JP MORGAN FUNDS
485BPOS, 1998-10-28
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As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 28, 1998.
                    Registration Nos. 033-54632 and 811-07340
    


                     U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                ----------------
                                    FORM N-1A



   
             REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                         POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 56
    


                                       and

   
         REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
                                AMENDMENT NO. 57
    

                                J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
                       (formerly, The JPM Pierpont Funds)
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

            60 State Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109
                    (Address of Principal Executive Offices)

               Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code:
                                 (617) 557-0700

                 Christopher Kelley, c/o Funds Distributor, Inc.
            60 State Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

   
                     Copy to:John E. Baumgardner, Jr., Esq.
                               Sullivan & Cromwell
                                125 Broad Street
                            New York, New York 10004
    

 It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):

   
[ ] Immediately  upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) 
[X] on (October 28, 1998)pursuant to paragraph (b) 
[ ] 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph  (a)(i)
[ ] on (date) pursuant to paragraph  (a)(i)
[ ] 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii)
[ ] on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii) of Rule 485.
    

If appropriate, check the following box:

[ ]  this  post-effective  amendment  designates  a  new  effective  date  for a
previously filed post-effective amendment.



<PAGE>




   
The Diversified Portfolio has also executed this registration statement.
    




<PAGE>





                                J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
                         (J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND)
                              CROSS-REFERENCE SHEET
                            (As Required by Rule 495)

PART A ITEM NUMBER:  Prospectus Headings.

1.       COVER PAGE:  Cover Page.

2.       SYNOPSIS: Introduction; Investor Expenses.

3.       CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION: Financial Highlights.

   
     4.  GENERAL   DESCRIPTION  OF  REGISTRANT:   Goal;   Investment   Approach;
Risk/Return Summary; Model Allocation;  Master/Feeder Structure; Risk and Reward
Elements.
    

     5. MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND: Cover Page; J.P. Morgan;  Portfolio  Management;
Management and Administration.

5A.      MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION OF FUND PERFORMANCE: Performance.

6.       CAPITAL STOCK AND OTHER  SECURITIES:  Investing  Directly;  Account and
         Transaction Policies; Dividends and Distributions;  Tax Considerations;
         Master/Feeder Structure.

7.       PURCHASE OF SECURITIES BEING OFFERED: Introduction; Investing Directly;
         Opening your Account;  Adding to your Account;  Account and Transaction
         Policies.

     8.  REDEMPTION  OR  REPURCHASE:  Selling  Shares;  Account and  Transaction
Policies.

9.    PENDING LEGAL PROCEEDINGS:  Not Applicable.

PART B ITEM NUMBER:  Statement of Additional Information Headings.

10.      COVER PAGE: Cover Page.

11.      TABLE OF CONTENTS: Table of Contents.

12.      GENERAL INFORMATION AND HISTORY: General.

   
13.      INVESTMENT  OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES:  Investment Objective and Policies;
         Additional   Investments;    Investment   Restrictions;   Quality   and
         Diversification Requirements; Appendix A.
    

14.      MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND: Trustees and Officers.

     15. CONTROL  PERSONS AND PRINCIPAL  HOLDERS OF  SECURITIES:  Description of
Shares.



     16. ESTMENT ADVISORY AND OTHER SERVICES:  Investment Advisor;  Distributor;
Co-Administrator;  Services  Agent;  Custodian and Transfer  Agent;  Shareholder
Servicing; Eligible Institutions; Independent Accountants; Expenses.

17.      BROKERAGE ALLOCATION AND OTHER PRACTICES: Portfolio Transactions.

     18. CAPITAL STOCK AND OTHER SECURITIES: Massachusetts Trust; Description of
Shares.

19.      PURCHASE, REDEMPTION AND PRICING OF SECURITIES BEING OFFERED: Net Asset
         Value;  Purchase of Shares;  Redemption of Shares;  Exchange of Shares;
         Dividends and Distributions.

20.      TAX STATUS: Taxes.

21.      UNDERWRITERS: Distributor.

22.      CALCULATION OF PERFORMANCE DATA: Performance Data.

23.      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS: Financial Statements.

     PART C.  Information  required  to be included in Part C is set forth under
the appropriate items, so numbered, in Part C of this Registration Statement.



<PAGE>



                                EXPLANATORY NOTE

   
This  post-effective  amendment  No. 56 (the  "Amendment")  to the  Registrant's
registration  statement  on Form N-1A (File No.  033-54632)  (the  "Registration
Statement") is being filed to update  Registrant's  disclosure in the Prospectus
and Statement of Additional Information relating to the Registrant's J.P. Morgan
Diversified  Fund, a separate series of shares of the Registrant for the purpose
of updating financial information for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1998.
    

<PAGE>

   
                                             NOVEMBER 2, 1998   PROSPECTUS
    




J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND


                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  A balanced fund seeking high
                                                  total return with reduced risk



This prospectus contains essential information for anyone investing in the fund.
Please read it carefully and keep it for reference.

Shares in the fund are not bank deposits and are not guaranteed or insured by
any bank, government entity, or the FDIC.

   
As with all mutual funds, the fact that these shares are registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission does not mean that the commission approves
them or guarantees that the information in this prospectus is
correct or adequate. It is a criminal offense for anyone to state or suggest
otherwise.
    

Distributed by Funds Distributor, Inc.                                  JPMORGAN

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

CONTENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                         <C>
 2
- ---

The fund's goal, investment approach, risks, expenses, performance, and
financial highlights

J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND

Fund description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
Investor expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
Performance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
Financial highlights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3


 4
- ---

Investing in the J.P. Morgan Diversified Fund

YOUR INVESTMENT

Investing through a financial professional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
Investing through an employer-sponsored retirement plan. . . . . . . . . .  4
Investing through an IRA or Rollover IRA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
Investing directly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
Opening your account . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
Adding to your account . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
Selling shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
Account and transaction policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
Dividends and distributions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
Tax considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6


 7
- ---

More about risk and the fund's business operations

FUND DETAILS

   
Master/feeder structure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
Management and administration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
Risk and reward elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
Investments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    

FOR MORE INFORMATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . back cover
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

INTRODUCTION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND

This fund invests in a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds by investing
through a master portfolio (another fund with the same goal). As a shareholder,
you should anticipate risks and rewards beyond those of a typical bond fund, but
less than those of most stock funds.

WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST

The fund is designed for investors who:

- -    are pursuing a long-term goal such as retirement

- -    want an investment with the potential to outpace inflation

- -    seek less risk than a fund investing completely in stocks

- -    prefer to leave asset allocation decisions in the hands of an investment
     professional

It is NOT designed for investors who:

- -    are looking for the higher long-term potential growth (with the higher
     risks) of a fund investing completely in stocks

- -    require regular income or stability of principal

- -    are pursuing a short-term goal or investing emergency reserves

J.P. MORGAN

   
Known for its commitment to proprietary research and its disciplined investment
strategies, J.P. Morgan is the asset management choice for many of the world's
most respected corporations, financial institutions, governments, and
individuals. Today, J.P. Morgan employs over 300 analysts and portfolio managers
around the world and has more than $275 billion in assets under management,
including assets managed by the fund's advisor, J.P. Morgan Investment
Management Inc.
    


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

BEFORE YOU INVEST

Investors considering the fund should understand that:

- -    The value of the fund's shares will fluctuate over time. You could lose
     money if you sell when the fund's share price is lower than when you
     invested.

- -    There is no assurance that the fund will meet its investment goal.

- -    Future returns will not necessarily resemble past performance.


                                                                               1
<PAGE>

J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND                 TICKER SYMBOL: PPDVX
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             REGISTRANT NAME: J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
                                             (J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND)


[GRAPHIC]
GOAL

   
The fund seeks to provide a high total return from a diversified portfolio of
stocks and bonds. This goal can be changed without shareholder approval.
    

[GRAPHIC]
INVESTMENT APPROACH

Drawing on a variety of analytical tools, the portfolio management team
allocates assets among various types of stock and bond investments, based on the
model allocation shown at right. The team periodically adjusts the fund's actual
asset allocation according to the relative attractiveness of each asset class.

Within this asset allocation framework, the team selects the fund's securities.
With the stock portion of the portfolio, the fund keeps its economic sector
weightings in line with the markets in which it invests, while actively seeking
the most attractive stocks within each sector. In choosing individual stocks,
the team ranks them according to their relative value using a proprietary model
that incorporates research from J.P. Morgan's worldwide network of analysts.
Foreign stocks are chosen using a similar process, while also considering
country allocation and currency exposure.

With the bond portion of the portfolio, the team uses fundamental, economic, and
capital markets research to select securities. The team actively manages the mix
of U.S. and foreign bonds while typically keeping duration - a common
measurement of sensitivity to interest rate movements - within one year of the
average for the U.S. investment-grade bond universe (currently about 5 years).

[GRAPHIC]
RISK/RETURN SUMMARY

The value of your investment in the fund will fluctuate in response to movements
in the stock and bond markets. The fund's broad diversification among asset
classes and among individual stocks and bonds is more effective in reducing
volatility when asset classes perform differently. Fund performance will also
depend on the management team's asset allocation and securities selection.

Over the long term, investors can anticipate that the fund's total return and
volatility should exceed those of bonds but remain less than those of medium-
and large-capitalization domestic stocks.

The fund's securities are described in more detail on page 8, along with their
main risks, which may cause the fund's share price to decline, and the fund's
strategies to reduce these risks.


MODEL ALLOCATION

[CHART]

52% medium- and large-cap U.S. stocks
35% U.S. and foreign bonds
10% foreign stocks
 3% small-cap U.S. stocks

PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

   
The fund's assets are managed by J.P. Morgan, which currently manages over $275
billion, including more than $14.8 billion using the same strategy
as the fund.

The portfolio management team is led by John M. Devlin, Vice President, who
joined the team in December of 1993 and has been at J.P. Morgan since 1986, and
Kate Jonas, who recently joined the team and has been at J.P. Morgan since 1997.
Prior to working at J.P. Morgan, Ms. Jonas worked, since 1985, in investment
related areas at Morgan Stanley Asset Management and Morgan Stanley Co.
    


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTOR EXPENSES

The current expenses you should expect to pay as an investor in the fund are
shown at right. The fund has no sales, redemption, exchange, or account fees,
although some institutions may charge you a fee for shares you buy through them.
The annual fund expenses shown are deducted from fund assets prior to
performance calculations.

Footnotes for this section are shown on next page.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------------
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES(1) (%)
- -----------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                               <C>
   
Management fees                                   0.55
    

Marketing (12b-1) fees                            none

Other expenses(2)
(after reimbursement)                             0.43
- -----------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES(2)
(AFTER REIMBURSEMENT)                             0.98
- -----------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

EXPENSE EXAMPLE

The example below uses the same assumptions as other fund prospectuses: $1,000
initial investment, 5% annual total return, expenses unchanged, all shares sold
at the end of each time period. The example is for comparison only; the fund's
actual return and expenses will be different.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        1 yr.     3 yrs.    5 yrs.    10 yrs.
<S>                                     <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
YOUR COST($)                             10         31        54       120
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


2  J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND
<PAGE>
   

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

PERFORMANCE (UNAUDITED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN (%)    Shows performance over time, for periods ended December 31, 1997
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          1 yr.     3 yrs.    Since inception(3)
<S>                                                                                       <C>       <C>       <C>
J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND (after expenses)                                             18.47     19.33            13.82
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FUND BENCHMARK(4) (no expenses)                                                           21.26     20.91            14.85
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P 500 INDEX(5) (no expenses)                                                            33.36     31.15            22.13
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<CAPTION>

YEAR-BY-YEAR TOTAL RETURN (%)      Shows changes in returns by calendar year
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 1993(3)        1994           1995           1996           1997
<S>                                                              <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND                                     1.74           0.60           26.47          13.42          18.47

FUND BENCHMARK(4)                                                1.43           0.46           27.75          14.10          21.26

S&P 500 INDEX(5)                                                 2.32           1.32           37.58          22.96          33.36

<CAPTION>

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

PER-SHARE DATA           For fiscal periods ended June 30
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 1994(3)        1995           1996           1997           1998
<S>                                                              <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD ($)                         10.00           9.81           11.20         12.22           13.89
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment operations:
     Net investment income ($)                                    0.09            0.28           0.30          0.37            0.33
     Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
     on investment and foreign currency ($)                      (0.27)           1.37           1.48          2.02            2.03
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS ($)                             (0.18)           1.65           1.78          2.39            2.36
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less distributions to shareholders from:
     Net investment income ($)                                   (0.01)          (0.20)         (0.32)        (0.32)          (0.53)
     Net realized gain ($)                                          --           (0.06)         (0.44)        (0.40)          (0.66)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL DISTRIBUTIONS ($)                                          (0.01)          (0.26)         (0.76)        (0.72)          (1.19)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD ($)                                9.81           11.20          12.22         13.89           15.06
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL RETURN (%)                                                 (1.82)(6)       17.08          16.51         20.52           18.06
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET ASSETS AT END OF PERIOD ($ thousands)                        7,023          22,396         53,198        70,338         227,064
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIO OF EXPENSES TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS (%)                       0.98(7)         0.98           0.98          0.98            0.98
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIO OF NET INVESTMENT INCOME TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS (%)          2.80(7)         3.39           3.04          3.00            2.81
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DECREASE REFLECTED IN EXPENSE RATIO DUE TO
EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT (%)                                         1.52(7)         0.91           0.38          0.27            0.09
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

The Financial Highlights have been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, the
fund's independent accountants.


(1)  The fund has a master/feeder structure as described on page 7. This table
     shows the fund's expenses and its share of master portfolio expenses for
     the past fiscal year, expressed as a percentage of the fund's average net
     assets and reflecting reimbursement for ordinary expenses over 0.98%.

(2)  Without reimbursement, other expenses and total operating expenses would
     have been 0.52% and 1.07%, respectively. This reimbursement arrangement can
     be changed or terminated at any time at the option of J.P. Morgan.

(3)  The fund commenced operations on 12/15/93. Except in the Financial
     Highlights, returns reflect performance of J.P. Morgan Institutional
     Diversified Fund (a separate feeder fund investing in the same master
     portfolio) from 9/30/93 through 12/15/93.

(4)  A composite benchmark of unmanaged indices that corresponds to the fund's
     model allocation and that consists of the S&P 500 (52%), Russell 2000 (3%),
     Salomon Brothers Broad Investment Grade Bond (35%), and MSCI EAFE (10%)
     indices.

(5)  The S&P 500 Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. stocks widely used as a
     measure of overall stock market performance.

(6)  Not annualized.

(7)  Annualized.


                                                 J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND  3
    
<PAGE>

YOUR INVESTMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For your convenience, the J.P. Morgan Funds offer several ways to initiate and
maintain fund investments.

INVESTING THROUGH A FINANCIAL PROFESSIONAL

If you work with a financial professional, either at J.P. Morgan or elsewhere,
he or she is prepared to handle your planning and transaction needs. Your
financial professional will be able to assist you in establishing your fund
account, executing transactions, and monitoring your investment. If your fund
investment is not held in the name of your financial professional and you prefer
to place a transaction order yourself, please use the instructions for investing
directly.

INVESTING THROUGH AN EMPLOYER-SPONSORED RETIREMENT PLAN

   
Your fund investments are handled through your plan. Refer to your plan
materials or contact your benefits office for information on buying, selling, or
exchanging fund shares.
    

INVESTING THROUGH AN IRA OR ROLLOVER IRA

Please contact a J.P. Morgan Retirement Services Specialist at 1-888-576-4472
for information on J.P. Morgan's comprehensive IRA services, including lower
minimum investments.

INVESTING DIRECTLY

Investors may establish accounts without the help of an intermediary by using
the instructions below and at right:

- -    Determine the amount you are investing. The minimum amount for initial
     investments in the fund is $2,500 and for additional investments $500,
     although these minimums may be less for some investors. For more
     information on minimum investments, call 1-800-521-5411.

- -    Complete the application, indicating how much of your investment you
     want to allocate to which fund(s). Please apply now for any account
     privileges you may want to use in the future, in order to avoid the
     delays associated with adding them later on.

- -    Mail in your application, making your initial investment as shown at
     right.

For answers to any questions, please speak with a J.P. Morgan Funds Services
Representative at 1-800-521-5411.

OPENING YOUR ACCOUNT

     BY WIRE

- -    Mail your completed application to the Shareholder Services Agent.

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent to obtain an account number and to
     place a purchase order. FUNDS THAT ARE WIRED WITHOUT A PURCHASE ORDER
     WILL BE RETURNED UNINVESTED.

- -    After placing your purchase order, instruct your bank to wire the
     amount of your investment to:

     State Street Bank & Trust Company
     ROUTING NUMBER: 011-000-028
     CREDIT: J.P. Morgan Funds
     ACCOUNT NUMBER: 9904-226-9
     FFC: your account number, name of registered owner(s) and fund
     name

     BY CHECK

- -    Make out a check for the investment amount payable to J.P. Morgan
     Funds.

- -    Mail the check with your completed application to the Transfer Agent.

     BY EXCHANGE

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent for an exchange.

ADDING TO YOUR ACCOUNT

     BY WIRE

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent to place a purchase order. FUNDS
     THAT ARE WIRED WITHOUT A PURCHASE ORDER WILL BE RETURNED UNINVESTED.

- -    Once you have placed your purchase order, instruct your bank to wire
     the amount of your investment as described above.

     BY CHECK

- -    Make out a check for the investment amount payable to J.P. Morgan
     Funds.

   
- -    Mail the check with a completed investment slip to the Transfer Agent.
     If you do not have an investment slip, attach a note indicating your
     account number and how much you wish to invest in which fund(s).
    

     BY EXCHANGE

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent for an exchange.


4    YOUR INVESTMENT
<PAGE>

SELLING SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
     BY PHONE -- WIRE PAYMENT
    

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent to verify that the wire redemption
     privilege is in place on your account. If it is not, a representative
     can help you add it.

- -    Place your wire request. If you are transferring money to a non-Morgan
     account, you will need to provide the representative with the personal
     identification number (PIN) that was provided to you when you opened
     your fund account.

   
     BY PHONE -- CHECK PAYMENT
    

- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent and place your request. Once your
     request has been verified, a check for the net amount, payable to the
     registered owner(s), will be mailed to the address of record. For
     checks payable to any other party or mailed to any other address,
     please make your request in writing (see below).

     IN WRITING

- -    Write a letter of instruction that includes the following information:
     The name of the registered owner(s) of the account; the account
     number; the fund name; the amount you want to sell; and the
     recipient's name and address or wire information, if different from
     those of the account registration.

- -    Indicate whether you want the proceeds sent by check or by wire.

- -    Make sure the letter is signed by an authorized party. The Shareholder
     Services Agent may require additional information, such as a signature
     guarantee.

- -    Mail the letter to the Shareholder Services Agent.

     BY EXCHANGE

   
- -    Call the Shareholder Services Agent to effect an exchange.
    

ACCOUNT AND TRANSACTION POLICIES

TELEPHONE ORDERS  The fund accepts telephone orders from all shareholders. To
guard against fraud, the fund requires shareholders to use a PIN and may record
telephone orders or take other reasonable precautions. However, if the fund does
take such steps to ensure the authenticity of an order, you may bear any loss if
the order later proves fraudulent.

EXCHANGES  You may exchange shares in this fund for shares in any other J.P.
Morgan or J.P. Morgan Institutional mutual fund at no charge (subject to the
securities laws of your state). When making exchanges, it is important to
observe any applicable minimums. Keep in mind that for tax purposes an exchange
is considered a sale.

The fund may alter, limit, or suspend its exchange policy at any time.

   
     BUSINESS HOURS AND NAV  CALCULATIONS  The fund's regular  business days and
hours are the same as those of the New York Stock Exchange.  The fund calculates
its net asset  value  per  share  (NAV)  every  business  day as of the close of
trading on the NYSE (normally 4:00 p.m. eastern time). The fund's securities are
typically priced using market quotes or pricing services. When these methods are
not available or do not represent a security's value at the time of pricing, the
security is valued in accordance with the fund's fair valuation procedures.
    

TIMING OF ORDERS  Orders to buy or sell shares are executed at the next NAV
calculated after the order has been accepted. Orders are accepted until 4:00
p.m. eastern time every business day and are executed the same day, at that
day's NAV. The fund has the right to suspend redemption of shares and to
postpone payment of proceeds for up to seven days or as permitted by law.



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

TRANSFER AGENT                               SHAREHOLDER SERVICES AGENT
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY          J.P. MORGAN FUNDS SERVICES
P.O. Box 8411                                522 Fifth Avenue
Boston, MA 02266-8411                        New York, NY 10036
Attention: J.P. Morgan Funds Services        1-800-521-5411

Representatives are available 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. eastern time on fund 
business days.

                                                              YOUR INVESTMENT  5
<PAGE>

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

TIMING OF SETTLEMENTS  When you buy shares, you will become the owner of record
when the fund receives your payment, generally the day following execution. When
you sell shares, the proceeds are generally available the day following
execution and will be forwarded according to your instructions.

When you sell shares that you recently purchased by check, your order will be
executed at the next NAV but the proceeds will not be available until your check
clears. This may take up to 15 days.

   
STATEMENTS AND REPORTS  The fund sends monthly account statements as well as
confirmations after each purchase or sale of shares (except reinvestments).
Every six months the fund sends out an annual or semi-annual report containing
information on the fund's holdings and a discussion of recent and anticipated
market conditions and fund performance.

ACCOUNTS WITH BELOW-MINIMUM BALANCES  If your account balance falls below the
minimum for 30 days as a result of selling shares (and not because of
performance), the fund reserves the right to request that you buy more shares or
close your account. If your account balance is still below the minimum 60 days
after notification, the fund reserves the right to close out your account and
send the proceeds to the address of record.
    

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

The fund typically pays income dividends four times a year (usually in March,
June, September, and December) and makes capital gains distributions, if any,
once a year (usually in September). These dividends and distributions consist of
most or all of the fund's net investment income and net realized capital gains.

   
Dividends and distributions are reinvested in additional fund shares.
Alternatively, you may instruct your financial professional or J.P. Morgan Funds
Services to have them sent to you by check, credited to a separate account, or
invested in another J.P. Morgan Fund.
    

TAX CONSIDERATIONS

   
In general, selling shares, exchanging shares, and receiving distributions
(whether reinvested or taken in cash) are all taxable events. These transactions
typically create the following tax liabilities for taxable accounts:
    

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSACTION                                  TAX STATUS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income dividends                             Ordinary income
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short-term capital gains                     Ordinary income
distributions
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Long-term capital gains                      Capital gains
distributions
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sales or exchanges of shares                 Capital gains or losses
owned for more than one year
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sales or exchanges of shares                 Gains are treated as ordinary
owned for one year or less                   income; losses are subject
                                             to special rules
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Because long-term capital gains distributions are taxable as capital gains
regardless of how long you have owned your shares, you may want to avoid making
a substantial investment when the fund is about to declare a long-term capital
gains distribution.

Every January, the fund issues tax information on its distributions for the
previous year.

Any investor for whom the fund does not have a valid taxpayer identification
number will be subject to backup withholding for taxes.

The tax considerations described in this section do not apply to tax-deferred
accounts or other non-taxable entities.

Because each investor's tax circumstances are unique, please consult your tax
professional about your fund investment.


6  YOUR INVESTMENT
<PAGE>

FUND DETAILS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MASTER/FEEDER STRUCTURE

As noted earlier, the fund is a "feeder" fund that invests in a master
portfolio. (Except where indicated, this prospectus uses the term "the fund" to
mean the feeder fund and its master portfolio taken together.)

   
The master portfolio accepts investments from other feeder funds, and the
feeders bear the master portfolio's expenses in proportion to their assets.
However, each feeder can set its own transaction minimums, fund-specific
expenses and other conditions. This means that one feeder could offer access to
the same master portfolio on more attractive terms, or could experience better
performance, than another feeder. Information about other feeders is available
by calling 1-800-521-5411. Generally, when the master portfolio seeks a vote,
the fund will hold a shareholder meeting and cast its vote proportionately, as
instructed by its shareholders. Fund shareholders are entitled to one full or
fractional vote for each dollar or fraction of a dollar invested.
    

The fund and its master portfolio expect to maintain consistent goals, but if
they do not, the fund will withdraw from the master portfolio, receiving its
assets either in cash or securities. The fund's trustees would then consider
whether the fund should hire its own investment adviser, invest in a different
master portfolio, or take other action.

MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION

   
The fund and its master portfolio are governed by the same trustees. The
trustees are responsible for overseeing all business activities. The trustees
are assisted by Pierpont Group, Inc., which they own and operate on a cost
basis; costs are shared by all funds governed by these trustees. Funds
Distributor, Inc., as co-administrator, along with J.P. Morgan, provides fund
officers. J.P. Morgan, as co-administrator, oversees the fund's other service
providers.
    

J.P. Morgan, subject to the expense reimbursements described earlier in this
prospectus, receives the following fees for investment advisory and other
services:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADVISORY SERVICES                       0.55% of the master portfolio's
                                        average net assets

ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES                 Master portfolio's and fund's pro-
(fee shared with Funds                  rata portions of 0.09% of the first
Distributor, Inc.)                      $7 billion in J.P. Morgan-advised
                                        portfolios, plus 0.04% of average
                                        net assets over $7 billion

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES                    0.25% of the fund's average
                                        net assets


J.P. Morgan may pay fees to certain firms and professionals for providing
recordkeeping or other services in connection with investments in the fund.

   
YEAR 2000  Fund operations and shareholders could be adversely affected if 
the computer systems used by J.P. Morgan, the fund's other service providers 
and other entities with computer systems linked to the fund do not properly 
process and calculate January 1, 2000 and after date-related information. 
J.P. Morgan is working to avoid these problems and to obtain assurances from 
other service providers that they are taking similar steps. However, it is 
not certain that these actions will be sufficient to prevent these 
date-related problems from adversely impacting fund operations and 
shareholders. In addition, to the extent that operations of issuers of 
securities held by the fund are impaired by date-related problems or prices 
of securities decline as a result of real or perceived date-related problems 
of issuers held by the fund or generally, the net asset value of the fund 
will decline.

THE EURO  Effective January 1, 1999 the euro, a single multinational currency,
will replace the national currencies of certain countries in the Economic
Monetary Union (EMU).

J.P. Morgan has identified the following potential risks to the fund, after the
conversion: The risk that the valuation of assets is not properly converted from
the national currency to the euro; currency risk resulting from increased 
volatility in exchange rates between EMU countries and non-participating 
countries; the inability of any of the fund, its service providers and the 
issuers of the fund's portfolio securities to make information technology 
updates timely; and the potential unenforceability of contracts. There have 
been recent laws and regulations designed to ensure the continuity of contracts,
however there is a risk that the valuation of contracts will be negatively 
impacted after the conversion.  J.P. Morgan is working to avoid these problems
and to obtain assurances from other service providers that they are taking 
similar steps.  However, it is not certain that these actions will be sufficient
to prevent problems associated with the conversion from adversely impacting 
fund operations and shareholders.
    


                                                                 FUND DETAILS  7
<PAGE>

RISK AND REWARD ELEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This table discusses the main elements that make up the fund's overall risk and
reward characteristics (described on page 2). It also outlines the fund's
policies toward various securities, including those that are designed to help
the fund manage risk.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POTENTIAL RISKS                              POTENTIAL REWARDS                            POLICIES TO BALANCE RISK AND REWARD
<S>                                          <C>                                          <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MARKET CONDITIONS

   
- -    The fund's share price and              -    Stocks and bonds have generally         -    Under normal circumstances the
     performance will fluctuate in                outperformed more stable                     fund plans to remain fully invested,
     response to stock and bond                   investments (such as short-term              with approximately 65% in stocks and
     market movements                             bonds and cash equivalents) over             35% in bonds; stock investments may
                                                  the long term                                include U.S. and foreign common
- -    The value of the fund's bonds                                                             stocks, convertible securities,
     (and potentially its convertible        -    A diversified, balanced portfolio            preferred stocks, trust or
     securities and stocks) could fall            should mitigate the effects of               partnership interests, warrants,
     when interest rates rise; the                wide market fluctuations, especially         rights, and investment company
     longer a bond's duration and the             when stock and bond prices move              securities; bond investments may
     lower its credit quality, the more           in different directions                      include U.S. and foreign corporate
     its value typically falls                                                                 and government bonds, and mortgage-
                                             -    The fund's bonds could rise in value         backed and asset-backed securities
- -    The fund's mortgage-backed and               when interest rates fall                     (securities representing an interest
     asset-backed securities could                                                             in, or secured by, a pool of
     generate capital losses or periods      -    Mortgage-backed and asset-backed             mortgages or other assets such as
     of low yields if they are paid off           securities can offer attractive              receivables)
     substantially earlier or later than          returns
     anticipated                                                                          -    The fund seeks to limit risk through
                                                                                               diversification in a large number of
- -    Adverse market conditions may from                                                        stocks, and to a lesser extent bonds
     time to time cause the fund to take                                                       (typically holding more than 1,000
     temporary defensive positions that                                                        stock and bond positions)
     are inconsistent with its principal
     investment strategies and may hinder                                                 -    The fund seeks to keep the average
     the fund from achieving its                                                               duration of its bond portfolio
     investment objective                                                                      within one year of that for the
                                                                                               U.S. investment-grade bond
                                                                                               universe
    

                                                                                          -    The fund monitors interest rate
                                                                                               trends, as well as geographic and
                                                                                               demographic information related
                                                                                               related, to mortgage-backed
                                                                                               securities and mortgage
                                                                                               prepayments

                                                                                          -    During severe market downturns,
                                                                                               the fund has the option of investing
                                                                                               up to 100% of assets in investment-
                                                                                               grade short-term securities

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MANAGEMENT CHOICES

- -    The fund could underperform its         -    The fund could outperform its           -    J.P. Morgan focuses its active
     benchmark due to its asset allocation        benchmark due to these same                  management on asset allocation and
     and securities choices                       choices                                      securities selection, areas where
                                                                                               it believes its research advantage
                                                                                               can enhance returns

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CREDIT QUALITY

- -    The default of an issuer would leave    -    Investment-grade bonds have a lower     -    At least 75% of the fund's bonds
     the fund with unpaid interest or             risk of default                              must be investment-grade (BBB/Baa
     principal                                                                                 or better, of which 65% must be A
                                             -    Junk bonds offer higher yields and           or better), and no more than 25%
- -    Junk bonds (those rated BB/Ba or             higher potential gains                       BB/Ba or B; the fund may include
     lower) have a higher risk of default                                                      unrated bonds of equivalent
                                                                                               quality in these categories

                                                                                          -    The fund does not buy bonds lower
                                                                                               than B

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS

   
- -    Currency exchange rate movements        -    Favorable exchange rate movements       -    The fund anticipates that total
     could reduce gains or create losses          could generate gains or reduce               foreign investments will not exceed
                                                  losses                                       30% of assets
- -    The fund could lose money because of
     foreign government actions, political   -    Foreign investments, which              -    The fund actively manages the
     instability, or lack of adequate and         represent a major portion of the             currency exposure of its foreign
     accurate information                         world's securities, offer                    stock and bond investments relative
                                                  attractive potential performance             to its benchmark, and may hedge a
                                                  and opportunities for diversification        portion of its foreign currency
                                                                                               exposure into the U.S. dollar from
                                                                                               time to time (see also
                                                                                               "Derivatives")
</TABLE>
    


8  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POTENTIAL RISKS                              POTENTIAL REWARDS                            POLICIES TO BALANCE RISK AND REWARD
<S>                                          <C>                                          <C>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DERIVATIVES

   
- -    Derivatives such as futures, options,   -    Hedges that correlate well with         -    The fund uses derivatives, such as
     swaps, and forward foreign currency          underlying positions can reduce              futures, options, swaps and forward
     contracts (1) that are used for hedging      or eliminate losses at low cost              foreign currency contracts, for
     the portfolio or specific securities                                                      hedging and for risk management
     may not fully offset the underlying     -    The fund could make money and                (i.e., to adjust duration or to
     positions and this could result in           protect against losses if                    establish or adjust exposure to
     losses to the fund that would not            management's analysis proves                 particular securities, markets or
     have otherwise occurred                      correct                                      currencies); risk management may
                                                                                               include management of the fund's
- -    Derivatives used for risk               -    Derivatives that involve leverage            exposure relative to its benchmark
     management may not have the intended         could generate substantial gains
     effects and may result in losses or          at low cost                             -    The fund only establishes hedges
     missed opportunities                                                                      that it expects will be highly
                                                                                               correlated with underlying
- -    The counterparty to a derivatives                                                         positions
     contract could default
                                                                                          -    While the fund may use derivatives
- -    Derivatives that involve leverage                                                         that incidentally involve leverage,
     could magnify losses                                                                      it does not use them for the
                                                                                               specific purpose of leveraging the
- -    Certain types of derivatives involve                                                      portfolio
     costs to the fund which can reduce
     returns
    

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ILLIQUID HOLDINGS

   
- -    The fund could have difficulty          -    These holdings may offer more           -    The fund may not invest more than
     valuing these holdings precisely             attractive yields or potential               15% of net assets in illiquid
                                                  growth than comparable widely                holdings
- -    The fund could be unable to sell             traded securities
     these holdings at the time or price                                                  -    To maintain adequate liquidity to
     it desires                                                                                meet redemptions, the fund may hold
                                                                                               investment-grade short-term
                                                                                               securities (including repurchase
                                                                                               agreements) and, for temporary or
                                                                                               extraordinary purposes, may borrow
                                                                                               from banks up to 33 1/3% of the
                                                                                               value of its total assets
    

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED
DELIVERY SECURITIES

- -    When the fund buys securities before    -    The fund can take advantage of          -    The fund uses segregated accounts to
     issue or for delayed delivery, it            attractive transaction opportunities         offset leverage risk
     could be exposed to leverage risk if
     it does not use segregated accounts

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM TRADING

- -    Increased trading would raise the       -    The fund could realize gains in a       -    The fund anticipates a portfolio
     fund's brokerage and related costs           short period of time                         turnover rate of approximately 150%

- -    Increased short-term capital gains      -    The fund could protect against losses   -    The fund generally avoids short-term
     distributions would raise                    if a stock is overvalued and its value       trading, except to take advantage
     shareholders' income tax liability           later falls                                  of attractive or unexpected
                                                                                               opportunities or to meet demands
                                                                                               generated by shareholder activity
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

   
(1)  A futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell a set quantity of an
     underlying instrument at a future date, or to make or receive a cash
     payment based on changes in the value of a securities index. An option is
     the right to buy or sell a set quantity of an underlying instrument at a
     predetermined price. A swap is a privately negotiated agreement to exchange
     one stream of payments for another. A forward foreign currency contract is
     an obligation to buy or sell a given currency on a future date and at a set
     price.
    


                                                                 FUND DETAILS  9
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This table discusses the customary types of investments which can be held by the
fund. In each case the principal types of risk (along with their definitions)
are listed on the following page.  This table reads across two pages.

   
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES  Interests in a stream of payments from specific assets,
such as auto or credit card receivables.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BANK OBLIGATIONS  Negotiable certificates of deposit, time deposits and bankers'
acceptances of domestic and foreign issuers.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMERCIAL PAPER  Unsecured short term debt issued by domestic and foreign banks
or corporations. These securities are usually discounted and are rated by S&P or
Moody's.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES  Domestic and foreign debt securities that can be
converted into equity securities at a future time and price.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CORPORATE BONDS  Debt securities of domestic and foreign industrial, utility,
banking, and other financial institutions.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORTGAGES (DIRECTLY HELD)  Domestic debt instruments which give the lender a
lien on property as security for the loan payment.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES  Domestic and foreign securities (such as Ginnie
Maes, Freddie Macs, Fannie Maes) which represent interests in pools of
mortgages, whereby the principal and interest paid every month is passed through
to the holder of the securities.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORTGAGE DOLLAR ROLLS  The purchase of mortgage-backed securities with the
promise to purchase similar securities upon the maturity of the original
security.  Segregated accounts are used to offset leverage risk.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PARTICIPATION INTERESTS  Interests that represent a share of bank debt or
similar securities or obligations.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRIVATE PLACEMENTS  Bonds or other investments that are sold directly to an
institutional investor.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REITS AND OTHER REAL-ESTATE RELATED INSTRUMENTS  Securities of issuers that
invest in real estate or are secured by real estate.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS  Contracts whereby the seller of a security agrees to
repurchase the same security from the buyer on a particular date and at a
specific price.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOVEREIGN DEBT, BRADY BONDS, AND DEBT OF SUPRANATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS  Dollar- or
non-dollar-denominated securities issued by foreign governments or supranational
organizations.  Brady bonds are issued in connection with debt restructurings.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SWAPS  Contractual agreement whereby a party agrees to exchange periodic
payments with a counterparty. Segregated accounts are used to offset leverage
risk.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TAX EXEMPT MUNICIPAL SECURITIES  Securities, generally issued as general
obligation and revenue bonds, whose interest is exempt from federal taxation and
state and/or local taxes in the state where the securities were issued.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES  Debt instruments (Treasury bills, notes, and bonds)
guaranteed by the U.S. government for the timely payment of principal and
interest.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZERO COUPON, PAY-IN-KIND, AND DEFERRED PAYMENT SECURITIES  Domestic and foreign
securities offering non-cash or delayed-cash payment.  Their prices are
typically more volatile than those of some other debt instruments and involve
certain special tax considerations.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    


10  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

   
/-/ Permitted (and if applicable, percentage of net assets limitation)
    

/ / Permitted, but not typically used


                         PRINCIPAL TYPES OF RISK

   
                                                                  DIVERSIFIED FUND(1)
<S>                                                               <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, interest rate, market, prepayment                                  /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, liquidity, political                                     /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, liquidity, market, political              /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, liquidity, market, political,
valuation                                                                  /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, liquidity, market, political,
valuation                                                                  /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, environmental, extension, interest rate, liquidity, market,        / /
natural event, political, prepayment
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, extension, interest rate, leverage, market,
political, prepayment                                                      /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
extension, interest rate, leverage, liquidity, market,
prepayment                                                            /-/33 1/3%
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, extension, interest rate, liquidity, political,
prepayment                                                                 /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, interest rate, liquidity, market, valuation                        /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, interest rate, liquidity, market, natural event,
prepayment, valuation                                                      /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit                                                                     /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, market, political                         /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, leverage, market, political               /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, interest rate, market, natural event, political                    / /
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
interest rate                                                              /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
credit, currency, interest rate, liquidity, market, political, valuation   /-/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

(1)  Under normal circumstances, the fund expects to invest approximately 30% of
     total assets in foreign securities.


RISK RELATED TO CERTAIN INVESTMENTS HELD BY J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND:
    

CREDIT RISK  The risk a financial obligation will not be met by the issuer of a
security or the counterparty to a contract, resulting in a loss to the
purchaser.

CURRENCY RISK  The risk currency exchange rate fluctuations may reduce gains or
increase losses on foreign investments.

ENVIRONMENTAL RISK  The risk that an owner or operator of real estate may be
liable for the costs associated with hazardous or toxic substances located on
the property.

EXTENSION RISK  The risk a rise in interest rates will extend the life of a
mortgage-backed security to a date later than the anticipated prepayment date,
causing the value of the investment to fall.

INTEREST RATE RISK  The risk a change in interest rates will adversely affect
the value of an investment.  The value of fixed income securities generally
moves in the opposite direction of interest rates (decreases when interest rates
rise and increases when interest rates fall).

LEVERAGE RISK  The risk of gains or losses disproportionately higher than the
amount invested.

LIQUIDITY RISK  The risk the holder may not be able to sell the security at the
time or price it desires.

MARKET RISK  The risk that when the market as a whole declines, the value of a
specific investment will decline proportionately.  This systematic risk is
common to all investments and the mutual funds that purchase them.

NATURAL EVENT RISK  The risk a natural disaster, such as a hurricane or similar
event, will cause severe economic losses and default in payments by the issuer
of the security.

POLITICAL RISK  The risk governmental policies or other political actions will
negatively impact the value of the investment.

PREPAYMENT RISK  The risk declining interest rates will result  in unexpected
prepayments, causing the value of the investment to fall.

VALUATION RISK  The risk the estimated value of a security does not match the
actual amount that can be realized if the security is sold.


                                                                FUND DETAILS  11
<PAGE>

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


                       (THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK)




































12
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                       (THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK)




































                                                                              13
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOR MORE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For investors who want more information on the fund, the following documents are
available free upon request:

ANNUAL/SEMI-ANNUAL REPORTS  Contain financial statements, performance data,
information on portfolio holdings, and a written analysis of market conditions
and fund performance for the fund's most recently completed fiscal year or
half-year.

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (SAI)  Provides a fuller technical and legal
description of the fund's policies, investment restrictions, and business
structure. This prospectus incorporates the SAI by reference.

   
Copies of the current versions of these documents, along with other information
about the fund, may be obtained by contacting:
    

J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND
J.P. Morgan Funds Services
522 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10036

TELEPHONE:  1-800-521-5411

HEARING IMPAIRED:  1-888-468-4015

EMAIL:  [email protected]


   
Text-only versions of these documents and this prospectus are available, upon
payment of a duplicating fee, from the Public Reference Room of the Securities
and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C. (1-800-SEC-0330) and may be viewed
on-screen or downloaded from the SEC's Internet site at http://www.sec.gov. The
fund's investment company and 1933 Act registration numbers are 811-07340 and
033-54632.
    


J.P. MORGAN FUNDS AND THE MORGAN TRADITION

The J.P. Morgan Funds combine a heritage of integrity and financial leadership
with comprehensive, sophisticated analysis and management techniques. Drawing on
J.P. Morgan's extensive experience and depth as an investment manager, the J.P.
Morgan Funds offer a broad array of distinctive opportunities for mutual fund
investors.



J.P. MORGAN
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
J.P. MORGAN FUNDS

   
ADVISOR                                           DISTRIBUTOR
J.P. Morgan Investment Management Inc.            Funds Distributor, Inc.
522 Fifth Avenue                                  60 State Street
New York, NY 10036                                Boston, MA 02109
1-800-521-5411                                    1-800-221-7930
    

<PAGE>



   
                               J. P. MORGAN FUNDS


                          J. P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND
    





                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


   
                                NOVEMBER 2, 1998





























THIS  STATEMENT OF  ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION  IS NOT A  PROSPECTUS,  BUT CONTAINS
ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION  WHICH  SHOULD BE READ IN  CONJUNCTION  WITH THE  FUND'S
PROSPECTUS  DATED  NOVEMBER  2,  1998,  AS  SUPPLEMENTED   FROM  TIME  TO  TIME,
ADDITIONALLY, THIS STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION INCORPORATES BY REFERENCE
THE  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  AND  SHAREHOLDER  REPORT  RELATING TO THE FUND.  THE
PROSPECTUS  AND THE  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS,  INCLUDING THE REPORT  THEREON,  ARE
AVAILABLE WITHOUT CHARGE, UPON REQUEST FROM FUNDS DISTRIBUTOR,  INC., ATTENTION:
THE J. P. MORGAN FUNDS (800) 221-7930.
    


<PAGE>



                   Table of Contents


                                                                            Page

   
General.................................                                      1
Investment Objective and Policies......                                       1
Investment Restrictions.................                                     26
Trustees and Officers...................                                     28
Investment Advisor......................                                     32
Distributor.............................                                     34
Co-Administrator........................                                     34
Services Agent..........................                                     35
Custodian and Transfer Agent............                                     36
Shareholder Servicing...................                                     37
Financial Professionals.................                                     38
Independent Accountants.................                                     38
Expenses................................                                     38
Purchase of Shares......................                                     39
Redemption of Shares....................                                     40
Exchange of Shares......................                                     40
Dividends and Distributions.............                                     41
Net Asset Value.........................                                     41
Performance Data........................                                     42
Portfolio Transactions..................                                     44
Massachusetts Trust.....................                                     45
Description of Shares...................                                     46
Special Information Concerning
Investment Structure....................                                     48
Taxes...................................                                     49
Additional Information..................                                     53
Financial Statements....................                                     55
Appendix A - Description of Securities
Ratings.................................                                     A-1
    


<PAGE>



 
GENERAL

   
     This  Statement  of  Additional  Information  relates  only to J. P. Morgan
Diversified  Fund (the  "Fund").  The Fund is a series  of shares of  beneficial
interest  of J. P.  Morgan  Funds,  an open-end  management  investment  company
organized as a  Massachusetts  business trust (the "Trust").  In addition to the
Fund, the Trust consists of other series representing  separate investment funds
(each a "J. P.  Morgan  Fund").  The other J. P.  Morgan  Funds are  covered  by
separate Statements of Additional Information.

         This  Statement  of  Additional  Information  describes  the  financial
history, investment objective and policies, management and operation of the Fund
and provides additional  information with respect to the Fund and should be read
in  conjunction   with  the  Fund's  current   Prospectus  (the   "Prospectus").
Capitalized  terms not otherwise  defined  herein have the meanings  accorded to
them in the  Prospectus.  The Fund's  executive  offices are located at 60 State
Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

         Unlike other mutual funds which  directly  acquire and manage their own
portfolio of securities,  the Fund seeks to achieve its investment  objective by
investing  all of  its  investable  assets  in The  Diversified  Portfolio  (the
"Portfolio"), a corresponding diversified open-end management investment company
having  the same  investment  objective  as the Fund.  The Fund  invests  in the
Portfolio  through a  two-tier  master-feeder  investment  fund  structure.  See
"Special Information Concerning Investment Structure."  Accordingly,  references
below to the Fund also  include  the  Portfolio;  similarly,  references  to the
Portfolio also include the Fund unless the context requires otherwise.

     The Portfolio is advised by J. P. Morgan Investment Management Inc.("JPMIM"
or the "Advisor").

         Investments  in the  Fund  are  not  deposits  or  obligations  of,  or
guaranteed  or  endorsed  by,  Morgan   Guaranty  Trust  Company  of  New  York,
("Morgan"),  an affiliate of the Advisor,  or any other bank. Shares of the Fund
are not federally  insured by the Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation,  the
Federal Reserve Board, or any other  governmental  agency.  An investment in the
Fund is subject to risk that may cause the value of the investment to fluctuate,
and when the  investment is redeemed,  the value may be higher or lower than the
amount originally invested by the investor.
    

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES

         The following  discussion  supplements  the  information  regarding the
investment objective of the Fund and the policies to be employed to achieve this
objective by the Portfolio as set forth herein and in the Prospectus.  Since the
investment  characteristics and experiences of the Fund correspond directly with
those  of  the  Portfolio,  the  discussion  in  this  Statement  of  Additional
Information focuses on the investments and investment policies of the Portfolio.
Accordingly, references below to the Portfolio also include the Fund; similarly,
references  to the Fund also include the Portfolio  unless the context  requires
otherwise.

          The Fund is designed  for  investors  who wish to invest for long term
objectives such as retirement and who seek to attain real  appreciation in their
investments over the long term, but with somewhat less price  fluctuation than a
portfolio  consisting  solely  of  equity  securities.   The  Fund's  investment
objective  is to provide a high total  return from a  diversified  portfolio  of
equity and fixed income securities.


<PAGE>



   
         The mix of equities and fixed income is based on the risk premium model
and the  anticipation  of  changing  economic  trends.  The risk  premium is the
difference   between  JPMIM's   forecast  of  the  long-term  return  on  stocks
(determined using JPMIM's  proprietary  dividend discount model) and the current
nominal  yield on 30-year U.S.  Treasury  bonds.  When the risk premium is high,
more assets are  allocated to stocks.  When the risk premium is low, more assets
are allocated to bonds.  Within U.S. equities,  the allocation between large cap
and small cap stocks is based on the  relative  dividend  discount  rate  spread
between  large and small  cap.  The  equity  portion  of the  Portfolio  will be
invested  primarily  in large  and  medium  sized  U.S.  companies  with  market
capitalizations  above $1.5  billion,  with the balance in small U.S.  companies
primarily included in the Russell 2000 Index and in foreign issuers primarily in
developed countries.  Within fixed income, the allocation among sectors is based
on JPMIM's analysis of their relative valuations.
    

         Investment Process for the Portfolio's Equity Component

         With respect to the equity portion of the Portfolio, JPMIM uses:

   
         Fundamental research: JPMIM's team of domestic equity analysts includes
more than 20 members,  each an industry  specialist  with an average of over ten
years of experience,  follow 600 medium and large capitalization U.S. companies.
Their research goal is to forecast  intermediate-term  earnings and  prospective
dividend growth rates for the most attractive companies among those researched.
    

         Systematic  valuation:  The  analysts'  forecasts  are  converted  into
comparable  expected returns using a proprietary  dividend discount model, which
calculates the intermediate-term earnings by comparing a company's current stock
price with the "fair value" price forecasted by the estimated  intermediate-term
earnings  power.  Within each sector,  companies  are ranked  according to their
relative  value and grouped  into  quintiles:  those with the  highest  expected
returns (Quintile 1) are deemed the most undervalued relative to their long-term
earnings power,  while those with the lowest expected  returns  (Quintile 5) are
deemed the most overvalued.

   
         Disciplined portfolio construction:  A broadly diversified portfolio is
constructed using disciplined buy and sell rules.  Purchases are allocated among
stocks in the first three  quintiles.  The stocks selected reflect the portfolio
manager's  judgment  concerning the soundness of the underlying  forecasts,  the
likelihood that a perceived  misvaluation  will be corrected within a reasonable
time frame, and the manager's  estimate of the magnitude of the risks versus the
potential  rewards.  A stock that  falls  into the  fourth  and fifth  quintiles
generally  becomes a candidate for sale,  either  because its price has risen or
its  fundamentals  have  deteriorated.  The  Portfolio's  sector  weightings are
matched  to those  of the S&P 500  Index,  reflecting  JPMIM's  belief  that its
research has the potential to add value at the individual  stock level,  but not
at the sector level.  JPMIM also controls the Portfolio's  exposure to style and
theme bets and maintains  near-market security weightings in individual security
holdings.  This process results in an investment  portfolio  containing  250-300
stocks.
    

         Investment Process for the Portfolio's Fixed Income Component

   
         Duration/yield curve management:  JPMIM's duration decision begins with
an  analysis  of real  yields,  which its  research  indicates  are  generally a
reliable  indicator of longer term  interest  rate trends.  Other  factors JPMIM
studies in regard to interest rates include economic growth and inflation,
    

<PAGE>


   
         capital flows and monetary policy. Based on this analysis,  JPMIM forms
a view of the most  likely  changes in the level and shape of the yield curve --
as well as the timing of those changes -- and sets the Portfolio's  duration and
maturity structure  accordingly.  JPMIM typically limits the overall duration of
the  Portfolio to a range between one year shorter and one year longer than that
of the Salomon Brothers Broad Investment Grade Bond Index. The maturities of the
individual fixed income securities in the Portfolio may vary widely, however.

         Sector   allocations:   Sector   allocations   are  driven  by  JPMIM's
fundamental and quantitative analysis of the relative valuation of a broad array
of fixed income sectors. Specifically, JPMIM utilizes market and credit analysis
to assess whether the current risk-adjusted yield spreads of various sectors are
likely to widen or narrow.  JPMIM then overweights  (underweights) those sectors
its analysis  indicates offer the most (least) relative value,  basing the speed
and magnitude of these shifts on valuation considerations.

         Security  selection:  Securities are selected by the portfolio manager,
with  substantial  input from JPMIM's fixed income  analysts and traders.  Using
quantitative analysis as well as traditional valuation methods,  JPMIM's applied
research  analysts aim to optimize  security  selection within the bounds of the
Portfolio's investment objective.  In addition,  credit analysts -- supported by
JPMIM's  equity  analysts  --  assess  the   creditworthiness   of  issuers  and
counterparties.  A dedicated  trading desk contributes to security  selection by
tracking  new  issuance,   monitoring   dealer   inventories,   and  identifying
attractively  priced  bonds.  The traders also handle all  transactions  for the
Portfolio.
    

         Investment Process for the Portfolio's U.S. Small Company Component

   
         Fundamental   research:   JPMIM's   domestic   equity   analysts   also
continuously  monitor  300-500  small  cap  stocks  with the aim of  identifying
companies  that  exhibit  superior  financial  strength and  operating  returns.
Meetings  with  management  and on-site  visits play a key role in shaping their
assessments.  Because  JPMIM's  analysts  follow  both the  larger  and  smaller
companies in their industries -- in essence,  covering their industries from top
to bottom -- they are able to bring broad perspective to the research they do on
both.
    

         See "Systematic Valuation" above.

   
         Disciplined   portfolio   construction:   A  diversified  portfolio  is
constructed as for the equity  component,  but purchases are concentrated  among
the stocks in the top two quintiles of the rankings. Once a stock falls into the
third quintile, it generally becomes a candidate for sale. The portfolio manager
seeks to hold sector weightings close to those of the Russell 2000 Index. Sector
neutrality  is  also  seen  as a way to  help  to  protect  the  portfolio  from
macroeconomic risks and--together with diversification-- represents an important
element of JPMIM's investment strategy.
    

         Investment Process for the Portfolio's International Equity Component

   
         Country  allocation:  JPMIM's country allocation decision begins with a
forecast of equity risk premiums,  which provide a valuation signal by measuring
the  relative  attractiveness  of  stocks  versus  bonds.  Using  a  proprietary
approach,  JPMIM  calculates  this risk  premium  for each of the nations in the
Portfolio's  universe,  determines the extent of its deviation -- if any -- from
its  historical  norm, and then ranks  countries  according to the size of those
deviations. Countries with high (low) rankings are overweighted
    

<PAGE>


   
         (underweighted)   in  comparisons   to  the  Morgan   Stanley   Capital
International  Europe,  Australia  and Far East Index (EAFE) to reflect the
above-average   (below-average)   attractiveness  of  their  stock  markets.  In
determining weightings,  JPMIM analyzes a variety of qualitative factors as well
- -- including the liquidity,  earnings  momentum and interest rate climate of the
market at hand. These  qualitative  assessments can change the magnitude but not
the  direction  of the  country  allocations  called  for by  the  risk  premium
forecast. JPMIM places limits on the total size of the Portfolio's country over-
and under-weightings relative to the EAFE Index.

         Stock selection:  JPMIM's more than 90  international  equity analysts,
each an industry  and  country  specialist,  forecast  normalized  earnings  and
dividend  payouts for roughly  1,200  non-U.S.  companies  -- taking a long-term
perspective rather than the short time frame common to consensus estimates.  The
comparable expected returns generated by the dividend discount model are used to
rank  companies  from  most to least  attractive  by  industry  and  country.  A
diversified  portfolio is constructed  using disciplined buy and sell rules. The
portfolio  manager's  objective is to  concentrate  the  purchases in the stocks
deemed most undervalued and to keep sector weightings close to those of the MSCI
EAFE  Index.  Once a stock  falls  into  the  bottom  half of the  rankings,  it
generally   becomes  a  candidate  for  sale.  Where  available,   warrants  and
convertibles may be purchased  instead of common stock if they are deemed a more
attractive means of investing in an undervalued company.

         Currency management:  Currency is actively managed, in conjunction with
country and stock allocation, with the goal of protecting and possibly enhancing
return. JPMIM's currency decisions are supported by a proprietary tactical model
which  forecasts  currency  movements  based on an analysis of four  fundamental
factors  --trade  balance  trends,  purchasing  power  parity,  real  short-term
interest  differentials  and real bond yields --plus a technical factor designed
to improve the timing of transactions. Combining the output of this model with a
subjective  assessment  of  economic,  political  and  market  factors,  JPMIM's
currency  group   recommends   currency   strategies  that  are  implemented  in
conjunction with the Portfolio's investment strategy.
    

Fixed Income Investments

         The  Portfolio  may  invest  in a broad  range  of debt  securities  of
domestic and foreign corporate and government issuers.  The corporate securities
in which the Portfolio may invest  include debt  securities of various types and
maturities,  e.g.,  debentures,  notes,  mortgage  securities,  equipment  trust
certificates  and other  collateralized  securities and zero coupon  securities.
Collateralized  securities  are  backed  by a pool of  assets  such as  loans or
receivables  which  generate  cash  flow  to  cover  the  payments  due  on  the
securities.  Collateralized securities are subject to certain risks, including a
decline in the value of the  collateral  backing  the  security,  failure of the
collateral to generate the anticipated  cash flow or in certain cases more rapid
prepayment  because of events  affecting  the  collateral,  such as  accelerated
prepayment of mortgages or other loans backing these  securities or  destruction
of equipment subject to equipment trust  certificates.  In the event of any such
prepayment   the  Portfolio  will  be  required  to  reinvest  the  proceeds  of
prepayments at interest rates prevailing at the time of reinvestment,  which may
be lower.  In  addition,  the value of zero coupon  securities  which do not pay
interest is more volatile than that of interest bearing debt securities with the
same maturity.



<PAGE>



Corporate Bonds and Other Debt Securities

         As discussed in the  Prospectus  the  Portfolio may invest in bonds and
other debt securities of domestic and foreign  issuers to the extent  consistent
with its  investment  objective and policies.  See "Quality and  Diversification
Requirements."  For information on short-term  investments in these  securities,
see "Money Market Instruments."

         Mortgage-Backed Securities. The Portfolio may invest in mortgage-backed
securities. Each mortgage pool underlying mortgage-backed securities consists of
mortgage loans evidenced by promissory notes secured by first mortgages or first
deeds of trust or other similar  security  instruments  creating a first lien on
owner  occupied  and  non-owner  occupied  one-unit  to  four-unit   residential
properties, multifamily (i.e., five or more) properties, agriculture properties,
commercial properties and mixed use properties.  The investment  characteristics
of adjustable  and fixed rate  mortgage-backed  securities  differ from those of
traditional fixed income securities.  The major differences  include the payment
of interest  and  principal on  mortgage-backed  securities  on a more  frequent
(usually  monthly) schedule and the possibility that principal may be prepaid at
any time due to prepayments  on the  underlying  mortgage loans or other assets.
These differences can result in significantly greater price and yield volatility
than is the case with traditional fixed income securities. As a result, a faster
than expected prepayment rate will reduce both the market value and the yield to
maturity  from those which were  anticipated.  A prepayment  rate that is slower
than expected will have the opposite effect of increasing  yield to maturity and
market value.

         Government Guaranteed Mortgage-Backed  Securities.  Government National
Mortgage Association mortgage-backed  certificates ("Ginnie Maes") are supported
by the full faith and credit of the United States. Certain other U.S. Government
securities,  issued or  guaranteed by federal  agencies or government  sponsored
enterprises,  are not  supported  by the full  faith and  credit  of the  United
States,  but may be supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S.
Treasury.  These securities include obligations of instrumentalities such as the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Macs") and the Federal National
Mortgage  Association  ("Fannie Maes").  No assurance can be given that the U.S.
Government   will  provide   financial   support  to  these  federal   agencies,
authorities,  instrumentalities  and  government  sponsored  enterprises  in the
future.

         There  are  several  types  of  guaranteed  mortgage-backed  securities
currently available, including guaranteed mortgage pass-through certificates and
multiple  class  securities,  which  include  guaranteed  real  estate  mortgage
investment conduit  certificates  ("REMIC  Certificates"),  other collateralized
mortgage obligations ("CMOs") and stripped mortgage-backed securities.

         Mortgage   pass-through   securities  are  fixed  or  adjustable   rate
mortgage-backed  securities  which  provide  for  monthly  payments  that  are a
"pass-through"  of the monthly  interest and principal  payments  (including any
prepayments) made by the individual  borrowers on the pooled mortgage loans, net
of any  fees or  other  amounts  paid  to any  guarantor,  administrator  and/or
servicer of the underlying mortgage loans.

         Multiple class securities include CMOs and REMIC Certificates issued by
U.S. Government agencies,  instrumentalities  (such as Fannie Mae) and sponsored
enterprises (such as Freddie Mac) or by trusts formed by private originators of,
or investors in, mortgage loans, including savings and loan associations,

<PAGE>


         mortgage bankers,  commercial banks,  insurance  companies,  investment
banks and special purpose  subsidiaries of the foregoing.  In general,  CMOs are
debt  obligations  of a legal  entity that are  collateralized  by, and multiple
class mortgage-backed securities represent direct ownership interests in, a pool
of mortgage loans or mortgaged-backed  securities and payments on which are used
to make payments on the CMOs or multiple class mortgage-backed securities.

         CMOs and guaranteed REMIC Certificates issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac are  types of  multiple  class  mortgage-backed  securities.  Investors  may
purchase beneficial  interests in REMICs, which are known as "regular" interests
or  "residual"  interests.  The Portfolio  does not intend to purchase  residual
interests  in REMICs.  The REMIC  Certificates  represent  beneficial  ownership
interests in a REMIC trust,  generally  consisting  of mortgage  loans or Fannie
Mae,  Freddie  Mac or Ginnie  Mae  guaranteed  mortgage-backed  securities  (the
"Mortgage  Assets").  The  obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under their
respective  guaranty of the REMIC  Certificates are obligations solely of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, respectively.

         CMOs and REMIC Certificates are issued in multiple classes.  Each class
of CMOs or REMIC Certificates,  often referred to as a "tranche," is issued at a
specific  adjustable  or fixed  interest rate and must be fully retired no later
than its final distribution date. Principal prepayments on the assets underlying
the CMOs or REMIC  Certificates  may cause some or all of the classes of CMOs or
REMIC  Certificates  to  be  retired  substantially  earlier  than  their  final
scheduled  distribution  dates.  Generally,  interest  is paid or accrues on all
classes of CMOs or REMIC Certificates on a monthly basis.

         Stripped   Mortgage-Backed    Securities.    Stripped   mortgage-backed
securities  ("SMBS") are derivative  multiclass mortgage  securities,  issued or
guaranteed  by the U.S.  Government,  its  agencies or  instrumentalities  or by
private issuers. Although the market for such securities is increasingly liquid,
privately  issued  SMBS may not be  readily  marketable  and will be  considered
illiquid for purposes of the  Portfolio's  limitation on investments in illiquid
securities.  The  Advisor  may  determine  that SMBS  which are U.S.  Government
securities are liquid for purposes of the Portfolio's  limitation on investments
in illiquid  securities in accordance  with  procedures  adopted by the Board of
Trustees.  The  market  value of the  class  consisting  entirely  of  principal
payments  generally  is  unusually  volatile  in response to changes in interest
rates.  The yields on a class of SMBS that  receives all or most of the interest
from Mortgage Assets are generally higher than prevailing market yields on other
mortgage-backed  securities  because  their cash flow patterns are more volatile
and  there is a  greater  risk  that the  initial  investment  will not be fully
recouped.

   
         Mortgages  (directly  held).  The  Portfolio  may  invest  directly  in
mortgages.  Mortgages  are debt  instruments  secured by real  property.  Unlike
mortgage-backed  securities,  which generally represent an interest in a pool of
mortgages,  direct  investments in mortgages involve prepayment and credit risks
of an  individual  issuer and real  property.  Consequently,  these  investments
require different investment and credit analysis by the Advisor.

         The  directly  placed  mortgages  in which the  Portfolio  invests  may
include residential mortgages,  multifamily mortgages,  mortgages on cooperative
apartment  buildings,   commercial   mortgages,   and   sale-leasebacks.   These
investments  are backed by assets such as office  buildings,  shopping  centers,
retail stores,  warehouses,  apartment buildings and single-family dwellings. In
the event that the Portfolio  forecloses  on any  non-performing  mortgage,  and
acquires a direct  interest in the real property,  the Portfolio will be subject
to the risks generally associated with the ownership of real property. There
    

<PAGE>


   
         may be fluctuations in the market value of the foreclosed  property and
its occupancy rates,  rent schedules and operating  expenses.  There may also be
adverse changes in local, regional or general economic conditions, deterioration
of the real  estate  market  and the  financial  circumstances  of  tenants  and
sellers,  unfavorable changes in zoning,  building environmental and other laws,
increased real property taxes, rising interest rates,  reduced  availability and
increased cost of mortgage borrowings,  the need for unanticipated  renovations,
unexpected increases in the cost of energy,  environmental  factors, acts of God
and other  factors which are beyond the control of the Portfolio or the Advisor.
Hazardous  or toxic  substances  may be  present  on, at or under the  mortgaged
property and adversely affect the value of the property. In addition, the owners
of property  containing such substances may be held  responsible,  under various
laws, for containing,  monitoring,  removing or cleaning up such substances. The
presence of such  substances  may also provide a basis for other claims by third
parties.  Costs of clean-up or of  liabilities  to third  parties may exceed the
value of the property. In addition, these risks may be uninsurable.  In light of
these  and  similar  risks,  it may  be  impossible  to  dispose  profitably  of
properties in foreclosure.

         Zero Coupon,  Pay-in-Kind and Deferred Payment Securities.  Zero coupon
securities are securities  that are sold at a discount to par value and 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.  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.  The  Portfolio  accrues  income with  respect to zero
coupon  and  pay-in-kind  securities  prior  to the  receipt  of cash  payments.
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.  While  interest
payments are not made on such securities,  holders of such securities are deemed
to have  received  "phantom  income."  Because  the  Portfolio  will  distribute
"phantom  income" to  shareholders,  to the extent  that  shareholders  elect to
receive  dividends in cash rather than  reinvesting such dividends in additional
shares,  the  Portfolio  will have fewer  assets with which to  purchase  income
producing securities.
    

         Asset-Backed Securities. Asset-backed securities directly or indirectly
represent a  participation  interest  in, or are secured by and payable  from, a
stream of payments  generated  by  particular  assets  such as motor  vehicle or
credit card receivables or other asset-backed securities  collateralized by such
assets.  Payments of  principal  and interest  may be  guaranteed  up to certain
amounts  and for a  certain  time  period  by a letter  of  credit  issued  by a
financial institution unaffiliated with the entities issuing the securities. The
asset-backed  securities  in which the  Portfolio  may invest are subject to the
Portfolio's overall credit requirements.  However,  asset-backed securities,  in
general,  are  subject  to certain  risks.  Most of these  risks are  related to
limited  interests  in  applicable  collateral.  For  example,  credit card debt
receivables  are  generally  unsecured  and  the  debtors  are  entitled  to the
protection of a number of state and federal  consumer credit laws, many of which
give such  debtors  the right to set off  certain  amounts  on credit  card debt
thereby  reducing  the  balance  due.  Additionally,  if the letter of credit is
exhausted,  holders of  asset-backed  securities may also  experience  delays in
payments or losses if the full amounts due on underlying sales contracts are not
realized.  Because  asset-backed  securities  are  relatively  new,  the  market
experience in these  securities  is limited and the market's  ability to sustain
liquidity through all phases of the market cycle has not been tested.


<PAGE>


   
Money Market Instruments

         The  Portfolio  may  invest  in  money  market  instruments  and  other
short-term securities to the extent consistent with its investment objective and
policies.  A description of the various types of money market  instruments  that
may be purchased by the Portfolio appears below.   Also see "Quality and 
Diversification Requirements."

     U.S. Treasury Securities. The Portfolio may invest in direct obligations of
the U.S.  Treasury,  including Treasury bills, notes and bonds, all of which are
backed as to principal and interest payments by the full faith and credit of the
United States.

         Additional  U.S.  Government  Obligations.  The Portfolio may invest in
obligations   issued   or   guaranteed   by   U.S.    Government   agencies   or
instrumentalities. These obligations may or may not be backed by the "full faith
and credit" of the United States.  Securities which are backed by the full faith
and credit of the United States include  obligations of the Government  National
Mortgage  Association,  the Farmers Home  Administration,  and the Export-Import
Bank. In the case of  securities  not backed by the full faith and credit of the
United States, the Portfolio must look principally to the federal agency 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 commitments. Securities in which the Portfolio
may invest that are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States
include,  but are not  limited  to:  (i)  obligations  of the  Tennessee  Valley
Authority,  the Federal Home Loan  Mortgage  Corporation,  the Federal Home Loan
Banks and the U.S.  Postal  Service,  each of which has the right to borrow from
the U.S. Treasury to meet its obligations; (ii) securities issued by the Federal
National  Mortgage  Association,   which  are  supported  by  the  discretionary
authority of the U.S. Government to purchase the agency's obligations; and (iii)
obligations  of the Federal Farm Credit  System and the Student  Loan  Marketing
Association,  each of whose  obligations may be satisfied only by the individual
credits of the issuing agency.

     Foreign Government  Obligations.  The Portfolio,  subject to its applicable
investment  policies,  may also  invest in  short-term  obligations  of  foreign
sovereign  governments or of their agencies,  instrumentalities,  authorities or
political  subdivisions.  These securities may be denominated in the U.S. dollar
or in another currency. See "Foreign Investments."

         Bank Obligations.  The Portfolio may invest in negotiable  certificates
of deposit,  time deposits and bankers'  acceptances  of (i) banks,  savings and
loan  associations  and  savings  banks which have more than $2 billion in total
assets and are organized under the laws of the United States or any state,  (ii)
foreign  branches of these banks or of foreign banks of equivalent  size (Euros)
and (iii) U.S.  branches of foreign  banks of  equivalent  size  (Yankees).  See
"Foreign  Investments."  The Portfolio will not invest in obligations  for which
the  Advisor,  or any of its  affiliated  persons,  is the  ultimate  obligor or
accepting  bank. The Portfolio may also invest in  obligations of  international
banking institutions  designated or supported by national governments to promote
economic  reconstruction,  development  or  trade  between  
    
<PAGE>

nations (e.g., the European Investment Bank, the Inter-American Development
Bank, or the World Bank).

   
     Commercial Paper. The Portfolio may invest in commercial  paper,  including
master  demand  obligations.  Master demand  obligations  are  obligations  that
provide for a periodic  adjustment  in the  interest  rate paid and permit daily
changes in the amount  borrowed.  Master  demand  obligations  are  governed  by
agreements between the issuer and Morgan acting as agent, for no additional fee.
The monies  loaned to the  borrower  come from  accounts  managed  Morgan or its
affiliates,  pursuant to arrangements with such accounts. Interest and principal
payments  are  credited  to such  accounts.  Morgan has the right to increase or
decrease the amount  provided to the borrower under an obligation.  The borrower
has the right to pay  without  penalty all or any part of the  principal  amount
then outstanding on an obligation together with interest to the date of payment.
Since these obligations  typically provide that the interest rate is tied to the
Federal  Reserve  commercial  paper  composite  rate,  the rate on master demand
obligations  is subject to change.  Repayment of a master  demand  obligation to
participating accounts depends on the ability of the borrower to pay the accrued
interest  and  principal  of the  obligation  on  demand  which is  continuously
monitored by the Portfolio's Advisor.  Since master demand obligations typically
are not  rated by credit  rating  agencies,  the  Portfolio  may  invest in such
unrated  obligations  only if at the time of an  investment  the  obligation  is
determined  by the  Advisor  to  have  a  credit  quality  which  satisfies  the
Portfolio's   quality    restrictions.    See   "Quality   and   Diversification
Requirements."   Although  there  is  no  secondary  market  for  master  demand
obligations,  such  obligations  are  considered  by the  Portfolio to be liquid
because they are payable upon demand.  The Portfolio  does not have any specific
percentage  limitation  on  investments  in  master  demand  obligations.  It is
possible  that the  issuer of a master  demand  obligation  could be a client of
Morgan to whom Morgan, in its capacity as a commercial bank, has made a loan.
    

         Repurchase   Agreements.   The  Portfolio  may  enter  into  repurchase
agreements  with  brokers,  dealers  or banks  that meet the  credit  guidelines
approved by the Portfolio's Trustees.  In a repurchase agreement,  the Portfolio
buys a security from a seller that has agreed to repurchase the same security at
a mutually agreed upon date and price. The resale price normally is in excess of
the purchase price,  reflecting an agreed upon interest rate. This interest rate
is effective  for the period of time the  Portfolio is invested in the agreement
and is not related to the coupon rate on the underlying  security.  A repurchase
agreement  may also be  viewed  as a fully  collateralized  loan of money by the
Portfolio to the seller. The period of these repurchase  agreements will usually
be short,  from overnight to one week, and at no time will the Portfolio  invest
in repurchase agreements for more than thirteen months. The securities which are
subject to repurchase agreements,  however, may have maturity dates in excess of
thirteen  months  from  the  effective  date of the  repurchase  agreement.  The
Portfolio  will always receive  securities as collateral  whose market value is,
and during the entire term of the agreement  remains,  at least equal to 100% of
the dollar  amount  invested by the  Portfolio  in each  agreement  plus accrued
interest,  and the  Portfolio  will make payment for such  securities  only upon
physical  delivery or upon evidence of book entry transfer to the account of its
custodian. If the seller defaults, the Portfolio might incur a loss if the value
of the  collateral  securing the repurchase  agreement  declines and might incur
disposition costs in connection with liquidating the collateral. In addition, if
bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with respect to the seller of the security,
realization  upon disposal of the  collateral by the Portfolio may be delayed or
limited.
   
          The  Portfolio  may make  investments  in other debt  securities  with
remaining  effective  maturities  of not more than  thirteen  months,  including
without  limitation  corporate and foreign  bonds,  asset-backed  securities and
other obligations described herein.
    


<PAGE>



   
         Corporate Fixed Income Securities. The Portfolio may invest in publicly
and  privately  issued  debt  obligations  of U.S.  and  non-U.S.  corporations,
including  obligations  of  industrial,  utility,  banking  and other  financial
issuers.  These  securities are subject to the risk of an issuer's  inability to
meet  principal and interest  payments on the obligation and may also be subject
to price  volatility  due to such  factors  as  market  interest  rates,  market
perception of the creditworthiness of the issuer and general market liquidity.
    

Equity Investments

         The  Portfolio  may invest in equity  securities  consisting  of common
stock and other  securities with equity  characteristics  comprised of preferred
stock, warrants,  rights,  convertible securities,  trust certificates,  limited
partnership   interests  and  equity   participations   (collectively,   "Equity
Securities"). The Equity Securities in which the Portfolio invests include those
listed  on  any  domestic  or  foreign  securities  exchange  or  traded  in the
over-the-counter  (OTC)  market  as  well  as  certain  restricted  or  unlisted
securities.

     Equity Securities.  The Equity Securities in which the Portfolio may invest
may or may not pay  dividends  and may or may not carry  voting  rights.  Common
stock occupies the most junior position in a company's capital structure.

         The  convertible  securities in which the Portfolio may invest  include
any debt  securities or preferred stock which may be converted into common stock
or which  carry the  right to  purchase  common  stock.  Convertible  securities
entitle the holder to exchange the securities  for a specified  number of shares
of common  stock,  usually of the same  company,  at specified  prices  within a
certain period of time.

         The  terms of any  convertible  security  determine  its  ranking  in a
company's capital structure. In the case of subordinated convertible debentures,
the holders'  claims on assets and earnings  are  subordinated  to the claims of
other  creditors,  and  are  senior  to  the  claims  of  preferred  and  common
shareholders. In the case of convertible preferred stock, the holders' claims on
assets and  earnings are  subordinated  to the claims of all  creditors  and are
senior to the claims of common shareholders.

Common Stock Warrants

         The  Portfolio  may invest in common  stock  warrants  that entitle the
holder to buy common  stock from the issuer of the  warrant at a specific  price
(the strike price) for a specific  period of time.  The market price of warrants
may be  substantially  lower than the  current  market  price of the  underlying
common  stock,  yet warrants  are subject to similar  price  fluctuations.  As a
result,  warrants may be more volatile  investments  than the underlying  common
stock.

         Warrants  generally  do not entitle the holder to  dividends  or voting
rights with  respect to the  underlying  common stock and do not  represent  any
rights in the assets of the issuer company.  A warrant will expire  worthless if
it is not exercised on or prior to the expiration date.

Foreign Investments

         The Portfolio may invest in certain foreign  securities.  The Portfolio
does not expect to invest more than 30% of its total assets at the time of

<PAGE>


         purchase in securities of foreign issuers and in obligations of foreign
branches of domestic  banks.  The  economies of individual  foreign  nations may
differ from the U.S. economy, whether favorably or unfavorably, in areas such as
growth of gross  national  product,  rate of  inflation,  capital  reinvestment,
resource  self-sufficiency and balance of payments position; it may also be more
difficult to obtain and enforce a judgment against a foreign issuer. Any foreign
investments  made by the  Portfolio  must be made in  compliance  with U.S.  and
foreign currency  restrictions and tax laws restricting the amounts and types of
foreign investments.

   
         Foreign  investments  may be made  directly  in  securities  of foreign
issuers  or in the  form of  American  Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs"),  European
Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs") and Global  Depositary  Receipts ("GDRs") or other
similar securities of foreign issuers. 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 and deposited
with the  depositary.  ADRs  include  American  Depositary  Shares  and New York
Shares.  EDRs are receipts  issued by a European  financial  institution.  GDRs,
which are sometimes referred to as Continental Depositary Receipts ("CDRs"), are
securities,  typically issued by a non-U.S. financial institution, that evidence
ownership  interests  in a security or a pool of  securities  issued by either a
U.S.  or  foreign  issuer.  ADRs,  EDRs,  GDRs  and CDRs  may be  available  for
investment through "sponsored" or "unsponsored" facilities. A sponsored facility
is established  jointly by the issuer of the security underlying the receipt and
a depositary, whereas an unsponsored facility may be established by a depositary
without  participation by the issuer of the receipt's  underlying  security.  An
unsponsored  depositary may not provide the same shareholder  information that a
sponsored  depositary is required to provide under its contractual  arrangements
with  the  issuer  of the  underlying  foreign  security.  Generally,  ADRs,  in
registered form, are designed for use in the U.S. securities markets,  and EDRs,
in bearer form, are designed for use in European securities markets.
    

         Holders of an unsponsored  depositary  receipt generally bear all costs
of  the  unsponsored  facility.   The  depositary  of  an  unsponsored  facility
frequently  is under no  obligation  to  distribute  shareholder  communications
received  from the issuer of the  deposited  security or to pass  through to the
holders of the receipts voting rights with respect to the deposited securities.

   
         Investment  in  securities  of foreign  issuers and in  obligations  of
foreign branches of domestic banks involves somewhat different  investment risks
from those affecting  securities of U.S. domestic 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
standards and requirements comparable to those applicable to domestic companies.
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 a Fund by domestic companies.

         Investors should realize that the value of the Portfolio's  investments
in foreign  securities  may be  adversely  affected by changes in  political  or
social conditions,  diplomatic relations,  confiscatory taxation, expropriation,
nationalization,  limitation on the removal of funds or assets, or imposition of
(or change in) exchange  control or tax regulations in those foreign  countries.
In  addition,  changes in  government  administration  or  economic  or monetary
policies  in the  United  States  or abroad  could  result  in  appreciation  or
depreciation of portfolio  securities and could favorably or unfavorably  affect
the Portfolio's operations. Furthermore, the economies of individual
    

<PAGE>


   
         foreign nations may differ from the U.S. economy,  whether favorably or
unfavorably,  in  areas  such as  growth  of  gross  national  product,  rate of
inflation,  capital  reinvestment,  resource  self-sufficiency  and  balance  of
payments  position;  it may also be more  difficult  to  obtain  and  enforce  a
judgment against a foreign issuer.  Any foreign investment made by the Portfolio
must be made in compliance with U.S. and foreign  currency  restrictions and tax
laws restricting the amounts and types of foreign investments.

         In  addition,  while the  volume of  transactions  effected  on foreign
exchanges has increased in recent  years,  in most cases it remains  appreciably
below that of domestic security exchanges.  Accordingly, the Portfolio's foreign
investments  may be less  liquid  and their  prices  may be more  volatile  than
comparable investments in securities of U.S. companies. Moreover, the settlement
periods for foreign securities, which are often longer than those for securities
of U.S. issuers, may affect portfolio liquidity. In addition, there is generally
less government supervision and regulation of securities exchanges,  brokers and
issuers located in foreign countries than in the United States.

         Since investments in foreign securities may involve foreign currencies,
the value of the Portfolio's  assets as measured in U.S. dollars may be affected
favorably or unfavorably  by changes in currency  rates and in exchange  control
regulations,  including currency blockage.  The Portfolio may enter into forward
commitments  for the purchase or sale of foreign  currencies in connection  with
the settlement of foreign  securities  transactions or to manage the Portfolio's
currency exposure. See "Foreign Currency Exchange Transactions" below.

Foreign Currency Exchange Transactions.
    

         Because the Portfolio may buy and sell securities and receive  interest
and dividends in currencies other than the U.S. dollar,  the Portfolio may enter
from time to time into foreign  currency  exchange  transactions.  The Portfolio
either enters into these  transactions on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot
rate  prevailing  in the  foreign  currency  exchange  market  or  uses  forward
contracts to purchase or sell foreign  currencies.  The cost of the  Portfolio's
spot currency exchange  transactions is generally the difference between the bid
and offer spot rate of the currency being purchased or sold.

         A forward foreign  currency  exchange  contract is an obligation by the
Portfolio 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. Forward foreign currency
exchange contracts  establish an exchange rate at a future date. These contracts
are derivative instruments,  as their value derives from the spot exchange rates
of the currencies  underlying the contract.  These contracts are entered into in
the interbank market directly between currency traders (usually large commercial
banks)  and  their  customers.  A forward  foreign  currency  exchange  contract
generally  has no  deposit  requirement  and is traded  at a net  price  without
commission.  Neither spot  transactions  nor forward foreign  currency  exchange
contracts eliminate  fluctuations in the prices of the Portfolio's securities or
in foreign  exchange  rates,  or prevent loss if the prices of these  securities
should decline.

   
         The  Portfolio  may  enter  into  forward  foreign  currency   exchange
contracts to adjust its currency  exposure  relative to the EAFE Index, the
benchmark for its international equity investments. The Portfolio may enter into
foreign currency exchange  transactions in an attempt to protect against changes
in foreign currency exchange rates between the trade and settlement
    

<PAGE>


   
         dates of specific  securities  transactions  or anticipated  securities
transactions.  The  Portfolio  may also enter into  forward  contracts  to hedge
against a change in foreign  currency  exchange rates that would cause a decline
in the value of existing  investments  denominated  or  principally  traded in a
foreign currency.  To do this, the Portfolio would enter into a forward contract
to sell  the  foreign  currency  in  which  the  investment  is  denominated  or
principally  traded in  exchange  for U.S.  dollars or in  exchange  for another
foreign currency. The Portfolio will only enter into forward contracts to sell a
foreign currency for another foreign currency if the Advisor expects the foreign
currency purchased to appreciate against the U.S. dollar.
    

         Although these  transactions  are intended to minimize the risk of loss
due to a decline  in the  value of the  hedged  currency,  at the same time they
limit any potential  gain that might be realized  should the value of the hedged
currency  increase.  In  addition,  forward  contracts  that  convert  a foreign
currency  into another  foreign  currency will cause the Portfolio to assume the
risk of fluctuations in the value of the currency purchased vis a vis the hedged
currency  and the U.S.  dollar.  The precise  matching  of the forward  contract
amounts and the value of the securities  involved will not generally be possible
because the future value of such securities in foreign currencies will change as
a consequence of market  movements in the value of such  securities  between the
date  the  forward  contract  is  entered  into  and the  date it  matures.  The
projection  of  currency  market  movements  is  extremely  difficult,  and  the
successful execution of a hedging strategy is highly uncertain.

   
         Sovereign  Fixed Income  Securities.  The Portfolio may invest in fixed
income securities issued or guaranteed by a foreign sovereign  government or its
agencies,  authorities or political subdivisions.  Investment in sovereign fixed
income  securities  involves special risks not present in corporate fixed income
securities.  The issuer of the sovereign  debt or the  governmental  authorities
that  control  the  repayment  of the debt may be unable or  unwilling  to repay
principal or interest when due, and the  Portfolio may have limited  recourse in
the event of a default.  During  periods  of  economic  uncertainty,  the market
prices of sovereign  debt,  and the  Portfolio's  net asset  value,  may be more
volatile  than prices of U.S. debt  obligations.  In the past,  certain  foreign
countries have  encountered  difficulties in servicing  their debt  obligations,
withheld  payments of  principal  and  interest  and  declared  moratoria on the
payment of principal and interest on their sovereign debts.

         A sovereign debtor's  willingness or ability to repay principal and pay
interest in a timely  manner may be affected by, among other  factors,  its cash
flow situation, the extent of its foreign currency reserves, the availability of
sufficient  foreign exchange,  the relative size of the debt service burden, the
sovereign  debtor's  policy  toward  international  lenders and local  political
constraints.  Sovereign debtors may also be dependent on expected  disbursements
from foreign  governments,  multilateral  agencies and other  entities to reduce
principal  and  interest  arrearages  on their debt.  The failure of a sovereign
debtor to  implement  economic  reforms,  achieve  specified  levels of economic
performance  or  repay  principal  or  interest  when  due  may  result  in  the
cancellation of third-party  commitments to lend funds to the sovereign  debtor,
which may further  impair such debtor's  ability or  willingness  to service its
debts.

     Obligations  of  Supranational   Entities.  The  Portfolio  may  invest  in
obligations of  supranational  entities  designated or supported by governmental
entities to promote economic  reconstruction or development and of international
banking  institutions  and related  government  agencies.  Examples  include the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the "World
    

<PAGE>


   
         Bank"),  the European Coal and Steel Community,  the Asian  Development
Bank  and the  Inter-American  Development  Bank.  Each  supranational  entity's
lending  activities are limited to a percentage of its total capital  (including
"callable  capital"  contributed  by its  governmental  members at the  entity's
call),  reserves  and net  income.  There  is no  assurance  that  participating
governments  will be able or willing to honor their  commitments to make capital
contributions to a supranational entity.
    

Additional Investments

   
         Convertible  Securities.   The  Portfolio  may  invest  in  convertible
securities of domestic and
foreign  issuers.  The convertible  securities in which the Portfolio may invest
include any debt  securities  or  preferred  stock which may be  converted  into
common  stock or which carry the right to  purchase  common  stock.  Convertible
securities  entitle the holder to exchange the securities for a specified number
of shares of common  stock,  usually of the same  company,  at specified  prices
within a certain period of time.

         When-Issued and Delayed Delivery Securities. The Portfolio may purchase
securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. For example,  delivery of
and payment for these  securities  can take place a month or more after the date
of the purchase commitment. The purchase price and the interest rate payable, if
any, on the securities are fixed on the purchase  commitment date or at the time
the settlement date is fixed.  The value of such securities is subject to market
fluctuation and for money market  instruments and other fixed income  securities
no interest  accrues to the Portfolio until  settlement takes place. At the time
the Portfolio  makes the  commitment to purchase  securities on a when-issued or
delayed delivery basis, it will record the  transaction,  reflect the value each
day of such  securities in  determining  its net asset value,  and calculate the
maturity for the  purposes of average  maturity  from that date.  At the time of
settlement a when-issued security may be valued at less than the purchase price.
To facilitate such acquisitions,  the Portfolio will maintain with its custodian
a segregated  account with liquid assets,  consisting of cash,  U.S.  Government
securities or other appropriate securities,  in an amount at least equal to such
commitments.  On delivery dates for such  transactions,  the Portfolio will meet
its  obligations  from  maturities  or  sales  of  the  securities  held  in the
segregated account and/or from cash flow. If the Portfolio chooses to dispose of
the right to acquire a when-issued security prior to its acquisition,  it could,
as with the disposition of any other portfolio obligation,  incur a gain or loss
due to market fluctuation. Also, the Portfolio may be disadvantaged if the other
party to the transaction defaults. It is the current policy of the Portfolio not
to enter into  when-issued  commitments  exceeding in the  aggregate  15% of the
market value of the  Portfolio's  total assets less  liabilities  other than the
obligations created by when-issued commitments.

         Investment Company Securities. Securities of other investment companies
may be acquired by the Portfolio to the extent  permitted under the 1940 Act, or
any order pursuant  thereto.  These limits currently require that, as determined
immediately  after a purchase is made,  (i) not more than 5% of the value of the
Portfolio's  total  assets  will  be  invested  in the  securities  of  any  one
investment company, (ii) not more than 10% of the value of its total assets will
be invested in the aggregate in  securities of investment  companies as a group,
and (iii) not more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of any one investment
company will be owned by the Portfolio.  As a shareholder of another  investment
company,  the Portfolio would bear, along with other shareholders,  its pro rata
portion of the other investment  company's  expenses,  including  advisory fees.
These expenses would be in addition to the advisory
    

<PAGE>


   
         and other expenses that the Portfolio bears directly in connection with
its own operations.  The Portfolio has applied for exemptive relief from the SEC
to permit the Portfolio to invest in  affiliated  investment  companies.  If the
requested relief is granted,  the Portfolio would then be permitted to invest in
affiliated  funds,  subject to certain  conditions  specified in the  applicable
order.

         Reverse  Repurchase  Agreements.  The  Portfolio may enter into reverse
repurchase agreements.  In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Portfolio sells a
security and agrees to repurchase  the same  security at a mutually  agreed upon
date and  price  reflecting  the  interest  rate  effective  for the term of the
agreement.  For purposes of the 1940 Act, a reverse repurchase agreement is also
considered as the borrowing of money by the Portfolio and, therefore,  a form of
leverage.  Leverage  may  cause  any gains or  losses  for the  Portfolio  to be
magnified.  The Portfolio  will invest the proceeds of borrowings  under reverse
repurchase  agreements.  In addition,  the  Portfolio  will enter into a reverse
repurchase  agreement  only  when the  interest  income  to be  earned  from the
investment  of  the  proceeds  is  greater  than  the  interest  expense  of the
transaction.  The Portfolio will not invest the proceeds of a reverse repurchase
agreement  for a period  which  exceeds the  duration of the reverse  repurchase
agreement.  The  Portfolio  will  establish  and maintain  with its  custodian a
separate account with a segregated portfolio of securities in an amount at least
equal to its purchase obligations under its reverse repurchase  agreements.  See
"Investment  Restrictions" for the Portfolio's limitations on reverse repurchase
agreements and bank borrowings.

         Mortgage Dollar Roll Transactions. The Portfolio may engage in mortgage
dollar  roll  transactions  with  respect to mortgage  securities  issued by the
Government  National  Mortgage   Association,   the  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. In a mortgage dollar
roll   transaction,   the  Portfolio   sells  a  mortgage  backed  security  and
simultaneously  agrees to  repurchase a similar  security on a specified  future
date at an agreed upon price.  During the roll period, the Portfolio will not be
entitled to receive any interest or principal paid on the  securities  sold. The
Portfolio is  compensated  for the lost interest on the  securities  sold by the
difference between the sales price and the lower price for the future repurchase
as well as by the interest earned on the reinvestment of the sales proceeds. The
Portfolio  may also be  compensated  by receipt of a  commitment  fee.  When the
Portfolio  enters into a mortgage dollar roll  transaction,  liquid assets in an
amount  sufficient  to pay for the future  repurchase  are  segregated  with the
custodian.  Mortgage dollar roll transactions are considered  reverse repurchase
agreements for purposes of the Portfolio's investment restrictions.
    

         Loans of Portfolio Securities. The Portfolio may lend its securities if
such loans are secured  continuously  by cash or  equivalent  collateral or by a
letter of credit in favor of the  Portfolio  at least equal at all times to 100%
of the market value of the securities loaned, plus accrued interest.  While such
securities are on loan, the borrower will pay the Portfolio any income  accruing
thereon.  Loans will be subject to  termination  by the  Portfolio in the normal
settlement time,  generally three business days after notice, or by the borrower
on one day's  notice.  Borrowed  securities  must be  returned  when the loan is
terminated.  Any gain or loss in the  market  price of the  borrowed  securities
which  occurs  during  the  term of the loan  inures  to the  Portfolio  and its
investors.  The Portfolio  may pay  reasonable  finders' and  custodial  fees in
connection  with a loan. In addition,  the Portfolio will consider all facts and
circumstances   including  the   creditworthiness  of  the  borrowing  financial
institution,  and the  Portfolio  not will make any loans in excess of one year.
The Portfolio  will not lend its securities to any officer,  Trustee,  Director,
employee or other affiliate of the Portfolio, the Advisor or the

<PAGE>


         Distributor, unless otherwise permitted by applicable law.

   
         Illiquid   Investments;   Privately   Placed  and  Other   Unregistered
Securities.  The Portfolio may not acquire any illiquid holdings if, as a result
thereof,  more  than 15% of the  Portfolio's  net  assets  would be in  illiquid
investments.  Subject to this non-fundamental  policy limitation,  the Portfolio
may acquire  investments  that are illiquid or have limited  liquidity,  such as
private  placements or investments  that are not registered under the Securities
Act of 1933,  as amended  (the "1933 Act") and cannot be offered for public sale
in the United  States  without  first  being  registered  under the 1933 Act. An
illiquid  investment is any  investment  that cannot be disposed of within seven
days in the normal course of business at approximately the amount at which it is
valued by the Portfolio. The price the Portfolio pays for illiquid securities or
receives  upon resale may be lower than the price paid or  received  for similar
securities  with a more  liquid  market.  Accordingly  the  valuation  of  these
securities will reflect any limitations on their liquidity.
    

         The  Portfolio  may  also  purchase  Rule  144A   securities   sold  to
institutional   investors  without   registration  under  the  1933  Act.  These
securities  may  be  determined  to be  liquid  in  accordance  with  guidelines
established  by the Advisor and  approved by the  Trustees.  The  Trustees  will
monitor the Advisor's implementation of these guidelines on a periodic basis.

         As to illiquid  investments,  the  Portfolio  is subject to a risk that
should the Portfolio  decide to sell them when a ready buyer is not available at
a price the  Portfolio  deems  representative  of their value,  the value of the
Portfolio's net assets could be adversely  affected.  Where an illiquid  holding
must be registered  under the 1933 Act before it may be sold,  the Portfolio may
be obligated to pay all or part of the registration expenses, and a considerable
period  may elapse  between  the time of the  decision  to sell and the time the
Portfolio  may be  permitted to sell a holding  under an effective  registration
statement.  If, during such a period, adverse market conditions were to develop,
the Portfolio might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided
to sell.

Quality and Diversification Requirements

   
          The Portfolio intends to meet the diversification  requirements of the
1940  Act.  Current  1940 Act  diversification  requirements  require  that with
respect to 75% of the assets of the Fund:  (1) the 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, its agencies and instrumentalities, and (2) the Fund may
not own more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any one issuer. As
for the other 25% of the Fund's assets not subject to the  limitation  described
above,  there is no limitation on investment of these assets under the 1940 Act,
so that all of such  assets may be  invested  in  securities  of any one issuer.
Investments  not subject to the  limitations  described  above could  involve an
increased risk to the Fund should an issuer, or a state or its related entities,
be unable to make  interest or principal  payments or should the market value of
such securities decline.

         The Portfolio will comply with the diversification requirements imposed
by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), for qualification
as a regulated investment company. See "Taxes".
    

         Below Investment Grade Debt.  Certain lower rated securities  purchased
by the  Portfolio,  such as those  rated Ba or B by  Moody's  Investors  Service
("Moody's") or BB or B by Standard & Poor's Ratings Group  ("Standard & Poor's")
(commonly known as junk bonds), may be subject to certain risks with

<PAGE>


         respect to the issuing entity's  ability to make scheduled  payments of
principal  and  interest and to greater  market  fluctuations.  While  generally
providing  higher coupons or interest  rates than  investments in higher quality
securities,  lower quality fixed income securities  involve greater risk of loss
of principal and income,  including the  possibility of default or bankruptcy of
the issuers of such securities,  and have greater price  volatility,  especially
during  periods of economic  uncertainty  or change.  These lower  quality fixed
income  securities  tend to be  affected  by  economic  changes  and  short-term
corporate  and industry  developments  to a greater  extent than higher  quality
securities,  which react  primarily  to  fluctuations  in the  general  level of
interest rates.  To the extent that the Portfolio  invests in such lower quality
securities, the achievement of its investment objective may be more dependent on
the Advisor's own credit analysis.

         Lower  quality  fixed  income  securities  are affected by the market's
perception  of  their  credit  quality,   especially  during  times  of  adverse
publicity,  and the  outlook  for  economic  growth.  Economic  downturns  or an
increase  in  interest  rates may cause a higher  incidence  of  default  by the
issuers of these securities,  especially issuers that are highly leveraged.  The
market for these lower quality fixed income  securities is generally less liquid
than the market for  investment  grade fixed income  securities.  It may be more
difficult to sell these lower rated securities to meet redemption  requests,  to
respond  to  changes  in the  market,  or to value  accurately  the  Portfolio's
portfolio securities for purposes of determining the Fund's net asset value. See
Appendix A for more detailed information on these ratings.

         The  Portfolio may invest in  convertible  debt  securities,  for which
there are no specific  quality  requirements.  The fixed  income  portion of the
Portfolio  invests in a  diversified  portfolio of  securities  with the ratings
described in the  Prospectus.  These  securities  are  considered  "high grade",
"investment  grade" and "below  investment grade" as described in Appendix A. In
addition,  at the time the  Portfolio  invests  in any  commercial  paper,  bank
obligation or repurchase agreement,  the issuer must have outstanding debt rated
A or higher by Moody's or Standard & Poor's, the issuer's parent corporation, if
any, must have  outstanding  commercial paper rated Prime-1 by Moody's or A-1 by
Standard & Poor's,  or if no such ratings are available,  the investment must be
of  comparable  quality  in the  Advisor's  opinion.  At the time the  Portfolio
invests in any other short-term debt securities,  they must be rated A or higher
by Moody's or  Standard  & Poor's,  or if  unrated,  the  investment  must be of
comparable quality in the Advisor's opinion.

         In  determining  suitability  of  investment  in a  particular  unrated
security,  the Advisor takes into consideration asset and debt service coverage,
the purpose of the  financing,  history of the issuer,  existence of other rated
securities of the issuer, and other relevant  conditions,  such as comparability
to other issuers.

Options and Futures Transactions

   
         The   Portfolio   may  purchase  and  sell  (a)  exchange   traded  and
over-the-counter   (OTC)  put  and  call  options  on  fixed  income  or  equity
securities,  indexes of fixed income or equity securities, and futures contracts
on fixed income  securities and indexes of fixed income or equity securities and
(b) futures  contracts on fixed income securities and indexes of fixed income or
equity securities.  Each of these instruments is a derivative  instrument as its
value derives from the underlying asset or index.

     The  Portfolio  may use futures  contracts and options for hedging and risk
management purposes. The Portfolio may not use futures contracts and options
    

<PAGE>


         for speculation.

         The Portfolio may utilize  options and futures  contracts to manage its
exposure to changing  interest rates and/or  security  prices.  Some options and
futures strategies, including selling futures contracts and buying puts, tend to
hedge the Portfolio's investments against price fluctuations.  Other strategies,
including  buying futures  contracts,  writing puts and calls, and buying calls,
tend to increase market exposure.  Options and futures contracts may be combined
with each other or with forward contracts in order to adjust the risk and return
characteristics  of  the  Portfolio's   overall  strategy  in  a  manner  deemed
appropriate to the Advisor and  consistent  with the  Portfolio's  objective and
policies.  Because combined  options  positions  involve  multiple trades,  they
result in higher  transaction  costs and may be more difficult to open and close
out.

         The use of options and futures is a highly  specialized  activity which
involves  investment  strategies and risks different from those  associated with
ordinary portfolio securities  transactions,  and there can be no guarantee that
their  use  will  increase  the  Portfolio's  return.  While  the  use of  these
instruments by the Portfolio may reduce certain risks associated with owning its
portfolio securities, these techniques themselves entail certain other risks. If
the  Advisor  applies a  strategy  at an  inappropriate  time or  judges  market
conditions or trends  incorrectly,  options and futures strategies may lower the
Portfolio's  return.  Certain strategies limit the Portfolio's  possibilities to
realize gains as well as limiting its exposure to losses.  The  Portfolio  could
also experience  losses if the prices of its options and futures  positions were
poorly correlated with its other  investments,  or if it could not close out its
positions because of an illiquid  secondary  market. In addition,  the Portfolio
will incur transaction costs, including trading commissions and option premiums,
in connection with its futures and options  transactions and these  transactions
could significantly increase the Portfolio's turnover rate.

         The Portfolio may purchase put and call options on securities,  indexes
of securities  and futures  contracts,  or purchase and sell futures  contracts,
only if such  options  are  written by other  persons  and if (i) the  aggregate
premiums  paid on all such options  which are held at any time do not exceed 20%
of the Portfolio's net assets,  and (ii) the aggregate margin deposits  required
on all such futures or options  thereon held at any time do not exceed 5% of the
Portfolio's total assets.  In addition,  the Portfolio will not purchase or sell
(write) futures contracts, options on futures contracts or commodity options for
risk  management  purposes if, as a result,  the  aggregate  initial  margin and
options  premiums  required to establish  these  positions  exceed 5% of the net
asset value of the Portfolio.

Options

         Purchasing  Put and Call  Options.  By  purchasing  a put  option,  the
Portfolio  obtains  the right (but not the  obligation)  to sell the  instrument
underlying  the option at a fixed strike  price.  In return for this right,  the
Portfolio  pays the  current  market  price for the option  (known as the option
premium).  Options  have  various  types of  underlying  instruments,  including
specific  securities,  indexes of securities,  indexes of securities prices, and
futures  contracts.  The Portfolio may terminate its position in a put option it
has  purchased  by  allowing  it to  expire or by  exercising  the  option.  The
Portfolio  may  also  close  out a put  option  position  by  entering  into  an
offsetting  transaction,  if a liquid market exists. If the option is allowed to
expire,  the  Portfolio  will lose the entire  premium it paid. If the Portfolio
exercises a put option on a security, it will sell the instrument

<PAGE>


underlying the option at the strike price. If the Portfolio  exercises an option
on an index,  settlement  is in cash and does not  involve  the  actual  sale of
securities. If an option is American style, it may be exercised on any day up to
its  expiration  date.  A European  style  option may be  exercised  only on its
expiration date.

         The buyer of a typical  put  option can expect to realize a gain if the
price of the underlying instrument falls substantially. However, if the price of
the instrument  underlying the option does not fall enough to offset the cost of
purchasing  the option,  a put buyer can expect to suffer a loss (limited to the
amount of the premium paid, plus related transaction costs).

         The features of call options are  essentially  the same as those of put
options,  except  that the  purchaser  of a call  option  obtains  the  right to
purchase, rather than sell, the instrument underlying the option at the option's
strike price. A call buyer typically  attempts to participate in potential price
increases of the instrument  underlying the option with risk limited to the cost
of the option if security prices fall. At the same time, the buyer can expect to
suffer a loss if security prices do not rise  sufficiently to offset the cost of
the option.

         Selling (Writing) Put and Call Options. When the Portfolio writes a put
option,  it  takes  the  opposite  side of the  transaction  from  the  option's
purchaser.  In return for  receipt of the  premium,  the  Portfolio  assumes the
obligation to pay the strike price for the  instrument  underlying the option if
the other party to the option  chooses to exercise it. The Portfolio may seek to
terminate its position in a put option it writes  before  exercise by purchasing
an offsetting  option in the market at its current  price.  If the market is not
liquid for a put option the Portfolio has written,  however,  the Portfolio must
continue to be prepared to pay the strike price while the option is outstanding,
regardless  of price  changes,  and must  continue to post  margin as  discussed
below.

         If the price of the  underlying  instrument  rises,  a put writer would
generally expect to profit,  although its gain would be limited to the amount of
the premium it received.  If security  prices  remain the same over time,  it is
likely that the writer will also profit,  because it should be able to close out
the option at a lower  price.  If security  prices  fall,  the put writer  would
expect to suffer a loss.  This loss should be less than the loss from purchasing
and holding the underlying  instrument  directly,  however,  because the premium
received for writing the option should offset a portion of the decline.

         Writing a call option  obligates  the  Portfolio to sell or deliver the
option's  underlying  instrument in return for the strike price upon exercise of
the option. The  characteristics of writing call options are similar to those of
writing put  options,  except  that  writing  calls  generally  is a  profitable
strategy  if prices  remain  the same or fall.  Through  receipt  of the  option
premium a call writer offsets part of the effect of a price decline. At the same
time,  because  a call  writer  must  be  prepared  to  deliver  the  underlying
instrument in return for the strike price, even if its current value is greater,
a call writer gives up some ability to participate in security price increases.

         The writer of an exchange  traded put or call option on a security,  an
index of  securities  or a futures  contract  is  required  to  deposit  cash or
securities  or a letter of credit as margin and to make mark to market  payments
of variation margin as the position becomes unprofitable.


<PAGE>



   
         Options on Indexes.  The Fund may purchase or sell put and call options
on any  securities  index  based on  securities  in which  the Fund may  invest.
Options on securities indexes are similar to options on securities,  except that
the exercise of securities index options is settled by cash payment and does not
involve the actual  purchase or sale of securities.  In addition,  these options
are designed to reflect price  fluctuations  in a group of securities or segment
of the securities  market rather than price  fluctuations in a single  security.
The Fund, in purchasing  or selling index  options,  is subject to the risk that
the value of its  portfolio  securities  may not change as much as index because
the Fund's investments generally will not match the composition of an index.
    

         For a number of  reasons,  a liquid  market  may not exist and thus the
Portfolio may not be able to close out an option position that it has previously
entered into. When the Portfolio  purchases an OTC option, it will be relying on
its  counterparty  to  perform  its  obligations,  and the  Portfolio  may incur
additional losses if the counterparty is unable to perform.

         Exchange Traded and OTC Options.  All options  purchased or sold by the
Portfolio  will be traded on a securities  exchange or will be purchased or sold
by  securities  dealers  (OTC  options)  that  meet  creditworthiness  standards
approved by the Portfolio's Board of Trustees. While exchange-traded options are
obligations of the Options Clearing Corporation, in the case of OTC options, the
Portfolio  relies on the dealer from which it purchased the option to perform if
the option is exercised.  Thus, when the Portfolio  purchases an OTC option,  it
relies on the dealer from which it purchased the option to make or take delivery
of the underlying securities. Failure by the dealer to do so would result in the
loss of the  premium  paid  by the  Portfolio  as  well as loss of the  expected
benefit of the transaction.

         Provided  that the Portfolio has  arrangements  with certain  qualified
dealers who agree that the Portfolio may  repurchase  any option it writes for a
maximum  price to be calculated by a  predetermined  formula,  the Portfolio may
treat the underlying  securities used to cover written OTC options as liquid. In
these  cases,  the OTC option  itself would only be  considered  illiquid to the
extent that the maximum repurchase price under the formula exceeds the intrinsic
value of the option.

   
Futures Contracts

         The  Portfolio  may  purchase  and  sell  futures  contracts.  When the
Portfolio  purchases  a futures  contract,  it agrees to  purchase  a  specified
quantity of an  underlying  instrument  at a specified  future date or to make a
cash payment based on the value of a securities  index. When the Portfolio sells
a futures  contract,  it agrees to sell a specified  quantity of the  underlying
instrument at a specified  future date or to receive a cash payment based on the
value of a securities  index. The price at which the purchase and sale will take
place is fixed when the Portfolio enters into the contract.  Futures can be held
until their  delivery  dates or the position can be (and normally is) closed out
before then.  There is no  assurance,  however,  that a liquid market will exist
when the Portfolio wishes to close out a particular position.

         When the  Portfolio  purchases  a  futures  contract,  the value of the
futures  contract tends to increase and decrease in tandem with the value of its
underlying  instrument.  Therefore,  purchasing  futures  contracts will tend to
increase the Portfolio's exposure to positive and negative price fluctuations in
the underlying instrument, much as if it had purchased the
    

<PAGE>


   
         underlying  instrument  directly.  When the  Portfolio  sells a futures
contract, by contrast,  the value of its futures position will tend to move in a
direction  contrary to the value of the underlying  instrument.  Selling futures
contracts,  therefore,  will tend to offset both  positive and  negative  market
price changes, much as if the underlying instrument had been sold.

     The purchaser or seller of a futures contract is not required to deliver or
pay for the underlying instrument unless the contract is held until the delivery
date.  However,  when the Portfolio buys or sells a futures  contract it will be
required to deposit "initial margin" with its custodian in a segregated  account
in the name of its futures broker, known as a futures commission merchant (FCM).
Initial  margin  deposits  are  typically  equal  to a small  percentage  of the
contract's value. If the value of either party's position  declines,  that party
will be required to make  additional  "variation  margin"  payments equal to the
change in value on a daily  basis.  The party that has a gain may be entitled to
receive all or a portion of this amount.  The Portfolio may be obligated to make
payments  of  variation  margin at a time when it is  disadvantageous  to do so.
Furthermore,  it may not always be possible  for the  Portfolio to close out its
futures positions. Until it closes out a futures position, the Portfolio will be
obligated to continue to pay  variation  margin.  Initial and  variation  margin
payments  do not  constitute  purchasing  on  margin  for  purposes  of a Fund's
investment  restrictions.  In the event of the  bankruptcy  of an FCM that holds
margin on behalf of the  Portfolio,  the  Portfolio may be entitled to return of
margin owed to it only in proportion  to the amount  received by the FCM's other
customers, potentially resulting in losses to the Portfolio.

         The Portfolio will segregate  liquid assets in connection  with its use
of options  and  futures  contracts  to the extent  required by the staff of the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission.  Securities  held in a segregated  account
cannot be sold while the futures contract or option is outstanding,  unless they
are replaced with other  suitable  assets.  As a result,  there is a possibility
that  segregation of a large  percentage of the Portfolio's  assets could impede
portfolio  management or the Portfolio's  ability to meet redemption requests or
other current obligations.

         Options on Futures  Contracts.  The  Portfolio  may  purchase  and sell
(write)  put and  call  options,  including  put and  call  options  on  futures
contracts.  Futures contracts  obligate the buyer to take and the seller to make
delivery at a future date of a specified  quantity of a financial  instrument or
an amount of cash based on the value of a securities index.  Currently,  futures
contracts are available on various types of fixed income  securities,  including
but not limited to U.S. Treasury bonds, notes and bills, Eurodollar certificates
of deposit  and on  indexes of fixed  income  securities  and  indexes of equity
securities.
    

         Unlike a futures contract, which requires the parties to buy and sell a
security  or make a cash  settlement  payment  based on changes  in a  financial
instrument  or  securities  index on an  agreed  date,  an  option  on a futures
contract  entitles  its holder to decide on or before a future  date  whether to
enter into such a contract.  If the holder  decides not to exercise  its option,
the holder may close out the option  position  by  entering  into an  offsetting
transaction  or may decide to let the  option  expire and  forfeit  the  premium
thereon. The purchaser of an option on a futures contract pays a premium for the
option but makes no initial  margin  payments  or daily  payments of cash in the
nature of "variation"  margin payments to reflect the change in the value of the
underlying contract as does a purchaser or seller of a futures contract.


<PAGE>



   
         The seller of an option on a futures contract receives the premium paid
by the purchaser and may be required to pay initial margin. Amounts equal to the
initial margin and any additional  collateral required on any options on futures
contracts  sold by the  Portfolio  are paid by the  Portfolio  into a segregated
account,  in the  name of the FCM,  as  required  by the 1940 Act and the  SEC's
interpretations thereunder.

         Combined  Positions.  The  Portfolio  may purchase and write options in
combination  with  each  other,  or  in  combination  with  futures  or  forward
contracts,  to  adjust  the  risk  and  return  characteristics  of the  overall
position.  For example, the Portfolio may purchase a put option and write a call
option on the same  underlying  instrument,  in order to  construct  a  combined
position whose risk and return  characteristics are similar to selling a futures
contract. Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option
at one  strike  price and  buying a call  option at a lower  price,  in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a  substantial  price
increase.  Because combined  options  positions  involve  multiple trades,  they
result in higher  transaction  costs and may be more difficult to open and close
out.
    

         Correlation  of Price  Changes.  Because there are a limited  number of
types of exchange-traded  options and futures  contracts,  it is likely that the
standardized  options  and  futures  contracts  available  will  not  match  the
Portfolio's current or anticipated investments exactly. The Portfolio may invest
in options and futures  contracts  based on securities  with different  issuers,
maturities,  or other  characteristics from the securities in which it typically
invests,  which  involves a risk that the options or futures  position  will not
track the performance of the Portfolio's other investments.

         Options and futures  contracts  prices can also diverge from the prices
of their underlying  instruments,  even if the underlying  instruments match the
Portfolio's  investments well. Options and futures contracts prices are affected
by such factors as current and anticipated short term interest rates, changes in
volatility of the underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration
of the contract,  which may not affect security  prices the same way.  Imperfect
correlation  may also result from differing  levels of demand in the options and
futures markets and the securities markets,  from structural  differences in how
options and futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of daily price
fluctuation  limits or trading halts. The Portfolio may purchase or sell options
and futures  contracts  with a greater or lesser  value than the  securities  it
wishes to hedge or intends to  purchase  in order to attempt to  compensate  for
differences in volatility between the contract and the securities, although this
may not be successful in all cases. If price changes in the Portfolio's  options
or futures  positions  are poorly  correlated  with its other  investments,  the
positions may fail to produce anticipated gains or result in losses that are not
offset by gains in other investments.

         Liquidity  of Options and Futures  Contracts.  There is no  assurance a
liquid market will exist for any  particular  option or futures  contract at any
particular  time even if the  contract is traded on an  exchange.  In  addition,
exchanges may establish daily price  fluctuation  limits for options and futures
contracts and may halt trading if a contract's  price moves up or down more than
the limit in a given day. On volatile  trading  days when the price  fluctuation
limit is reached or a trading  halt is  imposed,  it may be  impossible  for the
Portfolio to enter into new  positions or close out existing  positions.  If the
market for a  contract  is not liquid  because  of price  fluctuation  limits or
otherwise, it could prevent prompt liquidation of

<PAGE>


unfavorable  positions,  and could potentially require the Portfolio to continue
to hold a position  until  delivery or  expiration  regardless of changes in its
value.  As a result,  the  Portfolio's  access to other assets held to cover its
options or futures  positions could also be impaired.  (See "Exchange Traded and
OTC Options" above for a discussion of the liquidity of options not traded on an
exchange.)

         Position Limits.  Futures exchanges can limit the number of futures and
options on futures  contracts that can be held or controlled by an entity. If an
adequate  exemption  cannot be  obtained,  the  Portfolio  or the Advisor may be
required to reduce the size of its futures and options  positions  or may not be
able to trade a certain futures or options  contract in order to avoid exceeding
such limits.

         Asset  Coverage  for  Futures  Contracts  and  Options  Positions.  The
Portfolio  intends  to comply  with  Section  4.5 of the  regulations  under the
Commodity  Exchange  Act,  which  limits the extent to which the  Portfolio  can
commit assets to initial margin deposits and option premiums.  In addition,  the
Portfolio  will comply with  guidelines  established  by the SEC with respect to
coverage of options and futures contracts by mutual funds, and if the guidelines
so require,  will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a segregated  custodial
account in the amount prescribed. Securities held in a segregated account cannot
be sold while the  futures  contract or option is  outstanding,  unless they are
replaced with other suitable  assets.  As a result,  there is a possibility that
segregation  of a  large  percentage  of the  Portfolio's  assets  could  impede
portfolio  management or the Portfolio's  ability to meet redemption requests or
other current obligations.

   
Swaps and Related Swap Products

         The  Portfolio  may  engage in swap  transactions,  including,  but not
limited to, interest rate, currency, securities index, basket, specific security
and  commodity  swaps,  interest  rate caps,  floors and  collars and options on
interest rate swaps (collectively defined as "swap transactions").

         The  Portfolio may enter into swap  transactions  for any legal purpose
consistent with its investment  objective and policies,  such as for the purpose
of  attempting  to obtain or preserve a  particular  return or spread at a lower
cost than  obtaining  that return or spread  through  purchases  and/or sales of
instruments in cash markets,  to protect  against  currency  fluctuations,  as a
duration management  technique,  to protect against any increase in the price of
securities  the  Portfolio  anticipates  purchasing  at a later date, or to gain
exposure to certain markets in the most  economical way possible.  The Portfolio
will  not  sell  interest  rate  caps,  floors  or  collars  if it does  not own
securities  with coupons  which  provide the interest  that the Portfolio may be
required to pay.

         Swap  agreements  are  two-party  contracts  entered into  primarily by
institutional  counterparties  for periods  ranging  from a few weeks to several
years. In a standard swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the returns
(or  differentials  in rates of  return)  that  would be earned or  realized  on
specified notional investments or instruments. The gross returns to be exchanged
or  "swapped"  between the parties are  calculated  by  reference to a "notional
amount," i.e., the return on or increase in value of a particular  dollar amount
invested at a particular interest rate, in a particular foreign
    

<PAGE>


   
currency or commodity,  or in a "basket" of securities representing a particular
index.  The purchaser of an interest  rate cap or floor,  upon payment of a fee,
has the right to receive  payments  (and the seller of the cap is  obligated  to
make payments) to the extent a specified interest rate exceeds (in the case of a
cap) or is less than (in the case of a floor) a specified level over a specified
period of time or at specified  dates. The purchaser of an interest rate collar,
upon payment of a fee, has the right to receive  payments (and the seller of the
collar is  obligated to make  payments) to the extent that a specified  interest
rate falls  outside an agreed upon range over a  specified  period of time or at
specified  dates.  The  purchaser  of an option on an interest  rate swap,  upon
payment  of a fee  (either  at the time of  purchase  or in the  form of  higher
payments or lower  receipts  within an interest rate swap  transaction)  has the
right,  but  not  the  obligation,  to  initiate  a new  swap  transaction  of a
pre-specified  notional amount with  pre-specified  terms with the seller of the
option as the counterparty.

         The "notional  amount" of a swap  transaction  is the agreed upon basis
for  calculating  the payments  that the parties  have agreed to  exchange.  For
example,  one swap  counterparty  may agree to pay a floating  rate of  interest
(e.g., 3 month LIBOR)  calculated  based on a $10 million  notional  amount on a
quarterly basis in exchange for receipt of payments calculated based on the same
notional  amount and a fixed rate of interest  on a  semi-annual  basis.  In the
event the  Portfolio is  obligated  to make  payments  more  frequently  than it
receives  payments  from the  other  party,  it will  incur  incremental  credit
exposure to that swap  counterparty.  This risk may be mitigated somewhat by the
use of swap agreements which call for a net payment to be made by the party with
the larger payment  obligation  when the  obligations of the parties fall due on
the same  date.  Under  most  swap  agreements  entered  into by the  Portfolio,
payments by the parties will be exchanged  on a "net basis",  and the  Portfolio
will  receive  or pay,  as the  case  may be,  only  the net  amount  of the two
payments.

         The  amount  of the  Portfolio's  potential  gain or  loss on any  swap
transaction  is not subject to any fixed limit.  Nor is there any fixed limit on
the  Portfolio's  potential  loss if it sells a cap or collar.  If the Portfolio
buys a cap, floor or collar,  however, the Portfolio's potential loss is limited
to the amount of the fee that it has paid.  When  measured  against  the initial
amount of cash required to initiate the transaction,  which is typically zero in
the case of most conventional swap transactions, swaps, caps, floors and collars
tend to be more volatile than many other types of instruments.

         The  use of  swap  transactions,  caps,  floors  and  collars  involves
investment  techniques and risks which are different from those  associated with
portfolio security transactions. If the Advisor is incorrect in its forecasts of
market values,  interest rates,  and other  applicable  factors,  the investment
performance of the Portfolio will be less favorable than if these techniques had
not been  used.  These  instruments  are  typically  not  traded  on  exchanges.
Accordingly,  there  is a  risk  that  the  other  party  to  certain  of  these
instruments  will not  perform  its  obligations  to the  Portfolio  or that the
Portfolio may be unable to enter into offsetting positions to terminate its
    

<PAGE>


   
exposure or liquidate its position  under certain of these  instruments  when it
wishes to do so. Such occurrences could result in losses to the Portfolio.

         The Advisor will, however, consider such risks and will enter into swap
and other derivatives  transactions only when it believes that the risks are not
unreasonable.

         The  Portfolio  will  maintain  cash or liquid  assets in a  segregated
account  with its  custodian in an amount  sufficient  at all times to cover its
current  obligations under its swap transactions,  caps, floors and collars.  If
the Portfolio  enters into a swap  agreement on a net basis,  it will  segregate
assets  with a daily  value  at  least  equal  to the  excess,  if  any,  of the
Portfolio's accrued obligations under the swap agreement over the accrued amount
the  Portfolio  is entitled to receive  under the  agreement.  If the  Portfolio
enters into a swap agreement on other than a net basis, or sells a cap, floor or
collar,  it will segregate  assets with a daily value at least equal to the full
amount of the Portfolio's accrued obligations under the agreement.

         The Portfolio will not enter into any swap transaction,  cap, floor, or
collar, unless the counterparty to the transaction is deemed creditworthy by the
Advisor. If a counterparty defaults, the Portfolio may have contractual remedies
pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction. The swap markets in which
many types of swap  transactions  are traded have grown  substantially in recent
years, with a large number of banks and investment  banking firms acting both as
principals and as agents utilizing standardized swap documentation. As a result,
the markets for certain  types of swaps (e.g.,  interest rate swaps) have become
relatively  liquid.  The markets for some types of caps,  floors and collars are
less liquid.

         The liquidity of swap transactions, caps, floors and collars will be as
set forth in guidelines  established by the Advisor and approved by the Trustees
which are based on various  factors,  including (1) the  availability  of dealer
quotations  and the estimated  transaction  volume for the  instrument,  (2) the
number of dealers and end users for the instrument in the  marketplace,  (3) the
level of market making by dealers in the type of  instrument,  (4) the nature of
the  instrument  (including  any right of a party to terminate it on demand) and
(5) the nature of the marketplace for trades (including the ability to assign or
offset the Portfolio's rights and obligations relating to the instrument).  Such
determination  will govern whether the instrument  will be deemed within the 15%
restriction on investments in securities that are not readily marketable.

          During the term of a swap, cap, floor or collar,  changes in the value
of the  instrument  are  recognized as unrealized  gains or losses by marking to
market to reflect the market value of the  instrument.  When the  instrument  is
terminated,  the  Portfolio  will  record a  realized  gain or loss equal to the
difference,  if any,  between  the  proceeds  from  (or  cost  of)  the  closing
transaction and the Portfolio's basis in the contract.
    


<PAGE>



   
         The federal  income tax  treatment  with respect to swap  transactions,
caps,  floors,  and  collars may impose  limitations  on the extent to which the
Portfolio may engage in such transactions.
    

Risk Management

         The  Portfolio  may  employ  non-hedging  risk  management  techniques.
Examples  of risk  management  strategies  include  synthetically  altering  the
duration of the fixed income  portion of portfolio or the mix of  securities  in
the Portfolio.  For example,  if the Advisor wishes to extend  maturities in the
fixed  income  portion  of the  portfolio  in  order  to  take  advantage  of an
anticipated  decline  in  interest  rates,  but does not  wish to  purchase  the
underlying  long term  securities,  it might  cause the  Portfolio  to  purchase
futures contracts on long term debt securities. Similarly, if the Advisor wishes
to decrease  fixed income  securities or purchase  equities,  it could cause the
Portfolio to sell  futures  contracts on debt  securities  and purchase  futures
contracts on a stock index. Such non-hedging risk management  techniques are not
speculative,  but because they involve  leverage  include,  as do all  leveraged
transactions,  the  possibility of losses as well as gains that are greater than
if these techniques involved the purchase and sale of the securities  themselves
rather than their synthetic derivatives.

Portfolio Turnover

   
         The Portfolio's turnover rates for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1997
and 1998  were 100% and 82%,  respectively.  A rate of 100%  indicates  that the
equivalent of all of the  Portfolio's  assets have been sold and reinvested in a
year.  High portfolio  turnover may result in the realization of substantial net
capital  gains or  losses.  To the  extent  net  short  term  capital  gains are
realized,  any distributions  resulting from such gains are considered  ordinary
income for federal income tax purposes. See "Taxes" below.
    

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

         The investment restrictions below have been adopted by the Fund and the
Portfolio.  Except where otherwise  noted,  these  investment  restrictions  are
"fundamental" policies which, under the 1940 Act, may not be changed without the
vote  of a  majority  of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of the  Fund  and
Portfolio, as the case may be. A "majority of the outstanding voting securities"
is  defined  in the  1940  Act as the  lesser  of (a) 67% or more of the  voting
securities  present  at a  meeting  if  the  holders  of  more  than  50% of the
outstanding  voting  securities are present or represented by proxy, or (b) more
than  50% of the  outstanding  voting  securities.  The  percentage  limitations
contained  in the  restrictions  below  apply  at the  time of the  purchase  of
securities.  Whenever  the  Fund  is  requested  to  vote  on a  change  in  the
fundamental  investment  restrictions,  the Trust  will  hold a meeting  of Fund
shareholders and will cast its votes as instructed by the Fund's shareholders.

   
         The Fund has the same investment restrictions as the Portfolio,  unless
otherwise specified. References below to the Portfolio's investment restrictions
also  include the Fund's  investment  restrictions  unless the context  requires
otherwise.

         The Portfolio:

1.    May not make any investments  inconsistent with a Fund's classification as
      a diversified investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940;
    


<PAGE>



   
2.    May not purchase any  security  which would cause the Fund to  concentrate
      its  investments  in the  securities of issuers  primarily  engaged in any
      particular industry except as permitted by the SEC;

3.    May not issue senior securities,  except as permitted under the Investment
      Company Act of 1940 or any rule, order or interpretation thereunder;

4. May not borrow money, except to the extent permitted by applicable law;

5.    May not underwrite securities of other issuers,  except to the extent that
      the  Fund,  in  disposing  of  portfolio  securities,  may  be  deemed  an
      underwriter within the meaning of the 1933 Act;

6.    May not purchase or sell real estate, except that, to the extent permitted
      by  applicable  law,  the  Fund  may (a)  invest  in  securities  or other
      instruments  directly or indirectly  secured by real estate, (b) invest in
      securities  or other  instruments  issued by issuers  that  invest in real
      estate and (c) make direct investments in mortgages;

7.    May not  purchase  or  sell  commodities  or  commodity  contracts  unless
      acquired  as a result of  ownership  of  securities  or other  instruments
      issued  by  persons  that  purchase  or sell  commodities  or  commodities
      contracts;  but this shall not prevent the Fund from  purchasing,  selling
      and entering into financial futures contracts (including futures contracts
      on indices  of  securities,  interest  rates and  currencies),  options on
      financial  futures  contracts  (including  futures contracts on indices of
      securities,  interest  rates and  currencies),  warrants,  swaps,  forward
      contracts, foreign currency spot and forward contracts or other derivative
      instruments that are not related to physical commodities; and

8.    May make loans to other persons,  in accordance with the Fund's investment
      objectives and policies and to the extent permitted by applicable law.

     Non-Fundamental  Investment  Restrictions  -  The  investment  restrictions
described below are not  fundamental  policies of the Fund and the Portfolio and
may be changed by their respective Trustees.  These  non-fundamental  investment
restrictions require that the Portfolio:

(i) May not acquire any illiquid securities,  such as repurchase agreements with
more than seven days to maturity or fixed time  deposits with a duration of over
seven calendar days, if as a result  thereof,  more than 15% of the market value
of the Fund's net assets would be in investments which are illiquid;

(ii) May not purchase securities on margin,  make short sales of securities,  or
maintain a short position, provided that this restriction shall not be deemed to
be  applicable  to the  purchase  or sale of  when-issued  or  delayed  delivery
securities, or to short sales that are covered in accordance with SEC rules; and

(iii)  May not  acquire  securities  of other  investment  companies,  except as
permitted by the 1940 Act or any order pursuant thereto.
    

          There  will be no  violation  of any  investment  restriction  if that
restriction  is  complied  with  at  the  time  the  relevant  action  is  taken
notwithstanding a later change in market value of an investment, in net or total
assets, in the securities rating of the investment, or any other later change.


<PAGE>



   
         For  purposes  of  the  fundamental  investment  restriction  regarding
industry  concentration,  JPMIM may classify  issuers by industry in  accordance
with  classifications  set forth in the  Directory  of Companies  Filing  Annual
Reports  With The  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC")  or other
sources.  In the absence of such  classification  or if JPMIM determines in good
faith based on its own information that the economic characteristics affecting a
particular  issuer  make it more  appropriately  considered  to be  engaged in a
different  industry,  JPMIM may classify an issuer  accordingly.  For  instance,
personal  credit finance  companies and business  credit  finance  companies are
deemed  to be  separate  industries  and  wholly  owned  finance  companies  are
considered  to be in the  industry  of their  parents  if their  activities  are
primarily related to financing the activities of their parents.
    

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

Trustees

         The Trustees of the Trust,  who are also the Trustees of the  Portfolio
and the other Master  Portfolios as defined  below,  their  business  addresses,
principal  occupations  during  the past  five  years and dates of birth are set
forth below.

   
     FREDERICK S. ADDYAATrustee;  Retired;  Prior to April 1994,  Executive Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer,  Amoco  Corporation.  His address is 5300
Arbutus Cove, Austin, Texas 78746, and his date of birth is January 1, 1932.

     WILLIAM  G.  BURNSAATrustee;   Retired,  Former  Vice  Chairman  and  Chief
Financial Officer,  NYNEX. His address is 2200 Alaqua Drive,  Longwood,  Florida
32779, and his date of birth is November 2, 1932.

     ARTHUR C.  ESCHENLAUERAATrustee;  Retired;  Former  Senior Vice  President,
Morgan  Guaranty  Trust Company of New York. His address is 14 Alta Vista Drive,
RD #2, Princeton, New Jersey 08540, and his date of birth is May 23, 1934.

         MATTHEW  HEALEY  (*)AATrustee,  Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer;
Chairman,  Pierpont Group,  Inc.,  since prior to 1993. His address is Pine Tree
Country Club Estates,  10286 Saint Andrews Road,  Boynton Beach,  Florida 33436,
and his date of birth is August 23, 1937.

     MICHAEL P.  MALLARDIAATrustee;  Retired;  Prior to April 1996,  Senior Vice
President, Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. and President,  Broadcast Group. His address
is 10 Charnwood Drive,  Suffern,  New York 10910, and his date of birth is March
17, 1934. 

- ------------------------
     (*) Mr.  Healey is an  "interested  person" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of
the Trust.  Mr.  Healey is also an  "interested  person" (as defined in the 1940
Act) of the Advisor due to his son's affiliation with JPMIM.

     The Trustees of the Trust are the same as the  Trustees of the  Portfolio A
majority  of  the  disinterested   Trustees  have  adopted  written   procedures
reasonably appropriate to deal with potential conflicts of interest arising from
the fact that the same  individuals are Trustees of the Trust, the Portfolio and
the J. P. Morgan  Institutional  Funds, up to and including  creating a separate
board of trustees.
    


<PAGE>



   
     Each  Trustee is  currently  paid an annual fee of $75,000  (adjusted as of
April  1,  1997)  for  serving  as  Trustee  of the  Trust,  each of the  Master
Portfolios (as defined below),  The J. P. Morgan  Institutional  Funds and J. P.
Morgan Series Trust and is reimbursed for expenses  incurred in connection  with
service  as a  Trustee.  The  Trustees  may  hold  various  other  directorships
unrelated to these funds.

     Trustee  compensation  expenses  accrued by the Trust for the calendar year
ended December 31, 1997 are set forth below.
    

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

   
                                                         TOTAL TRUSTEE 
                                                         COMPENSATION ACCRUED BY
                                                         THE MASTER PORTFOLIOS 
                                    AGGREGATE TRUSTEE    (*), THE J.P. MORGAN 
                                    COMPENSATION         INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS, 
                                    PAID BY THE TRUST    J.P. MORGAN SERIES 
                                    DURING 1997          TRUST AND THE TRUST
NAME OF TRUSTEE                                          DURING 1997 (***)
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

Frederick S. Addy, Trustee          $11,786              $72,500
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

William G. Burns, Trustee           $11,786              $72,500
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

Arthur C. Eschenlauer, Trustee      $11,786              $72,500
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

Matthew Healey, Trustee (**)        $11,786              $72,500
  Chairman and Chief Executive
  Officer
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

Michael P. Mallardi, Trustee        $11,786              $65,000
- ----------------------------------- -------------------- -----------------------

(*) Includes the Portfolio  and 19 other  Portfolios  (collectively  the "Master
Portfolios") for which JPMIM acts as investment advisor.

     (**) During 1997,  Pierpont  Group,  Inc. paid Mr.  Healey,  in his role as
Chairman  of  Pierpont  Group,  Inc.,  compensation  in the amount of  $147,500,
contributed  $22,100  to a  defined  contribution  plan on his  behalf  and paid
$20,500 in insurance premiums for his benefit.

     (***)No  investment  company  within  the fund  complex  has a  pension  or
retirement  plan.  Currently  there are 18 investment  companies (15  investment
companies  comprising  the  Master  Portfolios,  the  Trust,  The J.  P.  Morgan
Institutional Funds and J. P. Morgan Series Trust) in the fund complex.

         The  Trustees   decide  upon  matters  of  general   policy  and  are
responsible for overseeing the Trust's and  Portfolio's  business  affairs.  The
Portfolio  and the  Trust  have  entered  into a Fund  Services  Agreement  with
Pierpont  Group,  Inc.  to assist  the  Trustees  in  exercising  their  overall
supervisory  responsibilities  over the affairs of the  Portfolio and the Trust.
Pierpont Group, Inc. was organized in July 1989 to provide services for the J.P.
Morgan  Family of Funds  (formerly  "The  Pierpont  Family of  Funds"),  and the
Trustees are the equal and sole  shareholders of Pierpont Group,  Inc. The Trust
and the  Portfolio  have agreed to pay Pierpont  Group,  Inc. a fee in an amount
representing its reasonable costs in performing these services.  These costs are
periodically reviewed by the Trustees.  The principal offices of Pierpont Group,
Inc. are located at 461 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10017.
    


<PAGE>



         The  aggregate  fees paid to Pierpont  Group,  Inc. by the Fund and the
Portfolio during the indicated fiscal years are set forth below:

   
Fund -- For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1996, 1997 and 1998: $2,212,  $2,071
and $4,318, respectively. Portfolio -- For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1996,
1997 and 1998: $13,109, $9,911 and $13,886, respectively.
    

Officers

         The Trust's and Portfolio's  executive  officers (listed below),  other
than  the  Chief  Executive  Officer,  are  provided  and  compensated  by Funds
Distributor,  Inc.  ("FDI"  or  the  "Distributor"),  a  wholly  owned  indirect
subsidiary  of  Boston  Institutional  Group,  Inc.  The  officers  conduct  and
supervise the business operations of the Trust and the Portfolio.  The Trust and
the Portfolio have no employees.

   
         The  officers  of  the  Trust  and  the  Portfolio,   their   principal
occupations  during the past five years and dates of birth are set forth  below.
Unless otherwise specified, each officer holds the same position with the Trust,
the Portfolio and the other Master  Portfolios.  The business address of each of
the officers unless otherwise noted is Funds Distributor, Inc., 60 State Street,
Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

         MATTHEW HEALEY;  Chief  Executive  Officer;  Chairman,  Pierpont Group,
since prior to 1993. His address is Pine Tree Club Estates,  10286 Saint Andrews
Road, Boynton Beach, Florida 33436. His date of birth is August 23, 1937.

     MARGARET W. CHAMBERS;  Vice President and Secretary.  Senior Vice President
and General  Counsel of FDI since April,  1998.  From August 1996 to March 1998,
Ms. Chambers was Vice President and Assistant General Counsel for Loomis, Sayles
& Company,  L.P. From January 1986 to July 1996,  she was an associate  with the
law firm of Ropes & Gray. Her date of birth is October 12, 1959.

         MARIE E. CONNOLLY;  Vice President and Assistant Treasurer.  President,
Chief Executive  Officer,  Chief Compliance Officer and Director of FDI, Premier
Mutual Fund  Services,  Inc.,  an  affiliate  of FDI  ("Premier  Mutual") and an
officer of certain  investment  companies  distributed or  administered  by FDI.
Prior to July 1994, she was President and Chief  Compliance  Officer of FDI. Her
date of birth is August 1, 1957.

     DOUGLAS C. CONROY; Vice President and Assistant  Treasurer.  Assistant Vice
President   and   Assistant   Department   Manager  of  Treasury   Services  and
Administration of FDI and an officer of certain investment companies distributed
or  administered  by FDI.  Prior to April 1997,  Mr.  Conroy was  Supervisor  of
Treasury  Services and  Administration  of FDI. From April 1993 to January 1995,
Mr. Conroy was a Senior Fund Accountant for Investors Bank & Trust Company.  His
date of birth is March 31, 1969.

     JACQUELINE  HENNING;  Assistant  Secretary and  Assistant  Treasurer of the
Portfolio only. Managing Director, State Street Cayman Trust Company, Ltd. since
October 1994.  Prior to October 1994,  Mrs.  Henning was head of mutual funds at
Morgan Grenfell in Cayman and was Managing Director of Bank of Nova Scotia Trust
Company  (Cayman)  Limited prior to September 1993.  Address:  P.O. Box 2508 GT,
Elizabethan Square, 2nd Floor,  Shedden Road, George Town, Grand Cayman,  Cayman
Islands, BWI. Her date of birth is March 24, 1942.
    


<PAGE>



   
     KAREN JACOPPO-WOOD;  Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Vice President
and  Senior  Counsel  of FDI and an  officer  of  certain  investment  companies
distributed  or  administered  by FDI.  From  June  1994 to  January  1996,  Ms.
Jacoppo-Wood was a Manager of SEC Registration at Scudder, Stevens & Clark, Inc.
Prior to May 1994, Ms. Jacoppo-Wood was a senior paralegal at The Boston Company
Advisors, Inc. ("TBCA"). Her date of birth is December 29, 1966.

     CHRISTOPHER  J.  KELLEY;  Vice  President  and  Assistant  Secretary.  Vice
President and Senior Associate  General Counsel of FDI and Premier Mutual and an
officer of certain investment companies distributed or administered by FDI. From
April 1994 to July 1996,  Mr.  Kelley was Assistant  Counsel at Forum  Financial
Group.  Prior to April 1994,  Mr. Kelley was employed by Putnam  Investments  in
legal and compliance capacities. His date of birth is December 24, 1964.

     KATHLEEN  K.  MORRISEY.  Vice  President  and  Assistant  Secretary.   Vice
President  and  Assistant   Secretary  of  FDI.  Manager  of  Treasury  Services
Administration  and an  officer  of  certain  investment  companies  advised  or
administered  by  Montgomery  Asset  Management,  L.P.  and  Dresdner RCM Global
Investors,  Inc., and their  respective  affiliates.  From July 1994 to November
1995, Ms.  Morrisey was a Fund Accountant II for Investors Bank & Trust Company.
Prior to July 1994 she was a  Finance  student  at  Stonehill  College  in North
Easton, Massachusetts. Her date of birth is July 5, 1972.

     MARY A. NELSON; Vice President and Assistant Treasurer.  Vice President and
Manager of Treasury Services and Administration of FDI and Premier Mutual and an
officer of certain  investment  companies  distributed or  administered  by FDI.
Prior to August 1994,  Ms.  Nelson was an Assistant  Vice  President  and Client
Manager for The Boston Company, Inc. Her date of birth is April 22, 1964.

     MARY JO PACE;  Assistant Treasurer.  Vice President,  Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company of New York since  1990.  Ms.  Pace  serves in the Funds  Administration
group as a Manager for the  Budgeting  and Expense  Processing  Group.  Prior to
September  1995,  Ms. Pace served as a Fund  Administrator  for Morgan  Guaranty
Trust  Company of New York.  Her address is 60 Wall Street,  New York,  New York
10260. Her date of birth is March 13, 1966.

     MICHAEL S. PETRUCELLI;  Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Senior Vice
President and Director of Strategic  Client  Initiatives  for FDI since December
1996. From December 1989 through November 1996, Mr. Petrucelli was employed with
GE  Investments  where  he held  various  financial,  business  development  and
compliance  positions.  He also  served  as  Treasurer  of the GE  Funds  and as
Director of GE Investment  Services.  Address:  200 Park Avenue,  New York,  New
York, 10166. His date of birth is May 18, 1961.

     STEPHANIE D. PIERCE; Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Vice President
and Client  Development  Manager for FDI since  April  1998.  From April 1997 to
March 1998,  Ms.  Pierce was employed by Citibank,  NA as an officer of Citibank
and Relationship  Manager on the Business and Professional Banking team handling
over 22,000 clients.  Address:  200 Park Avenue,  New York, New York 10166.  Her
date of birth is August 18, 1968.

     GEORGE A. RIO; President and Treasurer. Executive Vice President and Client
Service  Director of FDI since April 1998. From June 1995 to March 1998, Mr. Rio
was Senior  Vice  President  and Senior Key Account  Manager  for Putnam  Mutual
Funds. From May 1994 to June 1995, Mr. Rio was Director of
    

<PAGE>


   
     Business Development for First Data Corporation. From September 1983 to May
1994,  Mr. Rio was  Senior  Vice  President  & Manager  of Client  Services  and
Director of Internal Audit at The Boston  Company.  His date of birth is January
2, 1955.

     CHRISTINE ROTUNDO;  Assistant  Treasurer.  Vice President,  Morgan Guaranty
Trust Company of New York. Ms. Rotundo serves in the Funds  Administration group
as a Manager  of the Tax  Group  and is  responsible  for U.S.  mutual  fund tax
matters.  Prior to September 1995, Ms. Rotundo served as a Senior Tax Manager in
the Investment  Company  Services Group of Deloitte & Touche LLP. Her address is
60 Wall Street,  New York,  New York 10260.  Her date of birth is September  26,
1965.
    

INVESTMENT ADVISOR

   
         The Fund has not retained the services of an investment adviser because
the Fund seeks to achieve  its  investment  objective  by  investing  all of its
investable  assets  in  the  Portfolio.   Subject  to  the  supervision  of  the
Portfolio's  Trustees,  the Advisor makes the Portfolio's  day-to-day investment
decisions,  arranges for the execution of Portfolio  transactions  and generally
manages the Portfolio's  investments.  Prior to October 28, 1998, Morgan was the
Portfolio's investment advisor.  JPMIM, a wholly owned subsidiary of J.P. Morgan
& Co. Incorporated ("J.P. Morgan"), is a registered investment adviser under the
Investment  Advisers Act of 1940, as amended,  manages employee benefit funds of
corporations,  labor unions and state and local  governments and the accounts of
other institutional  investors,  including investment companies.  Certain of the
assets of  employee  benefit  accounts  under its  management  are  invested  in
comingled pension trust funds for which Morgan serves as trustee.

         J.P.  Morgan,  through  the  Advisor  and other  subsidiaries,  acts as
investment advisor to individuals,  governments,  corporations, employee benefit
plans, mutual funds and other institutional investors with combined assets under
management of more than $275 billion.

         J.P.  Morgan has a long history of service as adviser,  underwriter and
lender to an extensive  roster of major companies and as a financial  advisor to
national  governments.  The firm,  through its  predecessor  firms,  has been in
business  for over a  century  and has been  managing  investments  since  1913.
Morgan, also a wholly owned subsidiary of J.P. Morgan, is a bank holding company
organized  under  the laws of the State of  Delaware.  Morgan,  whose  principal
offices are at 60 Wall  Street,  New York,  New York 10260,  is a New York trust
company which conducts a general banking and trust  business.  Morgan is subject
to regulation by the New York State Banking  Department  and is a member bank of
the Federal Reserve System.  Through offices in New York City and abroad, Morgan
offers a wide  range of  services,  primarily  to  governmental,  institutional,
corporate  and high net worth  individual  customers  in the  United  States and
throughout the world.

         The basis of the Advisor's investment process is fundamental investment
research as the firm  believes  that  fundamentals  should  determine an asset's
value over the long  term.  J.P.  Morgan  currently  employs  over 100 full time
research  analysts,  among the largest  research staffs in the money  management
industry,  in its investment  management  divisions located in New York, London,
Tokyo,  Frankfurt and Singapore to cover companies,  industries and countries on
site. In addition,  the investment management divisions employ approximately 300
capital market researchers,  portfolio managers and traders.  The conclusions of
the equity analysts'  fundamental research is quantified into a set of projected
returns for individual companies through the use of a
    

<PAGE>


         dividend  discount model.  These returns are projected for 2 to 5 years
to enable  analysts to take a longer term view.  These  returns,  or  normalized
earnings,  are used to establish relative values among stocks in each industrial
sector.  These values may not be the same as the markets' current  valuations of
these companies.  This provides the basis for ranking the  attractiveness of the
companies in an industry according to five distinct quintiles or rankings.  This
ranking is one of the factors considered in determining the stocks purchased and
sold in each sector. The Advisor's fixed income  investment  process is based 
on analysis of real rates,  sector  diversification  and quantitative and credit
analysis.


         The investment  advisory services the Advisor provides to the Portfolio
are not exclusive under the terms of the Advisory Agreement. The Advisor is free
to and does render similar  investment  advisory services to others. The Advisor
serves  as  investment  advisor  to  personal  investors  and  other  investment
companies and acts as fiduciary for trusts,  estates and employee benefit plans.
Certain of the assets of trusts and estates  under  management  are  invested in
common trust funds for which the Advisor  serves as trustee.  The accounts which
are managed or advised by the Advisor have varying investment objectives and the
Advisor invests assets of such accounts in investments substantially similar to,
or the same as, those which are expected to constitute the principal investments
of the Portfolio.  Such accounts are supervised by officers and employees of the
Advisor  who may also be acting in similar  capacities  for the  Portfolio.  See
"Portfolio Transactions."

         Sector  weightings  are  generally  similar  to a  benchmark  with  the
emphasis on security selection as the method to achieve  investment  performance
superior to the  benchmark.  The  Portfolio's  benchmark is comprised of 52% S&P
500, 35% Salomon  Brothers Broad  Investment Grade Bond, 3% Russell 2000 and 10%
EAFE indexes.

   
         The  Portfolio is managed by officers of the Advisor who, in acting for
their  customers,  including  the  Portfolio,  do not discuss  their  investment
decisions with any personnel of J.P.  Morgan or any personnel of other divisions
of the Advisor or with any of its  affiliated  persons,  with the  exception  of
certain other investment management affiliates of J.P. Morgan.
    

         As compensation for the services  rendered and related expenses such as
salaries  of  advisory  personnel  borne  by  the  Advisor  under  the  Advisory
Agreement,  the Portfolio has agreed to pay the Advisor a fee, which is computed
daily  and may be paid  monthly,  equal  to the  annual  rate  of  0.55%  of the
Portfolio's average daily net assets.

   
     For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1996,  1997 and 1998 the advisory  fees
paid by the Portfolio to Morgan,  the  Portfolio's  Advisor prior to October 28,
1998,  were  $1,122,941,  $1,591,589  and  $2,359,972,   respectively.  See  the
Portfolio's June 30, 1998 Annual Report.

    

         The  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  provides that it will continue in
effect for a period of two years after execution only if  specifically  approved
thereafter  annually  in the same  manner  as the  Distribution  Agreement.  See
"Distributor"   below.   The  Investment   Advisory   Agreement  will  terminate
automatically  if assigned and is  terminable  at any time without  penalty by a
vote of a majority of the Portfolio's Trustees, or by a vote of the holders of a
majority of the Portfolio's  outstanding voting securities,  on 60 days' written
notice to the  Advisor  and by the  Advisor  on 90 days'  written  notice to the
Portfolio. See "Additional Information."

         The  Glass-Steagall  Act and other  applicable laws generally  prohibit
banks and their subsidiaries, such as the Advisor,  from  engaging in the 
business  of  underwriting  or distributing  securities,  and the Board of  
Governors  of the  Federal  Reserve System has issued an interpretation to 
the effect that under these laws a bank

<PAGE>


         holding company  registered  under the federal Bank Holding Company Act
or  certain  subsidiaries  thereof  may not  sponsor,  organize,  or  control  a
registered open-end investment company  continuously  engaged in the issuance of
its shares,  such as the Trust. The  interpretation  does not prohibit a holding
company or a subsidiary  thereof from acting as investment advisor and custodian
to such an  investment  company.  The Advisor  believes  that it may perform the
services  for the  Portfolio  contemplated  by the  Advisory  Agreement  without
violation  of the  Glass-Steagall  Act  or  other  applicable  banking  laws  or
regulations.  State  laws on this issue may differ  from the  interpretation  of
relevant  federal law, and banks and financial  institutions  may be required to
register as dealers pursuant to state securities laws.  However,  it is possible
that  future  changes  in  either  federal  or state  statutes  and  regulations
concerning the permissible  activities of banks or trust  companies,  as well as
further judicial or administrative  decisions and interpretations of present and
future  statutes and  regulations,  might prevent the Advisor from continuing to
perform such services for the Portfolio.

         If the Advisor were prohibited from acting as investment advisor to the
Portfolio,  it is expected that the Trustees of the Portfolio would recommend to
investors  that they  approve the  Portfolio's  entering  into a new  investment
advisory  agreement with another  qualified  investment  advisor selected by the
Trustees.

         Under separate agreements, Morgan also provides certain financial, fund
accounting  and  administrative  services  to the  Trust and the  Portfolio  and
shareholder  services  for the Trust.  See  "Services  Agent"  and  "Shareholder
Servicing" below.

DISTRIBUTOR

   
         FDI  serves as the  Trust's  exclusive  Distributor  and  holds  itself
available to receive  purchase  orders for the Fund's shares.  In that capacity,
FDI has been  granted  the right,  as agent of the Trust,  to solicit and accept
orders for the purchase of the Fund's shares in accordance with the terms of the
Distribution  Agreement  between  the  Trust  and FDI.  Under  the  terms of the
Distribution  Agreement  between FDI and the Trust, FDI receives no compensation
in its  capacity  as the Trust's  distributor.  FDI is a wholly  owned  indirect
subsidiary  of Boston  Institutional  Group,  Inc.  FDI also serves as exclusive
placement agent for the Portfolio.  FDI currently  provides  administration  and
distribution services for a number of other investment companies.
    

         The Distribution Agreement shall continue in effect with respect to the
Fund for a period of two years after  execution  only if it is approved at least
annually  thereafter  (i) by a vote of the  holders of a majority  of the Fund's
outstanding  shares or by its  Trustees  and (ii) by a vote of a majority of the
Trustees of the Trust who are not  "interested  persons" (as defined by the 1940
Act) of the parties to the Distribution  Agreement,  cast in person at a meeting
called for the purpose of voting on such approval (see "Trustees and Officers").
The  Distribution  Agreement will terminate  automatically if assigned by either
party  thereto  and is  terminable  at any time  without  penalty by a vote of a
majority of the Trustees of the Trust,  a vote of a majority of the Trustees who
are not  "interested  persons"  of the Trust,  or by a vote of the  holders of a
majority  of  the  Fund's   outstanding  shares  as  defined  under  "Additional
Information,"  in any case  without  payment of any penalty on 60 days'  written
notice to the other party. The principal  offices of FDI are located at 60 State
Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.



<PAGE>



CO-ADMINISTRATOR

         Under  Co-Administration  Agreements  with the Trust and the  Portfolio
dated  August 1,  1996,  FDI also  serves  as the  Trust's  and the  Portfolio's
Co-Administrator.  The Co-Administration Agreements may be renewed or amended by
the  respective  Trustees  without a  shareholder  vote.  The  Co-Administration
Agreements are terminable at any time without penalty by a vote of a majority of
the Trustees of the Trust or the Portfolio,  as applicable,  on not more than 60
days' written  notice nor less than 30 days' written  notice to the other party.
The  Co-Administrator  may subcontract  for the performance of its  obligations,
provided,  however,  that  unless  the Trust or the  Portfolio,  as  applicable,
expressly agrees in writing, the Co-Administrator shall be fully responsible for
the acts and  omissions  of any  subcontractor  as it would  for its own acts or
omissions. See "Services Agent" below.

         FDI (i) provides  office space,  equipment  and clerical  personnel for
maintaining  the  organization  and  books  and  records  of the  Trust  and the
Portfolio;  (ii)  provides  officers  for the  Trust  and the  Portfolio;  (iii)
prepares and files  documents  required  for  notification  of state  securities
administrators; (iv) reviews and files marketing and sales literature; (v) files
Portfolio  regulatory  documents and mails Portfolio  communications to Trustees
and investors; and (vi) maintains related books and records.

         For its services under the  Co-Administration  Agreements,  each of the
Fund and the Portfolio  has agreed to pay FDI fees equal to its allocable  share
of an annual complex-wide charge of $425,000 plus FDI's out-of-pocket  expenses.
The amount  allocable to the Fund or the  Portfolio is based on the ratio of its
net assets to the aggregate net assets of the Trust,  the Master  Portfolios and
other investment companies subject to similar agreements with FDI.

         The table below sets forth the administrative  fees paid to FDI for the
fiscal  period   indicated.   See  "Expenses"   below  for  applicable   expense
limitations.

   
     Fund -- For the period  August 1, 1996 through June 30, 1997 and the fiscal
year ended June 30, 1998: $1,916 and $3,367.

     Portfolio  -- For the period  August 1, 1996  through June 30, 1997 and the
fiscal year ended June 30, 1998: $6,791 and $8,817.
    

         The administrative fees paid to Signature  Broker-Dealer Services, Inc.
(which  provided  distribution  and  administrative  services  to the  Trust and
placement agent and administrative  services to the Portfolio prior to August 1,
1997) were as follows:

   
Fund -- For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1996 and for the period July 1, 1996
through July 31, 1996: $6,432 and $568, respectively.

     Portfolio  -- For the fiscal  years  ended June 30, 1996 and for the period
July 1, 1996 through July 31, 1996: $19,517 and $2,938, respectively.
    

See "Expenses" below for applicable expense limitations.



<PAGE>



SERVICES AGENT

         The Trust,  on behalf of the Fund,  and the Portfolio have entered into
Administrative  Services  Agreements  (the  "Services  Agreements")  with Morgan
effective  December 29, 1995, as amended  effective August 1, 1996,  pursuant to
which Morgan is  responsible  for certain  administrative  and related  services
provided to the Fund and Portfolio. The Services Agreements may be terminated at
any time,  without penalty,  by the Trustees or Morgan, in each case on not more
than 60 days' nor less than 30 days' written notice to the other party.

         Under the Services Agreements,  Morgan provides certain  administrative
and related services to the Fund and the Portfolio,  including  services related
to  tax  compliance,   preparation  of  financial  statements,   calculation  of
performance  data,  oversight of service  providers and certain  regulatory  and
Board of Trustee matters.

   
     Under the amended Services  Agreements,  each of the Fund and Portfolio has
agreed to pay Morgan fees equal to its allocable share of an annual complex-wide
charge. This charge is calculated daily based on the aggregate net assets of the
Master  Portfolios and J.P. Morgan Series Trust in accordance with the following
annual schedule:  0.09% of the first $7 billion of their aggregate average daily
net assets and 0.04% of their aggregate average daily net assets in excess of $7
billion,  less the complex-wide  fees payable to FDI. The portion of this charge
payable by the Fund or the Portfolio is determined  by the  proportionate  share
that its net  assets  bear to the total  net  assets of the  Trust,  the  Master
Portfolios,  other investors in the Master  Portfolios for which Morgan provides
similar services and J.P. Morgan Series Trust.

         Under prior administrative  services agreements in effect from December
29, 1995 through July 31, 1996, with Morgan,  each of the Fund and the Portfolio
paid  Morgan a fee equal to its  proportionate  share of an annual  complex-wide
charge.  This charge was  calculated  daily based on the aggregate net assets of
the Master  Portfolios in accordance with the following  schedule:  0.06% of the
first $7 billion of the Master  Portfolio's  aggregate average daily net assets,
and 0.03% of the  Master  Portfolio's  average  daily net assets in excess of $7
billion.
    

         Prior to December 29,  1995,  the Trust and the  Portfolio  had entered
into  Financial  and  Fund  Accounting  Services  Agreements  with  Morgan,  the
provisions of which  included  certain of the  activities  described  above and,
prior to September 1, 1995, also included  reimbursement  of usual and customary
expenses. The table below sets forth the fees paid to Morgan, net of fee waivers
and  reimbursements,  as Services  Agent.  See  "Expenses"  below for applicable
expense limitations.

   
     Portfolio  -- For the  fiscal  years  ended June 30,  1996,  1997 and 1998:
$45,687, $89,749 and ($120,189), respectively.

     Fund -- For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1996, 1997 and 1998: $(2,852)*,
$18,797 and ($13,803)*, respectively.
    

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

   
(*) Indicates a reimbursement by Morgan for expenses in excess of its fees under
the prior financial and fund accounting services agreements. For the fiscal year
ended June 30, 1998,  fees for the  Portfolio  and the Fund amounted to $127,584
and $41,692,  respectively.  No fees were paid for the fiscal period as a result
of these reimbursements.
    


<PAGE>



CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT

   
         State  Street Bank and Trust  Company  ("State  Street"),  225 Franklin
Street,  Boston,  Massachusetts 02110, serves as the Trust's and the Portfolio's
custodian  and fund  accounting  agent  and the  Fund's  transfer  and  dividend
disbursing  agent.  Pursuant  to  the  Custodian  Contracts,   State  Street  is
responsible  for  maintaining  the books of account  and  records  of  portfolio
transactions and holding  portfolio  securities and cash. In the case of foreign
assets  held  outside  the  United  States,   the  custodian   employs   various
subcustodians  who were  approved by the Trustees of the Portfolio in accordance
with the regulations of the SEC. The custodian maintains  portfolio  transaction
records.  As transfer  agent and  dividend  disbursing  agent,  State  Street is
responsible  for  maintaining  account  records  detailing the ownership of Fund
shares  and for  crediting  income,  capital  gains and other  changes  in share
ownership to shareholder accounts.
    

SHAREHOLDER SERVICING

         The  Trust  on  behalf  of the  Fund  has  entered  into a  Shareholder
Servicing  Agreement  with Morgan  pursuant to which Morgan acts as  shareholder
servicing agent for its customers and for other Fund investors who are customers
of a financial  professional.  Under this  agreement,  Morgan is responsible for
performing  shareholder account  administrative and servicing  functions,  which
include but are not limited to, answering inquiries regarding account status and
history,  the manner in which  purchases and  redemptions  of Fund shares may be
effected,  and certain other matters pertaining to the Fund; assisting customers
in  designating  and  changing  dividend  options,   account   designations  and
addresses;  providing  necessary  personnel and  facilities  to  coordinate  the
establishment  and  maintenance  of  shareholder  accounts  and records with the
transfer  agent;  transmitting  purchase and  redemption  orders to the transfer
agent  and  arranging  for the  wiring  or other  transfer  of funds to and from
customer  accounts in connection  with orders to purchase or redeem Fund shares;
verifying  purchase  and  redemption  orders,  transfers  among and  changes  in
accounts;  informing the  Distributor of the gross amount of purchase orders for
Fund shares; and providing other related services.

   
     Effective August 1, 1998, under the Shareholder  Servicing  Agreement,  the
Fund has agreed to pay  Morgan a fee for these  services  at the annual  rate of
0.25% of the  average  daily  net  asset  value of Fund  shares  owned by or for
shareholders.
    

   
         The shareholder  servicing fees paid by the Fund to Morgan,  net of fee
waivers and reimbursements,  were $90,759,  $151,781 and $352,054 for the fiscal
years ended June 30, 1996, 1997 and 1998, respectively.

     As discussed under "Investment  Advisor," the  Glass-Steagall Act and other
applicable laws and regulations  limit the activities of bank holding  companies
and  certain  of their  subsidiaries  in  connection  with  registered  open-end
investment  companies.  The  activities  of  Morgan  in  acting  as  shareholder
servicing agent for Fund shareholders under the Shareholder  Servicing Agreement
and providing  administrative  services to the Fund and the Portfolio  under the
Services  Agreements  and in  acting  as  Advisor  to the  Portfolio  under  the
Investment Advisory Agreement, may raise issues under these laws. However, JPMIM
and Morgan  believe that they may properly  perform these services and the other
activities described herein without violation of the Glass-Steagall Act or other
applicable banking laws or regulations.
    


<PAGE>



         If Morgan were  prohibited from providing any of the services under the
Shareholder Servicing Agreement and the Services Agreements,  the Trustees would
seek an  alternative  provider of such services.  In such event,  changes in the
operation of the Fund or the Portfolio  might occur and a  shareholder  might no
longer be able to avail himself or herself of any services  then being  provided
to shareholders by Morgan.

   
         The Fund may be sold to or  through  financial  intermediaries  who are
customers   of   Morgan   ("financial   professionals"),   including   financial
institutions  and  broker-dealers,  that  may be  paid  fees  by  Morgan  or its
affiliates  for services  provided to their clients that invest in the Fund. See
"Financial  Professionals"  below.  Organizations that provide  recordkeeping or
other services to certain  employee benefit or retirement plans that include the
Fund as an investment alternative may also be paid a fee.
    

FINANCIAL PROFESSIONALS

   
         The   services   provided  by  financial   professionals   may  include
establishing  and  maintaining  shareholder  accounts,  processing  purchase and
redemption  transactions,  arranging  for  bank  wires,  performing  shareholder
subaccounting, answering client inquiries regarding the Trust, assisting clients
in changing  dividend  options,  account  designations and addresses,  providing
periodic  statements  showing the client's account balance and integrating these
statements with those of other  transactions  and balances in the client's other
accounts serviced by the financial professional,  transmitting proxy statements,
periodic reports,  updated prospectuses and other communications to shareholders
and,  with  respect to  meetings of  shareholders,  collecting,  tabulating  and
forwarding  executed proxies and obtaining such other information and performing
such  other  services  as Morgan or the  financial  professional's  clients  may
reasonably request and agree upon with the financial professional.

         Although  there  is no  sales  charge  levied  directly  by  the  Fund,
financial  professionals  may  establish  their  own terms  and  conditions  for
providing their services and may charge investors a  transaction-based  or other
fee for their services.  Such charges may vary among financial professionals but
in all cases will be retained by the financial  professional and not be remitted
to the Fund or J.P. Morgan.

         The Fund has  authorized  one or more  brokers to accept  purchase  and
redemption orders on its behalf.  Such brokers are authorized to designate other
intermediaries  to accept purchase and redemption  orders on a Fund's behalf.  A
Fund will be deemed to have  received a  purchase  or  redemption  order when an
authorized broker or, if applicable, a broker's authorized designee, accepts the
order. These orders will be priced at the Fund's net asset value next calculated
after they are so accepted.
    

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

   
         The  independent  accountants  of  the  Trust  and  the  Portfolio  are
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP,  1177 Avenue of the  Americas,  New York,  New York
10036.  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  conducts an annual  audit of the  financial
statements  of the Fund and the  Portfolio,  assists in the  preparation  and/or
review of each of the Fund's and the  Portfolio's  federal and state  income tax
returns and consults with the Fund and the Portfolio as to matters of accounting
and federal and state income taxation.
    



<PAGE>



EXPENSES

   
         In addition to the fees payable to Pierpont Group, Inc., JPMIM,  Morgan
and FDI under  various  agreements  discussed  under  "Trustees  and  Officers,"
"Investment Advisor,"  "Co-Administrator,"  "Distributor,"  "Services Agent" and
"Shareholder  Servicing"  above,  the Fund and the Portfolio are responsible for
usual and customary expenses associated with their respective  operations.  Such
expenses  include  organization  expenses,   legal  fees,  accounting  expenses,
insurance costs,  the  compensation  and expenses of the Trustees,  registration
fees under federal securities laws, and extraordinary expenses applicable to the
Fund and the  Portfolio.  For the Fund,  such  expenses  also include  transfer,
registrar and dividend  disbursing  costs,  the expenses of printing and mailing
reports,  notices and proxy  statements  to Fund  shareholders,  and filing fees
under state  securities  laws.  For the  Portfolio,  such  expenses also include
registration  fees under foreign  securities laws,  custodian fees and brokerage
expenses.  Under fee arrangements prior to September 1, 1995, Morgan as Services
Agent was responsible for  reimbursements to the Trust and the Portfolio and the
usual  and  customary  expenses  described  above  (excluding  organization  and
extraordinary expenses, custodian fees and brokerage expenses).

         Morgan has agreed that it will  reimburse the Fund until further notice
to the extent  necessary to maintain the Fund's total operating  expenses (which
include  expenses of the Fund and the  Portfolio) at the annual rate of 0.98% of
the Fund's  average  daily net assets.  This limit does not cover  extraordinary
expenses during the period. There is no assurance that Morgan will continue this
waiver.
    

PURCHASE OF SHARES

         Method of  Purchase.  Investors  may open  accounts  with the Fund only
through  the  Distributor.  All  purchase  transactions  in  Fund  accounts  are
processed by Morgan as shareholder servicing agent and the Fund is authorized to
accept any  instructions  relating to a Fund account from Morgan as  shareholder
servicing  agent for the customer.  All purchase  orders must be accepted by the
Distributor.  Prospective  investors who are not already customers of Morgan may
apply to become  customers of Morgan for the sole purpose of Fund  transactions.
There  are no  charges  associated  with  becoming  a Morgan  customer  for this
purpose.  Morgan  reserves the right to  determine  the  customers  that it will
accept,  and the Trust reserves the right to determine the purchase  orders that
it will accept.

         References  in  the   Prospectus   and  this  Statement  of  Additional
Information to customers of Morgan or a financial professional include customers
of their affiliates and references to transactions by customers with Morgan or a
financial  professional  include  transactions with their affiliates.  Only Fund
investors  who are using  the  services  of a  financial  institution  acting as
shareholder servicing agent pursuant to an agreement with the Trust on behalf of
the Fund may make transactions in shares of the Fund.

   
         The Fund may,  at its own  option,  accept  securities  in payment  for
shares. The securities  delivered in such a transaction are valued by the method
described in "Net Asset Value" as of the day the Fund  receives the  securities.
This is a taxable transaction to the shareholder.  Securities may be accepted in
payment for shares only if they are, in the judgment of the Advisor, appropriate
investments.  In addition,  securities  accepted in payment for shares must: (i)
meet the investment objective and policies of the Portfolio; (ii) be acquired by
the Fund for investment and not for resale
    

<PAGE>


         (other than for resale to the  Portfolio);  (iii) be liquid  securities
which are not  restricted  as to transfer  either by law or liquidity of market;
and (iv) if stock, have a value which is readily ascertainable as evidenced by a
listing  on a  stock  exchange,  OTC  market  or  by  readily  available  market
quotations  from a dealer in such  securities.  The Fund  reserves  the right to
accept or reject at its own option any and all securities offered in payment for
its shares.

         Prospective  investors  may purchase  shares with the  assistance  of a
financial  professional,  and the financial  professional  may establish its own
minimums and charge the  investor a fee for this  service and other  services it
provides to its customers.  Morgan may pay fees to financial  professionals  for
services in connection with fund investments.

REDEMPTION OF SHARES

   
         Investors may redeem shares as described in the Prospectus.

         If the  Trust  on  behalf  of the  Fund  determines  that it  would  be
detrimental  to the best interest of the remaining  shareholders  of the Fund to
make payment wholly or partly in cash,  payment of the  redemption  price may be
made in whole or in part by a distribution  in kind of securities from the Fund,
in lieu of cash, in conformity  with the  applicable  rule of the SEC. If shares
are redeemed in kind, the redeeming shareholder might incur transaction costs in
converting the assets into cash. The method of valuing  portfolio  securities is
described  under "Net Asset  Value," and such  valuation  will be made as of the
same time the redemption  price is determined.  The Trust, on behalf of the Fund
and the  Portfolio,  has elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1 under the 1940 Act
pursuant to which the Fund and the  Portfolio  are  obligated  to redeem  shares
solely in cash up to the  lesser of  $250,000  or one  percent  of the net asset
value of the Fund during any 90-day  period for any one  shareholder.  The Trust
will  redeem Fund shares in kind only if it has  received a  redemption  in kind
from  the  Portfolio  and  therefore  shareholders  of  the  Fund  that  receive
redemptions in kind will receive securities of the Portfolio.  The Portfolio has
advised  the  Trust  that  the  Portfolio  will not  redeem  in kind  except  in
circumstances in which the Fund is permitted to redeem in kind.

         Further  Redemption   Information.   Investors  should  be  aware  that
redemptions  from the Fund may not be processed  if a redemption  request is not
submitted in proper form. To be in proper form,  the Fund must have received the
shareholder's  taxpayer  identification  number and address.  In addition,  if a
shareholder  sends a check  for the  purchase  of fund  shares  and  shares  are
purchased before the check has cleared,  the transmittal of redemption  proceeds
from the shares will occur upon  clearance  of the check which may take up to 15
days. The Trust, on behalf of the Fund and the Portfolio,  reserves the right to
suspend  the  right of  redemption  and to  postpone  the date of  payment  upon
redemption as follows:  (i) for up to seven days,  (ii) during  periods when the
New York Stock  Exchange is closed for other than  weekends and holidays or when
trading on such  Exchange  is  restricted  as  determined  by the SEC by rule or
regulation,  (iii) during  periods in which an  emergency,  as determined by the
SEC,  exists that causes  disposal by the Portfolio of, or evaluation of the net
asset value of, its portfolio securities to be unreasonable or impracticable, or
(iv) for such other periods as the SEC may permit.

         For information  regarding redemption orders placed through a financial
professional, please see "Financial Professionals" above
    



<PAGE>



EXCHANGE OF SHARES

   
         An  investor  may  exchange  shares  from the Fund into any other J. P.
Morgan Fund,  J.P.  Morgan  Institutional  Fund or J.P.  Morgan Series Trust
fund without charge.  An exchange may be made so long as after the exchange the
investor has shares, in each fund in which he or she remains an investor, with a
value of at least that fund's minimum  investment  amount.  Shareholders  should
read the  prospectus  of the fund into  which they are  exchanging  and may only
exchange between fund accounts that are registered in the same name, address and
taxpayer  identification  number.  Shares are exchanged on the basis of relative
net asset value per share. Exchanges are in effect redemptions from one fund and
purchases of another fund and the usual purchase and  redemption  procedures and
requirements are applicable to exchanges. Shareholders subject to federal income
tax who  exchange  shares in one fund for shares in another  fund may  recognize
capital gain or loss for federal  income tax purposes.  Shares of the fund to be
acquired are purchased for settlement when the proceeds from  redemption  become
available. In the case of investors in certain states, state securities laws may
restrict the availability of the exchange privilege. The Fund reserves the right
to discontinue, alter or limit its exchange privilege at any time.
    

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

   
         The Fund  declares and pays  dividends and  distributions  as described
under "Dividends and Distributions" in the Prospectus.
    

         Dividends  and  capital  gains  distributions  paid  by  the  Fund  are
automatically reinvested in additional shares of the Fund unless the shareholder
has elected to have them paid in cash. Dividends and distributions to be paid in
cash are  credited to the  shareholder's  account at Morgan or at his  financial
professional or, in the case of certain Morgan customers, are mailed by check in
accordance  with the  customer's  instructions.  The Fund  reserves the right to
discontinue, alter or limit the automatic reinvestment privilege at any time.

         If a shareholder has elected to receive  dividends  and/or capital gain
distributions  in cash and the  postal or other  delivery  service  is unable to
deliver  checks to the  shareholder's  address  of  record,  such  shareholder's
distribution  option will  automatically be converted to having all dividend and
other distributions  reinvested in additional shares. No interest will accrue on
amounts represented by uncashed distribution or redemption checks.

NET ASSET VALUE

   
         The Fund  computes  its net asset  value  separately  for each
class of shares  outstanding  once  daily as of the close of  trading on the New
York Stock Exchange  (normally  4:00 p.m.  eastern time) on each business day as
described in the Prospectus. The net asset value will not be computed on the day
the following  legal holidays are observed:  New Year's Day, Martin Luther King,
Jr. Day,  Presidents' Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence  Day, Labor
Day,  Thanksgiving  Day, and Christmas  Day. On days when U.S.  trading  markets
close early in observance of these  holidays,  the Fund will close for purchases
and  redemptions at the same time. The Fund and the Portfolio may also close for
purchases and  redemptions at such other times as may be determined by the Board
of Trustees to the extent  permitted  by  applicable  law. The days on which net
asset value is determined are the Funds' business days.
    



<PAGE>



   
         The net  asset  value of the Fund is equal to the  value of the  Fund's
investment in its corresponding Portfolio (which is equal to the Fund's pro rata
share of the  total  investment  of the Fund and of any other  investors  in the
Portfolio less the Fund's pro rata share of the  Portfolio's  liabilities)  less
the Fund's liabilities.  The following is a discussion of the procedures used by
the Portfolio corresponding to the Fund in valuing its assets.

          Portfolio  securities  are  valued  at  the  last  sale  price  on the
securities  exchange or national  securities market on which such securities are
primarily  traded.  Unlisted  securities  are valued at the last  average of the
quoted bid and asked  prices in the OTC market.  The value of each  security for
which readily available market quotations exist is based on a decision as to the
broadest  and most  representative  market for such  security.  For  purposes of
calculating  net asset value all assets and liabilities  initially  expressed in
foreign currencies will be converted into U.S. dollars at the prevailing average
currency exchange rate on the valuation date.

         Securities or other assets for which market  quotations are not readily
available  (including certain restricted and illiquid  securities) are valued at
fair value in accordance  with  procedures  established by and under the general
supervision and responsibility of the Trustees.  Such procedures include the use
of independent  pricing services which use prices based upon yields or prices of
securities of comparable quality,  coupon,  maturity and type; indications as to
values from dealers; and general market conditions. Short-term investments which
mature  in 60 days or less  are  valued  at  amortized  cost if  their  original
maturity was 60 days or less, or by amortizing their value on the 61st day prior
to maturity,  if their original maturity when acquired by the Portfolio was more
than 60 days,  unless  this is  determined  not to  represent  fair value by the
Trustees.
    

         Trading in  securities  in most foreign  markets is normally  completed
before the close of trading in U.S.  markets  and may also take place on days on
which the U.S. markets are closed. If events  materially  affecting the value of
securities  occur  between  the time when the  market in which  they are  traded
closes and the time when the  Portfolio's  net asset value is  calculated,  such
securities   will  be  valued  at  fair  value  in  accordance  with  procedures
established by and under the general supervision of the Trustees.

PERFORMANCE DATA

   
         From time to time,  the Fund may quote  performance  in terms of actual
distributions, total return or capital appreciation in reports, sales literature
and  advertisements  published  by the Trust.  Shareholders  may obtain  current
performance information by calling the number provided on the cover page of this
Statement of Additional Information.  See also the Prospectus.

         Comparative  performance  information  may be used from time to time in
advertising the Funds' shares,  including  appropriate  market indices including
the benchmarks  indicated under  "Investment  Advisor" above or data from Lipper
Analytical  Services,  Inc., Micropal,  Inc., Ibbotson  Associates,  Morningstar
Inc., the Dow Jones Industrial
Average and other industry publications.

         The Fund may advertise "total return" and non-standardized total return
data.  The total return shows what an  investment  in the Fund would have earned
over a specified period of time (one, five or ten years or since commencement of
operations,  if less) assuming that all  distributions and dividends by the Fund
were  reinvested  on the  reinvestment  dates  during  the  period  and less all
recurring fees. This method of calculating total return is required by
    

<PAGE>


   
         regulations of the SEC. Total return data similarly calculated,  unless
otherwise indicated,  over other specified periods of time may also be used. All
performance  figures are based on  historical  earnings  and are not intended to
indicate future performance.

         Total Return  Quotations.  The Fund may  advertise  "total  return" and
non-standardized total return data. The total return shows what an investment in
a Fund would have earned over a specified period of time (one, five or ten years
or since  commencement of operations,  if less) assuming that all  distributions
and dividends by the Fund were reinvested on the  reinvestment  dates during the
period and less all recurring fees.  This method of calculating  total return is
required by  regulations  of the SEC.  Total return data  similarly  calculated,
unless  otherwise  indicated,  over other specified  periods of time may also be
used.  All  performance  figures are based on  historical  earnings  and are not
intended to indicate future performance.

         As required by  regulations of the SEC, the average annual total return
of the Fund for a period is computed by assuming a hypothetical  initial payment
of $1,000. It is then assumed that all of the dividends and distributions by the
Fund over the period are  reinvested.  It is then assumed that at the end of the
period,  the entire amount is redeemed.  The average annual total return is then
calculated by  determining  the annual rate required for the initial  payment to
grow to the amount which would have been received upon redemption.
    

         Aggregate total returns,  reflecting the cumulative  percentage  change
over a measuring period, may also be calculated.

         Historical  performance for periods prior to the  establishment  of the
Fund  will be  that  of J.  P.  Morgan  Institutional  Diversified  Fund,  which
commenced  operations  before the Fund, and will be presented in accordance with
applicable SEC staff interpretations.

         Below is set forth historical  return  information for the Fund for the
period indicated.

   
     (6/30/98):  Average  annual total return,  1 year:  18.06%;  average annual
total  return,  5 years:  N/A;  average  annual total  return,  commencement  of
operations(*)  to period end: 14.43%;  aggregate total return,  1 year:  18.06%;
aggregate total return, 5 years:  N/A;  aggregate total return,  commencement of
operations(*) to period end: 91.13%.  
    

     --------------------  
* The Fund commenced operations on December 15, 1993.
The  J.  P.  Morgan  Institutional  Diversified  Fund  commenced  operations  on
September 10, 1993.

         General.  The Fund's  performance will vary from time to time depending
upon market conditions,  the composition of the Portfolio, and the Fund's
operating expenses.  Consequently, any given performance quotation should not be
considered  representative  of a Fund's  performance for any specified period in
the future. In addition,  because performance will fluctuate, it may not provide
a basis for  comparing an  investment  in a Fund with  certain bank  deposits or
other investments that pay a fixed yield or return for a stated period of time.

   
     From  time to time,  the Fund may,  in  addition  to any other  permissible
information,  include the  following  types of  information  in  advertisements,
supplemental  sales literature and reports to  shareholders:  (1) discussions of
general economic or financial principles (such as the effects of compounding and
the benefits of dollar-cost averaging); (2) discussions of general

<PAGE> 

economic trends;  (3)  presentations of statistical data to supplement such
discussions;  (4)  descriptions  of past or anticipated  portfolio  holdings (5)
descriptions  of investment  strategies;  (6)  descriptions  or  comparisons  of
various  savings  and  investment  products  (including,  but  not  limited  to,
qualified  retirement plans and individual  stocks and bonds),  which may or may
not include the Fund;  (7)  comparisons  of investment  products  (including the
Fund) with relevant markets or industry indices or other appropriate benchmarks;
(8) discussions of fund rankings or ratings by recognized rating  organizations;
and (9)  discussions  of  various  statistical  methods  quantifying  the fund's
volatility  relative to its  benchmark or to past  performance,  including  risk
adjusted measures. The Fund may also include calculations,  such as hypothetical
compounding  examples,  which describe  hypothetical  investment results in such
communications.  Such  performance  examples  will be based on an express set of
assumptions and are not indicative of the performance of the Fund.
    

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

     The Advisor  places orders for the Portfolio for all purchases and sales of
portfolio  securities,  enters into  repurchase  agreements,  and may enter into
reverse  repurchase  agreements  and execute  loans of portfolio  securities  on
behalf of the Portfolio. See "Investment Objective and Policies."

         Fixed income and debt  securities  are generally  traded at a net price
with  dealers  acting  as  principal  for their  own  accounts  without a stated
commission. The price of the security usually includes profit to the dealers. In
underwritten offerings, securities are purchased at a fixed price which includes
an amount of  compensation  to the  underwriter,  generally  referred  to as the
underwriter's  concession or discount.  On occasion,  certain  securities may be
purchased directly from an issuer, in which case no commissions or discounts are
paid.

     Portfolio transactions for the Portfolio's fixed income investments will be
undertaken  principally to accomplish the  Portfolio's  objective in relation to
expected  movements in the general  level of interest  rates.  The Portfolio may
engage in short-term  trading  consistent  with its objective.  See  "Investment
Objective and Policies -- Portfolio Turnover."

   
     In connection with fixed income  portfolio  transactions for the Portfolio,
the  Advisor  intends to seek best  execution  on a  competitive  basis for both
purchases and sales of securities.

     In connection with transactions in Equity Securities for the Portfolio, the
overriding  objective  is to obtain  the best  execution  of  purchase  and sale
orders.
    

         In  selecting  a broker,  the  Advisor  considers  a number of  factors
including:  the price per unit of the  security;  the broker's  reliability  for
prompt,  accurate  confirmations and on-time delivery of securities;  the firm's
financial condition;  as well as the commissions charged. A broker may be paid a
brokerage  commission in excess of that which another  broker might have charged
for effecting the same transaction if, after considering the foregoing  factors,
the Advisor decides that the broker chosen will provide the best execution.  The
Advisor monitors the  reasonableness of the brokerage  commissions paid in light
of the execution  received.  The Trustees of the Portfolio  review regularly the
reasonableness  of  commissions  and other  transaction  costs  incurred  by the
Portfolio in light of facts and circumstances deemed relevant from time to time,
and, in that  connection,  will receive  reports from the Advisor and  published
data concerning transaction costs incurred by institutional investors generally.
Research  services  provided  by  brokers  to which the  Advisor  has  allocated
brokerage  business in the past  include  economic  statistics  and  forecasting
services,   industry  and  company  analyses,   portfolio   strategy   services,
quantitative  data,  and  consulting  services  from  economists  and  political
analysts. Research services

<PAGE>


         furnished  by brokers  are used for the  benefit  of all the  Advisor's
clients  and not solely or  necessarily  for the benefit of the  Portfolio.  The
Advisor  believes  that  the  value  of  research   services   received  is  not
determinable and does not significantly reduce its expenses.  The Portfolio does
not reduce its fee to the  Advisor by any amount that might be  attributable  to
the value of such services.

   
     The Portfolio paid the following  approximate brokerage commissions for the
fiscal years ended June 30, 1998: $314,363; 1997: $219,273; and 1996: $220,206
    

         Subject to the overriding  objective of obtaining the best execution of
orders,  the  Advisor  may  allocate  a  portion  of the  Portfolio's  brokerage
transactions  to  affiliates  of the  Advisor.  In order for  affiliates  of the
Advisor to effect any portfolio transactions for the Portfolio, the commissions,
fees or other  remuneration  received by 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 Trustees of the Portfolio,  including a majority of the
Trustees who are not  "interested  persons," have adopted  procedures  which are
reasonably designed to provide that any commissions, fees, or other remuneration
paid to such affiliates are consistent with the foregoing standard.

         Portfolio  securities  will not be purchased from or through or sold to
or through the  Co-Administrator,  the  Distributor  or the Advisor or any other
"affiliated  person"  (as  defined  in the  1940  Act) of the  Co-Administrator,
Distributor  or Advisor when such entities are acting as  principals,  except to
the extent  permitted  by law. In  addition,  the  Portfolios  will not purchase
securities  during the existence of any  underwriting  group relating thereto of
which the  Advisor or an  affiliate  of the  Advisor is a member,  except to the
extent permitted by law.

         On those  occasions  when the Advisor  deems the  purchase or sale of a
security to be in the best interests of the Portfolio as well as other customers
including  other  Master  Portfolios,  the  Advisor to the extent  permitted  by
applicable  laws and  regulations,  may, but is not obligated to,  aggregate the
securities to be sold or purchased  for the  Portfolio  with those to be sold or
purchased for other customers in order to obtain best execution, including lower
brokerage  commissions  if  appropriate.   In  such  event,  allocation  of  the
securities  so  purchased  or  sold  as well  as any  expenses  incurred  in the
transaction  will be made by the Advisor in the manner it  considers  to be most
equitable and consistent  with its fiduciary  obligations  to the Portfolio.  In
some instances, this procedure might adversely affect the Portfolio.

         If the Portfolio effects a closing purchase transaction with respect to
an option written by it, normally such  transaction will be executed by the same
broker-dealer who executed the sale of the option. The writing of options by the
Portfolio  will be subject to  limitations  established by each of the exchanges
governing the maximum  number of options in each class which may be written by a
single investor or group of investors  acting in concert,  regardless of whether
the  options  are  written  on the same or  different  exchanges  or are held or
written in one or more  accounts or through one or more  brokers.  The number of
options which the Portfolio may write may be affected by options  written by the
Advisor  for  other  investment  advisory  clients.  An  exchange  may order the
liquidation  of  positions  found to be in  excess of these  limits,  and it may
impose certain other sanctions.


<PAGE>



MASSACHUSETTS TRUST

   
         The Trust is a  "Massachusetts  business  trust" of which the Fund is a
separate and distinct  series.  A copy of the Declaration of Trust for the Trust
is on file in the office of the Secretary of The Commonwealth of  Massachusetts.
Under  Massachusetts  law,  shareholders  of such a  trust  may,  under  certain
circumstances,  be held personally liable as partners for the obligations of the
trust.  However, the Trust's Declaration of Trust provides that the shareholders
will not be subject to any personal liability for the acts or obligations of any
Fund and that every written  agreement,  obligation,  instrument or  undertaking
made on behalf  of any Fund will  contain a  provision  to the  effect  that the
shareholders are not personally liable thereunder.

         Effective October 10, 1996, the name of the Trust was changed from "The
Pierpont  Funds" to "The JPM Pierpont  Funds".  Effective  October 10, 1996, the
name of the Fund was changed from "The  Pierpont  Diversified  Fund" to "The JPM
Pierpont Diversified Fund." Effective January 1, 1998, the name of the Trust was
changed  from "The JPM  Pierpont  Funds" to "J. P. Morgan  Funds" and the Fund's
name was  changed  from  "The JPM  Pierpont  Diversified  Fund" to "J.P.  Morgan
Diversified Fund."

         The Trust's  Declaration of Trust further provides that the name of the
Trust refers to the Trustees  collectively  as Trustees,  not as  individuals or
personally, that no Trustee, officer, employee or agent of a Fund is liable to a
Fund or to a shareholder,  and that no Trustee,  officer,  employee, or agent is
liable to any third persons in connection with the affairs of a Fund,  except as
such  liability  may arise from his or its own bad faith,  willful  misfeasance,
gross  negligence  or  reckless  disregard  of his or its  duties to such  third
persons.  It also  provides  that all third  persons  shall look  solely to Fund
property for  satisfaction of claims arising in connection with the affairs of a
Fund. With the exceptions stated, the Trust's Declaration of Trust provides that
a Trustee, officer, employee, or agent is entitled to be indemnified against all
liability in connection with the affairs of a Fund.

         The Trust shall  continue  without  limitation  of time  subject to the
provisions in the Declaration of Trust  concerning  termination by action of the
shareholders or by action of the Trustees upon notice to the shareholders.
    

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES

     The Trust is an  open-end  management  investment  company  organized  as a
Massachusetts  business trust on November 2, 1992 in which the Fund represents a
separate series of shares of beneficial interest. See "Massachusetts Trust."

   
         The  Declaration  of Trust  permits the  Trustees to issue an unlimited
number of full and  fractional  shares  ($0.001 par value) of one or more series
and  classes  within  any  series  and to divide or  combine  the shares (of any
series)  without  changing  the  proportionate   beneficial   interest  of  each
shareholder in a series (or in the assets of other series,  if  applicable).  To
date shares of 18 series have been  authorized and are available for sale to the
public.  Each share represents an equal  proportional  interest in the Fund with
each other share.  Upon  liquidation of the Fund,  holders are entitled to share
pro  rata in the net  assets  of the Fund  available  for  distribution  to such
shareholders.  See "Massachusetts  Trust." Shares of the Fund have no preemptive
or  conversion  rights  and are  fully  paid and  nonassessable.  The  rights of
redemption  and exchange are  described in the  Prospectus  or elsewhere in this
Statement of Additional Information.
    


<PAGE>



   
         The  shareholders of the Trust are entitled to one vote for each dollar
of  net  asset  value  (or a  proportionate  fractional  vote  in  respect  of a
fractional  dollar  amount),  on  matters  on which  shares of the Fund shall be
entitled to vote.  Subject to the 1940 Act,  the  Trustees  themselves  have the
power to alter the number and the terms of office of the  Trustees,  to lengthen
their own terms, or to make their terms of unlimited duration subject to certain
removal procedures,  and appoint their own successors,  provided,  however, that
immediately  after such appointment the requisite  majority of the Trustees have
been elected by the shareholders of the Trust. The voting rights of shareholders
are not cumulative so that holders of more than 50% of the shares voting can, if
they choose,  elect all Trustees being selected  while the  shareholders  of the
remaining  shares would be unable to elect any Trustees.  It is the intention of
the Trust not to hold meetings of shareholders  annually.  The Trustees may call
meetings of  shareholders  for action by shareholder  vote as may be required by
either the 1940 Act or the Trust's Declaration of Trust.
    

         Shareholders  of the Trust  have the  right,  upon the  declaration  in
writing or vote of more than two-thirds of its outstanding  shares,  to remove a
Trustee.  The Trustees will call a meeting of shareholders to vote on removal of
a Trustee upon the written  request of the record  holders of 10% of the Trust's
shares.  In addition,  whenever ten or more shareholders of record who have been
such for at least six months preceding the date of application,  and who hold in
the  aggregate  either shares having a net asset value of at least $25,000 or at
least 1% of the Trust's  outstanding  shares,  whichever is less, shall apply to
the  Trustees  in  writing,  stating  that they wish to  communicate  with other
shareholders  with a view to obtaining  signatures  to request a meeting for the
purpose of voting upon the  question  of removal of any Trustee or Trustees  and
accompanied by a form of communication  and request which they wish to transmit,
the Trustees  shall within five business days after receipt of such  application
either:  (1)  afford  to  such  applicants  access  to a list of the  names  and
addresses  of all  shareholders  as recorded  on the books of the Trust;  or (2)
inform such applicants as to the  approximate  number of shareholders of record,
and the approximate cost of mailing to them the proposed  communication and form
of request.  If the Trustees  elect to follow the latter  course,  the Trustees,
upon the  written  request of such  applicants,  accompanied  by a tender of the
material to be mailed and of the  reasonable  expenses of mailing,  shall,  with
reasonable promptness, mail such material to all shareholders of record at their
addresses as recorded on the books,  unless within five business days after such
tender  the  Trustees  shall  mail to such  applicants  and  file  with the SEC,
together with a copy of the material to be mailed, a written statement signed by
at least a majority of the Trustees to the effect that in their  opinion  either
such  material  contains  untrue  statements  of fact or omits  to  state  facts
necessary to make the statements  contained therein not misleading,  or would be
in violation of applicable law, and specifying the basis of such opinion.  After
opportunity for hearing upon the objections  specified in the written statements
filed, the SEC may, and if demanded by the Trustees or by such applicants shall,
enter an order either  sustaining one or more of such  objections or refusing to
sustain any of them. If the SEC shall enter an order  refusing to sustain any of
such  objections,  or if, after the entry of an order  sustaining one or more of
such  objections,  the SEC shall find, after notice and opportunity for hearing,
that all  objections  so  sustained  have been met,  and shall enter an order so
declaring,  the Trustees shall mail copies of such material to all  shareholders
with reasonable promptness after the entry of such order and the renewal of such
tender.



<PAGE>



   
         The Trustees have no current intention to create any classes within the
initial series or any subsequent  series.  The Trustees may  authorize
the  issuance  of shares of  additional  series and the  creation  of classes of
shares  within any series with such  preferences,  privileges,  limitations  and
voting and dividend rights as the Trustees may determine.  The proceeds from the
issuance of any additional  series would be invested in separate,  independently
managed   portfolios   with  distinct   investment   objectives,   policies  and
restrictions, and share purchase, redemption and net asset valuation procedures.
Any  additional  classes  would  be used to  distinguish  among  the  rights  of
different categories of shareholders, as might be required by future regulations
or other unforeseen  circumstances.  All consideration received by the Trust for
shares  of any  additional  series  or  class,  and all  assets  in  which  such
consideration is invested, would belong to that series or class, subject only to
the rights of  creditors  of the Trust and would be  subject to the  liabilities
related thereto. Shareholders of any additional series or class will approve the
adoption of any management contract or distribution plan relating to such series
or class and of any changes in the investment  policies related thereto,  to the
extent required by the 1940 Act.
    

         For  information  relating to  mandatory  redemption  of Fund shares or
their  redemption  at the option of the Trust under certain  circumstances,  see
"Redemption of Shares."

   
         As of September  30,  1998,  the  following  owned of record or, to the
knowledge  of  management,  beneficially  owned more than 5% of the  outstanding
shares of the Fund:

     National   Financial  Services  Corp  For  the  Exclusive  Benefit  of  our
Customers,   (27.89);   Insilco  Corp  Employee  Thrift  Plan,  (8.02%);  Quincy
Newspapers Profit Sharing & Retirement Plan, (6.48%)

         The address of the owners listed above is c/o Morgan,  522
Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10036. As of the date this Statement Additional
Information,  the officers and Trustees a group owned less than 1% of the shares
of the Fund.
    

SPECIAL INFORMATION CONCERNING INVESTMENT STRUCTURE

         Unlike other mutual funds which  directly  acquire and manage their own
portfolio of securities,  the Fund is an open-end management  investment company
which  seeks  to  achieve  its  investment  objective  by  investing  all of its
investable assets in a corresponding Portfolio, a separate registered investment
company  with the same  investment  objective  and  policies  as the Fund.  Fund
shareholders  are  entitled to one vote for each dollar of net asset value (or a
proportionate  fractional  vote in respect of a fractional  dollar  amount),  on
matters on which shares of the Fund shall be entitled to vote.

         In addition to selling a beneficial interest to the Fund, the Portfolio
may sell beneficial interests to other mutual funds or institutional  investors.
Such investors will invest in the Portfolio on the same terms and conditions and
will bear a proportionate share of the Portfolio's expenses.  However, the other
investors  investing in the  Portfolio may sell shares of their own fund using a
different pricing structure than the Fund. Such different pricing structures may
result in  differences  in returns  experienced by investors in other funds that
invest in the  Portfolio.  Such  differences in returns are not uncommon and are
present in other mutual fund structures. Information concerning other holders of
interests in the Portfolio is available from Morgan at (800) 521-5411.


<PAGE>



   
         The Trust may withdraw the investment of the Fund from the Portfolio at
any time if the Board of Trustees of the Trust determines that it is in the best
interests of the Fund to do so. Upon any such withdrawal,  the Board of Trustees
would  consider what action might be taken,  including the investment of all the
assets  of the  Fund  in  another  pooled  investment  entity  having  the  same
investment  objective  and  restrictions  as the  Fund  or the  retaining  of an
investment adviser to manage the Fund's assets in accordance with the investment
policies described below with respect to the Portfolio.

         Certain changes in the Portfolio's  fundamental  investment policies or
restrictions,  or a failure by the Fund's shareholders to approve such change in
the Portfolio's  investment  restrictions,  may require withdrawal of the Fund's
interest in the Portfolio. Any such withdrawal could result in a distribution in
kind of  portfolio  securities  (as  opposed  to a cash  distribution)  from the
Portfolio which may or may not be readily  marketable.  The distribution in kind
may result in the Fund having a less  diversified  portfolio of  investments  or
adversely affect the Fund's liquidity,  and the Fund could incur brokerage,  tax
or other  charges in converting  the  securities  to cash.  Notwithstanding  the
above, there are other means for meeting shareholder  redemption requests,  such
as borrowing.
    

         Smaller funds investing in the Portfolio may be materially  affected by
the actions of larger funds investing in the Portfolio.  For example, if a large
fund  withdraws  from  the  Portfolio,  the  remaining  funds  may  subsequently
experience higher pro rata operating expenses, thereby producing lower returns.

         Additionally, because the Portfolio would become smaller, it may become
less diversified,  resulting in potentially  increased  portfolio risk (however,
these  possibilities  also exist for  traditionally  structured funds which have
large or institutional investors who may withdraw from a fund). Also, funds with
a greater  pro rata  ownership  in the  Portfolio  could have  effective  voting
control of the  operations of the  Portfolio.  Whenever the Fund is requested to
vote on matters  pertaining to the  Portfolio  (other than a vote by the Fund to
continue the operation of the Portfolio upon the withdrawal of another  investor
in the Portfolio), the Trust will hold a meeting of shareholders of the Fund and
will  cast  all  of its  votes  proportionately  as  instructed  by  the  Fund's
shareholders.  The Trust will vote the shares held by Fund  shareholders  who do
not give  voting  instructions  in the same  proportion  as the  shares  of Fund
shareholders  who do give voting  instructions.  Shareholders of the Fund who do
not vote will have no effect on the outcome of such matters.

TAXES

         The following  discussion of tax  consequences is based on U.S. federal
tax laws in effect on the date of this  Prospectus.  These laws and  regulations
are subject to change by legislative or administrative action.

   
         The Fund  intends  to  qualify  and  remain  qualified  as a  regulated
investment  company under  Subchapter M of the Code.  As a regulated  investment
company, the Fund must, among other things, (a) derive at least 90% of its gross
income from  dividends,  interest,  payments  with respect to loans of stock and
securities,  gains from the sale or other  disposition  of stock,  securities or
foreign  currency  and other  income  (including  but not  limited to gains from
options, futures, and forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of
investing in such stock,  securities or foreign currency;  and (b) diversify its
holdings so that, at the end of each fiscal  quarter of its taxable year, (i) at
least 50% of the value of the Fund's total assets is represented by
    

<PAGE>


   
         cash,  cash items,  U.S.  Government  securities,  investments in other
regulated investment companies,  and other securities limited, in respect of any
one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the 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  or  securities  of  other  regulated
investment companies).

         As a  regulated  investment  company,  the  Fund  (as  opposed  to  its
shareholders)  will not be subject to federal income taxes on the net investment
income and capital gains that it distributes to its shareholders,  provided that
at least 90% of its net investment  income and realized net  short-term  capital
gains  in  excess  of net  long-term  capital  losses  for the  taxable  year is
distributed in accordance with the Code's timing requirements.
    

         Under  the  Code,  the Fund will be  subject  to a 4%  excise  tax on a
portion of its  undistributed  taxable  income and capital  gains if it fails to
meet certain distribution requirements by the end of the calendar year. The Fund
intends to make distributions in a timely manner and accordingly does not expect
to be subject to the excise tax.

   
         For federal  income tax  purposes,  dividends  that are declared by the
Fund in  October,  November  or  December  as of a record date in such month and
actually paid in January of the  following  year will be treated as if they were
paid on December 31 of the year declared.  Therefore,  such dividends  generally
will be taxable to a shareholder in the year declared rather than the year paid.

         Distributions of net investment income, certain foreign currency gains,
and realized net  short-term  capital  gain in excess of net  long-term  capital
losses  (other  than  exempt  interest   dividends)  are  generally  taxable  to
shareholders of the Fund as ordinary income whether such distributions are taken
in cash or reinvested in additional  shares.  If dividend payments exceed income
earned  by the  Fund,  the over  distribution  would be  considered  a return of
capital  rather than a dividend  payment.  The Fund intends to pay  dividends in
such a manner so as to minimize the possibility of a return of capital. The Fund
expects that a portion of these distributions to corporate  shareholders will be
eligible for the dividends-received deduction, subject to applicable limitations
under the Code. Distributions of net long-term capital gain (i.e., net long-term
capital  gain  in  excess  of  net  short-term  capital  loss)  are  taxable  to
shareholders of the Fund as long-term  capital gain,  regardless of whether such
distributions  are  taken  in  cash  or  reinvested  in  additional  shares  and
regardless  of how long a  shareholder  has held shares in the Fund. In general,
long-term capital gain of an individual shareholder will be subject to a reduced
rate  of tax.  Investors  should  consult  their  tax  advisors  concerning  the
treatment of capital gains and losses.

         Gains or losses on sales of  portfolio  securities  will be  treated as
long-term capital gains or losses if the securities have been held for more than
one year except in certain cases where,  if  applicable,  a put is acquired or a
call  option is  written  thereon  or the  straddle  rules  described  below are
otherwise  applicable.  Other gains or losses on the sale of securities  will be
short-term capital gains or losses. Gains and losses on the sale, lapse or other
termination  of options on  securities  will be treated as gains and losses from
the sale of  securities.  If an option  written  by the  Portfolio  lapses or is
terminated through a closing transaction,  such as a repurchase by the Portfolio
of the option from its holder,  the Portfolio will realize a short-term  capital
gain or loss,  depending  on whether the premium  income is greater or less than
the amount paid by the Portfolio in the closing
    

<PAGE>


   
         transaction.  If securities are purchased by the Portfolio  pursuant to
the  exercise of a put option  written by it, the  Portfolio  will  subtract the
premium received from its cost basis in the securities purchased.
    

         Any  distribution  of net investment  income or capital gains will have
the effect of reducing the net asset value of Fund shares held by a  shareholder
by the same amount as the distribution.  If the net asset value of the shares is
reduced  below a  shareholder's  cost as a result  of such a  distribution,  the
distribution, although constituting a return of capital to the shareholder, will
be taxable as described above.

   
         Any gain or loss realized on the  redemption or exchange of Fund shares
by a shareholder  who is not a dealer in securities will be treated as long-term
capital  gain or loss if the shares  have been held for more than one year,  and
otherwise as short-term  capital gain or loss.  However,  any loss realized by a
shareholder  upon the  redemption or exchange of shares in the Fund held for six
months or less (i) will be treated as a long-term  capital loss to the extent of
any  long-term  capital  gain  distributions  received by the  shareholder  with
respect  to such  shares,  and (ii)  will be  disallowed  to the  extent  of any
exempt-interest  dividends  received  by the  shareholder  with  respect to such
shares.  In addition,  no loss will be allowed on the  redemption or exchange of
shares of the Fund, if within a period beginning 30 days before the date of such
redemption  or  exchange  and ending 30 days after  such date,  the  shareholder
acquires  (such  as  through   dividend   reinvestment)   securities   that  are
substantially identical to shares of the Fund.
    

         Under the Code, gains or losses  attributable to disposition of foreign
currency  or to  certain  foreign  currency  contracts,  or to  fluctuations  in
exchange  rates between the time the Portfolio  accrues income or receivables or
expenses or other liabilities denominated in a foreign currency and the time the
Portfolio actually collects such income or pays such liabilities,  are generally
treated as ordinary income or ordinary loss.  Similarly,  gains or losses on the
disposition of debt  securities  held by the Portfolio,  if any,  denominated in
foreign currency,  to the extent  attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates
between  the  acquisition  and  disposition  dates are also  treated as ordinary
income or loss.

   
         Forward currency contracts,  options and futures contracts entered into
by the Portfolio may create "straddles" for U.S. federal income tax purposes and
this may affect the  character  and  timing of gains or losses  realized  by the
Portfolio on forward currency contracts, options and futures contracts or on the
underlying securities.
    

         Certain  options,  futures and foreign  currency  contracts held by the
Portfolio  at the end of each  taxable  year will be  required  to be "marked to
market" for federal income tax purposes -- i.e.,  treated as having been sold at
market  value.  For  options  and  futures  contracts,  60% of any  gain or loss
recognized on these deemed sales and on actual  dispositions  will be treated as
long-term  capital gain or loss, and the remainder will be treated as short-term
capital gain or loss  regardless of how long the Portfolio has held such options
or  futures.  However,  gain or loss  recognized  on  certain  foreign  currency
contracts will be treated as ordinary income or loss.

         The Portfolio may invest in equity  securities of foreign  issuers.  If
the Portfolio purchases shares in certain foreign  corporations  (referred to as
passive foreign investment  companies  ("PFICs") under the Code, the Fund may be
subject to federal  income tax on a portion of any  "excess  distribution"  from
such foreign corporation including any gain from the disposition of such shares,
even though a portion of such income may have to be distributed as a

<PAGE>


         taxable dividend by the Fund to its shareholders.  In addition, certain
interest  charges  may  be  imposed  on  the  Fund  as  a  result  of  any  such
distributions.  Alternatively,  a Fund may in some cases be permitted to include
each year in its income and distribute to shareholders a pro rata portion of the
PFIC's income, whether or not distributed to the Fund.

         For taxable years of the Portfolio  beginning after 1997, the Portfolio
will be permitted to "mark to market" any marketable stock held by the Portfolio
in a PFIC.  If the  Portfolio  made such an election,  the Fund would include in
income each year an amount equal to its share of the excess,  if any of the fair
market value of the PFIC stock as of the taxable year over the adjusted basis of
such stock.  The Fund would be allowed a deduction for its shares in excess,  if
any, of the  adjusted  basis of the PFIC stock over its fair market  value as of
the close of the taxable year, but only to the extent of any net  mark-to-market
gains with respect to the stock included by the Fund for prior taxable years.

         Foreign   Shareholders.   Dividends  of  net   investment   income  and
distributions of realized net short-term gain in excess of net long-term loss to
a shareholder who, as to the United States,  is a nonresident  alien individual,
fiduciary  of  a  foreign  trust  or  estate,  foreign  corporation  or  foreign
partnership (a "foreign shareholder") will be subject to U.S. withholding tax at
the rate of 30% (or lower  treaty  rate) unless the  dividends  are  effectively
connected  with a U.S. trade or business of the  shareholder,  in which case the
dividends  will be subject to tax on a net income basis at the  graduated  rates
applicable to U.S. individuals or domestic  corporations.  Distributions treated
as long term capital gains to foreign  shareholders  will not be subject to U.S.
tax unless the  distributions  are effectively  connected with the shareholder's
trade or business in the United States or, in the case of a shareholder who is a
nonresident alien  individual,  the shareholder was present in the United States
for more than 182 days during the taxable year and certain other  conditions are
met.

         If a correct and  certified  taxpayer  identification  number is not on
file, the Fund is required,  subject to certain  exemptions,  to withhold 31% of
certain payments made or distributions declared to non-corporate shareholders.

         In  the  case  of a  foreign  shareholder  who is a  nonresident  alien
individual or foreign entity,  the Fund may be required to withhold U.S. federal
income tax as "backup withholding" at the rate of 31% from distributions treated
as long-term  capital gains and from the proceeds of  redemptions,  exchanges or
other dispositions of Fund shares unless IRS Form W-8 is provided.  Transfers by
gift of shares of the Fund by a foreign  shareholder who is a nonresident  alien
individual will not be subject to U.S. federal gift tax, but the value of shares
of the Fund held by such a shareholder at his or her death will be includible in
his or her gross estate for U.S. federal estate tax purposes.

   
         Foreign  Taxes.  It is expected that the Fund may be subject to foreign
withholding  taxes or other  foreign  taxes  with  respect  to income  (possibly
including,  in some cases,  capital gains)  received from sources within foreign
countries.  So long as more than 50% in value of the total assets of the Fund at
the  close of any  taxable  year  consists  of stock or  securities  of  foreign
corporations,  the Fund may elect to treat any foreign  income taxes deemed paid
by it as paid directly by its shareholders.  The Fund will make such an election
only if it deems it to be in the best  interest of Fund  shareholders.  The Fund
will notify its  shareholders  in writing each year if it makes the election and
of the  amount of foreign  income  taxes,  if any,  to be treated as paid by the
shareholders and the amount of foreign taxes, if any, for which
    

<PAGE>


   
         shareholders  of the Fund will not be  eligible  to claim a foreign tax
credit because the holding period  requirements  (described below) have not been
satisfied.  If the Fund makes the election, each shareholder will be required to
include  in his  income (in  addition  to the  dividends  and  distributions  he
receives) his  proportionate  share of the amount of foreign income taxes deemed
paid by the Fund and will be entitled to claim  either a credit  (subject to the
limitations discussed below) or, if he itemizes deductions,  a deduction for his
share of the foreign income taxes in computing federal income tax liability. (no
deduction will be permitted in computing an individual's alternative minimum tax
liability).  Effective for dividends paid after September 5, 1997,  shareholders
of the Fund will not be eligible  to claim a foreign tax credit with  respect to
taxes  paid by the  Fund  (notwithstanding  that the Fund  elects  to treat  the
foreign  taxes deemed paid by it as paid  directly by its  shareholders)  unless
certain holding period  requirements are met. A shareholder who is a nonresident
alien individual or a foreign corporation may be subject to U.S. withholding tax
on the income resulting from the election  described in this paragraph,  but may
not be able to claim a credit or deduction against such U.S. tax for the foreign
taxes treated as having been paid by such shareholder.  A tax-exempt shareholder
will not  ordinarily  benefit  from this  election.  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
his or her total foreign source taxable income. For this purpose, the portion of
dividends  and  distributions  paid by the Fund  from  its  foreign  source  net
investment income will be treated as foreign source income. The Fund's gains and
losses from the sale of  securities  will  generally  be treated as derived from
U.S.  sources,  however,  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 the 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  and  individuals.  Because of
these  limitations,  if the election is made,  shareholders  may nevertheless be
unable to claim a credit for the full  amount of their  proportionate  shares of
the foreign income taxes paid by the Portfolio. Effective for taxable years of a
shareholder  beginning after December 31, 1997,  individual  shareholders of the
Fund  with  $300 or less of  creditable  foreign  taxes  ($600 in the case of an
individual  shareholder  filing jointly) may elect to be exempt from the foreign
tax credit  limitation  rules  described  above  (other than the 90%  limitation
applicable for purposes of the  alternative  minimum tax),  provided that all of
such  individual  shareholder's  foreign  source  income is  "qualified  passive
income" (which generally  includes  interest,  dividends,  rents,  royalties and
certain  other types of income) and further  provided  that all of such  foreign
source  income  is  shown  on one or  more  payee  statements  furnished  to the
shareholder.  Shareholders  making this  election will not be permitted to carry
over any excess  foreign  taxes to or from a tax year to which such an  election
applies.
    

         State and Local Taxes.  The Fund may be subject to state or local taxes
in jurisdictions in which the Fund is deemed to be doing business.  In addition,
the treatment of the Fund and its shareholders in those states which have income
tax laws  might  differ  from  treatment  under  the  federal  income  tax laws.
Shareholders  should consult their own tax advisors with respect to any state or
local taxes.

     Other Taxation.  The Trust is organized as a  Massachusetts  business trust
and, under current law,  neither the Trust nor the Fund is liable for any income
or franchise tax in The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, provided

<PAGE>


         that the Fund  continues to qualify as a regulated  investment  company
under  Subchapter M of the Code. The Portfolio is organized as a New York Trust.
The  Portfolio  is not  subject  to any  federal  income  taxation  or income or
franchise tax in the State of New York or The Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The
investment by the Fund in the Portfolio does not cause the Fund to be liable for
any income or franchise tax in the State of New York.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

   
         Telephone calls to the Fund,  J.P. Morgan or a Financial  Professional
as  shareholder  servicing  agent  may be tape  recorded.  With  respect  to the
securities  offered  hereby,  this Statement of Additional  Information  and the
Prospectus  do  not  contain  all  the  information   included  in  the  Trust's
registration  statement  filed  with the SEC under the 1933 Act and the 1940 Act
and the Portfolio's registration statement filed under the 1940 Act. Pursuant to
the rules and regulations of the SEC,  certain  portions have been omitted.  The
registration  statements  including the exhibits filed therewith may be examined
at the office of the SEC in Washington, D.C.
    

         Statements  contained in this Statement of Additional  Information  and
the Prospectus concerning the contents of any contract or other document are not
necessarily  complete,  and in each  instance,  reference is made to the copy of
such  contract  or  other  document  filed  as  an  exhibit  to  the  applicable
Registration Statements.
Each such statement is qualified in all respects by such reference.

         No dealer, salesman or any other person has been authorized to give any
information or to make any  representations,  other than those  contained in the
Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information,  in connection with the
offer  contained  therein  and,  if given or made,  such  other  information  or
representations  must not be relied upon as having been authorized by any of the
Trust,  the Portfolio or the  Distributor.  The Prospectus and this Statement of
Additional  Information  do  not  constitute  an  offer  by the  Fund  or by the
Distributor  to sell or solicit any offer to buy any of the  securities  offered
hereby in any  jurisdiction to any person to whom it is unlawful for the Fund or
the Distributor to make such offer in such jurisdictions.

   
The Year 2000 Initiative

         With  the  new  millennium  rapidly   approaching,   organizations  are
examining  their computer  systems to ensure they are year 2000  compliant.  The
issue,  in simple  terms,  is that many existing  computer  systems use only two
numbers to identify a year in the date field with the assumption  that the first
two digits are always 19. As the  century is implied in the date,  on January 1,
2000,  computers  that are not year 2000 compliant will assume the year is 1900.
Systems that  calculate,  compare,  or sort using the incorrect  date will cause
erroneous results,  ranging from system  malfunctions to incorrect or incomplete
transaction  processing.  If not  remedied,  potential  risks  include  business
interruption  or  shutdown,   financial  loss,  reputation  loss,  and/or  legal
liability.

         J.P.  Morgan has  undertaken a firmwide  initiative to address the year
2000 issue and has developed a  comprehensive  plan to prepare,  as appropriate,
its  computer  systems.   Each  business  line  has  taken   responsibility  for
identifying  and fixing the  problem  within its own area of  operation  and for
addressing  all  interdependencies.  A  multidisciplinary  team of internal  and
external experts supports the business teams by providing direction and firmwide
coordination.  Working together,  the business and multidisciplinary  teams have
completed a thorough education and awareness initiative and a
    

<PAGE>


   
     global inventory and assessment of J.P. Morgan's technology and application
portfolio to understand the scope of the year 2000 impact at J.P.  Morgan.  J.P.
Morgan  presently is renovating and testing these  technologies and applications
in partnership with external consulting and software development  organizations,
as well as with year 2000 tool providers. J.P. Morgan is on target with its plan
to substantially complete renovation, testing, and validation of its key systems
by year-end 1998 and to  participate  in  industry-wide  testing (or  streetwide
testing)  in 1999.  J.P.  Morgan  is also  working  with key  external  parties,
including clients, counterparties,  vendors, exchanges, depositories, utilities,
suppliers,  agents and regulatory agencies, to stem the potential risks the year
2000 problem poses to J.P. Morgan and to the global financial community.

         Costs associated with efforts to prepare J.P.  Morgan's systems for the
year 2000  approximated  $95 million in 1997. In 1998, J.P. Morgan will continue
its efforts to prepare  its systems for the year 2000.  The total cost to become
year-2000  compliant  is  estimated  at  $250  million,   for  internal  systems
renovation  and  testing,  testing  equipment,  and both  internal  and external
resources working on the project.  Remaining costs will be incurred primarily in
1998. The costs associated with J.P. Morgan becoming year-2000 compliant will be
borne by J.P. Morgan and not the Fund nor the Portfolio.

The Euro

         Effective  January 1, 1999 the euro, a single  multinational  currency,
will  replace the  national  currencies  of certain  countries  in the  Economic
Monetary  Union (EMU).  Conversion  rates among EMU  countries  will be fixed on
December 31, 1998, however,  existing currencies will still be used through July
1, 2002.  During this transition  period,  transactions may be settled in either
euro or existing  currencies,  but  financial  markets  and payment  systems are
expected to use the euro  exclusively.  Beginning  January 1, 1999,  J.P. Morgan
intends to conduct and settle all fund transactions,  where appropriate,  in the
euro.

         J.P.  Morgan has identified the following  potential risks to the Fund,
after  the  conversion:  The risk that  valuation  of  assets  are not  properly
redenominated;  currency risk resulting  from  increased  volatility in exchange
rates between EMU countries and non-participating  countries;  the inability any
of the Funds,  their service  providers and the issuers of the Fund's  portfolio
securities to make  information  technology  updates  timely;  and the potential
unenforceability  of  contracts.  There have been  recent  laws and  regulations
designed to ensure the continuity of contracts, however there is a risk that the
valuation of contracts will be negatively  impacted after the Funds' conversion.
J.P.  Morgan is working to avoid these  problems and to obtain  assurances  from
other service providers that they are taking similar steps.  However,  it is not
certain that these  actions will be sufficient  to prevent  problems  associated
with the conversion from adversely impacting fund operations and shareholders.

     The  I.R.S.  has  concluded  that  euro  conversion  will not  cause a U.S.
taxpayer to realize gain or loss to the extent taxpayer's rights and obligations
are altered solely by reason of the conversion.
    



<PAGE>



FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

   
         The    financial    statements    and   the    reports    thereon    of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP are incorporated herein by reference from the Fund's
June 30, 1998 annual  report  filing made with the SEC pursuant to Section 30(b)
of the 1940 Act and Rule 30b2-1 thereunder (Accession No. 0001047469-98-033155).
The Fund's financial reports include the Portfolio's financial  statements.  The
annual and  subsequent  semi-annual  reports are available  without  charge upon
request by calling J.P. Morgan Funds Services at (800) 521-5411.
    


<PAGE>



                                      
APPENDIX A
Description of Security Ratings


STANDARD & POOR'S

Corporate and Municipal Bonds

AAA - Debt rated AAA has the highest ratings  assigned by Standard & Poor's to a
debt  obligation.  Capacity to pay  interest  and repay  principal  is extremely
strong.

AA - Debt  rated  AA has a very  strong  capacity  to  pay  interest  and  repay
principal and differs from the highest rated issues only in a small degree.

A - Debt  rated A has a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and repay  principal
although it is somewhat more  susceptible  to the adverse  effects of changes in
circumstances and economic conditions than debt 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 - Debt rated BB is regarded as having less near-term vulnerability to default
than other speculative issues.  However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or
exposure to adverse business,  financial or economic conditions which could lead
to inadequate capacity to meet timely interest and principal payments.

B - An obligation  rated B is more  vulnerable to  nonpayment  than  obligations
rated BB, but the  obligor  currently  has the  capacity  to meet its  financial
commitment  on  the  obligation.   Adverse  business,   financial,  or  economic
conditions will likely impair the obligor's  capacity or willingness to meet its
financial commitment on the obligation.

CCC - An  obligation  rated CCC is currently  vulnerable to  nonpayment,  and is
dependent upon favorable  business,  financial,  and economic conditions for the
obligor to meet its  financial  commitment  on the  obligation.  In the event of
adverse business,  financial, or economic conditions,  the obligor is not likely
to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

CC - An obligation rated CC is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.

C - The C rating may be used to cover a situation  where a  bankruptcy  petition
has been filed or similar action has been taken, but payments on this obligation
are being continued.


<PAGE>


Commercial Paper, including Tax Exempt

A - Issues  assigned  this  highest  rating are  regarded as having the greatest
capacity for timely  payment.  Issues in this category are further  refined with
the designations 1, 2, and 3 to indicate the relative degree of safety.

A-1 - This  designation  indicates  that the degree of safety  regarding  timely
payment is very strong.

Short-Term Tax-Exempt Notes

SP-1 - The  short-term  tax-exempt  note  rating of SP-1 is the  highest  rating
assigned by  Standard & Poor's and has a very  strong or strong  capacity to pay
principal and interest.  Those issues determined to possess  overwhelming safety
characteristics are given a "plus" (+) designation.

SP-2 - The short-term tax-exempt note rating of SP-2 has a satisfactory capacity
to pay principal and interest.

MOODY'S

Corporate and Municipal Bonds

Aaa - Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of 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.

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.


<PAGE>



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.

Commercial Paper, including Tax Exempt

Prime-1 - Issuers  rated  Prime-1 (or related  supporting  institutions)  have a
superior capacity for repayment of short-term  promissory  obligations.  Prime-1
repayment capacity will normally be evidenced by the following characteristics:

- - Leading market positions in well established industries.
- - High rates of return on funds employed.
- - Conservative  capitalization  structures  with moderate  reliance on debt and
  ample asset protection.  
- - Broad margins in earnings coverage of fixed financial charges and high 
  internal cash generation. 
- - Well established access to a range of financial markets and assured sources of
  alternate liquidity. 

Short-Term Tax Exempt Notes

MIG-1 - The  short-term  tax-exempt  note  rating  MIG-1 is the  highest  rating
assigned by Moody's  for notes  judged to be the best  quality.  Notes with this
rating enjoy strong  protection from  established  cash flows of funds for their
servicing  or  from  established  and  broad-based  access  to  the  market  for
refinancing, or both.

MIG-2 - MIG-2 rated notes are of high quality but with margins of protection not
as large as MIG-1.

<PAGE>

                                     PART C

ITEM 24. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS.

(a) Financial Statements

The following financial statements are included in Part A:

   
Financial Highlights:      J.P. Morgan Diversified Fund
    

The following financial statements are incorporated by reference into Part B:

   
J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND
Statement of Assets and Liabilities at June 30, 1998
Statement of Operations for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1998
Statement  of Changes in Net Assets for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1998 and
1997
Financial Highlights
Notes to Financial Statements June 30, 1998

THE DIVERSIFIED  PORTFOLIO 
Schedule of Investments at June 30, 1998
Statement of Assets and Liabilities at June 30, 1998
Statement of Operations for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1998
Statement  of Changes in Net Assets for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1998 and
1997
Supplementary Data
Notes to Financial Statements June 30, 1998
    

 (b)  Exhibits
Exhibit Number

     1.  Declaration  of  Trust,  as  amended,  was  filed as  Exhibit  No. 1 to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 26 to the Registration Statement filed on September
27, 1996 (Accession Number 0000912057-96-021331).

     1(a). Amendment No. 5 to Declaration of Trust;  Amendment and Fifth Amended
and Restated  Establishment  and  Designation  of Series of Shares of Beneficial
Interest.*

     1(b). Amendment No. 6 to Declaration of Trust;  Amendment and Sixth Amended
and Restated  Establishment  and  Designation  of Series of Shares of Beneficial
Interest was filed as Exhibit No. 1(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32 to the
Registration     Statement     February    28,    1997     (Accession     Number
0001016964-97-000038).

     1(c).  Amendment  No. 7 to  Declaration  of Trust;  Amendment  and  Seventh
Amended  and  Restated  Establishment  and  Designation  of  Series of Shares of
Beneficial  Interest was filed as Exhibit No. 1(c) to  Post-Effective  Amendment
No. 34 to the Registration  Statement filed on April 30, 1997 (Accession  Number
0001019694-97-000063).

     1(d) Amendment No. 8 to Declaration of Trust;  Amendment and Eighth Amended
and Restated  Establishment  and  Designation  of Series of Shares of Beneficial
Interest was filed as Exhibit No. 1(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 41 to the
Registration   Statement   filed  on  October   21,   1997   (Accession   Number
0001042058-97-000006).

     1(e) Amendment No. 9 to  Declaration of Trust;  Amendment and Ninth Amended
and Restated  Establishment  and  Designation  of Series of Shares of Beneficial
Interest. (Accession Number 001041455-97-000013)

2.       Restated By-Laws of Registrant.*

     6. Distribution  Agreement between Registrant and Funds  Distributor,  Inc.
("FDI").*

     8. Custodian  Contract  between  Registrant and State Street Bank and Trust
Company ("State Street").*

9(a). Co-Administration Agreement between Registrant and FDI.*

9(b).    Restated Shareholder  Servicing Agreement between Registrant and Morgan
         Guaranty  Trust  Company of New York ("Morgan  Guaranty")  was filed as
         Exhibit No. 9(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 33 to the Registration
         Statement    filed    on    March    6,    1997    (Accession    Number
         0001019694-97-000048).

     9(c).  Transfer Agency and Service Agreement  between  Registrant and State
Street.*

     9(d).  Restated  Administrative  Services  Agreement between Registrant and
Morgan Guaranty.*

     9(e). Fund Services Agreement, as amended,  between Registrant and Pierpont
Group, Inc.*

10.      Opinion and consent of Sullivan & Cromwell.*

11.      Consents of independent accountants. (filed herewith)

13.      Purchase agreements with respect to Registrant's initial shares.*

16.      Schedule for computation of performance quotations.*

     18.  Powers of  Attorney  were  filed as Exhibit  No. 18 to  Post-Effective
Amendment  No.  41 to the  Registration  Statement  filed on  October  21,  1997
(Accession Number 0001042058-97-000006).

27.      Financial Data Schedules. (filed herewith)
- ------------------------

     * Incorporated  herein by reference to  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 30 to
the  Registration  Statement  filed  on  December  27,  1996  (Accession  Number
0001016964-96-000066).

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

Not applicable.

ITEM 26. NUMBER OF HOLDERS OF SECURITIES.

   
Shares of Beneficial Interest ($0.001 par value).
Title of Class:  Number of Record Holders as of September 30, 1998.
    

   
J.P. Morgan Prime Money Market Fund: 4,807
J.P. Morgan Tax Exempt Money Market Fund: 1,955
J.P. Morgan Federal Money Market Fund: 678
J.P. Morgan Short Term Bond Fund: 175
J.P. Morgan Bond Fund: 986
J.P. Morgan Tax Exempt Bond Fund: 1,208
J.P. Morgan New York Tax Exempt Bond Fund: 311
J.P. Morgan Diversified Fund: 858
J.P. Morgan U.S. Equity Fund: 2,849
J.P. Morgan U.S. Small Company Fund: 2,045
J.P. Morgan Disciplined Equity Fund: 190
J.P. Morgan International Equity Fund: 1,162
J.P. Morgan Emerging Markets Equity Fund: 1,123
J.P. Morgan European Equity Fund: 361
J.P. Morgan International Opportunities Fund: 607
J.P. Morgan Global Strategic Income Fund: 143
J.P. Morgan Emerging Markets Debt Fund: 117
J.P. Morgan U.S. Small Company Opportunities Fund: 1,299
    

ITEM 27. INDEMNIFICATION.

Reference  is made to  Section  5.3 of  Registrant's  Declaration  of Trust  and
Section 5 of Registrant's Distribution Agreement.

Registrant,  its Trustees and officers are insured against  certain  expenses in
connection with the defense of claims, demands,  actions, suits, or proceedings,
and certain liabilities that might be imposed as a result of such actions, suits
or proceedings.

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

ITEM 28. BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER.

Not Applicable.

ITEM 29. PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS.

(a) FDI, located at 60 State Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, is
the principal underwriter of the Registrant's shares.

FDI acts as principal  underwriter of the following  investment  companies other
than the Registrant:

   
American Century California Tax-Free and Municipal Funds
American Century Capital Portfolios, Inc.
American Century Government Income Trust
American Century International Bond Funds
American Century Investment Trust
American Century Municipal Trust
American Century Mutual Funds, Inc.
American Century Premium Reserves, Inc.
American Century Quantitative Equity Funds
American Century Strategic Asset Allocations, Inc.
American Century Target Maturities Trust
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.
American Century World Mutual Funds, Inc.
BJB Investment Funds
The Brinson Funds
Dresdner RCM Capital Funds, Inc.
Dresdner RCM Equity Funds, Inc.
Founders Funds, Inc.
Harris Insight Funds Trust
HT Insight Funds, Inc. d/b/a Harris Insight Funds
J.P. Morgan Funds
J.P. Morgan Series Trust
J.P. Morgan Series Trust II
LaSalle Partners Funds, Inc.
Monetta Fund, Inc.
Monetta Trust
The Montgomery Funds
The Montgomery Funds II
The Munder Framlington Funds Trust
The Munder Funds Trust
The Munder Funds, Inc.
Orbitex Group of Funds
St. Clair Funds, Inc.
The Skyline Funds
Waterhouse Investors Family of Funds, Inc.
WEBS Index Fund, Inc.
    

FDI does not act as depositor or investment adviser of any investment companies.

FDI is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a broker-dealer
and is a member of the National  Association  of Securities  Dealers.  FDI is an
indirect wholly-owned  subsidiary of Boston Institutional Group, Inc., a holding
company all of whose outstanding shares are owned by key employees.

(b) The  information  required by this Item 29(b) with respect to each director,
officer and partner of FDI is incorporated  herein by reference to Schedule A of
Form BD filed by FDI with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the
Securities Act of 1934 (SEC File No. 8-20518).

(c) Not applicable.

ITEM 30. LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS.

     PIERPONT GROUP,  INC.: 461 Fifth Avenue,  New York, New York 10017 (records
relating  to its  assisting  the  Trustees  in  carrying  out  their  duties  in
supervising the Registrant's affairs).

MORGAN  GUARANTY  TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK: 60 Wall Street,  New York, New York
10260-0060,  522 Fifth Avenue,  New York,  New York 10036 or 9 West 57th Street,
New York,  New York 10019  (records  relating to its  functions  as  shareholder
servicing agent and administrative services agent).

STATE  STREET  BANK AND  TRUST  COMPANY:  1776  Heritage  Drive,  North  Quincy,
Massachusetts  02171 and 40 King Street West, Toronto,  Ontario,  Canada M5H 3Y8
(records relating to its functions as fund accountant, custodian, transfer agent
and dividend disbursing agent).

     FUNDS DISTRIBUTOR, INC.: 60 State Street, Suite 1300, Boston, Massachusetts
02109 (records relating to its functions as distributor and co-administrator).

ITEM 31. MANAGEMENT SERVICES.

Not Applicable.

ITEM 32. UNDERTAKINGS.

(a)        If the information called for by Item 5A of Form N-1A is contained in
           the  latest  annual  report to  shareholders,  the  Registrant  shall
           furnish each person to whom a prospectus is delivered  with a copy of
           the  Registrant's  latest annual report to shareholders  upon request
           and without charge.

(b)        The  Registrant  undertakes  to comply with Section 16(c) of the 1940
           Act as though such  provisions of the 1940 Act were applicable to the
           Registrant,  except  that the  request  referred to in the third full
           paragraph  thereof may only be made by  shareholders  who hold in the
           aggregate at least 10% of the  outstanding  shares of the Registrant,
           regardless  of the net asset value of shares held by such  requesting
           shareholders.
   
    

<PAGE>




                                   SIGNATURES

   
Pursuant to the  requirements  of the  Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this registration  statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,  thereto duly authorized,  in the
City of Boston and  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts  on the 28th day of October,
1998.
    

J.P. MORGAN FUNDS

By         /s/ Michael S. Petrucelli
           ---------------------------
           Michael S. Petrucelli
           Vice President and Assistant Secretary

   
Pursuant to the  requirements of the Securities Act of 1933,  this  registration
statement  has been  signed  below by the  following  persons in the  capacities
indicated on October 28, 1998.
    

George A. Rio*
- ---------------------------
George A. Rio
President and Treasurer

Matthew Healey*
- -----------------------------
Matthew Healey
Trustee, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)

Frederick S. Addy*
- ------------------------------
Frederick S. Addy
Trustee

William G. Burns*
- ------------------------------
William G. Burns
Trustee

Arthur C. Eschenlauer*
- ------------------------------
Arthur C. Eschenlauer
Trustee

Michael P. Mallardi*
- ------------------------------
Michael P. Mallardi
Trustee

*By        /s/ Michael S. Petrucelli
           ---------------------------
           Michael S. Petrucelli
           as attorney-in-fact pursuant to a power of attorney previously filed.


<PAGE>



                                   SIGNATURES

   
Each  Portfolio  has  duly  caused  this  registration  statement  on Form  N-1A
("Registration  Statement")  of the J.P.  Morgan Funds (the  "Trust")  (File No.
033-54632)  to be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,  thereto  duly
authorized,  in the City of George Town,  and Grand  Cayman,  on the 28th day of
October, 1998
    

THE DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIO


By         /s/ Jacqueline Henning
           -------------------------
           Jacqueline Henning
           Assistant Secretary and Assistant Treasurer

   
Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  the  Trust's
Registration  Statement  has been signed below by the  following  persons in the
capacities indicated on October 28, 1998.
    

George A. Rio*
- ----------------------------
George A. Rio
President and Treasurer
Officer of the Portfolios

Matthew Healey*
- -----------------------------
Matthew Healey
Trustee, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)
of the Portfolios

Frederick S. Addy*
- ----------------------------
Frederick S. Addy
Trustee of the Portfolios

William G. Burns*
- ----------------------------
William G. Burns
Trustee of the Portfolios

Arthur C. Eschenlauer*
- ----------------------------
Arthur C. Eschenlauer
Trustee of the Portfolios

Michael P. Mallardi*
- ----------------------------
Michael P. Mallardi
Trustee of the Portfolios

*By        /s/ Jacqueline Henning
           -------------------------
           Jacqueline Henning
           as attorney-in-fact pursuant to a power of attorney previously filed.


                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit No.       Description of Exhibit
- -------------    ----------------------
Ex-11                      Consents of Independent Accountants

EX-27.1-27.18              Financial Data Schedules



                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

We hereby  consent to the  incorporation  by  reference  in the  Prospectus  and
Statement of Additional  Information  constituting parts of this  Post-Effective
Amendment No. 56 to the registration  statement on Form N-1A (the  "Registration
Statement")  of our reports  dated  August 18, 1998,  relating to the  financial
statements  and financial  highlights of J.P.  Morgan  Diversified  Fund and the
financial  statements  and  supplementary  data  of  The  Diversified  Portfolio
appearing in the June 30, 1998 Annual  Report,  which are also  incorporated  by
reference into the Registration  Statement. We also consent to the references to
us under the  heading  "Financial  Highlights"  in the  Prospectus  an under the
headings "Independent  Accountants" and "Financial  Statements" in the Statement
of Additional Information.


/s/ Price Waterhouse LLP
Price Waterhouse LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
October 26, 1998


<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED MAY 31,  1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN  PRIME MONEY  MARKET FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 012
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN PRIME MONEY MARKET FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          NOV-30-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                       2,565,158
<RECEIVABLES>                                        0
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       8
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                               2,565,166
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                        2,193
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                              2,193
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                     2,563,558
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                        2,563,198
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                        2,318,656
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                           (63)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                             0
<NET-ASSETS>                                 2,562,973
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                               69,121
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                   2,366
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                         66,755
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           (4)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                            0
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                           66,751
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                       66,755
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                           (2)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                      8,991,329
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                  8,801,738
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                             54,951
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         244,536
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                  2,366
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                         2,479,730
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             1.00
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   .027
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           .000
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         .027
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               1.00
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .36
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR  DATED  FEBRUARY 28, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN TAX EXEMPT MONEY MARKET FUND
AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>          0000894089
<NAME>         J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER>    007
   <NAME>      J.P. MORGAN TAX EXEMPT MONEY MARKET FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          AUG-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               FEB-28-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                        1,214,495
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                       1,214,495
<RECEIVABLES>                                        0
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       9
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                               1,214,504
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          879
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                879
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                     1,213,797
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                        1,213,452
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                        1,103,923
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                          (171)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                             0
<NET-ASSETS>                                 1,213,625
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                               20,384
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                   1,211
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                         19,173
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           142
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                            0
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                           19,315
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                       19,173
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                      2,743,008
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                  2,648,523
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                             15,044
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         109,529
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                        (313)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                  1,211
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                         1,192,859
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             1.00
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   .016
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           .000
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                              .016
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         .000
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               1.00
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .43
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR  DATED APRIL 30, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN FEDERAL MONEY MARKET FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 001
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN FEDERAL MONEY MARKET FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          338481
<RECEIVABLES>                                        0
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       1
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  338482
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          677
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                677
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                        337805
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                                0
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                             0
<NET-ASSETS>                                    337805
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                 8958
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     653
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                           8305
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           (1)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                            0
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             8304
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                         8304
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                        1123008
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                    1029718
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                               5441
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           98731
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    763
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            323538
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             1.00
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   .026
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                              0
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         .026
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               1.00
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .41
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR  DATED  APRIL  30,  1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN  SHORT  TERM BOND FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 002
   <NAME> J.P MORGAN SHORT TERM BOND FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           22876
<RECEIVABLES>                                      409
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       1
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   23286
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           66
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 66
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         23266
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             2357
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             1474
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               1
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                            46
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                             1
<NET-ASSETS>                                     23220
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     627 
<EXPENSES-NET>                                      25
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            602
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                             3
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                         (13)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                              592
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                          603
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           1192
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                        356
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                 47
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                            8700
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                          49
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     62
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             20537
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             9.85
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .29
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                              0
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .29
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.85
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .50
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                00
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR DATED APRIL 30, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN BOND FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS
ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 003
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN BOND FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         194,130
<RECEIVABLES>                                       61
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       2
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                 194,193
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          169
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                169
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       190,321
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           18,561
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                           16,244
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                           66
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                            624
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         3,013
<NET-ASSETS>                                    194024
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                   6,129
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     265
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                          5,864
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           639
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                        (131)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            6,371
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                        5,870
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                          5,383
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                      3,577
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                511
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                          24,790
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                             72
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                          15
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    265
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                           183,741
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.42
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.33
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           0.03
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                              0.33
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              10.45
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   0.66
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR  DATED  FEBRUARY  28, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN TAX EXEMPT BOND FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>          0000894089
<NAME>         J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER>    006
   <NAME>      J.P. MORGAN TAX EXEMPT BOND FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          AUG-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               FEB-28-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          431,189
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         431,189
<RECEIVABLES>                                    1,770
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       2
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  432961
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          634
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                634
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       405,789
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           35,818
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                           33,828
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                             (2)
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                            430
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                        26,105
<NET-ASSETS>                                   432,326
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                9,663
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     533
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                          9,130
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           262
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                        6,949
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                           16,341
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                        9,130
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                           119
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                         98,608
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                     81,761
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                              7,382
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                          31,321
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                          287
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                            (2)
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                      0
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                           406,760
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            11.85
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .27
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                            .22
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                .0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                          .27
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              12.07
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .64
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM-SAR  DATED MARCH 31, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN NEW YORK TOTAL  RETURN BOND FUND
AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 013
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN NEW YORK TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAR-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAR-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           85253
<RECEIVABLES>                                       29
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       4
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   85286
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          125
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                125
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         82226
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             8016
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             5465
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                           21
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                            144
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                          2770
<NET-ASSETS>                                     85161
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                 3463
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     488
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                           2975
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           577
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                         1726
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             5278
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                         2975
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                           433
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           3864
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       1556
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                244
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           28963
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                             21
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    528
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            101989
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.28
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .46
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                            .40
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .46
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                          .06
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              10.62
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .71
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED MAY 31, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN U.S. EQUITY FUND AND IS QUALIFIED
IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 010
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN U.S. EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                          <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAY-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         448,301
<RECEIVABLES>                                      206
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      37
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                 448,544
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          400
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                400
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       328,959
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           17,467
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                           14,722
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                          579
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                         48,997
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                        69,609
<NET-ASSETS>                                   448,144
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                   4,239
<EXPENSES-NET>                                   1,309
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                          2,930
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                        99,517
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                      (1,088)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                          101,359
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                        3,619
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                        75,350
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                          3,184
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                      3,622
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                              3,183
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                          85,541
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                          1,269
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                       37,796
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                          00
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                  1,309
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                           412,025
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            24.63
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.18
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           5.92
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                              0.23
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         4.84
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              25.66
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   0.78
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED MAY 31, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN U.S.  SMALL  COMPANY  FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 011
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN U.S. SMALL COMPANY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                           <C>

<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAY-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          261693
<RECEIVABLES>                                      544
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      62
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  262299
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          495
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                495
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                        216250
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             9460
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             9140
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                           78
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                          22790
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         22686
<NET-ASSETS>                                    261804
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                    1766
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     743
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                           1023
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                         61222
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                       (8412)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            53833
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                         1261
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                         36242
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           1988
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       2727
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                               1059
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           23819
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                            593
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                        18766
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    908
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            264954
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            26.04
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .11
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           5.58
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .14
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         3.91
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              27.68
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .97
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY  FINANCIAL  INFORMATION  EXTRACTED FROM THE
REPORT ON FORM N-SAR  DATED  APRIL 30,  1998 FOR THE J.P.  MORGAN  INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 004
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          113324
<RECEIVABLES>                                       22
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       3
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  113349
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           84
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 84
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         91108
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             9760
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                            13371
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                             356
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                           1831
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         20682
<NET-ASSETS>                                    113265
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                  912
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                  126
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     720
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            318
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          1809
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                        13947
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            16074
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                         4506
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                          5060
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           1079
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       5360
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                670
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         (33394)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                           3833
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                         5082
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   9
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    720
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            122391
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.97
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .10
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           1.42
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .42
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                          .47
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              11.60
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.17
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                             497
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                               .04
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY  FINANCIAL  INFORMATION  EXTRACTED FROM THE
REPORT ON FORM N-SAR DATED APRIL 30, 1998 FOR THE J.P. MORGAN  EMERGING  MARKETS
EQUITY FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 005
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN EMERGING MARKETS EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           58072
<RECEIVABLES>                                       38
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      12
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   58122
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           66
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 66
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         63141
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             5906
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             4648
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                            (52)
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                         (8328)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                          3295
<NET-ASSETS>                                     58056
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     322
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     109
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            213
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                        (7144)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                         8978
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             2047
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                          315
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           3905
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       2677
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                 30
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           12612
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                             49
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                       (1184)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    121
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             52802
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             9.78
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.06
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           0.07
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                            (0.08)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.83
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.75
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED JUNE 30, 1998 FOR J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND AND IS QUALIFIED
IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 008
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN DIVERSIFIED FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          JUN-30-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               JUN-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          227082
<RECEIVABLES>                                      118
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       3
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  227203
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          139
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                139
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                    000
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                        196933
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                            15077
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             7330
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                          124
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                             000
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                           3583
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         26424
<NET-ASSETS>                                    227064
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                    4412
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     462
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                           3950
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          4691
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                        16433
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            25075
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                         4766
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                          3891
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                          11308
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       1898
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                601
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                          156726
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                            109
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                          169
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    518
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            140822
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            13.89
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .33
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           2.03
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .53
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                          .66
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              15.06
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .98
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR  DATED JUNE 30,  1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN  EUROPEAN  EQUITY  FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 014
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN EUROPEAN EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               JUN-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           17208
<RECEIVABLES>                                       51
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      34
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   17293
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           31
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 31
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         16051
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             1045
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                              362
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                          116
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                            160
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                           935
<NET-ASSETS>                                     17262
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     142
<EXPENSES-NET>                                      26
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            116
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                           727
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                          806
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             1649
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                            0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                            880
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                        197
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  0
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           12430
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                        (567)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              1
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     48
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             10620
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            13.35
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .11
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           3.06
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              16.52
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.42
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMERY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM  N-SAR  DATED  JUNE 30,  1998  FOR J.P.  MORGAN  JAPAN  EQUITY  FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK>0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 016
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN JAPAN EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               JUN-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                            1210
<RECEIVABLES>                                       10
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       0
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                    1220
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           17
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 17
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                          1619
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                              230
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                              146
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               5
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                           532   
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                           121
<NET-ASSETS>                                      1203
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                                       1
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            (1)
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                         (345)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                          319
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             (26)
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                            0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                            198
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                        114
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  0
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                             412
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0  
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              4
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                         187  
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     26
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                               957
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             5.42
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .00
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                          (.18)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               5.24
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.36
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY  FINANCIAL  INFORMATION  EXTRACTED FROM THE
REPORT  ON  FORM  N-SAR  DATED  MAY  31,  1998  FOR  J.P.  MORGAN  INTERNATIONAL
OPPORTUNITIES FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 017
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN INTERNATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          NOV-30-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           85299
<RECEIVABLES>                                      364
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                     169
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   85832
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          676
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                676
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         79495
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             7696
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                             6345
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                          521
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                            953
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                          4187
<NET-ASSETS>                                     85156
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     671
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     155
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            516
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          2061
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                         6443
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                             9020
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                          441
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                            14
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           3602
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       2292
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                 41
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           22217
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                            446
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                       (1095)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    161
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             79715
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             9.92
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.06
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           1.16
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .07
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              11.07
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.17
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY  FINANCIAL  INFORMATION  EXTRACTED FROM THE
REPORT ON FORM N-SAR DATED JUNE 30, 1998 FOR J.P. MORGAN  EMERGING  MARKETS DEBT
FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 018
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN EMERGING MARKETS DEBT FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               JUN-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           12233
<RECEIVABLES>                                       22
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      13
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   12268
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           55
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 55
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         11667
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             1332
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            6
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                          (243)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         (549)
<NET-ASSETS>                                     12213
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     627
<EXPENSES-NET>                                       0
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            627
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                         (981)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                           86
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            (268)
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                          561
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                            284
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                        234
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                 55
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                             235
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     57
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             13009
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             9.76
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.47
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                         (0.64)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                              0.42
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.17
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.25
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED MAY 31, 1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN U.S. SMALL COMPANY  OPPORTUNITIES
FUND AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 19
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN U.S. SMALL COMPANY OPPORTUNITIES FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   11-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAY-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          188579
<RECEIVABLES>                                     1133
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       0
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  189712
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                          780
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                780
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                        176896
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                            15035
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                           4517
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                          7519
<NET-ASSETS>                                    188932
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                    (22)
<EXPENSES-NET>                                     348
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                          (370)
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          4884
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                         7519
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                            12033
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                            0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                          17556
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                       2521
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  0
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                          188932
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    404
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                            103968
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.00
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                  (.02)
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           2.59
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              12.57
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.19
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED APRIL 30, 1998 FOR J.P. MORGAN GLOBAL STRATEGIC INCOME FUND AND
IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 20
   <NAME> J.P. MORGAN GLOBAL STRATEGIC INCOME FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               APR-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           11304
<RECEIVABLES>                                       71
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                      29
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   11404
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           84
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 84
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         11254
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             1094
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                              12
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                            24
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                           102
<NET-ASSETS>                                     11320
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                     220
<EXPENSES-NET>                                      12
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                            208
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          (24)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                          102
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                              286
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                          220
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           1116
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                         37
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                 15
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           11320
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     47
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                              6290
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.21
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .35
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                            .15
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                               .36
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              10.35
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.00
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA EXTRACTED FROM THE REPORT ON
FORM N-SAR DATED MAY 31,  1998 FOR J.P.  MORGAN  DISCIPLINED  EQUITY FUND AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH REPORT.
</LEGEND>
<CIK> 0000894089
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN FUNDS
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 21
<NAME> J.P. MORGAN DISCIPLINED EQUITY FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   5-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAY-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               MAY-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                                0
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                           18029
<RECEIVABLES>                                       70
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       9
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                   18108
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           71
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                 71
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         17603
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                             1207
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                           14
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                             74
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                           346
<NET-ASSETS>                                     18037
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                      37
<EXPENSES-NET>                                      16
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                             21
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                            74
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                          346
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                              441
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                            7
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                           1233
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                         26
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  0
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           18037
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                                0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                     71
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                              5235
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            12.98
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .03
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                           1.96
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                         0.02
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                                  0
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                    .75
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>


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