   157
                                                           --------------------
     FOOD  (2.9%)
    2,900   Ralston-Ralston Purina Group                            194
                                                           --------------------
     HOSPITAL MANAGEMENT  (0.7%)
    1,000   U.S. Healthcare, Inc.                                    46
                                                           --------------------
     PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS  (0.9%)
    1,300   Tambrands, Inc                                           61
                                                           --------------------
  TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES                                          2,265
                                                           --------------------
     DIVERSIFIED  (11.8%)
   3,900    Loews Corp.                                             295
  16,500    RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp.                              499
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    794
                                                           --------------------

</TABLE>
       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

                                    MORGAN STANLEY
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                               PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                    MARCH 31, 1996

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                         VALUE
SHARES                                                    (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                      <C>
  FINANCE  (32.9%)
     BANKING  (19.8%)
    1,700   Chase Manhattan Corp.                          $        125
    1,600   Citicorp                                                128
    1,700   First Interstate Bancorp                                295
    3,000   Wells Fargo & Co.                                       783
                                                           --------------------
                                                                  1,331
                                                           --------------------
     FINANCIAL SERVICES  (5.9%)
    3,300   American Express Co.                                    163
    2,500   CMAC Investment Corp.                                   141
    1,200   Student Loan Marketing Association                       92
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    396
                                                           --------------------
     INSURANCE  (6.7%)
    1,500   ACE Ltd.                                                 67
      500   Aetna Life & Casualty Co.                                38
    1,800   CIGNA Corp.                                             206
    3,200   PMI Group, Inc.                                         140
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    451
                                                           --------------------
     REAL ESTATE  (0.5%)
    1,200   Partnerre Holdings Ltd.                                  36
                                                           --------------------
  TOTAL FINANCE                                                   2,214
                                                           --------------------
  MATERIALS  (1.5%)
     BUILDING MATERIALS & COMPONENTS  (1.5%)
    5,300   AMRE, Inc.                                               99
                                                           --------------------
     TECHNOLOGY  (7.2%)
        COMPUTERS  (3.4%)
    2,200   Allied Signal, Inc.                                     130
    1,700   ITT Corp                                                102
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    232
                                                           --------------------
     ELECTRONICS  (2.7%)
    3,000   Sundstrand Corp.                                        122
    1,600   Watkins Johnson Co.                                      57
                                                           --------------------
                                                                    179
                                                           --------------------
     SOFTWARE SERVICES  (1.1%)
      700   Microsoft Corp.                                          72
                                                           --------------------
  TOTAL TECHNOLOGY                                                  483
                                                           --------------------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK  (COST $7,512)                                 7,884
                                                           --------------------
PURCHASED CALL OPTIONS  (2.2%)
    2,300   Philip Morris Cos., Inc., expiring 1/18/97,
            strike price $70                                         45
    4,200   Philip Morris Cos., Inc., expiring 1/19/98,
            strike price $80                                         64
      500   Wells Fargo Co., expiring 1/19/98,
            strike price $200                                        37
                                                           --------------------
TOTAL PURCHASED CALL OPTIONS (COST $138)                            146
                                                           --------------------

</TABLE>
       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

                                    MORGAN STANLEY
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                               PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                    MARCH 31, 1996
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

     FACE
    AMOUNT                                                VALUE
    (000)                                                 (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                       <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT   (14.5%)
   U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY OBLIGATIONS
   (14.5%)
  $   1,000   U.S. Treasury Bills, 8/29/96
  (COST $980)                                                     $ 979
                                                           --------------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS  (133.9%)  (COST $8,630)                        9,009
                                                           --------------------
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES (-33.9%)                   (2,282)
                                                           --------------------
NET ASSET VALUE (100%)                                           $6,727
                                                           --------------------
                                                           --------------------

</TABLE>
       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

                                    MORGAN STANLEY
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                               PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                    MARCH 31, 1996

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                         VALUE
    SHARES                                                (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                      <C>
SECURITIES SOLD SHORT  (NOTE A-  )
    1,700   American Express Co.                                 $   84
    1,700   Autozone, Inc.                                           58
      208   Chase Manhattan Corp.                                    15
    1,600   Citicorp                                                128
    6,850   Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.                             211
    1,100   CMAC Investment Corp.                                    62
      600   First Interstate Bancorp.                               104
    4,300   HFS, Inc.                                               209
      400   McDonnell Douglas Corp.                                  37
    2,000   Philip Morris Cos., Inc.                                176
   11,000   RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp.                              333
    1,200   Student Loan Marketing Association                       92
      600   Sundstrand Corp.                                         24
    1,600   Watkins Johnson Co.                                      57
    2,800   United Technologies Corp.                               314
                                                           --------------------
           (TOTAL PROCEEDS $1,971)                               $1,904
                                                           --------------------
                                                           --------------------

</TABLE>
       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>
LIMITED DURATION PORTFOLIO
(UNAUDITED)

STATEMENT OF NET ASSETS
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (94.7%)

                                       Ratings        Face 
                                       (Standard      Amount        Value 
March 31, 1996                         & Poor's)      (000)         (000)+
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES (15.7%)
##Government National
    Mortgage Association II
     Various Pools:
      5.50%, 1/20/24                          Agy    $   2,361     $ 2,384
      6.00%,
       2/20/24-5/20/25                        Agy        2,596       2,607
      6.50%,
       2/20/23-2/20/25                        Agy        7,525       7,593
      7.00%,
       10/20/23-10/20/24                      Agy        5,650       5,713
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                         18,297
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AGENCY FIXED RATE MORTGAGES (9.7%)
 Federal Home Loan
  Mortgage Corporation
   Conventional Pools:
    10.00%,
     4/1/10-8/1/16                            Agy          586         642
    10.50%, 12/1/14                           Agy          548         599
    11.00%,
     8/1/15-5/1/20                            Agy          368         409
    11.50%,
     4/1/11-1/1/18                            Agy        1,639       1,839
    12.00%, 12/1/14                           Agy           62          71
    13.00%, 9/1/14                            Agy           10          11
   Gold Pools:
    10.00%
    2/1/21-10/1/21                            Agy          434         473
    10.50%,
     1/1/19-12/1/20                           Agy        1,299       1,413
    11.50%, 8/1/10                            Agy          260         293
    12.00%,
     6/1/15-9/1/15                            Agy          826         935
Federal National
 Mortgage Association
  Conventional Pools:
    10.00%,
    12/1/15-9/1/16                            Agy          804         880
    10.50%, 4/1/15                            Agy          248         276
    12.00%
     5/1/14-8/1/20                            Agy          522         588
    12.50%, 2/1/15                            Agy          223         251
Government National
 Mortgage Association:
   Various Pools
    10.0%,
     11/15/09-4/15/17                         Agy          996       1,110
    10.50%, 11/15/18                          Agy           76          85

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

    11.00%                                       
     1/15/10-12/15/17                         Agy          933       1,050
    11.50%
     2/15/13-9/15/14                          Agy          371         422
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                         11,347
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ASSET BACKED CORPORATES (12.3%)
 Advanta Credit Card Master
   Trust Series 92-3A1
    5.95%, 8/31/99                            AAA        1,200       1,200
 AFG Receivables Trust
  Series 95-AA
    6.15%, 9/15/00                              A          507         506
## Airplanes Pass Through
   Trust Series 1 A5
    5.725%, 3/15/19                            AA          900         900
 ALPS Series 94-1 A2 CMO
    7.15%, 11/15/97                            AA          472         477
 Case Equipment Loan Trust
  Series:
   95-A A
    7.30%, 3/15/02                            AAA          323         328
   95-A B
    7.65%, 3/15/02                              A          351         359
## Discount Credit Master
   Trust Series 93-1
    5.645%, 10/16/01                          AAA          500         501
# Equitable Asset Trust
   Series 93-A
    5.00%, 10/15/08                           AAA          119         119
Ford Credit Grantor Trust
   Series 94-B A
    7.30%, 10/15/99                           AAA        1,381       1,403
 General Motors Acceptance
  Corp. Series
  93-A A Grantor Trust
    4.15%, 3/15/98                            AAA           34          34
 Green Tree Financial Series:
   94-5 A1
    6.60%, 11/15/19                            AA          330         332
   94-8 A1
    7.75%, 4/15/25                            AAA          237         238
   95-4 A1
    6.05%, 7/15/25                            AAA          691         692
 Greenwich Capital
  Acceptance, Inc
   Series 95-BA1 A1
    6.00%, 8/10/20                            AAA          562         557
 IBM Credit Receivables
  Lease Asset Master Trust
   Series 93-1A
    4.55%, 11/15/00                           AAA       $  515      $  509
 John Deere Owner Trust
   Series 93-B A2
    4.10%, 10/15/00                           AAA          422         420
 Navistar Financial Corp.
   Series:

     The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>


   93-A A2
    4.475%, 10/15/98                          AAA          272         272
   94-B A
    6.40%, 1/15/00                            AAA        1,170       1,175
 Oakwood Mortgage Investors
  Inc., Series 95-B A1
    6.25%, 1/15/21                            AAA          870         870
 Olympic Automobile
  Receivables Trust Series:
   94-A1
    5.65%, 1/15/01                            AAA          453         452
   94-B B
    6.95%, 6/15/01                            AAA          523         528
 Onyx Acceptance Trust
  Series:
   94-1 A
    6.90%, 1/17/00                            AAA          370         373
 Orix Credit Alliance Owner
  Trust Series 94-A A
    6.05%, 6/15/99                            AAA          502         502
 Premier Auto Trust Series:
   92-3 B
    6.25%, 11/15/97                             A          206         206
   94-3 B
    6.80%. 12/2/99                             AA          311         313
   95-1 A2
    7.35%, 5/4/97                             AAA          231         231
 Western Financial Auto
  Grantor Trust Series:
   93-2 A2
    4.70%, 10/1/98                            AAA          117         116
   93-3 A1
    4.25%, 12/1/98                            AAA          169         167
   94-1 A1
    5.10%, 6/1/99                             AAA          311         308
 Western Financial Series:
   93-A1
    4.45%, 7/1/98                             AAA          187         186
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                         14,274
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ASSET BACKED MORTGAGES (4.6%)
  Cityscape Home Equity
   Loan Series 95-2 A1
    7.92%, 2/25/09                            AAA          416         417
  Cityscape Series 96-1 A1
    6.45%, 3/1/09                             AAA        1,100       1,100
  Contimortgage Home Equity
   Loan Trust Series 96-1 A1
    5.70%, 10/15/09                           AAA        1,026       1,014
  Fleet Finance, Inc.
   Series 93-1 A
    5.45%, 3/20/23                            AAA        1,081       1,077
  Money Store (The) Home
  Equity Trust Series
   95-C A1
    6.20%, 1/15/09                            AAA          800         799


    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>


Southern Pacific Secured
 Assets Corp. 96-1 A2   
    6.09%, 2/25/14                               AAA       959         956
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                          5,363
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

##COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS -
   AGENCY COLLATERAL SERIES (1.2%)
    Student Loan Marketing Association
     Series
     95-1 A1
      5.735%, 4/26/04                            AAA    $  771     $   771
     96-1 A1
      5.58%, 7/26/04                             AAA       575         575
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                          1,346
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS -
 NON-AGENCY COLLATERAL SERIES (2.0%)
  Citicorp Mortgage
   Securities, Inc. REMIC
    Series 93-9 A1
    7.00%, 3/25/20                               AAA       230         230
  GE Capital Mortgage
   Services, Inc. Series
    93-14 A2
    5.75%, 4/25/11                               AAA       900         891
  Old Stone Credit
   Corporation
    Series 92-3 B1
    6.35%, 9/25/07                               AAA       170         168
  Residential Funding
   Mortgage Securities Co.
    Inc. Series 93-MZ1 A1
    7.47%, 3/2/23                                AA        265         265
  Security Pacific Home
   Loan Equity Trust
    Series 91-1B
    8.85%, 5/15/98                               AAA       750         768
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                          2,322
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGES (1.0%)
+ Carolina First Bank 96
    6.50%, 12/18/99                              Aaa2      600         598
^ CMB Funding Corp. 96-1 A1
    7.55%, 2/1/13                                AA        587         598
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                          1,196
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FINANCE (17.7%)
  Allstate Corp.
    5.875%, 6/15/98                              A       1,125       1,118
  Associates Corp., N.A.
    8.25%, 12/1/99                               AA-       600         635
  Barclays American Corp.
    7.875%, 8/15/98                              AA        450         467
##Caterpillar Financial
   Services
    5.513%, 6/20/97                              A         750         750
##Chrysler Financial Corp.
    6.09%, 7/18/97                               A-        625         626
+## Corestates Capital

       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


<PAGE>
    
    5.29%, 10/16/96                              A1        250         250
Countrywide Funding
    7.32%, 8/15/00                               A         650         666
Dean Witter Discover
 & Co
    6.00%, 3/1/98                                A         625         624
Equitable Cos., Inc.
    7.30%, 12/1/03                               A+        560         571
^Farmers Insurance
    8.50%, 8/1/04                                BBB-      700         717
##First National Bank of Chicago
    5.32%, 5/10/96                               A+      1,600       1,600
Ford Motor Credit Corp.
    7.47%, 7/29/99                               A+        675         695
General Motors Acceptance
 Corp.
    6.00%, 12/30/98                              A-        600         595
    7.125%, 7/1/97                               A-        100         102
    7.25%, 6/22/99                               A-        285         292
Heller Financial, Inc.
    8.85%, 4/15/96                               BBB+      225         225
    9.375%, 3/15/98                              BBB+      375         396
    7.875%, 11/1/99                              BBB+      525         547
Household Finance Corp.
 Series 89-2 A
    5.66%, 12/20/04                              AAA        15          15
Household International
    6.00%, 3/15/99                               A         575         570
International Lease Finance
    5.92%, 1/15/98                               A+        550         548
##   6.00%, 10/15/97                             A+        700         703
 Lehman Brothers Holding, Inc.
    6.625%, 11/15/00                             A         725         720
##Marshall & Ilsley Bank
    5.465%, 5/26/97                              A+        725         725
^Metropolitan Life
   Insurance Co.
    6.30%, 11/1/03                               AA        675         644
##NationsBank Texas
    5.50%, 6/18/97                               A+        875         875
^Nationwide Mutual
  Insurance Co.
    6.50%, 2/15/04                               AA-       675         650
^New York Life
  Insurance Co.
    6.40%, 12/15/03                              AA        675         655
^Prudential Insurance Co.                        
    6.875%, 4/15/03                              A2        400         395
##Student Loan Marketing Association
    5.47%, 10/30/97                              AAA     1,500       1,499
##Superior Wholesale
   Inventory Financing
    94-A
    5.825%, 1/15/99                              A         650         650
##Toyota Motor Credit
    5.29%, 6/3/96                                AAA       900         900
## Wells Fargo
    5.438%, 1/28/97                              A-        175         175
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                         20,600
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

INDUSTRIALS (3.5%)
  Columbia/HCA Healthcare
    6.87%, 9/15/03                               BBB+      490         488
^Kern River Funding Corp.                        
    6.42%, 3/31/01                               A-        805         805
 News America Holdings                           
    8.625%, 2/1/03                               BBB       500         540
 Philip Morris Cos., Inc.
    8.75%, 6/1/01                                A         520         565
 RJR Nabisco, Inc.
    8.625%, 12/1/02                              BBB-      575         569
 Tele-Communications Inc.
    8.25%, 1/15/03                               BBB-      500         523
 Time Warner, Inc.
    9.625%, 5/1/02                               BBB-      550         616
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group Total                                                          4,106
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

RATED NON-AGENCY FIXED RATE MORTGAGES (0.8%)
+Town & Country Funding Corp.
    5.85%, 8/15/98                               Aa2     1,000         979
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. TREASURY SECURITIES (26.2%)
 U.S. Treasury Notes
    8.75%, 10/15/97                              Tsy     1,500       1,566
++  5.125%, 6/30/98                              Tsy     6,850       6,748
    4.375%, 11/15/96                             Tsy       585         581
    4.75%, 8/31/98                               Tsy     2,500       2,438
    4.75%, 9/30/98                               Tsy    10,850      10,572
    6.75%, 5/31/99                               Tsy     4,225       4,316
    7.75%, 12/31/99                              Tsy     2,825       2,985
    7.125%, 2/29/00                              Tsy     1,275       1,322
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP TOTAL                                                         30,528
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (Cost $110,587)                      110,358
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CASH EQUIVALENT (1.5%)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (1.5%)
 The Chase Manhattan Bank N.A.
  5.35%, dated March 29, 1996, due
  4/1/96, to be repurchased at
  $1,697, collateralized by various
  U.S. Government Obligations,
  due 5/31/96-5/31/97, valued at
  $1,713  (Cost $1,697)                                  1,697       1,697
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL CASH EQUIVALENT (Cost $1,697)                                  1,697
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS (96.2%) (Cost $112,284)                          112,055
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

OTHER ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (3.8%)
 Cash                                                                    1
 Interest Receivable                                                 1,263
 Receivable for Fund Shares Sold                                     7,423
 Receivable for Investments Sold                                     1,545
 Receivable for Daily Variation on
  Futures Contracts                                                      2
 Payable for Fund Shares Redeemed                                  (3,979)
 Payable for Investments Purchased                                 (1,683)
 Payable for Investment Advisory Fees                                 (91)
 Payable for Administrative Fees                                       (8)
 Other Liabilities                                                     (9)
                                                                ----------

       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

                                                                     4,464
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSETS (100%)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Applicable to 11,198,188 outstanding shares
   of beneficial interest (unlimited authorization,
   no par value)                                                  $116,519
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE                                           $10.41
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    +   See Note A1 to Financial Statements.
    ++  A portion of these securities was pledged to cover margin
          requirements for future contracts.
    +   Moody's Investor Service, Inc. rating.  Security is not
         rated by Standard & Poor's Corporation.
    #   Step Bond-Coupon rate increases in increments to maturity.  Rate
         disclosed is as of March 31, 1996.  Maturity date
         disclosed is ultimate maturity.
    ##  Variable or floating rate security - rate disclosed is as of
         March 31, 1996.
    ^   144A security.  Certain conditions for public sale may exist.
   CMO  Collateralized Mortgage Obligation.      
                                                 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>


                                 MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                         STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
                                    MARCH 31, 1996
                                     (UNAUDITED)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                   AGGRESSIVE
                                                                   EQUITY FUND
                                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSETS:
<S>                                                        <C>
  Investments in Securities, at Value (Note 1)
    - See accompanying portfolios                                        $9,009
  Receivable for:
     Investments Sold                                                      34
     Fund Shares Sold                                                      45
     Dividends                                                             26
  Collateral on Deposit with Broker                                     1,971
  Deferred Organization Costs                                              39
  Receivable from Investment Advisor                                       10
                                                          -------------------
        Total Assets                                                   11,134
                                                          -------------------
LIABILITIES:
  Securities Sold Short, at Value (Proceeds $1,971)                     1,904
  Payable for:
     Investments Purchased                                                244
     Bank Overdraft                                                     2,213
     Dividends                                                             10
     Investment Advisory Fees                                              13
     Administrative Fees                                                    1
     Custody Fees                                                           1
     Professional Fees                                                      5
     Distribution Fees                                                     10
     Shareholder Reporting Expenses                                         1
     Filing and Registration Fees                                           3
  Dividends payable on Securities Sold Short                                2

                                                          -------------------
       Total Liabilities                                                4,407
                                                          -------------------

NET ASSETS                                                             $6,727
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

Net Assets Consist Of:
  Capital Stock at Par                                                     $1
  Paid in Capital in Excess of Par                                      6,195
  Undistributed Net Investment Income                                       8
  Accumulated Net Realized Gain                                            77
  Unrealized Appreciation on Investments                                  446
                                                          -------------------
NET ASSETS                                                             $6,727
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------


CLASS A SHARES:
  Net Assets                                                           $2,714
  Shares Issued and Outstanding ($.001 par value)
    (Authorized 375,000,000)                                                205
  Net Asset Value and Redemption Price Per Share                       $13.23
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

  Maximum Sales Charge                                                  4.75%
  Maximum Offering Price Per Share (Net Asset
    Value Per Share x 100/95.25)                                       $13.89
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

CLASS B SHARES:
  Net Assets                                                           $1,906
  Shares Issued and Outstanding ($.001 par value)
    (Authorized 375,000,000)                                                144
  Net Asset Value and Offering Price Per Share                         $13.23
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

CLASS C SHARES:
  Net Assets                                                           $2,107
  Shares Issued and Outstanding ($.001 par value)
    (Authorized 375,000,000)                                                159
  Net Asset Value and Offering Price Per Share                         $13.22
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

  Investments at Cost                                                  $8,630
                                                          -------------------
                                                          -------------------

</TABLE>



       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

                                 MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                               STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                                     (UNAUDITED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                AGGRESSIVE
                                                               EQUITY FUND
                                                         JANUARY 2, 1996*
                                                         TO MARCH 31, 1996
                                                                      (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                   <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Dividends                                           $                 41
  Interest                                                               8
                                                       -------------------

  Total Income                                                          49
                                                       -------------------

EXPENSES:
  Investment Advisory Fees
  Basic Fee                                                             13
  Less: Fees Waived                                                    (11)
                                                       -------------------

  Investment Advisory Fees - Net                                         2

  Administrative Fees                                                    5
  Custodian Fees                                                         1
  Filing and Registration Fees                                           2
  Professional Fees                                                      5
  Shareholder Reports                                                    1
  Distribution Fees
  Class A                                                                1
  Class B                                                                4
  Class C                                                                4
  Blue Sky Fees
  Class A                                                                1
  Class B                                                            -
  Class C                                                            -
  Dividend Expense                                                       3
                                                       -------------------

  Net Expenses                                                          29
                                                       -------------------

Net Investment Income                                                   20
                                                       -------------------

NET REALIZED GAIN ON INVESTMENTS
  Securities Sold                                                       77
                                                       -------------------

CHANGE IN UNREALIZED APPRECIATION ON:
  Securities                                                           446
                                                       -------------------

Total Net Realized Gain and Change in
  Unrealized Appreciation                                              523
                                                       -------------------

NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING
  FROM OPERATIONS                                                     $543
                                                       -------------------
                                                       -------------------

</TABLE>
- ---------------------------------
* Commencement of operations.

  The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statement.

<PAGE>

                                 MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS
                          STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           JANUARY 2, 1996* TO
                                                                MARCH 31, 1996
                                                                   (UNAUDITED)
                                                                         (000)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                        <C>
OPERATIONS:
   Net Investment Income                                                  $20
   Net Realized Gain on Investments                                        77
   Change in Unrealized Appreciation                                      446
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations                   543
                                                           -------------------
Distributions:
   Net Investment Income:
   Class A                                                                 (6)
   Class B                                                                 (3)
   Class C                                                                 (3)
                                                           -------------------
                                                                          (12)
                                                           -------------------

CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (1):
   Issued                                                               6,661
   Distributions Reinvested                                                 2
   Redeemed                                                              (467)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital
   Share Transactions                                                   6,196
                                                           -------------------

   Total Increase in Net Assets                                         6,727
Net Assets - Beginning of Period                                         -
                                                           -------------------

Net Assets - End of Period (Including undistributed
   net investment income of $8.)                                       $6,727
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Capital Share Transactions:
(1) CLASS A:
    Shares:
    Issued                                                                237
    Distributions Reinvested                                             -
    Redeemed                                                              (32)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                             205
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------

   Dollars:
    Issued                                                             $2,941
    Distributions Reinvested                                                2
    Redeemed                                                             (418)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class A Shares Outstanding                          $2,525
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------

   CLASS B
    Shares:
    Issued                                                                145
    Distributions Reinvested                                             -
    Redeemed                                                               (1)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                             144
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------

   Dollars:
    Issued                                                             $1,746
    Distributions Reinvested                                             -
    Redeemed                                                              (11)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class B Shares Outstanding                          $1,735
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------

   CLASS C
   Shares:
    Issued                                                                162
    Distributions Reinvested                                             -
    Redeemed                                                               (3)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                             159
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------

   Dollars:
    Issued                                                             $1,974
    Distributions Reinvested                                             -
    Redeemed                                                              (38)
                                                           -------------------
   Net Increase in Class C Shares Outstanding                          $1,936
                                                           -------------------
                                                           -------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    * Commencement of operations

       The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                           MORGAN STANLEY FUNDS

                                           FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

                                          AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND

                                                            Class A             Class B             Class C
                                                            January 2, 1996*    January 2, 1996*    January 2, 1996
                                                            to March 31, 1996   to March 31, 1996   to March 31, 1996
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA AND RATIOS                          (Unaudited)         (Unaudited)         (Unaudited)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                       <C>                   <C>                  <C>
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                  $12.00              $12.00                $12.00

INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
     Net Investment Income                                              0.06                0.05                  0.04
     Net Realized and Unrealized Gain                                   1.20                1.20                  1.20
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
     Total From Investment Operations                                   1.26                1.25                  1.24
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
DISTRIBUTION:
     Net Investment Income                                            (0.03)              (0.02)                (0.02)
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------


NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD                                        $13.23              $13.23                $13.22
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
TOTAL RETURN (1)                                                      10.50%              10.42%                10.33%
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net Assets, End of Period (000's)                                     $2,714              $1,906                $2,107

Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                1.50% **            2.25% **              2.25% **
Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets                  1.85% **            1.10% **              1.10% **
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                  95%                 95%                   95%
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------

Effect of Voluntary Expense Limitation During the Period
     Per Share Benefit to Net Investment Income                      $  0.02             $  0.02               $  0.02
Ratios Before Expense Limitation:
     Expenses to Average Net Assets                                    2.23% **            2.98% **              2.98% **
     Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets                       1.12% **            0.37% **              0.37% **
                                                            ----------------    ----------------     -----------------
*    Commencement of operations
**   Annualized
(1)  Total return is calculated exclusive of sales charges or deferred sales
     charges.  Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
</TABLE>

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
<PAGE>

                               MORGAN STANLEY FUND, INC.
                             NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                                    March 31, 1996



     Morgan Stanley Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") was incorporated under the laws 
of Maryland on August 14, 1992 and commenced operations on January 4, 1993.  
The Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 
as an open-end management investment company which offers redeemable shares 
of diversified and non-diversified investment portfolios.  As of March 31, 
1996, the Fund had eight separate active investment portfolios: Morgan 
Stanley Global Equity Allocation Fund, Morgan Stanley Global Fixed Income 
Fund, Morgan Stanley Asian Growth Fund, Morgan Stanley Aggressive Equity 
Fund, Morgan Stanley American Value Fund, Morgan Stanley Worldwide High 
Income Fund, Morgan Stanley Latin American Fund and Morgan Stanley Emerging 
Markets Fund (referred to herein respectively as "Global Equity Allocation 
Fund", "Global Fixed Income Fund", "Asian Growth Fund", "Aggressive Equity 
Fund", "American Value Fund", "Worldwide High Income Fund", "Latin American 
Fund" and "Emerging Markets Fund" and collectively as the "Portfolios").  The 
Fund currently offers three classes of shares, Class A, Class B and Class C 
shares.  Class A shares are sold with a front-end sales charge of up to 
4.75%.  Class B shares are sold with a contingent deferred sales charge on 
redemptions made within 6 years of purchase which declines annually from 5% 
for redemptions made in year one, down to 1% in year six.  Class B shares 
will automatically convert to Class A shares after the seventh year following 
purchase.  Class C shares are sold with a contingent deferred sales charge at 
the rate of 1.00% for shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase 
based on the lesser of the current market value of the shares redeemed or the 
total cost of such shares.  All three classes of shares have identical 
voting, dividend, liquidation and other rights.

A.   ACCOUNTING POLICIES:  The following is a summary of significant 
accounting policies for the Fund.  Such policies are in conformity with 
generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies and are 
consistently followed by the Fund in the preparation of the financial 
statements.  Generally accepted accounting principles requires management to 
make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and 
disclosures on the financial statements.  Actual results could differ from 
those estimates.

1.   SECURITY VALUATION:  Equity securities listed on an exchange and equity 
securities traded on NASDAQ are valued at the latest quoted sales price on 
the valuation date.  Securities listed on a foreign exchange are valued at 
their closing price.  Unlisted securities and listed securities not traded on 
the valuation date for which market quotations are readily available are 
valued at the average of the mean between the current bid and asked prices, 
if any, of two reputable brokers.  Bonds and other fixed income securities 
are valued according to the broadest and most representative market. In 
addition, bonds and other fixed income securities are valued on the basis of 
prices provided by a pricing service which are based primarily on 
institutional size trading in similar groups of securities. Debt securities 
purchased with remaining maturities of 60 days or less are valued at 
amortized cost, if it approximates market value.  All other securities and 
assets for which market values are not readily available, including 
restricted securities, are valued at fair value as determined in good faith 
by the Board of Directors, although the actual calculations may be done by 
others.  

2.   TAXES:  It is each Portfolio's intention to qualify as a regulated 
investment company and distribute all of its taxable income.  Accordingly, no 
provision for Federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.  
The Fund may be subject to taxes imposed by countries in which it invests.  
Such taxes are generally based on either income earned or repatriated.

3.   REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS:  In connection with transactions in repurchase 
agreements, a bank as a custodian for the Fund takes possession of the 
underlying securities, the value of which is at least equal to the principal 
amount of the repurchase transaction, including accrued interest.  To the 
extent that any repurchase transaction exceeds one business day, the value of 
the collateral is marked-to-market on a daily basis to determine the adequacy 
of the collateral.  In the event of default on the obligation to repurchase, 
the Fund has the right to

<PAGE>

liquidate the collateral and apply the proceeds in satisfaction of the 
obligation.  In the event of default or bankruptcy by the other party to the 
agreement, realization and/or retention of the collateral or proceeds may be 
subject to legal proceedings.

4.   SHORT SALES:  The Aggressive Equity Fund may sell securities short.  A 
short sale is a transaction in which the Portfolio sells securities it does 
not own, but has borrowed, in anticipation of a decline in the market price 
of the securities.  The Portfolio is obligated to replace the borrowed 
securities at the market price at the time of replacement. The Portfolio may 
have to pay a premium to borrow the securities as well as pay any dividends 
or interest payable on the securities until they are replaced The Portfolio's 
obligation to replace the securities borrowed in connection with a short sale 
will generally be secured by collateral deposited with the broker that 
consists of cash, U.S. government securities or other liquid, high grade debt 
obligations.  In addition, the Portfolio will place in a segregated account 
with its Custodian an amount of cash, U.S. government securities or other 
liquid high grade debt obligations equal to the difference, if any, between 
(1) the market value of the securities sold at the time they were sold short 
and (2) any cash, U.S. government securities or other liquid high grade debt 
obligations deposited as collateral with the broker in connection with the 
short sale (not including the proceeds of the short sale).  Short sales by 
the Portfolio involve certain risks and special considerations.  Possible 
losses from short sales differ from losses that could be incurred from a 
purchase of a security, because losses from short sales may be unlimited, 
whereas losses from purchases cannot exceed the total amount invested.

5.   PURCHASED OPTIONS:  Certain Portfolios may purchase call or put options 
which are traded on a recognized securities or futures exchange.  When a 
Portfolio purchases a call option, it acquires the right to buy a designated 
security at a designated price ("exercise price");  when a Portfolio 
purchases a put option, it acquires the right to sell a designated security 
at the exercise price.  A Portfolio may purchase call options to close out a 
covered call position or to protect against an increase in the price of a 
security it anticipates purchasing.  A Portfolio may purchase put options on 
securities which it holds to protect against a decline in the value of the 
security.  Risks may arise from imperfect correlation between the change in 
market value of the securities held by the Portfolio and the prices of 
options relating to the securities purchased or sold by the Portfolio and 
from the possible lack of a liquid secondary market for an option.  The 
maximum exposure to loss for any purchased option is limited to the premium 
initially paid for the option.

6.   DELAYED DELIVERY COMMITMENTS:  Each Portfolio may purchase securities on 
a when-issued or forward commitment basis.  Payment and delivery may take 
place a month or more after the date of the transaction.  The price of the 
underlying securities and the date when the securities will be delivered and 
paid for are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated.

7.   ORGANIZATIONAL COSTS:  The organizational costs of the Portfolios are 
being amortized on a straight line basis over a period of five years 
beginning with each Portfolio's commencement of operations.  MSAM has agreed 
that in the event any of its initial shares in a Portfolio are redeemed, the 
proceeds on redemption will be reduced by the pro-rata portion of any 
unamortized organizational costs in the same proportion as the number of 
shares redeemed bears to the initial shares held at time of redemption.

8.   OTHER:  Security transactions are accounted for on the date the 
securities are purchased or sold.  Costs used in determining realized gains 
and losses on the sale of investment securities are those of specific 
securities sold.  Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date.  
Interest income is recognized on the accrual basis except where collection is 
in doubt.  Discounts and premiums on securities purchased are amortized 
according to the effective yield method over their respective lives. 
Distributions from the Portfolios are recorded on the ex-distribution date.  
Most expenses of the Fund can be directly attributed to a particular 
Portfolio.  Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned 
among the Portfolios based upon relative net assets.  Income, expenses (other 
than class specific expenses) and realized and unrealized gains or losses are 
allocated to each class of shares based upon their relative net assets.  
Distributions from the Portfolios are recorded on the ex-distribution date.  
Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with U.S. 
Federal income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted 
accounting principles.

<PAGE>

B.   ADVISER:  Morgan Stanley Asset Management, Inc. (the "Adviser" or 
"MSAM"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., provides 
the Fund with investment advisory services at a fee paid quarterly and 
calculated at the annual rates of average daily net assets indicated below.  
The Adviser has agreed to reduce fees payable to it and to reimburse the 
Aggressive Equity Fund, if necessary, if the annual operating expenses, 
expressed as a percentage of average daily net assets, exceed the maximum 
ratio indicated below:

                                                                Class B
                                                  Class A     and Class C
                                                  Maximum       Maximum
                                                 Operating     Operating
                                    Advisory      Expense       Expense
Fund                                  Fee          Ratio         Ratio
- ------                              --------     ---------     -----------
Aggressive Equity Fund               0.90%         1.50%          2.25%

C.  ADMINISTRATOR:  MSAM also provides the Fund with administrative services 
pursuant to an Administrative Agreement for a monthly fee which on an annual 
basis equals 0.25% of the average daily net assets of each Portfolio. 
Effective September 1, 1995, The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. through its 
affiliate Chase Global Funds Services Company ("CGFSC"), formerly Mutual 
Funds Service Company ("MFSC"), provides certain administrative services to 
the Fund under an agreement with MSAM.  CGFSC is compensated for such 
services by MSAM from the fee it receives from the Fund.  Certain employees 
of CGFSC are officers of the Fund.

D.  DISTRIBUTOR:  Morgan Stanley & Co., Incorporated (the "Distributor"), a 
wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group, Inc., and an affiliate of 
MSAM, serves as the distributor of the Fund and provides both classes of each 
Portfolio with distribution services pursuant to a Distribution Plan in 
accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940.  The 
Distributor is entitled to receive from the Portfolios a distribution fee, 
which is accrued daily and paid quarterly, of up to 0.25% for the Class A 
shares of each Portfolio and up to 1.00% of the Class B and Class C shares of 
each Portfolio, on an annualized basis of the average daily net assets of 
such class.

E.     CUSTODIANS:  Morgan Stanley Trust Company ("MSTC"); a wholly-owned 
subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Group Inc., acts as custodian for the Fund's 
non-U.S. assets held outside the United States in accordance with a Custodian 
Agreement. The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. serves as custodian for the Fund's 
domestic assets in accordance with a Custodian Agreement.  Custodian fees are 
computed and payable monthly based on assets held, investment purchases and 
sales activity, an account maintenance fee, plus reimbursement for certain 
out-of-pocket expenses.

F.  PURCHASES AND SALES:  For the period January 2, 1996 to March 31, 1996, 
purchases and sales of investment securities other than U.S. Government 
securities and short-term investments were $11,495,000 and $3,921,000, 
respectively.

G.  OTHER:  At March 31, 1996, cost an unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 
for Federal income tax purposes of the securities of the Portfolio were:

                                                                     NET
                                                                 APPRECIATION
                       COST            APPREC.     (DEPREC.)    (DEPRECIATION)
FUND                  (000)            (000)         (000)           (000)
- ----                  -----            -------     --------     --------------
Aggressive Equity    $8,630             $569        $(190)           $379



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