NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
485BPOS, 1999-04-30
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    As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 30, 1999
                      1933 Act Registration No. 033-64368
                      1940 Act Registration No. 811-07784

                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            Washington, D.C. 20549

                                  FORM N-1A

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933     [ X ]
      Pre-Effective Amendment No.  ____   [___]
      Post-Effective Amendment No.  20    [ X ]
                                   ----
            and/or
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940     [ X ]

      Amendment No.                  18   [ X ]
                                     --

                        (Check appropriate box or boxes)

                          NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
                          -----------------------------
             (Exact Name of the Registrant as Specified in Charter)
                           605 Third Avenue, 2nd Floor
                          New York, New York 10158-0180
                    (Address of Principal Executive Offices)

            Registrant's Telephone Number, including area code: (212)
                                    476-8800

                           Lawrence Zicklin, President
                          Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
                           605 Third Avenue, 2nd Floor
                          New York, New York 10158-0180

                            Arthur C. Delibert, Esq.
                           Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP
                   1800 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., 2nd Floor
                           Washington, D.C. 20036-1800
                   (Names and Addresses of agents for service)


Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: Continuous

It is proposed that this filing will become effective:

___  immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
 X   on April 30, 1999 pursuant to paragraph (b)
- ---
___  60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
___  on ________________pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
___  75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
___  on _______________ pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)

Neuberger Berman Equity Trust is a "master/feeder fund." This Post-Effective
Amendment No. 20 includes a signature page for the master fund, Equity Managers
Trust, and appropriate officers and trustees thereof.


<PAGE>



                        NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST

           CONTENTS OF POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 20 ON FORM N-1A

  This post-effective amendment consists of the following papers and documents:

Cover Sheet

Contents of Post-Effective Amendment No. 20 on Form N-1A

            Neuberger Berman Regency Trust
            ------------------------------

            Part A - Prospectus

            Part B - Statement of Additional Information

            Part C - Other Information

Signature Pages

Exhibits

<PAGE>


<PAGE>
[PHOTO]                                                         NEUBERGER BERMAN
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN
REGENCY TRUST-SM-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    PROSPECTUS APRIL 30, 1999
 
                        The Securities and Exchange Commission does not say
                        whether any mutual fund is a good or bad investment or
                        whether the information in any prospectus is accurate or
                        complete. It is unlawful for anyone to indicate
                        otherwise.
<PAGE>
CONTENTS
- -----------------
 
<TABLE>
<C>         <S>
            NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
 
PAGE 2 ......  Regency Trust
 
            YOUR INVESTMENT
 
     6 ......  Maintaining Your Account
 
     8 ......  Share Prices
 
     9 ......  Distributions and Taxes
 
    11 ......  Fund Structure
</TABLE>
 
   
                             The "Neuberger Berman" name and logo are service
                             marks of Neuberger Berman, LLC. "Neuberger Berman
                             Management Inc." and the fund name in this
                             prospectus are either service marks or registered
                             trademarks of Neuberger Berman Management Inc.
                             -C-1999 Neuberger Berman Management Inc.
    
<PAGE>
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
FUND MANAGEMENT
   
The fund is managed by Neuberger Berman Management Inc., in conjunction with
Neuberger Berman, LLC, as sub-adviser. Together, the firms manage more than
$54.6 billion in total assets (as of March 31, 1999) and continue an asset
management history that began in 1939.
    
 
RISK INFORMATION
This prospectus discusses principal risks of investment in fund shares. These
and other risks are discussed in detail in the Statement of Additional
Information (see back cover).
 
  THIS FUND:
 
- - IS DESIGNED FOR INVESTORS WITH LONG-TERM GOALS IN MIND
 
- - OFFERS YOU THE OPPORTUNITY TO PARTICIPATE IN FINANCIAL MARKETS THROUGH A
  PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED STOCK PORTFOLIO
 
- - ALSO OFFERS THE OPPORTUNITY TO DIVERSIFY YOUR PORTFOLIO WITH A FUND THAT
  INVESTS USING A VALUE APPROACH
 
- - USES A MASTER/FEEDER STRUCTURE IN ITS PORTFOLIO; SEE PAGE 11 FOR INFORMATION
  ON HOW IT WORKS
 
- - CARRIES CERTAIN RISKS, INCLUDING THE RISK THAT YOU COULD LOSE MONEY IF FUND
  SHARES ARE WORTH LESS THAN WHAT YOU PAID
 
- - IS A MUTUAL FUND, NOT A BANK DEPOSIT, AND IS NOT GUARANTEED OR INSURED
 
                                                         1
<PAGE>
NEUBERGER BERMAN
REGENCY TRUST
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
                              PORTFOLIO MANAGERS ROBERT I. GENDELMAN,
                              MICHAEL M. KASSEN AND
                              S. BASU MULLICK
 
"WE FOCUS ON THE MID-CAP SECTOR OF THE MARKET BECAUSE WE BELIEVE
THERE ARE NUMEROUS OPPORTUNITIES THERE TO FIND LESS WELL-KNOWN
VALUES. WE LOOK FOR LEADERSHIP COMPANIES WITH STRONG FUNDAMENTALS WHOSE
UNDERLYING VALUE IS NOT YET REFLECTED IN THEIR STOCK PRICES."
    
 
                      2
<PAGE>
GOAL & STRATEGY
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
MID-CAP STOCKS
Mid-cap stocks have historically shown risk/return characteristics that are in
between those of small- and large-cap stocks. Their prices can rise and fall
substantially, although they have the potential to offer comparatively
attractive long-term returns.
 
Mid-caps are less widely followed on Wall Street than large-caps, which can make
it comparatively easier to find attractive stocks that are not overpriced.
 
VALUE INVESTING
At any given time, there are companies whose stock prices are below the market
average, based on earnings, book value, or other financial measures. The value
investor examines these companies, searching for those that may rise in price
before other investors realize their worth.
 
  [ICON]  THE FUND SEEKS GROWTH OF CAPITAL.
 
   
To pursue this goal, the fund invests mainly in common stocks of
mid-capitalization companies. The fund seeks to reduce risk by diversifying
among different companies and industries.
    
 
The managers look for well-managed companies whose stock prices are undervalued.
Factors in identifying these firms may include:
 
- - strong fundamentals
 
- - consistent cash flow
 
- - a sound track record through all phases of the market cycle
 
The managers may also look for other characteristics in a company, such as a
strong position relative to competitors, a high level of stock ownership among
management, and a recent sharp decline in stock price that appears to be the
result of a short-term market overreaction to negative news.
 
The fund generally considers selling a stock when it reaches the managers'
target price, when it fails to perform as expected, or when other opportunities
appear more attractive.
 
The fund has the ability to change its goal without shareholder approval,
although it does not currently intend to do so.
 
                                         Regency Trust   3
<PAGE>
MAIN RISKS
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
OTHER RISKS
The fund may use certain practices and securities involving additional risks.
 
   
Borrowing, securities lending, and derivatives could create leverage, meaning
that certain gains or losses could be amplified, increasing share price
movements. In using certain derivatives to gain stock market exposure for excess
cash holdings, the fund increases its risk of loss.
    
 
Although they may add diversification, foreign securities can be riskier,
because foreign markets tend to be more volatile and currency exchange rates
fluctuate.
 
When the fund anticipates unusual market or other conditions, it may temporarily
depart from its goal and invest substantially in high-quality short-term
fixed-income investments. This could help the fund avoid losses but may mean
lost opportunities.
 
  [ICON]  Most of the fund's performance depends
          on what happens in the stock market. The market's behavior is
          unpredictable, particularly in the short term. Because of this, the
value of your investment will rise and fall, and you could lose money.
 
By focusing on mid-cap stocks, the fund is subject to their risks, including the
risk its holdings may:
 
- - fluctuate more widely in price than the market as a whole
 
- - underperform stocks with larger or smaller capitalizations during a particular
  time interval
 
- - fall in price or be difficult to sell during market downturns
 
With a value approach, there is also the risk that stocks may remain undervalued
during a given period. This may happen because value stocks as a category lose
favor with investors compared to growth stocks or because the managers failed to
anticipate which stocks or industries would benefit from changing market or
economic conditions. To the extent that the managers sell stocks before they
reach their market peak, the fund may miss out on opportunities for higher
performance.
 
Through active trading, the fund may have a high portfolio turnover rate, which
can mean higher taxable distributions and lower performance due to increased
brokerage costs.
 
                      4  Neuberger Berman
<PAGE>
INVESTOR EXPENSES
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
MANAGEMENT
MICHAEL M. KASSEN, ROBERT I. GENDELMAN AND S. BASU MULLICK are Vice Presidents
of Neuberger Berman Management. They have co-managed the fund since its
inception in 1999. Kassen and Gendelman are principals of Neuberger Berman, LLC.
Kassen has been a portfolio manager at the firm since 1990. Gendelman was a
portfolio manager at another firm from 1992 to 1993, as was Mullick from 1993 to
1998.
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT is the fund's investment manager, administrator, and
distributor. It engages Neuberger Berman, LLC as sub-adviser to provide
management and related services. For investment management services, the fund
will pay Neuberger Berman Management a fee at the annual rate of 0.55% of the
first $250 million of average net assets, 0.525% of the next $250 million, 0.50%
of the next $250 million, 0.475% of the next $250 million, 0.45% of the next
$500 million and 0.425% of average net assets in excess of $1.5 billion.
 
  [ICON]  The fund does not charge you any fees for
          buying, selling, or exchanging shares, or for maintaining your
          account. Your only fund cost is your share of annual operating
expenses. The expense example can help you compare costs among funds.
 
FEE TABLE
 
 SHAREHOLDER FEES                             None
- -------------------------------------------------------
 
 ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES (% of average net assets)*
 
 These are deducted from fund assets, so you pay them indirectly.
 
<TABLE>
<S>      <C>                                  <C>
         Management fees                      0.95
PLUS:    Distribution (12b-1) fees            0.10
         Other expenses**                     0.88
                                              ....
EQUALS:  Total annual operating expenses      1.93
MINUS:   Expense reimbursement                0.43
                                              ....
EQUALS:  Net expenses                         1.50
</TABLE>
 
 * NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT HAS AGREED TO REIMBURSE CERTAIN EXPENSES OF THE
   FUND THROUGH 12/31/02, SO THAT THE TOTAL ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES OF THE
   FUND ARE LIMITED TO 1.50% OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS. THIS ARRANGEMENT DOES NOT
   COVER INTEREST, TAXES, BROKERAGE COMMISSIONS, AND EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSES. THE
   FUND HAS AGREED TO REPAY NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT FOR EXPENSES REIMBURSED
   TO THE FUND PROVIDED THAT REPAYMENT DOES NOT CAUSE THE FUND'S ANNUAL
   OPERATING EXPENSES TO EXCEED 1.50% OF ITS AVERAGE NET ASSETS AND THE
   REPAYMENT IS MADE WITHIN THREE YEARS AFTER THE YEAR IN WHICH NEUBERGER BERMAN
   MANAGEMENT INCURRED THE EXPENSE. THE TABLE INCLUDES COSTS PAID BY THE FUND
   AND ITS SHARE OF MASTER PORTFOLIO COSTS. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON
   MASTER/FEEDER FUNDS, SEE "FUND STRUCTURE" ON PAGE 11.
 
** OTHER EXPENSES ARE BASED ON ESTIMATED AMOUNTS FOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR.
 
EXPENSE EXAMPLE
 
 The example assumes that you invested $10,000 for the periods shown, that you
 earned a hypothetical 5% total return each year, and that the fund's expenses
 were those in the table above. Your costs would be the same whether you sold
 your shares or continued to hold them at the end of each period. Actual
 performance and expenses may be higher or lower.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      1 Year   3 Years
<S>                   <C>      <C>
- --------------------------------------
Expenses               $153     $474
</TABLE>
 
Because the fund is new it does not have performance or financial highlights to
report.
 
                                         Regency Trust   5
<PAGE>
YOUR INVESTMENT
 
MAINTAINING YOUR
ACCOUNT
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
YOUR INVESTMENT PROVIDER
The fund shares described in this prospectus are available through investment
providers such as banks, brokerage firms, workplace retirement programs, and
financial advisers.
 
The fees and policies outlined in this prospectus are set by the fund and by
Neuberger Berman Management. However, most of the information you'll need for
managing your investment will come from your investment provider. This includes
information on how to buy and sell shares, investor services, and additional
policies.
 
In exchange for the services it offers, your investment provider may charge
fees, which are generally in addition to those described in this prospectus.
 
To buy or sell shares of the fund described in this prospectus, contact your
investment provider. All investments must be made in U.S. dollars, and
investment checks must be drawn on a U.S. bank. The fund does not issue
certificates for shares.
 
Most investment providers allow you to take advantage of the Neuberger Berman
fund exchange program, which is designed for moving money from one Neuberger
Berman fund to another through an exchange of shares. However, this privilege
can be withdrawn from any investor that we believe is trying to "time the
market" or is otherwise making exchanges that we judge to be excessive. Frequent
exchanges can interfere with fund management and affect costs and performance
for other shareholders.
 
                      6  Neuberger Berman
<PAGE>
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
BUYING SHARES BEFORE
A DISTRIBUTION
The money the fund earns, either as income or as capital gains, is reflected
in its share price until the fund makes a distribution. At that time, the amount
of the distribution is deducted from the share price. The amount of the
distribution is either reinvested in additional fund shares or paid to
shareholders in cash.
 
Because of this, if you buy shares just before the fund makes a distribution,
you'll end up getting some of your investment back as a taxable distribution.
You can avoid this situation by waiting to invest until after the distribution
has been made.
 
If you're investing in a tax-advantaged account, you don't need to worry;
generally, there are no tax consequences to you in this case.
 
Under certain circumstances, the fund reserves the right to:
 
- - suspend the offering of shares
 
- - reject any exchange or investment order
 
- - change, suspend, or revoke the exchange privilege
 
- - satisfy an order to sell fund shares with securities rather than cash, for
  certain very large orders
 
- - suspend or postpone the redemption of shares on days when trading on the New
  York Stock Exchange is restricted, or as otherwise permitted by the SEC
 
The proceeds from the shares you sold are generally sent out the next business
day after your order is executed, and nearly always within three business days.
There are two cases in which proceeds may be delayed beyond this time:
 
- - in unusual circumstances where the law allows additional time if needed
 
- - if a check you wrote to buy shares hasn't cleared by the time you sell those
  shares
 
If you think you may need to sell shares soon after buying them, you can avoid
the check clearing time (which may be up to 15 days) by investing by wire or
certified check.
 
DISTRIBUTION FEE --  The fund has adopted a plan under which it pays 0.10% of
its average net assets every year to support share distribution and/or
shareholder servicing. This fee increases the cost of investing in the fund.
Over the long term, it could result in higher overall costs than other types of
sales charges.
 
                                       Your Investment   7
<PAGE>
SHARE PRICES
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
SHARE PRICE CALCULATIONS
The fund's share price is the total value of its assets minus its liabilities,
divided by the total number of shares. Because the value of the fund's
securities changes every business day, the share price usually changes as well.
 
When valuing portfolio securities, the fund uses market prices. However, in rare
cases, events that occur after certain markets have closed may render these
prices unreliable.
 
When the fund believes a market price does not reflect a security's true value,
the fund may substitute for the market price a fair-value estimate derived
through methods approved by its trustees. The fund may also use these methods to
value certain types of illiquid securities.
 
   
Because the fund does not have an initial sales charge, the price you pay for
each share of the fund is the fund's net asset value per share. Similarly,
because the fund does not charge any fee for selling shares, the fund pays you
the full share price when you sell shares. Remember that your investment
provider may charge fees for its services.
    
 
The fund is open for business every day the New York Stock Exchange is open. In
general, every buy or sell order you place will go through at the next share
price to be calculated after your order has been accepted; check with your
investment provider to find out by what time your order must be received in
order to be processed the same day. The fund calculates its share price as of
the end of regular trading on the Exchange on business days, usually 4:00 p.m.
eastern time. Depending on when your investment provider accepts orders, it's
possible that the fund's share price could change on days when you are unable to
buy or sell shares.
 
Also, because foreign markets may be open on days when U.S. markets are closed,
the value of foreign securities owned by the fund could change on days when you
can't buy or sell fund shares. The fund's share price, however, will not change
until the next time it is calculated.
 
                      8  Neuberger Berman
<PAGE>
DISTRIBUTIONS
AND TAXES
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
TAXES AND YOU
The taxes you actually owe on distributions and transactions can vary with many
factors, such as your tax bracket, how long you held your shares and whether you
owe alternative minimum tax.
 
How can you figure out your tax liability on fund distributions and
transactions? One helpful tool is the tax statement that your investment
provider sends you every January. It details the distributions you received
during the past year and shows their tax status. A separate statement covers
your transactions.
 
Most importantly, consult your tax professional. Everyone's tax situation is
different, and your professional should be able to help you answer any questions
you may have.
 
   
DISTRIBUTIONS -- The fund pays out to shareholders any net income and net
capital gains. Ordinarily, the fund makes any distributions once a year in
December.
    
 
Consult your investment provider about whether your income and capital gains
distributions from the fund will be reinvested in the fund or paid to you in
cash.
 
HOW DISTRIBUTIONS ARE TAXED -- Except for tax-advantaged retirement accounts,
all fund distributions you receive are generally taxable to you, regardless of
whether you take them in cash or reinvest them. Fund distributions to Roth IRAs,
other individual retirement accounts and qualified retirement plans generally
are tax-free. Eventual withdrawals from a Roth IRA of those amounts also may be
tax-free, while withdrawals from other retirement accounts and plans generally
are subject to tax.
 
Distributions are taxable in the year you receive them. In some cases,
distributions you receive in January are taxable as if they had been paid the
previous year. Your tax statement (see sidebar) will help clarify this for you.
 
Income distributions and short-term capital gain distributions are generally
taxed as regular income. Distributions of other capital gains are generally
taxed as long-term capital gains. The tax treatment of capital gain
distributions depends on how long the fund held the securities it sold, not when
you bought your shares of the fund or whether you reinvested your distributions.
 
                                       Your Investment   9
<PAGE>
DISTRIBUTIONS
AND TAXES CONTINUED
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
 
EURO AND YEAR 2000 ISSUES
Like other mutual funds, the fund could be affected by problems relating to the
conversion of European currencies into the Euro beginning 1/1/99, and the
ability of computer systems to recognize the year 2000.
 
At Neuberger Berman, we are taking steps to ensure that our own computer
systems are compliant with Euro and Year 2000 issues and to determine that the
systems used by our major service providers are also compliant. We are also
making efforts to determine whether companies in the fund's portfolio will be
affected by either issue.
 
At the same time, it is impossible to know whether these problems, which could
disrupt fund operations and investments if uncorrected, have been adequately
addressed until the dates in question arrive.
 
HOW TRANSACTIONS ARE TAXED -- When you sell fund shares, you generally realize
a gain or loss. These transactions, which include exchanges between funds,
usually have tax implications. The exception, once again, is tax-advantaged
retirement accounts.
 
UNCASHED CHECKS -- When you receive a check, you may want to deposit or cash it
right away, as you will not receive interest on uncashed checks.
 
                      10  Neuberger Berman
<PAGE>
FUND STRUCTURE
- ------------------------------------------------------------
 
The fund uses a "master/feeder" structure.
 
Rather than investing directly in securities, the fund is a "feeder fund,"
meaning that it invests in a corresponding "master portfolio." The master
portfolio in turn invests in securities, using the strategies described in this
prospectus. One potential benefit of this structure is lower costs, since the
expenses of the master portfolio can be shared with any other feeder funds. In
this prospectus we have used the word "fund" to mean the feeder fund and its
master portfolio.
 
For reasons relating to costs or a change in investment goal, among others, the
feeder fund could switch to another master portfolio or decide to manage its
assets itself. The fund is not currently contemplating such a move.
 
                                      Your Investment   11
<PAGE>
[SOLID BAR]
 
OBTAINING INFORMATION
You can obtain a shareholder report, SAI, and other information from your
investment provider, or from:
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN
MANAGEMENT INC.
605 Third Avenue 2nd Floor
New York, NY 10158-0180
800-877-9700
212-476-8800
 
Broker/Dealer and
Institutional Services:
800-366-6264
 
Web site:
www.nbfunds.com
Email:
[email protected]
 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, DC
20549-6009
800-SEC-0330 (Public
Reference Section)
 
Web site:
www.sec.gov
 
You can request copies of documents from the SEC for the cost of a duplicating
fee, or view documents at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington.
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN REGENCY TRUST
 
If you'd like further details about this fund, you can request a free copy
of the following documents:
 
SHAREHOLDER REPORTS -- Published twice a year, the shareholder reports offer
information about the fund's recent performance, including:
 
- - a discussion by the portfolio managers about strategies and market conditions
 
- - fund performance data and financial statements
 
- - complete portfolio holdings
 
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION -- The SAI contains more comprehensive
information about this fund, including:
 
- - various types of securities and practices, and their risks
 
- - investment limitations and additional policies
 
- - information about the fund's management and business structure
 
The SAI is incorporated by reference into this prospectus, making it legally
part of the prospectus.
 
Investment manager:
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT INC.
Sub-adviser:
NEUBERGER BERMAN, LLC
 
[LOGO]
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT INC.
605 Third Avenue 2nd Floor
New York, NY 10158-0180
 
[RECYCLE LOGO] NMLRR2380499                            SEC file number: 811-7784
 
<PAGE>


________________________________________________________________________________

                  NEUBERGER BERMAN REGENCY TRUST AND PORTFOLIO

                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                              DATED APRIL 30, 1999

                               NO-LOAD MUTUAL FUND
              605 THIRD AVENUE, 2ND FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10158-0180
                             TOLL-FREE 800-877-9700

________________________________________________________________________________


               Neuberger  Berman REGENCY Trust  ("Fund"),  a series of Neuberger
Berman  Equity  Trust  ("Trust"),  is a no-load  mutual fund that offers  shares
pursuant to a Prospectus  dated April 30, 1999.  The Fund invests all of its net
investable assets in Neuberger Berman REGENCY Portfolio ("Portfolio").

               AN INVESTOR  CAN BUY,  OWN,  AND SELL FUND SHARES ONLY THROUGH AN
ACCOUNT WITH AN ADMINISTRATOR, BROKER-DEALER, OR OTHER INSTITUTION THAT PROVIDES
ACCOUNTING,  RECORDKEEPING,  AND OTHER  SERVICES  TO  INVESTORS  AND THAT HAS AN
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AGREEMENT WITH NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT INC. (EACH AN
"INSTITUTION").

               The Fund's Prospectus provides basic information that an investor
should know before investing. A copy of the Prospectus may be obtained,  without
charge,  from Neuberger Berman Management Inc. ("NB Management"),  Institutional
Services,  605 Third Avenue,  2nd Floor, New York, NY 10158-0180,  or by calling
800-877-9700.

               This  Statement  of  Additional  Information  ("SAI")  is  not  a
prospectus and should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus.

               No person has been  authorized to give any information or to make
any representations not contained in the Prospectus or in this SAI in connection
with  the  offering  made  by the  Prospectus,  and,  if  given  or  made,  such
information or representations must not be relied upon as having been authorized
by the Fund or its distributor. The Prospectus and this SAI do not constitute an
offering  by the Fund or its  distributor  in any  jurisdiction  in  which  such
offering may not lawfully be made.

        The  "Neuberger  Berman"  name and logo are service  marks of  Neuberger
Berman, LLC. "Neuberger Berman Management Inc." and the fund and portfolio names
in this SAI are either  service  marks or  registered  trademarks  of  Neuberger
Berman Management Inc. (C)1999 Neuberger Berman Management Inc.


<PAGE>


                               TABLE OF CONTENTS


   
INVESTMENT INFORMATION....................................................... 1
        Investment Policies and Limitations.................................. 1
        Investment Insight................................................... 4
        Additional Investment Information.................................... 6


PERFORMANCE INFORMATION..................................................... 20
        Total Return Computations........................................... 20
        Comparative Information............................................. 21
        Other Performance Information....................................... 21


CERTAIN RISK CONSIDERATIONS................................................. 22


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS....................................................... 22


INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICES........................... 28
        Investment Manager and Administrator................................ 28
        Management and Administration Fees.................................. 29
        Sub-Adviser......................................................... 30
        Investment Companies Managed........................................ 31
        Management and Control of NB Management............................. 34


DISTRIBUTION ARRANGEMENTS................................................... 34


ADDITIONAL PURCHASE INFORMATION............................................. 36
        Share Prices and Net Asset Value.................................... 36


ADDITIONAL REDEMPTION INFORMATION........................................... 36
        Suspension of Redemptions........................................... 36
        Redemptions in Kind................................................. 37


DIVIDENDS AND OTHER DISTRIBUTIONS........................................... 37


ADDITIONAL TAX INFORMATION.................................................. 37
        Taxation of the Fund................................................ 37
        Taxation of the Portfolio........................................... 38
        Taxation of the Fund's Shareholders................................. 41

<PAGE>

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS...................................................... 41
        Portfolio Turnover.................................................. 44


REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS..................................................... 44


ORGANIZATION, CAPITALIZATION AND OTHER MATTERS.............................. 44


CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT................................................ 47
 

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS........................................................ 47
    

LEGAL COUNSEL............................................................... 47


APPENDIX A................................................................. A-1
        RATINGS OF CORPORATE BONDS AND COMMERCIAL PAPER.................... A-1


                                      ii
<PAGE>



                             INVESTMENT INFORMATION

               The Fund is a separate  operating series of the Trust, a Delaware
business trust that is registered  with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
("SEC") as a diversified open-end management  investment company. The Fund seeks
its investment  objective by investing all of its net  investable  assets in the
Portfolio,  a series of Equity  Managers  Trust  ("Managers  Trust") that has an
investment  objective  identical to that of the Fund.  The  Portfolio,  in turn,
invests in securities in accordance with an investment objective,  policies, and
limitations identical to those of the Fund. (The Trust and Managers Trust, which
is an open-end  management  investment  company  managed by NB  Management,  are
together referred to below as the "Trusts.")

               The  following  information  supplements  the  discussion  in the
Prospectus of the investment  objective,  policies,  and limitations of the Fund
and Portfolio.  The investment  objective and, unless otherwise  specified,  the
investment   policies  and  limitations  of  the  Fund  and  Portfolio  are  not
fundamental.  Any  investment  objective,  policy  or  limitation  that  is  not
fundamental may be changed by the trustees of the Trust ("Fund  Trustees") or of
Managers  Trust  ("Portfolio   Trustees")  without  shareholder  approval.   The
fundamental investment policies and limitations of the Fund or the Portfolio may
not be changed without the approval of the lesser of:

               (1) 67% of the total units of beneficial  interest  ("shares") of
the Fund or  Portfolio  represented  at a meeting  at which more than 50% of the
outstanding Fund or Portfolio shares are represented or

               (2)  a  majority  of  the  outstanding  shares  of  the  Fund  or
Portfolio.

               These  percentages are required by the Investment  Company Act of
1940 ("1940 Act") and are referred to in this SAI as a "1940 Act majority vote."
Whenever the Fund is called upon to vote on a change in a fundamental investment
policy or limitation of the Portfolio, the Fund casts its votes in proportion to
the votes of its shareholders at a meeting thereof called for that purpose.

Investment Policies and Limitations
- -----------------------------------

               The Fund has the  following  fundamental  investment  policy,  to
enable it to invest in the Portfolio:

               Notwithstanding  any  other  investment  policy  of the
               Fund, the Fund may invest all of its investable  assets
               (cash,   securities,   and   receivables   relating  to
               securities)  in  an  open-end   management   investment
               company  having   substantially   the  same  investment
               objective, policies, and limitations as the Fund.

               All other fundamental investment policies and limitations and the
non-fundamental investment policies and limitations of the Fund are identical to


                                  1
<PAGE>

those  of  the  Portfolio.  Therefore,  although  the  following  discusses  the
investment policies and limitations of the Portfolio,  it applies equally to the
Fund.

               Except for the limitation on borrowing,  any investment policy or
limitation  that involves a maximum  percentage of securities or assets will not
be  considered  to be  violated  unless the  percentage  limitation  is exceeded
immediately after, and because of, a transaction by the Portfolio.

               The Portfolio's  fundamental  investment policies and limitations
are as follows:

               1.  BORROWING.  The Portfolio  may not borrow money,  except that
the  Portfolio  may (i)  borrow  money  from banks for  temporary  or  emergency
purposes  and not for  leveraging  or  investment  and (ii) enter  into  reverse
repurchase agreements for any purpose; provided that (i) and (ii) in combination
do not exceed  33-1/3% of the value of its total  assets  (including  the amount
borrowed) less liabilities  (other than  borrowings).  If at any time borrowings
exceed 33-1/3% of the value of the Portfolio's total assets,  the Portfolio will
reduce its borrowings within three days (excluding  Sundays and holidays) to the
extent necessary to comply with the 33-1/3% limitation.

               2.  COMMODITIES.   The  Portfolio  may  not  purchase   physical
commodities or contracts  thereon,  unless acquired as a result of the ownership
of  securities  or  instruments,  but this  restriction  shall not  prohibit the
Portfolio from purchasing  futures  contracts or options  (including  options on
futures  contracts,  but  excluding  options or futures  contracts  on  physical
commodities) or from investing in securities of any kind.

               3.  DIVERSIFICATION.  The  Portfolio may not, with respect to 75%
of the value of its total assets,  purchase the  securities of any issuer (other
than  securities  issued  or  guaranteed  by the U.S.  Government  or any of its
agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result, (i) more than 5% of the value of
the Portfolio's  total assets would be invested in the securities of that issuer
or (ii)  the  Portfolio  would  hold  more  than 10% of the  outstanding  voting
securities of that issuer.

               4.  INDUSTRY  CONCENTRATION.  The  Portfolio may not purchase any
security  if, as a result,  25% or more of its total  assets  (taken at  current
value) would be invested in the  securities  of issuers  having their  principal
business  activities in the same  industry.  This  limitation  does not apply to
securities  issued or  guaranteed  by the U.S.  Government  or its  agencies  or
instrumentalities.

               5.  LENDING.  The Portfolio may not lend any security or make any
other  loan if, as a result,  more than  33-1/3% of its total  assets  (taken at
current value) would be lent to other parties,  except,  in accordance  with its
investment objective,  policies, and limitations,  (i) through the purchase of a
portion  of an  issue  of debt  securities  or (ii) by  engaging  in  repurchase
agreements.

               6.  REAL  ESTATe.  The  Portfolio  may not  purchase  real estate
unless acquired as a result of the ownership of securities or  instruments,  but
this  restriction  shall not prohibit the Portfolio from  purchasing  securities
issued by entities  or  investment  vehicles  that own or deal in real estate or
interests therein or instruments secured by real estate or interests therein.


                                       2
<PAGE>


               7.  SENIOR  SECURITIES.   The  Portfolio  may  not  issue  senior
securities, except as permitted under the 1940 Act.

               8.  UNDERWRITING.  The Portfolio may not underwrite securities of
other  issuers,  except  to the  extent  that the  Portfolio,  in  disposing  of
portfolio  securities,  may be deemed to be an underwriter within the meaning of
the Securities Act of 1933 ("1933 Act").

               For purposes of the limitation on commodities, the Portfolio does
not consider foreign currencies or forward contracts to be physical commodities.

               The   Portfolio's   non-fundamental   investment   policies   and
limitations are as follows:

               1.  BORROWING.  The  Portfolio  may not  purchase  securities  if
outstanding borrowings,  including any reverse repurchase agreements,  exceed 5%
of its total assets.

               2.  LENDING.  Except  for the  purchase  of debt  securities  and
engaging in  repurchase  agreements,  the Portfolio may not make any loans other
than securities loans.

               3.  MARGIN   TRANSACTIONS.   The   Portfolio   may  not  purchase
securities  on margin from brokers or other  lenders,  except that the Portfolio
may  obtain  such  short-term  credits as are  necessary  for the  clearance  of
securities  transactions.  Margin  payments in connection  with  transactions in
futures  contracts and options on futures  contracts  shall not  constitute  the
purchase  of  securities  on margin  and shall  not be  deemed  to  violate  the
foregoing limitation.

               4.  FOREIGN  SECURITIES.  The  Portfolio may not invest more than
10% of the value of its total assets in securities of foreign issuers,  provided
that this limitation shall not apply to foreign  securities  denominated in U.S.
dollars, including American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs").

               5.  ILLIQUID  SECURITIES.  The  Portfolio  may not  purchase  any
security  if, as a result,  more than 15% of its net assets would be invested in
illiquid securities.  Illiquid securities include securities that cannot be sold
within  seven days in the  ordinary  course of business  for  approximately  the
amount at which the  Portfolio  has valued the  securities,  such as  repurchase
agreements maturing in more than seven days.

               The  Portfolio does not intend to invest in futures contracts and
options thereon during the coming year. In addition, although the Portfolio does
not have policies  limiting its  investment in warrants,  the Portfolio does not
currently  intend to invest in warrants  unless acquired in units or attached to
securities.

               TEMPORARY DEFENSIVE  POSITION.  For temporary defensive purposes,
the  Portfolio  may  invest  up to 100% of its  total  assets  in cash  and cash
equivalents, U.S. Government and Agency Securities, commercial paper and certain
other money market instruments,  as well as repurchase agreements collateralized
by the foregoing.



                                       3
<PAGE>

Investment Insight
- ------------------

               Neuberger Berman's commitment to its asset management approach is
reflected in the more than $125 million the organization's principals, employees
and their families invested in the Neuberger Berman mutual funds.

               Neuberger  Berman REGENCY Trust seeks long-term growth of capital
by primarily  investing in common stocks of  mid-capitalization  companies  with
solid fundamentals.  The  characteristics the portfolio  co-managers look for in
companies include consistent cash flows, low price-to-earnings ratios, and sound
track  records  through  all phases of the market  cycle.  They are  looking for
quality  medium-sized  companies whose stock prices are undervalued  compared to
what they believe is the stocks' intrinsic value in the marketplace.

               Their  ultimate goal is to find  undervalued  companies that have
not yet been  discovered  by the  majority  of  investors,  or better yet to buy
"great  companies at a great  price." They attempt to do this by focusing on the
mid-cap  segment of the market  because it generally  tends to be less  followed
than the large-cap  segment by Wall Street analysts.  They strongly believe that
more often than not, if you are  patient and you do your  homework on a company,
you can get a good business at a great or at least a good price.

               A particular  characteristic  the portfolio  co-managers  like to
focus  on is  the  "owner-operator"  aspect  of  many  of the  companies  in the
portfolio.  "Owner-operator"  companies are those that continue to be run by the
company's  original  founder(s) and who still own a lot of stock.  Many of these
kinds of  companies  are found in the mid-cap  sector and are  considered  to be
"leadership" businesses, despite their medium size.

               The Fund's value approach in the mid-cap sector  complements  the
mid-cap growth style of investing utilized by Neuberger Berman's Manhattan Fund.
Investors  seeking a balance  between  growth  and value  investing  styles  and
various market capitalizations may want to consider this fund.

               REGENCY  Portfolio  uses the Russell  MidcapTM Value Index as its
benchmark.  Consistent with the Portfolio's  capitalization parameters and value
style, the co-managers believe this is a more appropriate benchmark than the S&P
"500." The Portfolio regards mid-cap companies to be those companies with market
capitalizations that, at the time of investment,  fall within the capitalization
range of the Russell MidcapTM Value Index as last announced by the Frank Russell
Company  before the date of this SAI. For  purposes of this SAI,  that range was
approximately   $1.4   billion  to  $10.3   billion.   Companies   whose  market
capitalizations  move out of this mid-cap  range after  purchase  continue to be
considered mid-cap companies for purposes of the Portfolio's investment program.
The Portfolio does not follow a policy of active trading for short-term profits.

                                       4
<PAGE>

   
NEUBERGER BERMAN REGENCY
SEEKING MID-CAP COMPANIES WITH MARKET LEADERSHIP

               REGENCY'S  co-managers  search the  mid-cap  stock  universe  for
companies  with  a  dominant  market  share  in  their  industry.  Historically,
businesses  with  market  leadership  have  delivered  significant  returns  for
shareholders  over  the  long  term.  While  this may not  always  be the  case,
discovering such middle-weight champions before the rest of Wall Street does can
yield substantial  payoffs for investors.  Of course,  there can be no assurance
that the managers  will select the right stocks  every time.  Remember  that the
stocks of mid-cap companies may be more volatile, and entail more risk, than the
stocks of larger companies.

               The   managers'   extensive   bottom-up   approach   begins  with
quantitative  screens that are used to search for  undervalued  securities  with
compelling  fundamentals.  Then,  in-depth  company and  industry  analyses  are
conducted,   followed  by  interviews   with  company   managements   and  their
competitors,  customers, and suppliers. In this stage, reviewing strategic plans
and evaluating management are critical steps.

               After applying these  quantitative and qualitative  screens,  the
remaining  candidates are ranked on a risk/reward  basis. The managers look at a
company's growth potential and how it is positioned to achieve its goals.  Their
aim  is  to  select  mid-cap  market  leaders  whose  stocks  are  selling  at a
significant discount to their underlying value.

Risk Management
- ---------------

               In  seeking to reduce risk on the buy side, the managers look for
reasonably priced stocks,  diversify  investments across an array of industries,
and avoid making large sector bets. On the sell side,  stocks are sold when they
reach their price target,  do not perform as expected,  or are  considered  less
attractive than other opportunities.

Disciplined Investment Process
- ------------------------------

1.      STOCK UNIVERSE
        o Quantitative Analysis
           -   Capitalization>$1 Billion
           -   Free Cash Flow
           -   Low P/E's
           -   Strong Balance Sheets

2.      VALUE STOCK UNIVERSE
        o Quantitative Evaluation:  Catalyst for Change
           -   Managerial
           -   Operational
           -   Structural

3.      EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT TEAM EVALUATION
        o Proven Track Record


                                       5
<PAGE>

        o Strategic Plan
        o Inside Ownership

FUND SUMMARY

Primary  investments                    U.S. mid-cap stocks
Benchmark                               Russell MidcapTM Value Index
Investing style                         Value
Number of expected holdings             50-70*
Expected size of new position           (LESS THAN)5% of total assets 
* Based on when portfolio  assets reach $25 million - $50 million
    

Additional Investment Information
- ---------------------------------

               The Portfolio may make the following  investments,  among others,
although  it may  not  buy  all of the  types  of  securities  or use all of the
investment techniques that are described.

               ILLIQUID  SECURITIES.  Illiquid  securities are  securities  that
cannot be expected to be sold within  seven days at  approximately  the price at
which  they are  valued.  These may  include  unregistered  or other  restricted
securities  and  repurchase  agreements  maturing  in greater  than seven  days.
Illiquid  securities may also include commercial paper under section 4(2) of the
1933 Act, as amended, and Rule 144A securities  (restricted  securities that may
be traded freely among qualified  institutional  buyers pursuant to an exemption
from the registration requirements of the securities laws); these securities are
considered  illiquid  unless  NB  Management,   acting  pursuant  to  guidelines
established  by the  trustees of  Managers  Trust,  determines  they are liquid.
Generally,  foreign securities freely tradable in their principal market are not
considered restricted or illiquid.  Illiquid securities may be difficult for the
Portfolio to value or dispose of due to the absence of an active trading market.
The sale of some  illiquid  securities  by the Portfolio may be subject to legal
restrictions which could be costly to the Portfolio.

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The Portfolio may invest up to 15% of
its net assets in illiquid securities.

               REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  In a repurchase agreement,  the Portfolio
purchases  securities from a bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System
or from a securities  dealer that agrees to repurchase the  securities  from the
Portfolio at a higher price on a designated future date.  Repurchase  agreements
generally  are for a short  period of time,  usually  less  than a week.  Costs,
delays,  or losses could result if the selling  party to a repurchase  agreement
becomes   bankrupt  or   otherwise   defaults.   NB   Management   monitors  the
creditworthiness of sellers.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS.  Repurchase  agreements with a maturity
of more than seven days are considered to be illiquid securities.  The Portfolio
may not enter into a  repurchase  agreement  with a maturity  of more than seven
days if, as a result, more than 15% of the value of its net assets would then be
invested  in such  repurchase  agreements  and other  illiquid  securities.  The


                                       6
<PAGE>



Portfolio  may enter  into a  repurchase  agreement  only if (1) the  underlying
securities  are  of  a  type  that  the  Portfolio's   investment  policies  and
limitations  would allow it to purchase  directly,  (2) the market  value of the
underlying  securities,  including  accrued  interest,  at all  times  equals or
exceeds the repurchase  price, and (3) payment for the underlying  securities is
made only upon satisfactory  evidence that the securities are being held for the
Portfolio's account by its custodian or a bank acting as the Portfolio's agent.

               SECURITIES  LOANS.  The Portfolio  may lend  securities to banks,
brokerage firms,  and other  institutional  investors judged  creditworthy by NB
Management,  provided that cash or equivalent collateral, equal to at least 100%
of the market value of the loaned securities,  is continuously maintained by the
borrower with the  Portfolio.  The Portfolio may invest the cash  collateral and
earn income,  or it may receive an agreed upon amount of interest  income from a
borrower who has delivered equivalent collateral. During the time securities are
on loan,  the  borrower  will pay the  Portfolio  an  amount  equivalent  to any
dividends  or  interest  paid on such  securities.  These  loans are  subject to
termination  at the option of the Portfolio or the  borrower.  The Portfolio may
pay reasonable  administrative  and custodial fees in connection with a loan and
may pay a negotiated  portion of the interest  earned on the cash or  equivalent
collateral to the borrower or placing  broker.  The Portfolio  does not have the
right to vote  securities on loan,  but would  terminate the loan and regain the
right to vote if that were considered  important with respect to the investment.
NB Management believes the risk of loss on these transactions is slight because,
if a borrower were to default for any reason,  the collateral should satisfy the
obligation.  However,  as with  other  extensions  of secured  credit,  loans of
portfolio  securities  involve  some risk of loss of  rights  in the  collateral
should the borrower fail financially.

               POLICIES  AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio  may  lend  portfolio
securities  with a value not  exceeding  33-1/3%  of its total  assets to banks,
brokerage  firms, or other  institutional  investors  judged  creditworthy by NB
Management.  Borrowers are required  continuously to secure their obligations to
return securities on loan from the Portfolio by depositing  collateral in a form
determined to be satisfactory by the Portfolio Trustees.  The collateral,  which
must be marked to market  daily,  must be equal to at least  100% of the  market
value of the loaned securities, which will also be marked to market daily.

               RESTRICTED SECURITIES AND RULE 144A SECURITIES. The Portfolio may
invest in restricted  securities,  which are securities  that may not be sold to
the  public  without an  effective  registration  statement  under the 1933 Act.
Before  they are  registered,  such  securities  may be sold only in a privately
negotiated  transaction  or  pursuant  to an  exemption  from  registration.  In
recognition of the increased size and liquidity of the institutional  market for
unregistered  securities  and the importance of  institutional  investors in the
formation  of capital,  the SEC has adopted  Rule 144A under the 1933 Act.  Rule
144A is designed to facilitate  efficient trading among institutional  investors
by  permitting  the  sale  of  certain  unregistered   securities  to  qualified
institutional  buyers.  To the extent  privately  placed  securities held by the
Portfolio qualify under Rule 144A and an institutional market develops for those
securities,  the  Portfolio  likely  will be able to dispose  of the  securities
without  registering  them under the 1933 Act. To the extent that  institutional
buyers  become,  for  a  time,  uninterested  in  purchasing  these  securities,
investing in Rule 144A  securities  could increase the level of the  Portfolio's


                                       6
<PAGE>


illiquidity. NB Management, acting under guidelines established by the Portfolio
Trustees, may determine that certain securities qualified for trading under Rule
144A are  liquid.  Regulation  S under the 1933 Act  permits  the sale abroad of
securities that are not registered for sale in the United States.

               Where registration is required, the Portfolio may be obligated to
pay all or part of the  registration  expenses,  and a  considerable  period may
elapse  between the decision to sell and the time the Portfolio may be permitted
to sell a security 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.  Restricted
securities  for which no market exists are priced by a method that the Portfolio
Trustees believe accurately reflects fair value.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS.  To the extent  restricted  securities,
including Rule 144A securities, are illiquid,  purchases thereof will be subject
to the Portfolio's 15% limit on investments in illiquid securities.


                                       7
<PAGE>


               REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a reverse repurchase agreement,
the Portfolio sells portfolio  securities subject to its agreement to repurchase
the  securities  at a later date for a fixed price  reflecting  a market rate of
interest.  There  is a risk  that  the  counter-party  to a  reverse  repurchase
agreement will be unable or unwilling to complete the  transaction as scheduled,
which may result in losses to the Portfolio.

               POLICIES  AND  LIMITATIONS.  Reverse  repurchase  agreements  are
considered  borrowings for purposes of the Portfolio's  investment  policies and
limitations  concerning  borrowings.  While a reverse  repurchase  agreement  is
outstanding,  the  Portfolio  will  deposit  in a  segregated  account  with its
custodian cash or appropriate liquid  securities,  marked to market daily, in an
amount at least equal to the Portfolio's obligations under the agreement.

               FOREIGN   SECURITIES.   The   Portfolio   may   invest   in  U.S.
dollar-denominated  securities of foreign issuers (including banks, governments,
and  quasi-governmental  organizations)  and  foreign  branches  of U.S.  banks,
including negotiable  certificates of deposit ("CDs"),  bankers' acceptances and
commercial paper. While investments in foreign securities are intended to reduce
risk by providing further  diversification,  such investments  involve sovereign
and other risks, in addition to the credit and market risks normally  associated
with domestic  securities.  These  additional  risks include the  possibility of
adverse political and economic  developments  (including political  instability,
nationalization,  expropriation,  or confiscatory  taxation) and the potentially
adverse effects of unavailability of public information  regarding issuers, less
governmental  supervision and regulation of financial markets, reduced liquidity
of certain financial markets, and the lack of uniform accounting,  auditing, and
financial reporting standards or the application of standards that are different
or less stringent than those applied in the United States.

               The  Portfolio  also  may  invest  in  equity,   debt,  or  other
income-producing  securities  that are  denominated  in or  indexed  to  foreign
currencies,  including  (1) common and  preferred  stocks,  (2) CDs,  commercial
paper,  fixed time deposits,  and bankers'  acceptances issued by foreign banks,
(3)  obligations  of  other   corporations,   and  (4)  obligations  of  foreign
governments   and   their   subdivisions,   agencies,   and   instrumentalities,
international  agencies,  and  supranational  entities.   Investing  in  foreign
currency  denominated  securities  involves the special  risks  associated  with



                                       8
<PAGE>


investing in non-U.S.  issuers, as described in the preceding paragraph, and the
additional  risks of (1)  adverse  changes in foreign  exchange  rates,  and (2)
adverse  changes in  investment  or exchange  control  regulations  (which could
prevent  cash from  being  brought  back to the  United  States).  Additionally,
dividends  and interest  payable on foreign  securities  (and gains  realized on
disposition  thereof) may be subject to foreign taxes,  including taxes withheld
from those payments.  Commissions on foreign  securities  exchanges are often at
fixed  rates  and are  generally  higher  than  negotiated  commissions  on U.S.
exchanges,  although the Portfolio  endeavors to achieve the most  favorable net
results on portfolio transactions.

               Foreign  securities  often trade with less  frequency and in less
volume  than  domestic  securities  and  therefore  may  exhibit  greater  price
volatility. Additional costs associated with an investment in foreign securities
may include higher  custodial fees than apply to domestic  custody  arrangements
and transaction costs of foreign currency conversions.

               Foreign  markets also have  different  clearance  and  settlement
procedures. In certain markets, there have been times when settlements have been
unable to keep  pace  with the  volume  of  securities  transactions,  making it
difficult to conduct such  transactions.  Delays in  settlement  could result in
temporary  periods when a portion of the assets of the Portfolio are  uninvested
and no return is earned thereon. The inability of the Portfolio to make intended
security purchases due to settlement  problems could cause the Portfolio to miss
attractive   investment   opportunities.   Inability  to  dispose  of  portfolio
securities  due to settlement  problems  could result in losses to the Portfolio
due to subsequent  declines in value of the  securities or, if the Portfolio has
entered  into a  contract  to sell the  securities,  could  result  in  possible
liability to the purchaser.

               Interest  rates  prevailing  in other  countries  may  affect the
prices of foreign  securities and exchange rates for foreign  currencies.  Local
factors,  including the strength of the local economy, the demand for borrowing,
the government's fiscal and monetary policies,  and the international balance of
payments,  often affect interest rates in other  countries.  Individual  foreign
economies  may differ  favorably or  unfavorably  from the U.S.  economy in such
respects  as  growth  of gross  national  product,  rate of  inflation,  capital
reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency, and balance of payments position.

               The  Portfolio may invest in ADRs,  EDRs,  GDRs,  and IDRs.  ADRs
(sponsored or unsponsored) are receipts typically issued by a U.S. bank or trust
company evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign securities. Most ADRs
are denominated in U.S. dollars and are traded on a U.S. stock exchange. Issuers
of the  securities  underlying  sponsored  ADRs, but not  unsponsored  ADRs, are
contractually  obligated to disclose material  information in the United States.
Therefore,  the market value of  unsponsored  ADRs may not reflect the effect of
such information. EDRs and IDRs are receipts typically issued by a European bank
or trust company evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign  securities.
GDRs are  receipts  issued  by either a U.S.  or  non-U.S.  banking  institution
evidencing  its ownership of the  underlying  foreign  securities  and are often
denominated in U.S. dollars.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS. In order to limit the risks inherent in
investing in foreign  currency  denominated  securities,  the  Portfolio may not
purchase any such  security  if, as a result,  more than 10% of its total assets
(taken at market  value)  would be  invested  in  foreign  currency  denominated


                                       9
<PAGE>



securities. Within that limitation,  however, the Portfolio is not restricted in
the amount it may invest in securities denominated in any one foreign currency.

               Investments  in securities of foreign  issuers are subject to the
Portfolio's  quality  standards.  The Portfolio may invest only in securities of
issuers in countries whose governments are considered stable by NB Management.

   
         FUTURES, OPTIONS ON FUTURES, OPTIONS ON SECURITIES AND INDICES,
                    FORWARD CONTRACTS, AND OPTIONS ON FOREIGN
                CURRENCIES (COLLECTIVELY, "HEDGING INSTRUMENTS")


               FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON. The Portfolio may purchase
and sell stock  index  futures  contracts,  and may  purchase  and sell  options
thereon.  For purposes of managing cash flow,  the managers may use such futures
and  options to  increase  the  Portfolio's  exposure  to the  performance  of a
recognized securities index, such as the S&P "500" Index.

               A "sale" of a futures  contract (or a "short"  futures  position)
entails the assumption of a contractual  obligation to deliver the securities or
currency  underlying  the  contract at a specified  price at a specified  future
time. A "purchase" of a futures contract (or a "long" futures  position) entails
the assumption of a contractual obligation to acquire the securities or currency
underlying the contract at a specified price at a specified future time. Certain
futures,  including  stock and bond  index  futures,  are  settled on a net cash
payment basis rather than by the sale and delivery of the securities  underlying
the futures.

               U.S.  futures  contracts  (except certain  currency  futures) are
traded on exchanges that have been designated as "contract markets" by the CFTC;
futures transactions must be executed through a futures commission merchant that
is a member of the relevant  contract market.  In both U.S. and foreign markets,
an exchange's  affiliated clearing  organization  guarantees  performance of the
contracts between the clearing members of the exchange.

               Although futures  contracts by their terms may require the actual
delivery or acquisition of the underlying  securities or currency, in most cases
the contractual obligation is extinguished by being offset before the expiration
of the  contract.  A futures  position is offset by buying (to offset an earlier
sale) or selling (to offset an earlier  purchase) an identical  futures contract
calling for delivery in the same month. This may result in a profit or loss.

               "Margin"  with  respect  to a futures  contract  is the amount of
assets that must be deposited by the  Portfolio  with,  or for the benefit of, a
futures  commission  merchant in order to initiate and maintain the  Portfolio's
futures positions.  The margin deposit made by the Portfolio when it enters into
a futures contract  ("initial  margin") is intended to assure its performance of
the contract.  If the price of the futures  contract changes -- increases in the
case of a short (sale)  position or  decreases in the case of a long  (purchase)
position  -- so that the  unrealized  loss on the  contract  causes  the  margin
deposit not to satisfy  margin  requirements,  the Portfolio will be required to
make an additional margin deposit  ("variation  margin").  However, if favorable
price  changes in the futures  contract  cause the margin  deposit to exceed the
required margin, the excess will be paid to the Portfolio. In computing its NAV,

                                       10
<PAGE>


the  Portfolio  marks to market  the value of its open  futures  positions.  The
Portfolio also must make margin deposits with respect to options on futures that
it has  written  (but  not  with  respect  to  options  on  futures  that it has
purchased).  If the futures commission  merchant holding the margin deposit goes
bankrupt,  the Portfolio  could suffer a delay in recovering its funds and could
ultimately suffer a loss.

               An option on a futures contract gives the purchaser the right, in
return for the  premium  paid,  to assume a  position  in the  contract  (a long
position if the option is a call and a short position if the option is a put) at
a specified  exercise price at any time during the option exercise  period.  The
writer of the  option  is  required  upon  exercise  to  assume a short  futures
position (if the option is a call) or a long futures  position (if the option is
a put).  Upon  exercise  of the  option,  the  accumulated  cash  balance in the
writer's  futures margin account is delivered to the holder of the option.  That
balance  represents the amount by which the market price of the futures contract
at exercise  exceeds,  in the case of a call,  or is less than, in the case of a
put, the exercise price of the option.  Options on futures have  characteristics
and risks similar to those of securities options, as discussed herein.

               Although the Portfolio believes that the use of futures contracts
will benefit it, if NB Management's  judgment about the general direction of the
markets or about  interest  rate or currency  exchange rate trends is incorrect,
the  Portfolio's  overall  return would be lower than if it had not entered into
any such  contracts.  The  prices of  futures  contracts  are  volatile  and are
influenced by, among other things, actual and anticipated changes in interest or
currency  exchange  rates,  which in turn are  affected  by fiscal and  monetary
policies and by national and  international  political and economic  events.  At
best,  the  correlation  between  changes in prices of futures  contracts and of
securities being hedged can be only  approximate due to differences  between the
futures  and  securities  markets  or  differences  between  the  securities  or
currencies  underlying the Portfolio's  futures position and the securities held
by or to be purchased  for the  Portfolio.  The currency  futures  market may be
dominated  by  short-term  traders  seeking to profit  from  changes in exchange
rates.  This would reduce the value of such contracts used for hedging  purposes
over a  short-term  period.  Such  distortions  are  generally  minor  and would
diminish as the contract approaches maturity.

               Because  of the low margin  deposits  required,  futures  trading
involves an extremely high degree of leverage;  as a result,  a relatively small
price  movement in a futures  contract may result in immediate  and  substantial
loss,  or gain,  to the  investor.  Losses that may arise from  certain  futures
transactions are potentially unlimited.

               Most U.S.  futures  exchanges  limit the amount of fluctuation in
the price of a futures  contract or option  thereon during a single trading day;
once the daily  limit has been  reached,  no trades may be made on that day at a
price beyond that limit.  The daily limit governs only price movements  during a
particular  trading day,  however;  it thus does not limit potential  losses. In
fact,  it may  increase the risk of loss,  because  prices can move to the daily
limit for several  consecutive  trading days with little or no trading,  thereby
preventing   liquidation  of  unfavorable  futures  and  options  positions  and
subjecting traders to substantial losses. If this were to happen with respect to
a  position  held by the  Portfolio,  it  could  (depending  on the  size of the
position) have an adverse impact on the NAV of the Portfolio.


                                       11
<PAGE>

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio  may purchase and sell
stock index futures  contracts,  and may purchase and sell options thereon.  For
purposes of managing cash flow, the managers may use such futures and options to
increase the Portfolio's exposure to the performance of a recognized  securities
index, such as the S&P "500" Index.
    
               CALL OPTIONS ON SECURITIES.  The Portfolio may write covered call
options and may  purchase  call  options in related  closing  transactions.  The
purpose of writing call options is to hedge (i.e., to reduce,  at least in part,
the effect of price  fluctuations  of  securities  held by the  Portfolio on the
Portfolio's and the Fund's net asset values ("NAVs")) or to earn premium income.
Portfolio  securities  on which call options may be written and purchased by the
Portfolio  are  purchased  solely  on the  basis  of  investment  considerations
consistent with the Portfolio's investment objective.

               When the Portfolio writes a call option,  it is obligated to sell
a security to a purchaser at a specified  price at any time until a certain date
if the  purchaser  decides to exercise  the  option.  The  Portfolio  receives a
premium for  writing  the call  option.  So long as the  obligation  of the call
option continues, the Portfolio may be assigned an exercise notice, requiring it
to deliver the underlying  security  against payment of the exercise price.  The
Portfolio  may be obligated to deliver  securities  underlying an option at less
than the market price.

               The writing of covered call options is a conservative  investment
technique that is believed to involve  relatively  little risk but is capable of
enhancing the Portfolio's total return.  When writing a covered call option, the
Portfolio, in return for the premium, gives up the opportunity for profit from a
price  increase  in the  underlying  security  above  the  exercise  price,  but
conversely retains the risk of loss should the price of the security decline.

               If  a  call  option  that  the  Portfolio  has  written   expires
unexercised,  the  Portfolio  will  realize a gain in the amount of the premium;
however,  that  gain may be  offset  by a  decline  in the  market  value of the
underlying  security during the option period.  If the call option is exercised,
the  Portfolio  will  realize  a gain or loss  from the  sale of the  underlying
security.

               When the Portfolio purchases a call option, it pays a premium for
the right to purchase a security  from the writer at a  specified  price until a
specified date.

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio may write covered call
options and may  purchase  call  options in related  closing  transactions.  The
Portfolio  writes only "covered" call options on securities it owns (in contrast
to the writing of "naked" or uncovered  call options,  which the Portfolio  will
not do).  The  Portfolio  would  purchase a call  option to offset a  previously
written call option.

               GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT SECURITIES OPTIONS.  The exercise price
of an option may be below, equal to, or above the market value of the underlying
security at the time the option is written.  Options  normally  have  expiration
dates  between  three  and nine  months  from the date  written.  American-style
options  are  exercisable  at any  time  prior  to their  expiration  date.  The
obligation under any option written by the Portfolio  terminates upon expiration
of the option or, at an earlier time,  when the Portfolio  offsets the option by
 

                                      12
<PAGE>


entering into a "closing purchase transaction" to purchase an option of the same
series.  If an option is purchased by the  Portfolio  and is never  exercised or
closed out, the Portfolio will lose the entire amount of the premium paid.

               Options are traded both on U.S. national securities exchanges and
in the over-the-counter  ("OTC") market.  Exchange-traded  options in the United
States are issued by a clearing  organization  affiliated  with the  exchange on
which the option is  listed;  the  clearing  organization  in effect  guarantees
completion  of every  exchange-traded  option.  In  contrast,  OTC  options  are
contracts   between  the  Portfolio  and  a  counter-party,   with  no  clearing
organization  guarantee.  Thus,  when the  Portfolio  writes an OTC  option,  it
generally will be able to "close out" the option prior to its expiration only by
entering  into a  closing  purchase  transaction  with  the  dealer  to whom the
Portfolio  originally  sold  the  option.  There  can be no  assurance  that the
Portfolio  would  be able to  liquidate  an OTC  option  at any  time  prior  to
expiration.   Unless  the  Portfolio  is  able  to  effect  a  closing  purchase
transaction in a covered OTC call option it has written,  it will not be able to
liquidate  securities  used as cover until the option expires or is exercised or
until  different  cover is  substituted.  In the  event  of the  counter-party's
insolvency,  the Portfolio  may be unable to liquidate its options  position and
the associated  cover. NB Management  monitors the  creditworthiness  of dealers
with which the Portfolio may engage in OTC options transactions.

               The premium  received (or paid) by the  Portfolio  when it writes
(or  purchases) an option is the amount at which the option is currently  traded
on the  applicable  market.  The premium may reflect,  among other  things,  the
current  market  price  of the  underlying  security,  the  relationship  of the
exercise  price to the market  price,  the  historical  price  volatility of the
underlying security,  the length of the option period, the general supply of and
demand for credit,  and the interest rate  environment.  The premium received by
the  Portfolio  for  writing  an  option  is  recorded  as a  liability  on  the
Portfolio's  statement  of assets and  liabilities.  This  liability is adjusted
daily to the option's current market value.

               Closing  transactions  are  effected in order to realize a profit
(or minimize a loss) on an outstanding option, to prevent an underlying security
from being called, or to permit the sale or the put of the underlying  security.
There is, of course,  no  assurance  that the  Portfolio  will be able to effect
closing  transactions at favorable  prices.  If the Portfolio  cannot enter into
such a  transaction,  it may be  required  to  hold a  security  that  it  might
otherwise have sold, in which case it would continue to be at market risk on the
security.

               The  Portfolio  will  realize  a profit  or loss  from a  closing
purchase  transaction  if the cost of the  transaction  is less or more than the
premium received from writing the call option.  Because  increases in the market
price of a call option  generally  reflect  increases in the market price of the
underlying security,  any loss resulting from the repurchase of a call option is
likely to be offset,  in whole or in part,  by  appreciation  of the  underlying
security  owned by the  Portfolio;  however,  the  Portfolio  could be in a less
advantageous position than if it had not written the call option.

               The Portfolio pays brokerage commissions or spreads in connection
with purchasing or writing  options,  including those used to close out existing
positions.

                                       13
<PAGE>

               The hours of trading  for  options  may not  conform to the hours
during  which the  underlying  securities  are  traded.  To the extent  that the
options  markets  close  before  the  markets  for  the  underlying  securities,
significant  price and rate movements can take place in the  underlying  markets
that cannot be reflected in the options markets.

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The Portfolio may use  American-style
options.  The assets  used as cover (or held in a  segregated  account)  for OTC
options  written by the  Portfolio  will be considered  illiquid  unless the OTC
options  are  sold to  qualified  dealers  who  agree  that  the  Portfolio  may
repurchase  any OTC option it writes at a maximum  price to be  calculated  by a
formula  set forth in the  option  agreement.  The cover for an OTC call  option
written subject to this procedure will be considered illiquid only to the extent
that the maximum  repurchase price under the formula exceeds the intrinsic value
of the option.


   
               PUT AND CALL  OPTIONS ON  SECURITIES  INDICES.  For  purposes  of
managing  cash  flow,  the  Portfolio  may  purchase  put and  call  options  on
securities indices to increase the Portfolio's  exposure to the performance of a
recognized  securities index,  such as the S&P "500" Index.  Unlike a securities
option,  which  gives the  holder  the  right to  purchase  or sell a  specified
security at a specified  price, an option on a securities index gives the holder
the  right to  receive  a cash  "exercise  settlement  amount"  equal to (1) the
difference  between  the  exercise  price  of the  option  and the  value of the
underlying  securities  index on the  exercise  date (2)  multiplied  by a fixed
"index  multiplier." A securities  index  fluctuates  with changes in the market
values of the  securities  included in the index.  Options on stock  indices are
currently  traded on the  Chicago  Board  Options  Exchange,  the New York Stock
Exchange  ("NYSE"),  the  American  Stock  Exchange,  and other U.S. and foreign
exchanges.


               The  effectiveness  of hedging through the purchase of securities
index  options  will  depend  upon the extent to which  price  movements  in the
securities   being  hedged  correlate  with  price  movements  in  the  selected
securities  index.  Perfect  correlation is not possible  because the securities
held or to be acquired by the Portfolio  will not exactly match the  composition
of the securities indices on which options are available.

               Securities index options have  characteristics  and risks similar
to those of securities options, as discussed herein.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS. For purposes of managing cash flow, the
Portfolio  may purchase put and call options on  securities  indices to increase
the Portfolio's  exposure to the performance of a recognized  securities  index,
such as the S&P "500"  Index.  All  securities  index  options  purchased by the
Portfolio will be listed and traded on an exchange.
    

               FOREIGN  CURRENCY  TRANSACTIONS.  The  Portfolio  may enter  into
contracts  for the  purchase  or sale of a specific  currency  at a future  date
(usually  less than one year  from the date of the  contract)  at a fixed  price
("forward  contracts").  The  Portfolio  also may  engage  in  foreign  currency
exchange  transactions on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing
in the foreign currency exchange market.


                                      14
<PAGE>

               The  Portfolio  enters into  forward  contracts  in an attempt to
hedge against changes in prevailing  currency exchange rates. The Portfolio does
not  engage in  transactions  in forward  contracts  for  speculation;  it views
investments in forward  contracts as a means of establishing more definitely the
effective return on, or the purchase price of, securities denominated in foreign
currencies.  Forward contract transactions include forward sales or purchases of
foreign  currencies  for the  purpose of  protecting  the U.S.  dollar  value of
securities held or to be acquired by the Portfolio or protecting the U.S. dollar
equivalent of dividends, interest, or other payments on those securities.

               Forward  contracts  are traded in the interbank  market  directly
between dealers (usually large commercial banks) and their customers.  A forward
contract generally has no deposit requirement, and no commissions are charged at
any stage for trades;  foreign  exchange  dealers  realize a profit based on the
difference  (the spread) between the prices at which they are buying and selling
various currencies.

               At the consummation of a forward  contract to sell currency,  the
Portfolio  may either make  delivery of the foreign  currency or  terminate  its
contractual  obligation to deliver by purchasing an offsetting contract.  If the
Portfolio chooses to make delivery of the foreign  currency,  it may be required
to obtain such currency through the sale of portfolio securities  denominated in
such currency or through  conversion of other assets of the Portfolio  into such
currency. If the Portfolio engages in an offsetting transaction, it will incur a
gain or a loss to the extent  that  there has been a change in forward  contract
prices.  Closing  purchase  transactions  with respect to forward  contracts are
usually  made with the currency  dealer who is a party to the  original  forward
contract.

               NB Management  believes that the use of foreign  currency hedging
techniques,  including "proxy-hedges," can provide significant protection of NAV
in the event of a general rise in the U.S.  dollar against  foreign  currencies.
For example,  the return  available from securities  denominated in a particular
foreign  currency  would  diminish  if the  value of the U.S.  dollar  increased
against that currency. Such a decline could be partially or completely offset by
an  increase  in value of a hedge  involving  a  forward  contract  to sell that
foreign  currency  or a  proxy-hedge  involving  a  forward  contract  to sell a
different  foreign  currency whose behavior is expected to resemble the currency
in which the securities  being hedged are  denominated but which is available on
more advantageous terms.

               However,  a hedge or proxy-hedge  cannot protect against exchange
rate risks  perfectly,  and if NB  Management  is  incorrect  in its judgment of
future  exchange  rate   relationships,   the  Portfolio  could  be  in  a  less
advantageous  position  than if such a hedge  had not been  established.  If the
Portfolio uses  proxy-hedging,  it may experience losses on both the currency in
which it has invested and the currency used for hedging if the two currencies do
not vary with the expected  degree of  correlation.  Using forward  contracts to
protect the value of the Portfolio's  securities  against a decline in the value
of a  currency  does not  eliminate  fluctuations  in the  prices of  underlying
securities.  Because forward contracts are not traded on an exchange, the assets
used to cover such  contracts  may be illiquid.  The  Portfolio  may  experience
delays in the settlement of its foreign currency transactions.



                                       15
<PAGE>

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio may enter into forward
contracts for the purpose of hedging and not for speculation.

               OPTIONS  ON  FOREIGN  CURRENCIES.  The  Portfolio  may  write and
purchase  covered call and put options on foreign  currencies.  Currency options
have  characteristics  and risks  similar  to those of  securities  options,  as
discussed  herein.  Certain options on foreign  currencies are traded on the OTC
market and  involve  liquidity  and credit  risks that may not be present in the
case of exchange-traded currency options.

               POLICIES  AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio  would use options on
foreign  currencies  to protect  against  declines in the U.S.  dollar  value of
portfolio  securities  or increases in the U.S.  dollar cost of securities to be
acquired or to protect the U.S.  dollar  equivalent of dividends,  interest,  or
other payments on those securities.

               REGULATORY  LIMITATIONS  ON  USING  HEDGING  INSTRUMENTS.  To the
extent the  Portfolio  sells or purchases  futures  contracts or writes  options
thereon  or  options  on  foreign  currencies  that are  traded  on an  exchange
regulated by the CFTC other than for BONA FIDE  hedging  purposes (as defined by
the  CFTC),  the  aggregate  initial  margin  and  premiums  on those  positions
(excluding the amount by which options are  "in-the-money") may not exceed 5% of
the Portfolio's  net assets.  The Portfolio does not intend to invest in futures
contracts and options thereon during the coming year.

               COVER FOR HEDGING  INSTRUMENTS.  Securities  held in a segregated
account cannot be sold while the futures, options or forward strategy covered by
those  securities is  outstanding,  unless they are replaced with other suitable
assets. As a result, segregation of a large percentage of the Portfolio's assets
could impede  portfolio  management or the  Portfolio's  ability to meet current
obligations.  The  Portfolio  may be unable  promptly to dispose of assets which
cover,  or are  segregated  with  respect  to, an illiquid  futures,  options or
forward position; this inability may result in a loss to the Portfolio.

               POLICIES  AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio  will comply with SEC
guidelines  regarding "cover" for Hedging  Instruments and, if the guidelines so
require,  set aside in a segregated  account with its custodian  the  prescribed
amount of cash or appropriate liquid securities.

               GENERAL RISKS OF HEDGING INSTRUMENTS.  The primary risks in using
Hedging  Instruments  are (1) imperfect  correlation or no  correlation  between
changes in market value of the  securities or currencies  held or to be acquired
by the Portfolio and the prices of Hedging  Instruments;  (2) possible lack of a
liquid secondary market for Hedging  Instruments and the resulting  inability to
close out Hedging Instruments when desired;  (3) the fact that the skills needed
to use  Hedging  Instruments  are  different  from  those  needed to select  the
Portfolio's  securities;  (4) the fact that, although use of Hedging Instruments
for  hedging  purposes  can  reduce  the risk of loss,  they also can reduce the
opportunity  for gain, or even result in losses,  by offsetting  favorable price
movements in hedged investments; and (5) the possible inability of the Portfolio
to  purchase  or sell a portfolio  security  at a time that would  otherwise  be
favorable  for it to do so, or the  possible  need for the  Portfolio  to sell a
portfolio security at a disadvantageous  time, due to its need to maintain cover


                                       16
<PAGE>

or to segregate  securities in connection  with its use of Hedging  Instruments.
There can be no assurance that the Portfolio's use of Hedging  Instruments  will
be successful.

               The Portfolio's use of Hedging  Instruments may be limited by the
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended ("Code"), with which
it must comply if the Fund is to  continue to qualify as a regulated  investment
company ("RIC").  See "Additional Tax Information."  Hedging Instruments may not
be available  with  respect to some  currencies,  especially  those of so-called
emerging market countries.

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  NB  Management  intends to reduce the
risk of imperfect  correlation  by investing only in Hedging  Instruments  whose
behavior is expected  to resemble or offset that of the  Portfolio's  underlying
securities  or  currency.  NB  Management  intends  to reduce  the risk that the
Portfolio will be unable to close out Hedging  Instruments by entering into such
transactions  only if NB Management  believes there will be an active and liquid
secondary market.

               FIXED INCOME  SECURITIES.  While the emphasis of the  Portfolio's
investment program is on common stocks and other equity securities,  it may also
invest in money market instruments,  U.S. Government and Agency Securities,  and
other fixed income  securities.  The Portfolio  may invest in  investment  grade
corporate  bonds and  debentures and in corporate  debt  securities  rated below
investment grade.

               U.S.  Government  Securities are obligations of the U.S. Treasury
backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. U.S. Government Agency
Securities  are  issued  or  guaranteed  by  U.S.   Government  agencies  or  by
instrumentalities  of the  U.S.  Government,  such  as the  Government  National
Mortgage  Association,  Fannie  Mae (also  known as  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association),   Freddie   Mac  (also  known  as  Federal   Home  Loan   Mortgage
Corporation),  Student Loan  Marketing  Association  (commonly  known as "Sallie
Mae"),  and  the  Tennessee  Valley  Authority.   Some  U.S.  Government  Agency
Securities  are  supported  by the full faith and  credit of the United  States,
while others may by  supported  by the issuer's  ability to borrow from the U.S.
Treasury,  subject to the Treasury's discretion in certain cases, or only by the
credit of the issuer.  U.S. Government Agency Securities include U.S. Government
Agency  mortgage-backed  securities.  The market prices of U.S.  Government  and
Agency Securities are not guaranteed by the Government.

               Investment  grade debt  securities are those receiving one of the
four highest ratings from Standard & Poor's ("S&P"),  Moody's Investors Service,
Inc.   ("Moody's"),   or  another  nationally   recognized   statistical  rating
organization  ("NRSRO") or, if unrated by any NRSRO,  deemed by NB Management to
be  comparable  to such  rated  securities  ("Comparable  Unrated  Securities").
Securities  rated by Moody's  in its fourth  highest  rating  category  (Baa) or
Comparable Unrated Securities may be deemed to have speculative characteristics.

               The ratings of an NRSRO  represent  its opinion as to the quality
of  securities  it  undertakes  to rate.  Ratings are not absolute  standards of
quality; consequently, securities with the same maturity, coupon, and rating may
have  different  yields.  Although the  Portfolio may rely on the ratings of any
NRSRO,  the Portfolio  primarily  refers to ratings assigned by S&P and Moody's,
which are described in Appendix A to this SAI.



                                       17
<PAGE>

               Fixed  income  securities  are subject to the risk of an issuer's
inability to meet principal and interest  payments on its  obligations  ("credit
risk") and are subject to price  volatility due to such factors as interest rate
sensitivity, market perception of the creditworthiness of the issuer, and market
liquidity ("market risk"). The value of the fixed income securities in which the
Portfolio  may invest is likely to decline  in times of rising  market  interest
rates.  Conversely,  when rates fall, the value of the Portfolio's  fixed income
investments  is likely to rise.  Foreign  debt  securities  are subject to risks
similar to those of other foreign securities.

               Lower-rated  securities are more likely to react to  developments
affecting  market and credit risk than are more highly rated  securities,  which
react  primarily  to  movements  in the general  level of interest  rates.  Debt
securities in the lowest  rating  categories  may involve a substantial  risk of
default or may be in default.  Changes in economic  conditions  or  developments
regarding the  individual  issuer are more likely to cause price  volatility and
weaken the  capacity  of the issuer of such  securities  to make  principal  and
interest payments than is the case for higher-grade debt securities. An economic
downturn  affecting the issuer may result in an increased  incidence of default.
The market for  lower-rated  securities  may be thinner and less active than for
higher-rated  securities.  Pricing of thinly traded securities  requires greater
judgment than pricing of securities for which market  transactions are regularly
reported.  NB  Management  will invest in  lower-rated  securities  only when it
concludes  that the  anticipated  return on such an  investment to the Portfolio
warrants exposure to the additional level of risk.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS. The Portfolio normally may invest up to
35% of its total assets in debt  securities.  The Portfolio may invest up to 15%
of its net assets in corporate debt securities  rated below  investment grade or
Comparable Unrated Securities.  Subsequent to its purchase by the Portfolio,  an
issue of debt securities may cease to be rated or its rating may be reduced,  so
that the  securities  would no longer be eligible for purchase by the Portfolio.
In such a case,  the  Portfolio  will  engage in an orderly  disposition  of the
downgraded  securities  to the extent  necessary to ensure that the  Portfolio's
holdings of  securities  rated below  investment  grade and  Comparable  Unrated
Securities will not exceed 15% of its net assets.

               COMMERCIAL PAPER.  Commercial paper is a short-term debt security
issued by a corporation or bank,  usually for purposes such as financing current
operations.  The Portfolio may invest in commercial  paper that cannot be resold
to the public without an effective  registration  statement  under the 1933 Act.
While restricted commercial paper normally is deemed illiquid, NB Management may
in certain  cases  determine  that such paper is liquid,  pursuant to guidelines
established by the Portfolio Trustees.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS.  The Portfolio may invest in commercial
paper only if it has received the highest rating from S&P (A-1) or Moody's (P-1)
or deemed by NB Management to be of comparable quality.

               ZERO COUPON  SECURITIES.  The Portfolio may invest in zero coupon
securities,  which are debt  obligations  that do not  entitle the holder to any
periodic  payment of interest  prior to  maturity or that  specify a future date
when the securities begin to pay current  interest.  Zero coupon  securities are
issued  and  traded at a discount  from  their  face  amount or par value.  This


                                       18
<PAGE>

discount varies depending on prevailing interest rates, the time remaining until
cash payments  begin,  the liquidity of the security,  and the perceived  credit
quality of the issuer.

        The discount on zero coupon securities  ("original issue discount") must
be taken into income ratably by the Portfolio prior to the receipt of any actual
payments.  Because the Fund must distribute  substantially all of its net income
(including its share of the Portfolio's  accrued original issue discount) to its
shareholders  each year for income and excise tax  purposes,  the  Portfolio may
have to dispose of portfolio securities under  disadvantageous  circumstances to
generate cash, or may be required to borrow, to satisfy the Fund's  distribution
requirements. See "Additional Tax Information."

               The market  prices of zero coupon  securities  generally are more
volatile  than the prices of  securities  that pay interest  periodically.  Zero
coupon  securities  are likely to respond  to  changes  in  interest  rates to a
greater degree than other types of debt securities having a similar maturity and
credit quality.

               CONVERTIBLE  SECURITIES.  The Portfolio may invest in convertible
securities. A convertible security is a bond, debenture,  note, preferred stock,
or other  security  that may be  converted  into or  exchanged  for a prescribed
amount of common  stock of the same or a different  issuer  within a  particular
period of time at a specified price or formula. Convertible securities generally
have features of both common stocks and debt securities.  A convertible security
entitles  the  holder to  receive  the  interest  paid or accrued on debt or the
dividend paid on preferred  stock until the convertible  security  matures or is
redeemed,  converted or exchanged. Before conversion, such securities ordinarily
provide a stream of income with  generally  higher  yields than common stocks of
the same or similar issuers,  but lower than the yield on non-convertible  debt.
Convertible    securities   are   usually    subordinated   to   comparable-tier
non-convertible  securities  but rank senior to common stock in a  corporation's
capital structure.  The value of a convertible security is a function of (1) its
yield in comparison to the yields of other securities of comparable maturity and
quality that do not have a conversion  privilege  and (2) its worth if converted
into the underlying common stock.

               The price of a convertible  security often reflects variations in
the price of the underlying common stock in a way that  non-convertible debt may
not.  Convertible  securities  are  typically  issued by smaller  capitalization
companies  whose stock prices may be  volatile.  A  convertible  security may be
subject to redemption at the option of the issuer at a price  established in the
security's governing instrument. If a convertible security held by the Portfolio
is called for redemption,  the Portfolio will be required to convert it into the
underlying common stock, sell it to a third party or permit the issuer to redeem
the  security.  Any of  these  actions  could  have  an  adverse  effect  on the
Portfolio's and the Fund's ability to achieve their investment objectives.

               POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS. Convertible debt securities are subject
to the Portfolio's  investment policies and limitations  concerning fixed income
securities.

               PREFERRED  STOCK.  The Portfolio  may invest in preferred  stock.
Unlike interest  payments on debt  securities,  dividends on preferred stock are
generally  payable  at  the  discretion  of the  issuer's  board  of  directors.
Preferred  shareholders  may have certain  rights if dividends  are not paid but


                                       19
<PAGE>

generally have no legal recourse  against the issuer.  Shareholders may suffer a
loss of value if dividends are not paid.  The market prices of preferred  stocks
are generally  more sensitive to changes in the issuer's  creditworthiness  than
are the prices of debt securities.

   
               OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES.  The Portfolio at times may invest in
instruments   structured  as  investment  companies  to  gain  exposure  to  the
performance of a recognized  securities index, such as the S&P "500" Index. As a
shareholder  in an investment  company,  the  Portfolio  would bear its pro rata
share of that  investment  company's  expenses.  Investment  in other  funds may
involve the payment of  substantial  premiums  above the value of such  issuer's
portfolio  securities.  The  Portfolio  does not  intend to invest in such funds
unless,  in the  judgment  of NB  Management,  the  potential  benefits  of such
investment justify the payment of any applicable premium or sales charge.

               POLICIES AND  LIMITATIONS.  The  Portfolio's  investment  in such
securities is limited to (i) 3% of the total voting stock of any one  investment
company,  (ii)  5% of the  Portfolio's  total  assets  with  respect  to any one
investment  company  and  (iii)  10%  of the  Portfolio's  total  assets  in the
aggregate.
    

                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

               The Fund's  performance  figures are based on historical  results
and are not intended to indicate future  performance.  The share price and total
return of the Fund will vary, and an investment in the Fund, when redeemed,  may
be worth more or less than an investor's  original  cost. As of the date of this
SAI, the Fund was new and had no performance history.

Total Return Computations
- -------------------------

               The Fund may  advertise  certain  total  return  information.  An
average  annual  compounded  rate of return  ("T") may be  computed by using the
redeemable  value at the end of a  specified  period  ("ERV") of a  hypothetical
initial  investment of $1,000 ("P") over a period of time ("n") according to the
formula:

                                  P(1+T)n(SUPERSCRIPT)= ERV

               Average annual total return smoothes out year-to-year  variations
in performance and, in that respect, differs from actual year-to-year results.

Comparative Information
- -----------------------

               From time to time the Fund's performance may be compared with:

               (1) data (that may be  expressed  as  rankings  or  ratings)
        published  by  independent  services  or  publications   (including
        newspapers,  newsletters,  and financial  periodicals) that monitor
        the  performance  of  mutual  funds,   such  as  Lipper  Analytical
        Services, Inc., C.D.A. Investment Technologies,  Inc., Wiesenberger
        Investment   Companies  Service,   Investment  Company  Data  Inc.,

                                       20
<PAGE>


        Morningstar, Inc., Micropal Incorporated, and quarterly mutual fund
        rankings  by  Money,  Fortune,   Forbes,  Business  Week,  Personal
        Investor,  and U.S. News & World Report magazines,  The Wall Street
        Journal,  The New York Times,  Kiplinger's  Personal  Finance,  and
        Barron's Newspaper, or

               (2)  recognized  stock  and other  indices,  such as the S&P
        "500" Composite Stock Price Index ("S&P 500 Index"),  S&P Small Cap
        600  Index  ("S&P  600  Index"),  S&P Mid Cap 400  Index  ("S&P 400
        Index"),  Russell 2000 Stock Index, Russell Midcap Value Index, Dow
        Jones  Industrial  Average  ("DJIA"),  Wilshire 1750 Index,  Nasdaq
        Composite Index,  Montgomery  Securities Growth Stock Index,  Value
        Line  Index,   U.S.   Department  of  Labor  Consumer  Price  Index
        ("Consumer Price Index"),  College Board Annual Survey of Colleges,
        Kanon Bloch's Family Performance Index, the Barra Growth Index, the
        Barra Value Index and various other  domestic,  international,  and
        global indices.  The S&P 500 Index is a broad index of common stock
        prices,  while the DJIA represents a narrower segment of industrial
        companies.  The S&P 600 Index includes  stocks that range in market
        value  from $35  million to $6.1  billion,  with an average of $572
        million.  The S&P 400 Index measures mid-sized  companies that have
        an average  market  capitalization  of $2.1  billion.  Each assumes
        reinvestment of distributions  and is calculated  without regard to
        tax  consequences  or the costs of  investing.  The  Portfolio  may
        invest in different types of securities from those included in some
        of the above indices.

               Evaluations of the Fund's  performance,  its total  returns,  and
comparisons  may be used  in  advertisements  and in  information  furnished  to
current and prospective shareholders (collectively,  "Advertisements"). The Fund
may  also be  compared  to  individual  asset  classes  such as  common  stocks,
small-cap stocks, or Treasury bonds,  based on information  supplied by Ibbotson
and Sinquefield.

Other Performance Information
- -----------------------------

               From time to time,  information  about the Portfolio's  portfolio
allocation   and  holdings  as  of  a   particular   date  may  be  included  in
Advertisements  for the Fund.  This  information  may  include  the  Portfolio's
portfolio  diversification by asset type. Information used in Advertisements may
include statements or illustrations  relating to the appropriateness of types of
securities  and/or mutual funds that may be employed to meet specific  financial
goals, such as (1) funding retirement,  (2) paying for children's education, and
(3) financially supporting aging parents.

               NB Management believes that many of its common stock funds may be
attractive investment vehicles for conservative  investors who are interested in
long-term appreciation from stock investments, but who have a moderate tolerance
for risk. Such investors may include, for example,  individuals (1) planning for
or  facing   retirement,   (2)  receiving  or  expecting  to  receive   lump-sum
distributions  from  individual  retirement  accounts  ("IRAs"),   self-employed
individual  retirement  plans ("Keogh plans"),  or other  retirement  plans, (3)




                                       21
<PAGE>


anticipating  rollovers of CDs or IRAs, Keogh plans, or other retirement  plans,
and (4) receiving a significant amount of money as a result of inheritance, sale
of a business, or termination of employment.

               Investors  who may find the Fund to be an  attractive  investment
vehicle also include  parents  saving to meet college costs for their  children.
For instance, the cost of a college education is rapidly approaching the cost of
the average family home.  Estimates of total four-year costs (tuition,  room and
board,  books and other expenses) for students starting college in various years
may be included in  Advertisements,  based on the College Board Annual Survey of
Colleges.

               Information  relating to inflation  and its effects on the dollar
also may be  included  in  Advertisements.  For  example,  after ten years,  the
purchasing  power of $25,000  would  shrink to $16,621,  $14,968,  $13,465,  and
$12,100,  respectively, if the annual rates of inflation during that period were
4%, 5%, 6%, and 7%, respectively.  (To calculate the purchasing power, the value
at the end of each  year is  reduced  by the  inflation  rate  for the  ten-year
period.)

               Information  regarding  the  effects of  automatic  investing  at
market highs and/or lows, and investing  early versus late for retirement  plans
also may be included in Advertisements, if appropriate.

                           CERTAIN RISK CONSIDERATIONS

               Although  the  Portfolio  seeks to reduce risk by  investing in a
diversified  portfolio of  securities,  diversification  does not  eliminate all
risk.  There can, of course,  be no  assurance  the  Portfolio  will achieve its
investment objective.

                              TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

               The  following  table  sets  forth  information   concerning  the
trustees and officers of the Trusts,  including  their  addresses  and principal
business  experience  during the past five years. Some persons named as trustees
and  officers  also  serve in  similar  capacities  for  other  funds  and their
corresponding  portfolios administered or managed by NB Management and Neuberger
Berman, LLC ("Neuberger Berman").


                                       22
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Name, Age, and                   Positions Held
Address(1)                       With the Trusts           Principal Occupation(s)(2)
- ----------                       ---------------           --------------------------
<S>                              <C>                       <C>

Faith Colish (63)                Trustee of each Trust     Attorney at Law, Faith Colish, A
63 Wall Street                                             Professional Corporation.
24th Floor
New York, NY  10005

   
Stanley Egener* (65)             Chairman of the Board,    Principal of Neuberger Berman;
                                 Chief Executive           President and Director of NB
                                 Officer, and Trustee of   Management; Chairman of the Board,
                                 each Trust                Chief Executive Officer and Trustee
                                                           of ten  other  mutual  funds for which NB
                                                           Management acts as investment  manager or
                                                           administrator.


Howard A. Mileaf (62)            Trustee of each Trust     Vice President and Special Counsel to
WHX Corporation                                            WHX Corporation (holding company)
110 East 59th Street                                       since 1992; Director of Kevlin
30th Floor                                                 Corporation (manufacturer of
New York, NY  10022                                        microwave and other products).
    

Edward I. O'Brien* (70)          Trustee of each Trust     Until 1993, President of the
12 Woods Lane                                              Securities Industry Association
Scarsdale, NY 10583                                        ("SIA") (securities industry's
                                                           representative in government relations
                                                           and regulatory matters at the federal and
                                                           state levels); until November 1993,
                                                           employee of the SIA; Director of Legg
                                                           Mason, Inc.

John T. Patterson, Jr. (70)      Trustee of each Trust     Retired.  Formerly, President of
7082 Siena Court                                           SOBRO (South Bronx Overall Economic
Boca Raton, FL  33433                                      Development Corporation).

John P. Rosenthal (66)           Trustee of each Trust     Senior Vice President of Burnham
Burnham Securities Inc.                                    Securities Inc. (a registered
Burnham Asset Management Corp.                             broker-dealer) since 1991; Director,
1325 Avenue of the Americas                                Cancer Treatment Holdings, Inc.
17th Floor
New York, NY  10019


                                                 23
<PAGE>

Name, Age, and                   Positions Held
Address(1)                       With the Trusts           Principal Occupation(s)(2)
- ----------                       ---------------           --------------------------

Cornelius T. Ryan (67)           Trustee of each Trust     General Partner of Oxford Partners
Oxford Bioscience Partners                                 and Oxford Bioscience Partners
315 Post Road West                                         (venture capital partnerships) and
Westport, CT  06880                                        President of Oxford Venture
                                                           Corporation; Director of Capital Cash
                                                           Management Trust (money market fund) and
                                                           Prime Cash Fund.

   
Gustave H. Shubert (70)          Trustee of each Trust     Senior Fellow/Corporate Advisor and
13838 Sunset Boulevard                                     Advisory Trustee of Rand (a non-profit
Pacific Palisades, CA  90272                               public interest research institution)
                                                           since 1989; Honorary Member of the Board
                                                           of Overseers of the Institute for Civil
                                                           Justice, the Policy Advisory Committee of
                                                           the Clinical Scholars Program at the
                                                           University of California, the American
                                                           Association for the Advancement of
                                                           Science, the Counsel on Foreign
                                                           Relations, and the Institute for
                                                           Strategic Studies (London); advisor to
                                                           the Program Evaluation and Methodology
                                                           Division of the U.S. General Accounting
                                                           Office; formerly Senior Vice President
                                                           and Trustee of Rand.

Lawrence  Zicklin* (62)          President and Trustee     Principal of Neuberger Berman;  Director                     
                                 of each Trust             of NB Management; President and/or
                                                           Trustee of seven other mutual funds for
                                                           which NB Management acts as investment
                                                           manager or administrator.

Daniel  J. Sullivan  (59)        Vice President of each    Senior Vice President of NB  Management
                                 Trust                     since 1992; Vice President of ten other
                                                           mutual funds for which NB Management acts
                                                           as investment manager or administrator.
                                                               


                                                 24
<PAGE>

   
Michael J. Weiner (52)           Vice President and        Senior Vice President of NB  Management
                                 Principal Financial       since 1992; Principal of Officer                
                                 of each Trust             Neuberger Berman since 1998; Treasurer of
                                                           NB Management from 1992 to 1996; Vice
                                                           President and Principal Financial Officer
                                                           of ten other mutual funds for which NB
                                                           Management acts as investment manager or
                                                           administrator.
                                                           

Claudia  A.  Brandon             Secretary  of  each       Director, Corporate Secretarial, of  
(42)                                                       Neuberger Berman since 1999; formerly Vice 
                                                           President of NB Management; Secretary of
                                                           ten other mutual funds for which NB
                                                           Management acts as investment manager or
                                                           administrator.

Richard Russell (52)
                                 Treasurer and Principal   Vice President of NB  Management since
                                 Accounting Officer of     1993; Treasurer and Principal Accounting  
                                 each Trust                Officer of ten other mutual funds for which 
                                                           NB Management acts as investment manager
                                                           or administrator.

Stacy Cooper-Shugrue             Assistant Secretary of    Assistant Director, Corporate 
(36)                             each  Trust               1999; formerly Assistant Vice President
                                                           of NB Management; Assistant Secretary of
                                                           ten other mutual funds for which NB
                                                           Management acts as investment manager or
                                                           administrator.

C.  Carl  Randolph  (61)         Assistant Secretary of    Principal of Neuberger  Berman  since  1992;
                                 each Trust                Assistant Secretary of ten other mutual
                                                           funds for which NB Management acts as
                                                           investment manager or administrator.
                                                           

                                                 25
<PAGE>


Name, Age, and                   Positions Held
Address(1)                       With the Trusts           Principal Occupation(s)(2)
- ----------                       ---------------           --------------------------


Barbara DiGiorgio (40) Assistant
                                                           Assistant Vice President of NB Treasurer
                                                           of each Trust Management since 1993;
                                                           Assistant Treasurer since 1996 of ten
                                                           other mutual funds for which NB
                                                           Management acts as investment manager or
                                                           administrator. 

Celeste Wischerth (38)
                                                           Assistant Treasurer of Assistant Vice
                                                           President of NB each Trust Management
                                                           since 1994; prior thereto, employee of NB
                                                           Management; Assistant Treasurer since
                                                           1996 of ten other mutual funds for which
                                                           NB Management acts as investment manager
                                                           or administrator.
</TABLE>


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

(1) Unless  otherwise  indicated,  the business address of each listed person is
605 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10158.

(2) Except as otherwise indicated,  each individual has held the positions shown
for at least the last five years.

*  Indicates  a trustee who is an  "interested  person" of the Trust  within the
meaning of the 1940 Act.  Messrs.  Egener and Zicklin are interested  persons by
virtue of the fact that they are officers and/or  directors of NB Management and
principals of Neuberger Berman. Mr. O'Brien is an interested person by virtue of
the fact that he is a director of Legg Mason, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of
which,  from time to time,  serves as a broker  or dealer to the  Portfolio  and
other funds for which NB Management serves as investment manager.

               The Trust's Trust Instrument and Managers Trust's  Declaration of
Trust  provide  that each such Trust will  indemnify  its  trustees and officers
against   liabilities  and  expenses  reasonably  incurred  in  connection  with
litigation  in which  they may be  involved  because of their  offices  with the
Trust,  unless it is  adjudicated  that they (a)  engaged in bad faith,  willful
misfeasance,  gross negligence,  or reckless disregard of the duties involved in
the conduct of their offices, or (b) did not act in good faith in the reasonable
belief that their action was in the best  interest of the Trust.  In the case of
settlement,  such  indemnification  will  not be  provided  unless  it has  been
determined  (by a  court  or  other  body  approving  the  settlement  or  other
disposition,  by a majority  of  disinterested  trustees  based upon a review of
readily  available  facts, or in a written opinion of independent  counsel) that
such  officers or trustees have not engaged in willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,
gross negligence, or reckless disregard of their duties.


                                       26
<PAGE>


               The  following  table  sets  forth  information   concerning  the
compensation  of the trustees of the Trust.  None of the Neuberger  Berman Funds
has any retirement plan for its trustees.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                        TABLE OF COMPENSATION
                                    FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDED 8/31/98
                                    -----------------------------
                                                                          Total Compensation from
                                                                          Investment Companies in
Name and Position                            Aggregate Compensation       the Neuberger Berman Fund
with Each Trust                              from the Trust               Complex Paid to Trustees
- ---------------                              -------------                ------------------------
<S>                                          <C>                          <C>    

Faith Colish                                 $5,924                       $84,500
Trustee                                                                   (5 other investment
                                                                          companies)


Stanley Egener                               $0                           $0
Chairman of the Board,                                                    (9 other investment
Chief Executive                                                           companies)
Officer, and Trustee

Howard A. Mileaf                             $5,980                       $52,000
Trustee                                                                   (4 other investment
                                                                          companies)

Edward I. O'Brien                            $6,400                       $51,750
Trustee                                                                   (3 other investment
                                                                          companies)

John T. Patterson, Jr.                       $6,456                       $55,750
Trustee                                                                   (4 other investment
                                                                          companies)

John P. Rosenthal                            $5,528                       $47,750
Trustee                                                                   (4 other investment
                                                                          companies)

Cornelius T. Ryan                            $6,037                       $48,750
Trustee                                                                   (3 other investment
                                                                          companies)

Gustave H. Shubert                           $5,980                       $48,250
Trustee                                                                   (3 other investment
                                                                          companies)

Lawrence Zicklin                             $0                           $0
President and Trustee                                                     (5 other investment
                                                                          companies)
</TABLE>



                                       27
<PAGE>

               At March 31, 1999, the trustees and officers of the Trusts,  as a
group, owned beneficially or of record less than 1% of the outstanding shares of
the Fund.

                INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICES

Investment Manager and Administrator
- ------------------------------------

   
               Because all of the Fund's net  investable  assets are invested in
the  Portfolio,  the Fund does not need an  investment  manager.  NB  Management
serves as the Portfolio's  investment manager pursuant to a management agreement
with Managers Trust,  dated as of August 2, 1993 ("Management  Agreement").  The
Management  Agreement  was  approved  by the  holders  of the  interests  in the
Portfolio on June 1, 1999.
    

               The  Management  Agreement  provides,   in  substance,   that  NB
Management will make and implement investment decisions for the Portfolio in its
discretion  and  will  continuously   develop  an  investment  program  for  the
Portfolio's  assets.  The Management  Agreement  permits NB Management to effect
securities transactions on behalf of the Portfolio through associated persons of
NB Management.  The Management Agreement also specifically permits NB Management
to  compensate,  through  higher  commissions,  brokers  and dealers who provide
investment research and analysis to the Portfolio, although NB Management has no
current plans to pay a material amount of such compensation.

               NB Management  provides to the Portfolio,  without separate cost,
office space,  equipment,  and facilities and the personnel necessary to perform
executive,  administrative,  and  clerical  functions.  NB  Management  pays all
salaries,  expenses,  and  fees of the  officers,  trustees,  and  employees  of
Managers Trust who are officers,  directors, or employees of NB Management.  Two
directors of NB Management (who also are principals of Neuberger Berman), one of
whom also serves as an officer of NB Management, presently serve as trustees and
officers of the Trusts.  See "Trustees  and  Officers."  The  Portfolio  pays NB
Management a management fee based on the  Portfolio's  average daily net assets,
as described below.

               NB Management  provides  facilities,  services and personnel,  as
well as accounting,  recordkeeping,  and other services, to the Fund pursuant to
an administration  agreement with the Trust, dated August 3, 1993, as amended on
August 2, 1996. ("Administration  Agreement"). The Fund was authorized to become
subject to the  Administration  Agreement by vote of the Fund  Trustees on April
28, 1999, and became  subject to it on April 30, 1999.  For such  administrative
services,  the Fund pays NB  Management a fee based on the Fund's  average daily
net assets,  as  described  below.  NB  Management  enters  into  administrative
services  agreements  with  Institutions,   pursuant  to  which  it  compensates
Institutions for accounting,  recordkeeping and other services that they provide
in connection with investments in the Fund.

               Institutions  may be  subject to federal or state laws that limit
their  ability  to  provide  certain   administrative  or   distribution-related
services.  For  example,  the  Glass-Steagall  Act is generally  interpreted  to
prohibit most banks from underwriting  mutual fund shares. NB Management intends
to contract with  Institutions for only those services they may legally provide.
If, due to a change in the laws governing  Institutions or in the interpretation

                                       28
<PAGE>


of any such law, an Institution is prohibited from performing some or all of the
above-described  services,  NB  Management  may be required to find  alternative
means of providing those services. Any such change is not expected to impact the
Fund or its shareholders adversely.

Management and Administration Fees
- ----------------------------------

               For  investment  management  services,   the  Portfolio  pays  NB
Management  a fee at the annual rate of 0.55% of the first $250  million of that
Portfolio's average daily net assets, 0.525% of the next $250 million,  0.50% of
the next $250 million,  0.475% of the next $250 million,  0.45% of the next $500
million, and 0.425% of average daily net assets in excess of $1.5 billion.

               NB Management provides  administrative  services to the Fund that
includes  furnishing  facilities  and  personnel  for the  Fund  and  performing
accounting, recordkeeping, and other services. For such administrative services,
the Fund pays NB  Management  a fee at the  annual  rate of 0.40% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets.  With the Fund's consent NB Management may subcontract
some of its responsibilities to the Fund under the administration  agreement and
may compensate each Institution that provides such services at an annual rate of
up to 0.25% of the average net asset  value of Fund  shares  held  through  that
Institution.

               NB Management has contractually  undertaken to reimburse the Fund
for  its  total  operating  expenses  (excluding  interest,   taxes,   brokerage
commissions and extraordinary  expenses) which exceed,  in the aggregate,  1.50%
per annum of the Fund's average daily net assets.  This undertaking  lasts until
December  31,  2002.  The Fund has  contractually  undertaken  to  reimburse  NB
Management,  until  December  31,  2005,  for  the  excess  expenses  paid by NB
Management,  provided the reimbursements do not cause the Fund's total operating
expenses (exclusive of taxes, interest,  brokerage commissions and extraordinary
expenses)  to exceed an  annual  rate of 1.50% of  average  net  assets  and the
reimbursements are made within three years after the year in which NB Management
incurred the expense.

               The  Management  Agreement  continues  until August 2, 1999.  The
Management  Agreement is renewable  thereafter from year to year with respect to
the Portfolio,  so long as its  continuance is approved at least annually (1) by
the  vote of a  majority  of the  Portfolio  Trustees  who  are not  "interested
persons" of NB Management or Managers Trust ("Independent  Portfolio Trustees"),
cast in person at a meeting  called for the purpose of voting on such  approval,
and (2) by the vote of a majority  of the  Portfolio  Trustees  or by a 1940 Act
majority vote of the outstanding interests in the Portfolio.  The Administration
Agreement  continues  until  August 2, 1999.  The  Administration  Agreement  is
renewable from year to year with respect to the Fund, so long as its continuance
is approved at least annually (1) by the vote of a majority of the Fund Trustees
who are not  "interested  persons" of NB Management  or the Trust  ("Independent
Fund Trustees"), cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on
such  approval,  and (2) by the vote of a majority of the Fund  Trustees or by a
1940 Act majority vote of the outstanding shares in the Fund.

               The Management  Agreement is terminable,  without  penalty,  with
respect to the Portfolio on 60 days' written  notice either by Managers Trust or
by NB Management.  The Administration Agreement is terminable,  without penalty,


                                       29
<PAGE>

with respect to the Fund on 60 days'  written  notice either by NB Management or
by the Trust. Each Agreement terminates automatically if it is assigned.

Sub-Adviser
- -----------

   
               NB Management  retains  Neuberger Berman,  605 Third Avenue,  New
York, NY 10158-3698,  as sub-adviser with respect to the Portfolio pursuant to a
sub-advisory  agreement  dated August 2, 1993  ("Sub-Advisory  Agreement").  The
Portfolio was  authorized  to become  subject to the  Sub-Advisory  Agreement on
April 28,  1999 and became  subject to it on April 30,  1999.  The  Sub-Advisory
Agreement  was approved by the holders of the interests in the Portfolio on June
1, 1999.
    

               The Sub-Advisory  Agreement  provides in substance that Neuberger
Berman will furnish to NB Management,  upon reasonable request, the same type of
investment  recommendations  and research that  Neuberger  Berman,  from time to
time,  provides to its  principals  and  employees  for use in  managing  client
accounts.  In this manner,  NB  Management  expects to have  available to it, in
addition to research  from other  professional  sources,  the  capability of the
research staff of Neuberger Berman.  This staff consists of numerous  investment
analysts, each of whom specializes in studying one or more industries, under the
supervision of the Director of Research,  who is also available for consultation
with NB Management.  The Sub-Advisory Agreement provides that NB Management will
pay for the  services  rendered  by  Neuberger  Berman  based on the  direct and
indirect costs to Neuberger Berman in connection with those services.  Neuberger
Berman also serves as  sub-adviser  for all of the other mutual funds managed by
NB Management.

               The Sub-Advisory  Agreement continues until August 2, 1999 and is
renewable from year to year,  subject to approval of its continuance in the same
manner as the Management  Agreement.  The  Sub-Advisory  Agreement is subject to
termination,  without  penalty,  with respect to the  Portfolio by the Portfolio
Trustees  or a 1940  Act  majority  vote  of the  outstanding  interests  in the
Portfolio, by NB Management, or by Neuberger Berman on not less than 30 nor more
than 60  days'  written  notice.  The  Sub-Advisory  Agreement  also  terminates
automatically  with  respect  to  the  Portfolio  if it is  assigned  or if  the
Management Agreement terminates with respect to the Portfolio.

               Most  money   managers   that  come  to  the   Neuberger   Berman
organization  have at least fifteen years  experience.  Neuberger  Berman and NB
Management  employ   experienced   professionals  that  work  in  a  competitive
environment.

Investment Companies Managed
- ----------------------------

   
               As of March 31,  1999,  the  investment  companies  managed by NB
Management  had  aggregate  net  assets  of  approximately   $19.3  billion.  NB
Management  currently serves as investment  manager of the following  investment
companies:
    

                                       30
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       Approximate Net Assets
                     Name                                                 at March 31, 1999
                     ----                                                 -----------------
<S>                                                                             <C>    

   
Neuberger Berman Cash Reserves Portfolio                                        $1,072,658,659
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Cash Reserves)

Neuberger Berman Government Money Portfolio                                       $676,709,830
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Government Money Fund)

Neuberger Berman High Yield Bond Portfolio                                         $26,206,698
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman High Yield Bond Fund)

Neuberger Berman Limited Maturity Bond                                            $327,757,663
Portfolio
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Limited Maturity Bond Fund and
        Neuberger Berman Limited Maturity Bond
        Trust)

Neuberger Berman Municipal Securities Portfolio                                    $39,438,060
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Municipal Securities Trust)

Neuberger Berman Municipal Money Portfolio                                        $215,374,856
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Municipal Money Fund)

Neuberger Berman Focus Portfolio                                                $1,662,517,815
(investment portfolio for Neuberger Berman
Focus Fund, Neuberger Berman Focus Trust, and
Neuberger Berman Focus Assets)

Neuberger Berman Genesis Portfolio                                              $1,614,791,480
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Genesis Fund, Neuberger Berman
        Genesis Trust and Neuberger Berman
        Genesis Assets)

Neuberger Berman Guardian Portfolio                                             $5,431,627,047
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Guardian Fund, Neuberger Berman
        Guardian Trust and Neuberger Berman
        Guardian Assets)

                                       31
<PAGE>

                                                                       Approximate Net Assets
                     Name                                                 at March 31, 1999
                     ----                                                 -----------------

Neuberger Berman International Portfolio                                          $121,120,636
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman International Fund and
        Neuberger Berman International Trust)

Neuberger Berman Manhattan Portfolio                                              $635,833,975
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Manhattan Fund, Neuberger
        Berman Manhattan Trust and Neuberger
        Berman Manhattan Assets)

Neuberger Berman Millennium Portfolio                                              $30,289,813
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Millennium Fund and Neuberger
        Berman Millennium Trust)

Neuberger Berman Partners Portfolio                                             $3,973,621,156
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Partners Fund,
        Neuberger Berman Partners Trust and
        Neuberger Berman Partners Assets)

Neuberger Berman Socially Responsive Portfolio                                    $362,264,160
        (investment portfolio for Neuberger
        Berman Socially Responsive Fund,
        Neuberger Berman Socially Responsive
        Trust, Neuberger Berman NYCDC Socially
        Responsive Trust and Neuberger Berman
        Socially Responsive Assets)

Advisers Managers Trust                                                         $2,524,184,209
        (eight series)
    

</TABLE>

               The investment  decisions  concerning the Portfolio and the other
mutual funds managed by NB Management (collectively, "Other NB Funds") have been
and will  continue to be made  independently  of one another.  In terms of their
investment  objectives,  most of the Other NB Funds  differ from the  Portfolio.
Even where the investment  objectives are similar,  however, the methods used by


                                       32
<PAGE>

the Other NB Funds and the Portfolio to achieve their objectives may differ. The
investment  results achieved by all of the mutual funds managed by NB Management
have varied from one another in the past and are likely to vary in the future.

               There may be occasions  when the Portfolio and one or more of the
Other  NB  Funds  or  other   accounts   managed   by   Neuberger   Berman   are
contemporaneously  engaged in purchasing or selling the same  securities from or
to third parties.  When this occurs,  the  transactions are averaged as to price
and allocated, in terms of amount, in accordance with a formula considered to be
equitable to the funds  involved.  Although in some cases this  arrangement  may
have a  detrimental  effect on the price or volume of the  securities  as to the
Portfolio,  in  other  cases it is  believed  that the  Portfolio's  ability  to
participate in volume  transactions may produce better executions for it. In any
case, it is the judgment of the Portfolio  Trustees that the desirability of the
Portfolio's  having its advisory  arrangements with NB Management  outweighs any
disadvantages that may result from contemporaneous transactions.

               The  Portfolio is subject to certain  limitations  imposed on all
advisory  clients of Neuberger  Berman  (including the  Portfolio,  the Other NB
Funds,  and other managed  accounts)  and personnel of Neuberger  Berman and its
affiliates.  These include,  for example,  limits that may be imposed in certain
industries or by certain companies,  and policies of Neuberger Berman that limit
the aggregate  purchases,  by all accounts under management,  of the outstanding
shares of public companies.

Management and Control of NB Management
- ---------------------------------------

   
               The  directors  and officers of NB  Management,  all of whom have
offices at the same address as NB Management, are Richard A. Cantor, Chairman of
the Board and director;  Stanley  Egener,  President  and director;  Theodore P.
Giuliano,  Vice  President and director;  Michael M. Kassen,  Vice President and
director;  Irwin  Lainoff,  director;  Lawrence  Zicklin,  director;  Daniel  J.
Sullivan,  Senior Vice  President;  Peter E.  Sundman,  Senior  Vice  President;
Michael J.  Weiner,  Senior Vice  President;  Andrea  Trachtenberg,  Senior Vice
President;  Patrick T. Byrne,  Vice  President;  Brooke A. Cobb, Vice President;
Valerie Chang,  Vice President;  Robert W. D'Alelio,  Vice President;  Clara Del
Villar, Vice President; Brian J. Gaffney, Vice President;  Joseph G. Galli, Vice
President;  Robert I.  Gendelman,  Vice  President;  Josephine P. Mahaney,  Vice
President;  Michael F. Malouf, Vice President;  S. Basu Mullick, Vice President;
Janet W.  Prindle,  Vice  President;  Kevin L. Risen,  Vice  President;  Richard
Russell,  Vice President;  Jennifer K. Silver,  Vice President;  Kent C. Simons,
Vice  President;  Frederic  B.  Soule,  Vice  President;  Judith M.  Vale,  Vice
President; Susan Stang, Vice President;  Susan Walsh, Vice President;  Catherine
Waterworth,  Vice President;  Allan R. White III, Vice President;  Robert Conti,
Treasurer; Ramesh Babu, Assistant Vice President;  Barbara DiGiorgio,  Assistant
Vice President;  Robert L. Ladd,  Assistant Vice President;  Carmen G. Martinez,
Assistant Vice  President;  Joseph S. Quirk,  Assistant Vice  President;  Ingrid
Saukaitis,  Assistant Vice President;  Benjamin Segal, Assistant Vice President;
Josephine Velez,  Assistant Vice President;  Celeste  Wischerth,  Assistant Vice
President;  and Ellen Metzger,  Secretary.  Messrs.  Cantor,  D'Alelio,  Egener,
Gendelman,  Giuliano, Kassen, Lainoff, Risen, Simons, Sundman, Weiner, White and
Zicklin and Mmes. Prindle, Silver and Vale are principals of Neuberger Berman.
    


                                       33
<PAGE>
               Messrs.  Egener and Zicklin are trustees and officers and Messrs.
Russell,  Sullivan and Weiner and Mmes.  DiGiorgio and Wischerth are officers of
the Trust.

               All of the outstanding  voting stock in NB Management is owned by
persons who are also principals of Neuberger Berman.

                            DISTRIBUTION ARRANGEMENTS

               NB  Management  serves  as  the  distributor  ("Distributor")  in
connection with the offering of the Fund's shares to Institutions. In connection
with the sale of its shares,  the Fund has  authorized  the  Distributor to give
only the  information,  and to make  only the  statements  and  representations,
contained  in the  Prospectus  and this SAI or that  properly may be included in
sales  literature and  advertisements  in accordance with the 1933 Act, the 1940
Act, and applicable rules of  self-regulatory  organizations.  Sales may be made
only by the Prospectus, which may be delivered personally, through the mails, or
by electronic  means.  The  Distributor  is the Fund's  "principal  underwriter"
within the meaning of the 1940 Act and, as such,  acts as agent in arranging for
the sale of the Fund's shares to Institutions  without sales commission or other
compensation  and bears all advertising and promotion  expenses  incurred in the
sale of the Fund's shares.

               The Trust, on behalf of the Fund, and the Distributor are parties
to a  Distribution  and Services  Agreement  dated February 12, 1996, as amended
August  2, 1996  ("Distribution  Agreement").  The  Distribution  Agreement  was
approved by the Fund  Trustees,  including a majority  of the  Independent  Fund
Trustees and a majority of those Independent Fund Trustees who have no direct or
indirect  financial  interest in the Distribution  Agreement or the Trust's plan
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act ("Plan") ("Rule 12b-1  Trustees"),  on
April 28, 1999. The Distribution  Agreement  continues until August 2, 1999. The
Distribution  Agreement may be renewed annually if specifically  approved by (1)
the vote of a majority of the Fund  Trustees or a 1940 Act majority  vote of the
Fund's outstanding shares and (2) the vote of a majority of the Independent Fund
Trustees and a majority of the Rule 12b-1 Trustees,  cast in person at a meeting
called for the purpose of voting on such approval.  The  Distribution  Agreement
may be  terminated  by either  party  and will  terminate  automatically  on its
assignment, in the same manner as the Management Agreement.

Rule 12b-1 Plan
- ---------------

               The Fund  Trustees  adopted the Plan with  respect to the Fund on
April 28, 1999.  The Plan provides  that the Fund will  compensate NB Management
for  administrative  and other services provided to the Fund, its activities and
expenses  related to the sale and  distribution  of Fund shares,  and/or ongoing
services to investors in the Fund.  Under the Plan, NB Management  receives from
the Fund a fee at the  annual  rate of 0.10% of the  Fund's  average  daily  net
assets.  NB Management may pay up to the full amount of this fee to Institutions
that  distribute or make available  Fund shares and/or  provide  services to the
Fund and its shareholders.  The fee paid to an Institution is based on the level
of such services  provided.  Institutions  may use the payments for, among other
purposes,  compensating employees engaged in sales and/or shareholder servicing.
The amount of fees paid by the Fund during any year may be more or less than the
cost of distribution  and other services  provided to the Fund. NASD rules limit

                                       34
<PAGE>
the amount of annual  distribution and service fees that may be paid by a mutual
fund and impose a ceiling on the cumulative  distribution fees paid. The Trust's
plan complies with these rules.

        The Plan provides that a written report identifying the amounts expended
by the Fund and the  purposes  for  which  such  expenditures  were made must be
provided to the Fund Trustees for their review at least quarterly.

        Prior to  approving  the  Plan,  the Fund  Trustees  considered  various
factors relating to the  implementation of the Plan and determined that there is
a  reasonable   likelihood   that  the  Plan  will  benefit  the  Fund  and  its
shareholders. The Fund Trustees noted that the purpose of the master/feeder fund
structure  is to permit  access to a variety of markets.  To the extent the Plan
allows  the Fund to  penetrate  markets  to which it would  not  otherwise  have
access,  the Plan may result in additional sales of Fund shares;  this, in turn,
may enable the Fund to achieve economies of scale that could reduce expenses. In
addition, certain on-going shareholder services may be provided more effectively
by Institutions with which shareholders have an existing relationship.

               The Plan  continues  until August 2, 1999.  The Plan is renewable
thereafter  from  year to year  with  respect,  so  long as its  continuance  is
approved at least  annually  (1) by the vote of a majority of the Fund  Trustees
and (2) by a vote of the majority of the Rule 12b-1 Trustees,  cast in person at
a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval. The Plan may not be
amended to increase  materially  the amount of fees paid by the Fund  thereunder
unless such amendment is approved by a 1940 Act majority vote of the outstanding
shares of the Fund and by the Fund Trustees in the manner  described  above. The
Plan is terminable  with respect at any time by a vote of a majority of the Rule
12b-1 Trustees or by a 1940 Act majority vote of the  outstanding  shares in the
Fund.

                         ADDITIONAL PURCHASE INFORMATION

Share Prices and Net Asset Value
- --------------------------------

               The  Fund's  shares  are  bought  or sold at a price  that is the
Fund's NAV per share.  The NAVs for the Fund and the Portfolio are calculated by
subtracting  total  liabilities from total assets (in the case of the Portfolio,
the  market  value of the  securities  the  Portfolio  holds plus cash and other
assets;  in the case of the Fund,  its  percentage  interest  in the  Portfolio,
multiplied by the Portfolio's NAV, plus any other assets).  The Fund's per share
NAV is calculated  by dividing its NAV by the number of Fund shares  outstanding
and  rounding the result to the nearest  full cent.  The Fund and the  Portfolio
calculate their NAVs as of the close of regular  trading on the NYSE,  usually 4
p.m. Eastern time, on each day the NYSE is open.

               The Portfolio values securities (including options) listed on the
NYSE,  the American Stock  Exchange or other  national  securities  exchanges or
quoted on The  Nasdaq  Stock  Market,  and  other  securities  for which  market
quotations are readily available, at the last reported sale price on the day the
securities are being valued.  If there is no reported sale of such a security on
that day,  the  security is valued at the mean between its closing bid and asked
prices on that day.  The  Portfolio  values  all other  securities  and  assets,
including  restricted  securities,  by a method  that the  trustees of the Trust
believe accurately reflects fair value.



                                       35
<PAGE>

              If NB Management  believes  that the price of a security  obtained
under  the  Portfolio's  valuation  procedures  (as  described  above)  does not
represent  the  amount  that the  Portfolio  reasonably  expects to receive on a
current sale of the security,  the Portfolio  will value the security based on a
method that the trustees of the Managers Trust believe accurately  reflects fair
value.

                        ADDITIONAL REDEMPTION INFORMATION

Suspension of Redemptions
- -------------------------

               The right to redeem the Fund's shares may be suspended or payment
of the redemption price postponed (1) when the NYSE is closed,  (2) when trading
on the NYSE is restricted,  (3) when an emergency exists as a result of which it
is not reasonably practicable for the Portfolio to dispose of securities it owns
or fairly to determine the value of its net assets, or (4) for such other period
as the SEC may by order permit for the  protection  of the Fund's  shareholders.
Applicable  SEC  rules and  regulations  shall  govern  whether  the  conditions
prescribed  in (2) or (3)  exist.  If the  right  of  redemption  is  suspended,
shareholders  may  withdraw  their  offers of  redemption,  or they will receive
payment at the NAV per share in effect at the close of business on the first day
the NYSE is open ("Business Day") after termination of the suspension.

Redemptions in Kind
- -------------------

               The Fund reserves the right, under certain  conditions,  to honor
any  request  for  redemption  (or a  combination  of  requests  from  the  same
shareholder in any 90-day period) exceeding  $250,000 or 1% of the net assets of
the Fund, whichever is less, by making payment in whole or in part in securities
valued as described in "Share Prices and Net Asset Value"  above.  If payment is
made in securities,  an Institution  generally will incur brokerage  expenses or
other  transaction  costs in converting  those  securities into cash and will be
subject to fluctuation in the market prices of those  securities  until they are
sold. The Fund does not redeem in kind under normal circumstances,  but would do
so when the Fund Trustees  determined  that it was in the best  interests of the
Fund's shareholders as a whole.

                        DIVIDENDS AND OTHER DISTRIBUTIONS

               The Fund distributes to its shareholders substantially all of its
share of any net investment income,  (after deducting expenses incurred directly
by the Fund),  any net realized  capital gains,  and any net realized gains from
foreign  currency  transactions  earned  or  realized  by  the  Portfolio.   The
Portfolio's  net investment  income  consists of all income accrued on portfolio
assets less accrued expenses,  but does not include capital and foreign currency
gains and  losses.  Net  investment  income  and  realized  gains and losses are
reflected in the  Portfolio's  NAV (and,  hence,  the Fund's NAV) until they are
distributed.  The Fund calculates its net investment income and NAV per share as
of the close of regular  trading on the NYSE on each  Business Day (usually 4:00
p.m. Eastern time).

   
               Dividends from net  investment  income and  distributions  of net
realized  capital and foreign  currency  gains,  if any,  normally are paid once
annually, in December.
    
 

                                     36
<PAGE>

               Dividends and other distributions are automatically reinvested in
additional shares of the Fund, unless the Institution  elects to receive them in
cash ("cash  election").  To the extent  dividends and other  distributions  are
subject to federal,  state,  or local income  taxation,  they are taxable to the
shareholders  whether  received in cash or  reinvested  in Fund  shares.  A cash
election  with  respect  to the Fund  remains  in effect  until the  Institution
notifies the Fund in writing to discontinue the election.

                           ADDITIONAL TAX INFORMATION

Taxation of the Fund
- --------------------

   
               To qualify for  treatment as a RIC under the Code,  the Fund must
distribute  to its  shareholders  for  each  taxable  year at  least  90% of its
investment  company  taxable  income  (consisting  generally  of net  investment
income, net short-term capital gain, and net gains from certain foreign currency
transactions)  ("Distribution  Requirement")  and must meet  several  additional
requirements. These requirements include the following: (1) the Fund must derive
at least 90% of its gross  income each taxable  year from  dividends,  interest,
payments  with  respect to  securities  loans,  and gains from the sale or other
disposition  of securities  or foreign  currencies,  or other income  (including
gains  from  Hedging  Instruments)  derived  with  respect  to its  business  of
investing in securities or those currencies ("Income  Requirement");  and (2) at
the close of each quarter of the Fund's  taxable  year,  (i) at least 50% of the
value of its total  assets  must be  represented  by cash and cash  items,  U.S.
Government  securities,  securities of other RICs, and other securities limited,
in respect of any one issuer,  to an amount that does not exceed 5% of the value
of the  Fund's  total  assets and that does not  represent  more than 10% of the
issuer's outstanding voting securities,  and (ii) not more than 25% of the value
of its total assets may be invested in  securities  (other than U.S.  Government
securities or securities of other RICs) of any one issuer. If the Fund failed to
qualify as a RIC for any taxable  year,  it would be taxed on the full amount of
its taxable income for that year without being able to deduct the  distributions
it  makes  to its  shareholders  and the  shareholders  would  treat  all  those
distributions,  including  distributions  of net capital gain (the excess of net
long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss), as dividends (that is,
ordinary income) to the extent of the Fund's earnings and profits.
    

               Certain funds that invest in portfolios managed by NB Management,
including  the Sister Fund,  have  received  rulings  from the Internal  Revenue
Service  ("Service")  that each such fund,  as an investor in its  corresponding
portfolio, will be deemed to own a proportionate share of the portfolio's assets
and income for  purposes  of  determining  whether  the fund  satisfies  all the
requirements described above to qualify as a RIC. Although these rulings may not
be relied on as precedent by the Fund, NB Management believes that the reasoning
thereof and, hence, their conclusion apply to the Fund as well.

               The  Fund  will be  subject  to a  nondeductible  4%  excise  tax
("Excise  Tax") to the extent it fails to  distribute by the end of any calendar
year substantially all of its ordinary income for that year and capital gain net
income for the one-year  period  ended on October 31 of that year,  plus certain
other amounts.


                                       37
<PAGE>

               See the next section for a discussion of the tax  consequences to
the Fund of distributions to it from the Portfolio, investments by the Portfolio
in certain securities, and hedging transactions engaged in by the Portfolio.

Taxation of the Portfolio
- -------------------------

   
               Certain  investment  portfolios  managed  by NB  Management  have
received rulings from the Service to the effect that,  among other things,  each
portfolio  will be treated  as a separate  partnership  for  federal  income tax
purposes and will not be a "publicly traded partnership." Although these rulings
may not be relied upon as precedent by the Portfolio, NB Management believes the
reasoning thereof and hence, their conclusion apply to the Portfolio as well. As
a result,  the  Portfolio is not subject to federal  income tax;  instead,  each
investor in the Portfolio, such as the Fund, is required to take into account in
determining  its  federal  income  tax  liability  its share of the  Portfolio's
income, gains, losses, deductions, and credits, without regard to whether it has
received any cash  distributions  from the Portfolio.  The Portfolio also is not
subject to Delaware or New York income or franchise tax.
    

               Because  the Fund is deemed to own a  proportionate  share of the
Portfolio's  assets and income for  purposes  of  determining  whether  the Fund
satisfies  the  requirements  to  qualify  as a RIC,  the  Portfolio  intends to
continue to conduct its  operations so that the Fund will be able to continue to
satisfy all those requirements.

               Distributions to the Fund from the Portfolio (whether pursuant to
a partial or complete  withdrawal  or  otherwise)  will not result in the Fund's
recognition of any gain or loss for federal income tax purposes, except that (1)
gain will be recognized to the extent any cash that is  distributed  exceeds the
Fund's  basis for its interest in the  Portfolio  before the  distribution,  (2)
income or gain will be recognized if the  distribution  is in liquidation of the
Fund's entire interest in the Portfolio and includes a disproportionate share of
any  unrealized  receivables  held  by the  Portfolio,  and  (3)  loss  will  be
recognized  if  a  liquidation  distribution  consists  solely  of  cash  and/or
unrealized  receivables.  The Fund's  basis for its  interest  in the  Portfolio
generally equals the amount of cash the Fund invests in the Portfolio, increased
by the  Fund's  share of the  Portfolio's  net  income  and  capital  gains  and
decreased by (1) the amount of cash and the basis of any property the  Portfolio
distributes to the Fund and (2) the Fund's share of the Portfolio's losses.

               Dividends  and  interest  received  by the  Portfolio,  and gains
realized by the Portfolio, may be subject to income, withholding, or other taxes
imposed by foreign countries and U.S.  possessions  ("foreign taxes") that would
reduce the yield  and/or total return on its  securities.  Tax treaties  between
certain  countries and the United  States may reduce or eliminate  these foreign
taxes,  however, and many foreign countries do not impose taxes on capital gains
in respect of investments by foreign investors.

               The  Portfolio  may  invest  in the  stock  of  "passive  foreign
investment companies" ("PFICs"). A PFIC is a foreign corporation -- other than a
"controlled  foreign  corporation" (I.E., a foreign corporation in which, on any
day during its  taxable  year,  more than 50% of the total  voting  power of all
voting stock therein or the total value of all stock therein is owned, directly,
indirectly,  or constructively,  by "U.S. shareholders," defined as U.S. persons

                                       38
<PAGE>


that individually own, directly, indirectly, or constructively,  at least 10% of
that voting power) as to which the Portfolio is a U.S.  shareholder  -- that, in
general,  meets  either of the  following  tests:  (1) at least 75% of its gross
income is passive or (2) an  average of at least 50% of its assets  produce,  or
are held for the production of, passive income. Under certain circumstances,  if
the Portfolio holds stock of a PFIC, the Fund  (indirectly  through its interest
in the  Portfolio)  will be  subject  to  federal  income  tax on its share of a
portion of any "excess  distribution"  received by the Portfolio on the stock or
of any gain on the  Portfolio's  disposition of the stock  (collectively,  "PFIC
income"),  plus interest thereon,  even if the Fund distributes its share of the
PFIC income as a taxable dividend to its shareholders. The balance of the Fund's
share of the PFIC  income will be included  in its  investment  company  taxable
income and, accordingly,  will not be taxable to it to the extent that income is
distributed to its shareholders.

               If the  Portfolio  invests in a PFIC and elects to treat the PFIC
as a "qualified electing fund" ("QEF"), then in lieu of the Fund's incurring the
foregoing tax and interest obligation,  the Fund would be required to include in
income each year its share of the Portfolio's pro rata share of the QEF's annual
ordinary earnings and net capital gain (the excess of net long-term capital gain
over net  short-term  capital  loss) -- which the Fund most likely would have to
distribute to satisfy the  Distribution  Requirement and avoid imposition of the
Excise Tax -- even if the Portfolio did not receive those earnings and gain from
the QEF. In most instances it will be very difficult, if not impossible, to make
this election because of certain requirements thereof.

               A holder of stock in any PFIC may elect to  include  in  ordinary
income each  taxable  year the excess,  if any, of the fair market  value of the
stock over the adjusted  basis  therein as of the end of that year.  Pursuant to
the  election,  a deduction  (as an ordinary,  not capital,  loss) also would be
allowed for the excess,  if any, of the  holder's  adjusted  basis in PFIC stock
over the fair market value thereof as of the taxable  year-end,  but only to the
extent of any net  mark-to-market  gains with respect to that stock  included in
income for prior taxable years.  The adjusted basis in each PFIC's stock subject
to the election would be adjusted to reflect the amounts of income  included and
deductions  taken  thereunder  (and  under  regulations  proposed  in 1992  that
provided a similar election with respect to the stock of certain PFICs).

               The  Portfolio's  use of  hedging  strategies,  such  as  writing
(selling) and purchasing options and entering into forward  contracts,  involves
complex rules that will determine for income tax purposes the amount,  character
and timing of  recognition  of the gains and losses the  Portfolio  realizes  in
connection  therewith.  Gains from the disposition of foreign currencies (except
certain  gains  that may be  excluded  by future  regulations),  and gains  from
Hedging  Instruments  derived by the  Portfolio  with respect to its business of
investing in  securities  or foreign  currencies,  will  qualify as  permissible
income for the Fund under the Income Requirement.

               Exchange-traded futures contracts,  certain forward contracts and
listed  options  thereon  subject to  Section  1256 of the Code  ("Section  1256
contracts") are required to be marked to market (that is, treated as having been
sold  at  market  value)  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  at the end of the
Portfolio's  taxable year. Sixty percent of any net gain or loss recognized as a
result of these  "deemed  sales," and 60% of any net realized  gain or loss from
any actual sales,  of Section 1256  contracts  are treated as long-term  capital
gain or loss;  the  remainder  is treated as  short-term  capital  gain or loss.
Section 1256 contracts also may be  marked-to-market  for purposes of the Excise


                                       39
<PAGE>

Tax. These rules may operate to increase the amount that a Fund must  distribute
to  satisfy  the  Distribution  Requirement,   which  will  be  taxable  to  the
shareholders as ordinary income, and to increase the net capital gain recognized
by the Fund, without in either case increasing the cash available to the Fund. A
Fund may elect to exclude  certain  transactions  from the  operation of section
1256,  although  doing  so may  have  the  effect  of  increasing  the  relative
proportion of net  short-term  capital gain (taxable as ordinary  income) and/or
increasing  the  amount  of  dividends  that  must be  distributed  to meet  the
Distribution Requirement and avoid imposition of the Excise Tax.

        If the Fund has an  "appreciated  financial  position" -- generally,  an
interest (including an interest through an option,  futures or forward contract,
or short sale) with respect to any stock,  debt instrument (other than "straight
debt"),  or  partnership  interest  the fair market  value of which  exceeds its
adjusted  basis  -- and  enters  into a  "constructive  sale"  of  the  same  or
substantially  similar  property,  the Fund will be  treated  as having  made an
actual sale thereof,  with the result that gain will be recognized at that time.
A constructive sale generally  consists of a short sale, an offsetting  notional
principal contract, or a futures or forward contract entered into by the Fund or
a related person with respect to the same or substantially  similar property. In
addition, if the appreciated financial position is itself a short sale or such a
contract,  acquisition  of the  underlying  property  or  substantially  similar
property  will be deemed a  constructive  sale.  The  foregoing  will not apply,
however,  to any  transaction  during any taxable year that  otherwise  would be
treated as a constructive sale if the transaction is closed within 30 days after
the end of that  year and the Fund  holds  the  appreciated  financial  position
unhedged  for 60 days after that  closing  (I.E.,  at no time during that 60-day
period is the Fund's risk of loss regarding  that position  reduced by reason of
certain specified  transactions with respect to substantially similar or related
property,  such as having an option to sell,  being  contractually  obligated to
sell, making a short sale, or granting an option to buy substantially  identical
stock or securities).

        The  Portfolio may acquire zero coupon  securities  or other  securities
issued with original issue discount  ("OID").  As a holder of those  securities,
the  Portfolio  (and,  through  it, the Fund) must take into income the OID that
accrues on the  securities  during the  taxable  year,  even if it  receives  no
corresponding  payment on them during the year.  Because the Fund  annually must
distribute substantially all of its investment company taxable income (including
its  share  of  the  Portfolio's   accrued  OID)  to  satisfy  the  Distribution
Requirement and avoid  imposition of the Excise Tax, the Fund may be required in
a particular year to distribute as a dividend an amount that is greater than its
share  of the  total  amount  of cash the  Portfolio  actually  receives.  Those
distributions  will be made from the  Fund's  (or its share of the  Portfolio's)
cash assets or, if  necessary,  from the  proceeds  of sales of the  Portfolio's
securities.  The Portfolio may realize capital gains or losses from those sales,
which would increase or decrease the Fund's  investment  company  taxable income
and/or net capital gain.

Taxation of the Fund's Shareholders
- -----------------------------------

               If Fund shares are sold at a loss after being held for six months
or less, the loss will be treated as long-term,  instead of short-term,  capital
loss to the extent of any capital gain distributions received on those shares.

                                       40
<PAGE>

                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

               Neuberger  Berman acts as principal  broker for the  Portfolio in
the purchase and sale of its portfolio securities (other than certain securities
traded on the OTC market)  and in  connection  with the writing of covered  call
options on its securities.

               Portfolio  securities  are,  from  time to  time,  loaned  by the
Portfolio to Neuberger  Berman in accordance with the terms and conditions of an
order issued by the SEC. The order exempts such  transactions from provisions of
the 1940 Act that would otherwise prohibit such transactions, subject to certain
conditions. In accordance with the order, securities loans made by the Portfolio
to Neuberger  Berman are fully  secured by cash  collateral.  The portion of the
income on the cash collateral which may be shared with Neuberger Berman is to be
determined by reference to concurrent  arrangements between Neuberger Berman and
non-affiliated  lenders  with  which it  engages  in  similar  transactions.  In
addition,  where Neuberger Berman borrows securities from the Portfolio in order
to re-lend them to other Neuberger  Berman  Portfolios,  Neuberger Berman may be
required to pay the  Portfolio,  on a quarterly  basis,  certain of the earnings
that Neuberger  Berman otherwise has derived from the re-lending of the borrowed
securities.  When  Neuberger  Berman  desires  to  borrow  a  security  that the
Portfolio has indicated a willingness to lend, Neuberger Berman must borrow such
security from the Portfolio, rather than from an unaffiliated lender, unless the
unaffiliated lender is willing to lend such security on more favorable terms (as
specified in the order) than the Portfolio.  If, in any month,  the  Portfolio's
expenses  exceed its income in any securities  loan  transaction  with Neuberger
Berman, Neuberger Berman must reimburse the Portfolio for such loss.

               A committee of Independent  Portfolio  Trustees from time to time
reviews,  among other things,  information  relating to securities  loans by the
Portfolio.

               In effecting  securities  transactions,  the Portfolio  generally
seeks to obtain the best price and execution of orders.  Commission rates, being
a component of price,  are  considered  along with other relevant  factors.  The
Portfolio  plans to continue to use  Neuberger  Berman as its  principal  broker
where, in the judgment of NB Management, that firm is able to obtain a price and
execution at least as favorable as other qualified  brokers.  To the Portfolio's
knowledge,  no  affiliate  of the  Portfolio  receives  give-ups  or  reciprocal
business in connection with its securities transactions.

               The use of  Neuberger  Berman as a broker  for the  Portfolio  is
subject to the  requirements of Section 11(a) of the Securities  Exchange Act of
1934.  Section 11(a)  prohibits  members of national  securities  exchanges from
retaining  compensation for executing  exchange  transactions for accounts which
they or their affiliates manage, except where they have the authorization of the
persons  authorized to transact business for the account and comply with certain
annual reporting  requirements.  Managers Trust and NB Management have expressly
authorized  Neuberger Berman to retain such  compensation,  and Neuberger Berman
has agreed to comply with the reporting requirements of Section 11(a).

                                       41
<PAGE>

               Under  the  1940  Act,  commissions  paid  by  the  Portfolio  to
Neuberger  Berman in  connection  with a  purchase  or sale of  securities  on a
securities exchange may not exceed the usual and customary broker's  commission.
Accordingly, it is the Portfolio's policy that the commissions paid to Neuberger
Berman must, in NB Management's  judgment, be (1) at least as favorable as those
charged by other brokers having comparable execution capability and (2) at least
as favorable as  commissions  contemporaneously  charged by Neuberger  Berman on
comparable transactions for its most favored unaffiliated customers,  except for
accounts  for which  Neuberger  Berman  acts as a clearing  broker  for  another
brokerage firm and customers of Neuberger Berman considered by a majority of the
Independent  Portfolio  Trustees  not to be  comparable  to the  Portfolio.  The
Portfolio  does not deem it  practicable  and in its best  interests  to solicit
competitive  bids for  commissions  on each  transaction  effected by  Neuberger
Berman. However,  consideration regularly is given to information concerning the
prevailing  level  of  commissions   charged  by  other  brokers  on  comparable
transactions during comparable periods of time. The 1940 Act generally prohibits
Neuberger  Berman  from  acting  as  principal  in  the  purchase  of  portfolio
securities from, or the sale of portfolio securities to, the Portfolio unless an
appropriate exemption is available.

               A committee of Independent  Portfolio  Trustees from time to time
reviews, among other things,  information relating to the commissions charged by
Neuberger  Berman to the  Portfolio and to its other  customers and  information
concerning the prevailing  level of commissions  charged by other brokers having
comparable execution capability.  In addition,  the procedures pursuant to which
Neuberger  Berman  effects  brokerage  transactions  for the  Portfolio  must be
reviewed  and  approved  no  less  often  than  annually  by a  majority  of the
Independent Portfolio Trustees.

               To ensure that accounts of all investment clients,  including the
Portfolio,  are  treated  fairly in the event  that  Neuberger  Berman  receives
transaction  instructions  regarding  a  security  for more than one  investment
account at or about the same time, Neuberger Berman may combine orders placed on
behalf of clients,  including advisory accounts in which affiliated persons have
an investment interest,  for the purpose of negotiating brokerage commissions or
obtaining a more favorable price.  Where  appropriate,  securities  purchased or
sold may be  allocated,  in  terms  of  amount,  to a  client  according  to the
proportion  that the  size of the  order  placed  by that  account  bears to the
aggregate size of orders contemporaneously placed by the other accounts, subject
to de minimis  exceptions.  All  participating  accounts will pay or receive the
same price.

               The  Portfolio  expects  that it will  execute a  portion  of its
transactions  through  brokers other than Neuberger  Berman.  In selecting those
brokers,  NB  Management  considers  the quality and  reliability  of  brokerage
services,   including   execution   capability,   performance,   and   financial
responsibility,  and may  consider  research  and other  investment  information
provided by, and sale of Fund shares effected through, those brokers.

               A committee comprised of officers of NB Management and principals
of Neuberger  Berman who are  portfolio  managers of the  Portfolio and Other NB
Funds (collectively, "NB Funds") and some of Neuberger Berman's managed accounts
("Managed  Accounts")  evaluates  semi-annually  the nature  and  quality of the
brokerage  and  research  services  provided  by  other  brokers.  Based on this
evaluation, the committee establishes a list and projected rankings of preferred
brokers  for use in  determining  the  relative  amounts  of  commissions  to be

                                       42
<PAGE>


allocated to those brokers.  Ordinarily,  the brokers on the list effect a large
portion of the brokerage  transactions for the NB Funds and the Managed Accounts
that are not effected by Neuberger Berman.  However,  in any semi-annual period,
brokers  not on the list may be used,  and the  relative  amounts  of  brokerage
commissions  paid to the  brokers  on the list may vary  substantially  from the
projected  rankings.  These  variations  reflect the  following  factors,  among
others:  (1) brokers not on the list or ranking  below other brokers on the list
may be selected for  particular  transactions  because they provide better price
and/or execution,  which is the primary  consideration in allocating  brokerage;
(2)  adjustments  may be required  because of periodic  changes in the execution
capabilities of or research  provided by particular  brokers or in the execution
or  research  needs of the NB Funds  and/or the  Managed  Accounts;  and (3) the
aggregate amount of brokerage  commissions  generated by transactions for the NB
Funds and the Managed  Accounts may change  substantially  from one  semi-annual
period to the next.

               The commissions  paid to a broker other than Neuberger Berman may
be higher than the amount another firm might charge if NB Management  determines
in good faith that the amount of those  commissions is reasonable in relation to
the value of the  brokerage  and research  services  provided by the broker.  NB
Management  believes  that those  research  services  benefit the  Portfolio  by
supplementing  the  information  otherwise  available  to  NB  Management.  That
research may be used by NB Management  in servicing  Other NB Funds and, in some
cases, by Neuberger Berman in servicing the Managed Accounts. On the other hand,
research received by NB Management from brokers effecting portfolio transactions
on behalf of the Other NB Funds and by Neuberger  Berman from brokers  effecting
portfolio  transactions  on behalf of the Managed  Accounts  may be used for the
Portfolio's benefit.

               Michael M. Kassen,  Robert I. Gendelman and S. Basu Mullick, each
of  whom  is a Vice  President  of NB  Management,  are  the  persons  primarily
responsible for making  decisions as to specific action to be taken with respect
to the investment portfolio of the Portfolio. Each of them has full authority to
take action with  respect to portfolio  transactions  and may or may not consult
with other  personnel of NB Management  prior to taking such action.  Mr. Kassen
and Mr. Gendelman are principals of Neuberger Berman, LLC.

Portfolio Turnover
- ------------------

               The Portfolio's portfolio turnover rate is calculated by dividing
(1) the lesser of the cost of the securities  purchased or the proceeds from the
securities sold by the Portfolio  during the fiscal year (other than securities,
including options,  whose maturity or expiration date at the time of acquisition
was one  year or  less)  by (2)  the  month-end  average  of the  value  of such
securities owned by the Portfolio during the fiscal year.

                             REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS

               Shareholders of the Fund receive unaudited  semi-annual financial
statements,  as well as year-end financial statements audited by the independent
auditors for the Fund and Portfolio.  The Fund's statements show the investments
owned  by the  Portfolio  and  the  market  values  thereof  and  provide  other
information  about the Fund and its operations,  including the Fund's beneficial
interest in the Portfolio.

                                       43
<PAGE>

                 ORGANIZATION, CAPITALIZATION AND OTHER MATTERS

The Fund
- --------

               The Fund is a separate  operating series of the Trust, a Delaware
business trust organized pursuant to a Trust Instrument dated as of December 23,
1992.  The Trust is  registered  under the  Investment  Company Act of 1940 as a
diversified,  open-end management investment company, commonly known as a mutual
fund. The Trust has nine separate  operating series. The Fund invests all of its
net investable assets in the Portfolio,  receiving a beneficial  interest in the
Portfolio.  The trustees of the Trust may establish additional series or classes
of shares without the approval of shareholders. The assets of each series belong
only to that series, and the liabilities of each series are borne solely by that
series and no other.

               Prior to November 9, 1998, the name of the Trust was "Neuberger &
Berman Equity Trust."

               DESCRIPTION  OF  SHARES.  The  Fund is  authorized  to  issue  an
unlimited number of shares of beneficial  interest (par value $0.001 per share).
Shares of the Fund represent equal proportionate  interests in the assets of the
Fund only and have identical  voting,  dividend,  redemption,  liquidation,  and
other  rights.  All  shares  issued  are  fully  paid  and  non-assessable,  and
shareholders  have no preemptive or other rights to subscribe to any  additional
shares.

               SHAREHOLDER MEETINGS.  The trustees of the Trust do not intend to
hold annual meetings of shareholders of the Fund. The trustees will call special
meetings of  shareholders  of the Fund only if required under the 1940 Act or in
their  discretion  or upon the written  request of holders of 10% or more of the
outstanding shares of the Fund entitled to vote.

               CERTAIN  PROVISIONS OF TRUST INSTRUMENT.  Under Delaware law, the
shareholders  of the Fund will not be personally  liable for the  obligations of
the Fund; a shareholder is entitled to the same limitation of personal liability
extended  to  shareholders  of a  corporation.  To guard  against  the risk that
Delaware law might not be applied in other states, the Trust Instrument requires
that every written  obligation of the Trust or the Fund contain a statement that
such obligation may be enforced only against the assets of the Trust or Fund and
provides for  indemnification  out of Trust or Fund property of any  shareholder
nevertheless held personally liable for Trust or Fund obligations, respectively.

               OTHER.  Because  Fund  shares can be bought,  owned and sold only
through an account with an Institution, a client of an Institution may be unable
to purchase  additional  shares  and/or may be  required  to redeem  shares (and
possibly incur a tax liability) if the client no longer has a relationship  with
the  Institution  or if  the  Institution  no  longer  has a  contract  with  NB
Management  to perform  services.  Depending on the policies of the  Institution
involved, an investor may be able to transfer an account from one Institution to
another.

                                       44

<PAGE>

The Portfolio
- -------------

               The Portfolio is a separate operating series of Managers Trust, a
New York common law trust  organized as of December 1, 1992.  Managers  Trust is
registered under the 1940 Act as a diversified,  open-end management  investment
company.  Managers  Trust  has eight  separate  Portfolios.  The  assets of each
Portfolio  belong only to that Portfolio,  and the liabilities of each Portfolio
are borne solely by that Portfolio and no other.

               FUND'S INVESTMENTS IN THE PORTFOLIO.  The Fund is a "feeder fund"
that seeks to achieve  its  investment  objective  by  investing  all of its net
investable  assets in the  Portfolio,  which is a "master  fund." The Portfolio,
which has the same investment objective,  policies, and limitations as the Fund,
in turn invests in  securities;  the Fund thus acquires an indirect  interest in
those securities.

               The  Fund's  investment  in the  Portfolio  is in the  form  of a
non-transferable  beneficial  interest.  Members of the  general  public may not
purchase a direct  interest in the Portfolio.  Series of three other  investment
companies,  Neuberger  Berman Equity Funds ("Equity  Funds"),  Neuberger  Berman
Equity Assets  ("Equity  Assets"),  and Neuberger  Berman Equity Series ("Equity
Series"),  invest all of their respective net assets in corresponding Portfolios
of Managers  Trust.  The shares of the series of Equity Funds are  available for
purchase by members of the general  public.  Equity  Assets and Equity Series do
not sell its shares directly to members of the general public.

               The Portfolio may also permit other  investment  companies and/or
other  institutional  investors to invest in the  Portfolio.  All investors will
invest in the  Portfolio on the same terms and  conditions  as the Fund and will
pay a proportionate  share of the Portfolio's  expenses.  Other investors in the
Portfolio  (including  the  series of Equity  Funds and Equity  Assets)  are not
required  to sell their  shares at the same public  offering  price as the Fund,
could  have a  different  administration  fee and  expenses  than the Fund,  and
(except  Equity  Funds  and  Equity  Assets)  might  charge a sales  commission.
Therefore,  Fund  shareholders may have different  returns than  shareholders in
another   investment   company  that  invests   exclusively  in  the  Portfolio.
Information  regarding any fund that invests in the Portfolio is available  from
NB Management by calling 800-877-9700.

               The  trustees  of  the  Trust  believe  that  investment  in  the
Portfolio  by a series of Equity  Funds or Equity  Assets or by other  potential
investors in addition to the Fund may enable the Portfolio to realize  economies
of scale that could reduce its  operating  expenses,  thereby  producing  higher
returns and benefiting all shareholders.  However,  the Fund's investment in the
Portfolio  may be  affected  by the  actions  of other  large  investors  in the
Portfolio, if any. For example, if a large investor in the Portfolio (other than
the Fund)  redeemed its interest in the  Portfolio,  the  Portfolio's  remaining
investors  (including the Fund) might, as a result,  experience  higher pro rata
operating expenses, thereby producing lower returns.

               The Fund may withdraw its entire investment from the Portfolio at
any  time,  if the  trustees  of the  Trust  determine  that  it is in the  best
interests of the Fund and its  shareholders  to do so. The Fund might  withdraw,
for example,  if there were other  investors in the Portfolio with power to, and
who did by a vote of all investors  (including the Fund),  change the investment

                                       45
<PAGE>

objective,  policies, or limitations of the Portfolio in a manner not acceptable
to the trustees of the Trust.  A withdrawal  could result in a  distribution  in
kind  of  portfolio  securities  (as  opposed  to a  cash  distribution)  by the
Portfolio to the Fund.  That  distribution  could  result in a less  diversified
portfolio of investments  for the Fund and could affect  adversely the liquidity
of the  Fund's  investment  portfolio.  If the Fund  decided  to  convert  those
securities to cash, it usually would incur  brokerage fees or other  transaction
costs. If the Fund withdrew its investment  from the Portfolio,  the trustees of
the Trust would  consider what actions might be taken,  including the investment
of all of the Fund's net investable  assets in another pooled  investment entity
having  substantially the same investment objective as the Fund or the retention
by the Fund of its own  investment  manager to manage  its assets in  accordance
with its investment objective,  policies, and limitations.  The inability of the
Fund  to  find a  suitable  replacement  could  have  a  significant  impact  on
shareholders.

               INVESTOR  MEETINGS AND VOTING.  The  Portfolio  normally will not
hold meetings of investors  except as required by the 1940 Act. Each investor in
the Portfolio will be entitled to vote in proportion to its relative  beneficial
interest in the Portfolio. On most issues subjected to a vote of investors,  the
Fund will solicit  proxies from its  shareholders  and will vote its interest in
the  Portfolio in proportion  to the votes cast by the Fund's  shareholders.  If
there are other  investors in the Portfolio,  there can be no assurance that any
issue  that  receives a majority  of the votes  cast by Fund  shareholders  will
receive a majority of votes cast by all Portfolio  investors;  indeed,  if other
investors  hold a majority  interest  in the  Portfolio,  they could have voting
control of the Portfolio.

               CERTAIN PROVISIONS. Each investor in the Portfolio, including the
Fund, will be liable for all obligations of the Portfolio.  However, the risk of
an investor in the Portfolio  incurring  financial loss beyond the amount of its
investment on account of such  liability  would be limited to  circumstances  in
which  the  Portfolio  had  inadequate  insurance  and was  unable  to meet  its
obligations  out of its assets.  Upon  liquidation of the  Portfolio,  investors
would be entitled to share pro rata in the net assets of the Portfolio available
for distribution to investors.

                          CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT

               The Fund and Portfolio  have selected State Street Bank and Trust
Company ("State  Street"),  225 Franklin Street,  Boston, MA 02110, as custodian
for their respective securities and cash. State Street also serves as the Fund's
transfer  agent,  administering  purchases,  redemptions,  and transfers of Fund
shares  with  respect to  Institutions  and the payment of  dividends  and other
distributions to Institutions.  All correspondence should be mailed to Neuberger
Berman Funds,  Institutional Services, 605 Third Avenue, 2nd Floor, New York, NY
10158-0180.  In  addition,  State  Street  serves  as  transfer  agent  for  the
Portfolio.

                              INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

   
               The Fund and Portfolio have selected  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP
as the independent accountants who will audit their financial statements.
    


                                       46
<PAGE>


                                  LEGAL COUNSEL

               The Fund and Portfolio have selected  Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP,
1800 Massachusetts  Avenue, N.W., 2nd Floor,  Washington,  D.C.  20036-1800,  as
their legal counsel.

                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT

               This SAI and the  Prospectus  do not contain all the  information
included in the Trust's registration statement filed with the SEC under the 1933
Act with respect to the securities  offered by the Prospectus.  The registration
statement,  including the exhibits filed therewith, may be examined at the SEC's
offices in  Washington,  D.C. The SEC  maintains a Website  (http://www.sec.gov)
that  contains  this  SAI,  material   incorporated  by  reference,   and  other
information regarding the Fund and Portfolio.

               Statements  contained in this SAI and in the Prospectus as to the
contents of any  contract  or other  document  referred  to are not  necessarily
complete.  In each instance where  reference is made to the copy of any contract
or other document filed as an exhibit to the registration  statement,  each such
statement is qualified in all respects by such reference.


                                       47
<PAGE>


                                   Appendix A


                 RATINGS OF CORPORATE BONDS AND COMMERCIAL PAPER

               S&P corporate bond ratings:
               --------------------------

               AAA - Bonds  rated AAA have the highest  rating  assigned by S&P.
Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.

               AA - Bonds rated AA have a very strong  capacity to pay  interest
and repay  principal  and differ  from the  higher  rated  issues  only in small
degree.

               A - Bonds  rated A have a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and
repay  principal,  although  they are somewhat more  susceptible  to the adverse
effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than bonds in higher
rated categories.

               BBB - Bonds rated BBB are regarded as having an adequate capacity
to pay principal and interest. Whereas they normally exhibit adequate protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions  or changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay principal and interest for bonds in
this category than for bonds in higher rated categories.

               BB,  B, CCC,  CC, C - Bonds  rated  BB,  B,  CCC,  CC,  and C are
regarded,  on balance, as predominantly  speculative with respect to capacity to
pay interest and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation.
BB  indicates  the lowest  degree of  speculation  and C the  highest  degree of
speculation.  While such bonds will  likely  have some  quality  and  protective
characteristics,  these are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  or major  risk
exposures to adverse conditions.

               CI - The  rating  CI is  reserved  for  income  bonds on which no
interest is being paid.

               D - Bonds rated D are in default,  and payment of interest and/or
repayment of principal is in - arrears.

               Plus (+) or Minus (-) - The ratings  above may be modified by the
addition  of a plus or minus  sign to show  relative  standing  within the major
categories.

               Moody's corporate bond ratings:
               ------------------------------

               Aaa - Bonds 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 an  exceptionally
stable margin, and principal is secure. Although the various protective elements
are likely to change,  the changes that can be  visualized  are most unlikely to
impair the fundamentally strong position of the issuer.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>


               Aa - Bonds  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-rated  securities,  fluctuation  of
protective elements may be of greater amplitude,  or there may be other elements
present that make the long-term  risks appear  somewhat larger than in Aaa-rated
securities.

               A - Bonds 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 that 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.  These  bonds  lack  outstanding
investment characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.

               Ba - Bonds  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 rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest and principal  payments or of  maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

               Caa - Bonds 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 rated Ca represent obligations that are speculative in
a  high  degree.  Such  issues  are  often  in  default  or  have  other  marked
shortcomings.

               C - Bonds 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.

Modifiers--Moody's  may apply  numerical  modifiers  1, 2, and 3 in each generic
rating  classification  described  above.  The  modifier  1  indicates  that the
security ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category;  the modifier 2
indicates  a mid-range  ranking;  and the  modifier 3 indicates  that the issuer
ranks in the lower end of its generic rating.

               S&P commercial paper ratings:

               A-1 - This highest  category  indicates that the degree of safety
regarding timely payment is strong. Those issues determined to possess extremely
strong safety characteristics are denoted with a plus sign (+).

               Moody's commercial paper ratings


                                      A-2

<PAGE>

               Issuers rated Prime-1 (or related supporting institutions),  also
known as P-1, 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.


                                      A-3

<PAGE>



                        NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
                 POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 20 ON FORM N-1A

                                    PART C

                              OTHER INFORMATION

Item 23.    Financial Statements and Exhibits
- -------     ---------------------------------

(a)   Financial Statements.  None.

(b)   Exhibits:

            Exhibit
            Number                      Description
            ------                      -----------
                        
            (a)         (1)   Certificate of Trust.  Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective  Amendment No. 8 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                              Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession
                              No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                        (2)   Restated Certificate of Trust. Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 18 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos.
                              33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-98-000838.

                        (3)   Trust Instrument of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust.
                              Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective
                              Amendment No. 8 to Registrant's Registration
                              Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                              Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.



                                       2
<PAGE>

            Exhibit
            Number                      Description
            ------                      -----------
                     
                        (4)   Schedule A - Current Series of Neuberger Berman
                              Equity Trust. Incorporated by Reference to
                              Post-Effective Amendment No. 19 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-99-000158.

            (b)         By-laws of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust. Incorporated
                        by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                        Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368
                        and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

            (c)         (1)   Trust Instrument of Neuberger Berman Equity
                              Trust, Articles IV, V, and VI. Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos.
                              33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-95-000427.

                        (2)   By-laws of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust,
                              Articles V, VI, and VIII.  Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos.
                              33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-95-000427.

            (d)         (1)   (i)   Management Agreement Between Equity
                                    Managers Trust and Neuberger Berman
                                    Management Inc..  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment
                                    No. 70 to Registration Statement of
                                    Neuberger Berman Equity Funds, File
                                    Nos. 2-11357 and 811-582, EDGAR Accession
                                    No. 0000898432-95-000314.

                        (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Equity Managers
                                    Trust Currently Subject to the Management
                                    Agreement. Filed Herewith.

                        (iii)       Schedule B - Schedule of Compensation
                                    Under the Management Agreement. Filed
                                    Herewith.

                        (2)   (i)   Sub-Advisory Agreement Between Neuberger
                                    Berman Management Inc. and Neuberger
                                    Berman, LLC with Respect to Equity
                                    Managers Trust.  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                                    70 to Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000314.

                        (ii)        Schedule A -  Series of Equity Managers
                                    Trust Currently Subject to the
                                    Sub-Advisory Agreement. Filed Herewith.


                                       3
<PAGE>
            Exhibit
            Number                      Description
            ------                      -----------
                     
                        (iii)       Substitution Agreement Among Neuberger
                                    Berman Management Inc., Equity Managers
                                    Trust, Neuberger Berman, L.P., and
                                    Neuberger Berman, LLC.  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                                    7 to Registration Statement of Equity
                                    Managers Trust, File No. 811-7910, EDGAR
                                    Accession No. 0000898432-96-000557.

                        (3)   (i)   Management Agreement Between Global
                                    Managers Trust and Neuberger Berman
                                    Management Inc.. Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                                    74 to Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000426.

                        (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Global Managers
                                    Trust Currently Subject to the Management
                                    Agreement.  Incorporated by Reference to
                                    Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to
                                    Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000426.

                        (iii)       Schedule B - Schedule of Compensation
                                    Under the Management Agreement.
                                    Incorporated by Reference to
                                    Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to
                                    Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000426.

                        (4)   (i)   Sub-Advisory Agreement Between Neuberger
                                    Berman Management Inc. and Neuberger
                                    Berman, LLC with Respect to Global
                                    Managers Trust.  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                                    74 to Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000426.

                        (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Global Managers
                                    Trust Currently Subject to the
                                    Sub-Advisory Agreement.  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                                    74 to Registration Statement of Neuberger
                                    Berman Equity Funds, File Nos. 2-11357
                                    and 811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-95-000426.



                                       4
<PAGE>

            Exhibit
            Number                      Description
            ------                      -----------
                     
                        (iii)       Substitution Agreement among Neuberger
                                    Berman Management Inc., Global Managers
                                    Trust, Neuberger Berman, L.P. and
                                    Neuberger Berman, LLC.  Incorporated by
                                    Reference to the substantially similar
                                    agreement filed in Post-Effective
                                    Amendment No. 7 to the Registration
                                    Statement of Equity Managers Trust, File
                                    No. 811-7910, EDGAR Accession No.
                                    0000898432-96-000557 (the documents
                                    differ only with respect to the date of
                                    and the master fund party to the
                                    subadvisory agreement under which
                                    substitution is sought and the name of
                                    the executing master fund).

            (e)   (1)   Distribution Agreement Between Neuberger Berman
                        Equity Trust and Neuberger Berman Management Inc..
                        Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment
                        No. 13 to Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos.
                        33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                        0000898432-97-000519.

                  (2)   Schedule A - Series of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
                        Currently Subject to the Distribution Agreement.
                        Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment
                        No. 19 to Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                        Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                        0000898432-99-000158.

            (f)         Bonus, Profit Sharing or Pension Plans.  None.

            (g)         (1)   Custodian Contract Between Neuberger Berman
                              Equity Trust and State Street Bank and Trust
                              Company.  Incorporated by Reference to
                              Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession
                              No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                        (2)   Schedule of Compensation under the Custodian
                              Contract.  Incorporated by Reference to
                              Post-Effective Amendment No. 10 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession No. 
                              0000898432-96-000532.

            (h)   (1)   (i)   Transfer Agency and Service Agreement Between
                              Neuberger Berman Equity Trust and State Street
                              Bank and Trust Company.  Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                              Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession
                              No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                        (ii)  First Amendment to Transfer Agency and Service
                              Agreement between Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
                              and State Street Bank and Trust Company.
                              Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective
                              Amendment No. 8 to Registrant's Registration
                              Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                              Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.


                                       5
<PAGE>

            Exhibit
            Number                      Description
            ------                      -----------

                        (iii) Schedule of Compensation under the Transfer Agency
                              and Service Agreement. Incorporated by Reference
                              to Post-Effective Amendment No. 10 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-96-000532.

                        (iv)  Second Amendment to Transfer Agency and Service
                              Agreement between Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
                              and State Street Bank and Trust Company.
                              Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
                              Amendment No. 12 to Registrant's Registration
                              Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                              Accession No. 0000898432-97-000398.

                  (2)   (i)   Administration Agreement Between Neuberger
                              Berman Equity Trust and Neuberger Berman
                              Management Inc.. Incorporated by Reference to
                              Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession
                              No. 0000898432-97-000519.

                        (ii)  Schedule A - Series of Neuberger Berman Equity
                              Trust Currently Subject to the Administration
                              Agreement. Incorporated by Reference to
                              Post-Effective Amendment No. 19 to Registrant's
                              Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                              811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-99-000158.

                        (iii) Schedule B - Schedule of Compensation Under the
                              Administration Agreement. Incorporated by
                              Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                              Registrant's Registration Statement, File Nos.
                              33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR Accession No.
                              0000898432-95-000427.

            (i)               Opinion and Consent of Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP
                              on Securities Matters with Respect to Neuberger
                              Berman Regency Trust. Filed Herewith.

            (j)               Consent of Independent Auditors. None.

            (k)               Financial Statements Omitted from Prospectus.
                              None.

            (l)               Letter of Investment Intent. None.

            (m)               Form of Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1. Filed
                              Herewith.

            (n)               Financial Data Schedule. None.

            (o)               Plan Pursuant to Rule 18f-3. None.


                                       6
<PAGE>



Item 24.    Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant
- -------     -------------------------------------------------------------

            No person is controlled by or under common control with the
Registrant.  (Registrant is organized in a master/feeder structure and
technically may be considered to control the master fund in which it invests,
Equity Managers Trust.)

Item 25.    Indemnification.
- -------     ---------------

            A Delaware business trust may provide in its governing instrument
for indemnification of its officers and trustees from and against any and all
claims and demands whatsoever. Article IX, Section 2 of the Trust Instrument
provides that the Registrant shall indemnify any present or former trustee,
officer, employee or agent of the Registrant ("Covered Person") to the fullest
extent permitted by law against liability and all expenses reasonably incurred
or paid by him or her in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding
("Action") in which he or she becomes involved as a party or otherwise by virtue
of his or her being or having been a Covered Person and against amounts paid or
incurred by him or her in settlement thereof. Indemnification will not be
provided to a person adjudged by a court or other body to be liable to the
Registrant or its shareholders by reason of "willful misfeasance, bad faith,
gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
his office" ("Disabling Conduct"), or not to have acted in good faith in the
reasonable belief that his or her action was in the best interest of the
Registrant. In the event of a settlement, no indemnification may be provided
unless there has been a determination that the officer or trustee did not engage
in Disabling Conduct (i) by the court or other body approving the settlement;
(ii) by at least a majority of those trustees who are neither interested
persons, as that term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("1940
Act"), of the Registrant ("Independent Trustees"), nor are parties to the matter
based upon a review of readily available facts; or (iii) by written opinion of
independent legal counsel based upon a review of readily available facts.

            Pursuant to Article IX, Section 3 of the Trust Instrument, if any
present or former shareholder of any series ("Series") of the Registrant shall
be held personally liable solely by reason of his or her being or having been a
shareholder and not because of his or her acts or omissions or for some other
reason, the present or former shareholder (or his or her heirs, executors,
administrators or other legal representatives or in the case of any entity, its
general successor) shall be entitled out of the assets belonging to the
applicable Series to be held harmless from and indemnified against all loss and
expense arising from such liability. The Registrant, on behalf of the affected
Series, shall, upon request by such shareholder, assume the defense of any claim
made against such shareholder for any act or obligation of the Series and
satisfy any judgment thereon from the assets of the Series.

            Section 9 of the Management Agreements between Neuberger and Berman
Management Incorporated ("NB Management") and Equity Managers Trust and Global
Managers Trust (Equity Managers Trust and Global Managers Trust are collectively
referred to as the "Managers Trusts") provide that neither NB Management nor any
director, officer or employee of NB Management performing services for the
series of the Managers Trusts at the direction or request of NB Management in
connection with NB Management's discharge of its obligations under the
Agreements shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for
any loss suffered by a series in connection with any matter to which the
Agreements relate; provided, that nothing in the Agreements shall be construed
(i) to protect NB Management against any liability to the Managers Trusts or any
series thereof or their interest holders to which NB Management would otherwise
be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in
the performance of its duties, or by reason of NB Management's reckless
disregard of its obligations and duties under the Agreements, or (ii) to protect
any director, officer or employee of NB Management who is or was a trustee or
officer of the Managers Trusts against any liability to the Managers Trusts or


                                       7
<PAGE>

any series thereof or their interest holders to which such person would
otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross
negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such
person's office with the Managers Trusts.

            Section 1 of the Sub-Advisory Agreements between NB Management and
Neuberger Berman, LLC ("Neuberger Berman") with respect to the Managers Trusts
provides that, in the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross
negligence in the performance of its duties, or of reckless disregard of its
duties and obligations under the Agreements, Neuberger Berman will not be
subject to any liability for any act or omission or any loss suffered by any
series of the Managers Trusts or their interest holders in connection with the
matters to which the Agreements relate.

            Section 11 of the Distribution Agreement between the Registrant and
NB Management provides that NB Management shall look only to the assets of a
Series for the Registrant's performance of the Agreement by the Registrant on
behalf of such Series, and neither the Trustees nor any of the Registrant's
officers, employees or agents, whether past, present or future, shall be
personally liable therefor.

            Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the
Securities Act of 1933 ("1933 Act") may be permitted to trustees, officers and
controlling persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or
otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, such indemnification is against public policy as
expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim
for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the
Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a trustee, officer or controlling
person of the Registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or
proceeding) is asserted by such trustee, officer or controlling person, 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 26.    Business and Other Connections of Adviser and Sub-Adviser.
- -------     ---------------------------------------------------------

            There is set forth below information as to any other business,
profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature in which each
director or officer of NB Management and each principal of Neuberger Berman is,
or at any time during the past two years has been, engaged for his or her own
account or in the capacity of director, officer, employee, partner or trustee.


NAME                                    BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
- ----                                    ------------------------------
Valerie Chang,
Vice President, NB Management           Senior Securities Analyst, TIAA/CREF.1

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

1 Until 1996.


                                       8
<PAGE>

NAME                                    BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
- ----                                    ------------------------------

Brooke A. Cobb                          Chief Investment Officer, Bainco
Vice President, NB                      International Investors.2  Senior Vice
Management                              President and Senior Portfolio Manager,
                                        Putnam Investments.

Robert W. D'Alelio                      Senior Portfolio Manager, Putnam
Vice President, NB Management;          Investments.3
Principal, Neuberger Berman

Barbara DiGiorgio,                      Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
Assistant Vice President,               Advisers Management Trust; Assistant
NB Management                           Treasurer, Advisers Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Income Funds; Assistant Treasurer,
                                        Neuberger Berman Income Trust; Assistant
                                        Treasurer, Neuberger Berman Equity
                                        Funds; Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger
                                        Berman Equity Trust; Assistant
                                        Treasurer, Income Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Equity Managers
                                        Trust; Assistant Treasurer, Global
                                        Managers Trust; Assistant Treasurer,
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Assets;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Stanley Egener                          Chairman of the Board and Trustee, 
President and Director,                 Neuberger Berman Advisers Management 
NB Management; Principal, Neuberger     Trust; Chairman of the Board and 
Berman                                  Trustee, Advisers Managers Trust;
                                        Chairman of the Board and Trustee,
                                        Neuberger Berman Income Funds; Chairman
                                        of the Board and Trustee, Neuberger
                                        Berman Income Trust; Chairman of the
                                        Board and Trustee, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Funds; Chairman of the Board and
                                        Trustee, Neuberger Berman Equity Trust;
                                        Chairman of the Board and Trustee,
                                        Income Managers Trust; Chairman of the
                                        Board and Trustee, Equity Managers
                                        Trust; Chairman of the Board and
                                        Trustee, Global Managers Trust; Chairman
                                        of the Board and Trustee, Neuberger
                                        Berman Equity Assets; Chairman of the
                                        Board and Trustee, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Theodore P. Giuliano                    President and Trustee, Neuberger Berman
Vice President and                      Income Funds; President and Trustee,
Director, NB Management;                Neuberger Berman Income Trust; President
Principal, Neuberger Berman             and Trustee, Income Managers Trust.

Michael F. Malouf                       Portfolio Manager, Dresdner RCM Global
Vice President, NB Management           Investors.4

- ------------------------------
2 Until 1997.

3 Until 1996.

4 Until 1998.

                                       9
<PAGE>

NAME                                    BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
- ----                                    ------------------------------

S. Basu Mullick                         Portfolio Manager, Ark Asset 
Vice President, NB Management           Management.5

C. Carl Randolph                        Assistant Secretary, Neuberger Berman
Principal, Neuberger Berman             Advisers Management Trust; Assistant
                                        Secretary, Advisers Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Secretary, Neuberger Berman
                                        Income Funds; Assistant Secretary,
                                        Neuberger Berman Income Trust; Assistant
                                        Secretary, Neuberger Berman Equity
                                        Funds; Assistant Secretary, Neuberger
                                        Berman Equity Trust; Assistant
                                        Secretary, Income Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Secretary, Equity Managers
                                        Trust; Assistant Secretary, Global
                                        Managers Trust; Assistant Secretary,
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Assets;
                                        Assistant Secretary, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Richard Russell                         Treasurer, Neuberger Berman Advisers
Vice President,                         Management Trust; Treasurer, Advisers
NB Management                           Managers Trust; Treasurer, Neuberger 
                                        Berman Income Funds; Treasurer, 
                                        Neuberger Berman Income Trust;
                                        Treasurer, Neuberger Berman Equity
                                        Funds; Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Trust; Treasurer, Income Managers
                                        Trust; Treasurer, Equity Managers Trust;
                                        Treasurer, Global Managers Trust;
                                        Treasurer, Neuberger Berman Equity
                                        Assets; Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Ingrid Saukaitis                        Project Director, Council on Economic
Assistant Vice President,               Priorities.6
NB Management

Jennifer K. Silver                      Portfolio Manager and Director, Putnam
Vice President, NB                      Investments.7
Management; Principal,
Neuberger Berman

Daniel J. Sullivan                      Vice President, Neuberger Berman
Senior Vice President, NB Management    Advisers Management Trust; Vice
                                        President, Advisers Managers Trust; Vice
                                        President, Neuberger Berman Income
                                        Funds; Vice President, Neuberger Berman 

- ------------------------------
5 Until 1998.

6 Until 1997.

7 Until 1997.

                                       10
<PAGE>

NAME                                    BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
- ----                                    ------------------------------

                                        Income Trust; Vice President, Neuberger 
                                        Berman Equity Funds; Vice President, 
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Income Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Equity Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Global Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Neuberger Berman Equity 
                                        Assets; Vice President, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Michael J. Weiner                       Vice President, Neuberger Berman 
Senior Vice President,                  Advisers Management Trust; Vice 
NB Management;                          President, Advisers Managers Trust; Vice
Principal, Neuberger Berman             President, Neuberger Berman Income
                                        Funds; Vice President, Neuberger Berman 
                                        Income Trust; Vice President, Neuberger 
                                        Berman Equity Funds; Vice President, 
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Trust; Vice
                                        President, Income Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Equity Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Global Managers Trust; Vice 
                                        President, Neuberger Berman Equity 
                                        Assets; Vice President, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Allan R. White III                      Portfolio Manager, Salomon Asset 
Vice President, NB Management;          Management.8
Principal, Neuberger Berman

Celeste Wischerth,                      Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
Assistant Vice President,               Advisers Management Trust; Assistant
NB Management                           Treasurer, Advisers Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Income Funds; Assistant Treasurer,
                                        Neuberger Berman Income Trust; Assistant
                                        Treasurer, Neuberger Berman Equity
                                        Funds; Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger
                                        Berman Equity Trust; Assistant
                                        Treasurer, Income Managers Trust;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Equity Managers
                                        Trust; Assistant Treasurer, Global
                                        Managers Trust; Assistant Treasurer,
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Assets;
                                        Assistant Treasurer, Neuberger Berman
                                        Equity Series.

Lawrence Zicklin                        President and Trustee, Neuberger Berman
Director, NB Management;                Advisers Management Trust; President and
Principal, Neuberger Berman             Trustee, Advisers Managers Trust; 
                                        President and Trustee, Neuberger Berman 
                                        Equity Funds; President and Trustee,
                                        Neuberger Berman Equity Trust; President
                                        and Trustee, Neuberger Berman Equity 
                                        Assets, President and Trustee, Neuberger
                                        Berman Equity Funds; President and 
                                        Trustee, Global Managers Trust; 
                                        President and Trustee, Equity Managers 
                                        Trust; President and Trustee, Neuberger 
                                        Berman Equity Series.

      The principal address of NB Management, Neuberger Berman, and of each of
the investment companies named above, is 605 Third Avenue, New York, New York
10158.

- ------------------------------
8 Until 1998.

                                       11
<PAGE>



Item 27.  Principal Underwriters.
- -------   -----------------------

          (a)   NB Management, the principal underwriter distributing securities
of the Registrant, is also the principal underwriter and distributor for each of
the following investment companies:

            Neuberger Berman Advisers Management Trust
            Neuberger Berman Equity Funds
            Neuberger Berman Equity Assets
            Neuberger Berman Equity Series
            Neuberger Berman Income Funds
            Neuberger Berman Income Trust

          NB Management is also the investment manager to the master funds in
which the above-named investment companies invest.

          (b) Set forth below is information concerning the directors and
officers of the Registrant's principal underwriter. The principal business
address of each of the persons listed is 605 Third Avenue, New York, New York
10158-0180, which is also the address of the Registrant's principal underwriter.

                           POSITIONS AND OFFICES        POSITIONS AND OFFICES
NAME                       WITH UNDERWRITER             WITH REGISTRANT
- ----                       ----------------             ---------------
Ramesh Babu                Assistant Vice President     None

Patrick T. Byrne           Vice President               None

Richard A. Cantor          Chairman of the Board        None

Valerie Chang              Vice President               None

Brooke A. Cobb             Vice President               None

Robert Conti               Treasurer                    None

Robert W. D'Alelio         Vice President               None

Clara Del Villar           Vice President               None

Barbara DiGiorgio          Assistant Vice President     Assistant Treasurer

Stanley Egener             President and Director       Chairman of the
                                                        Board, Chief
                                                        Executive Officer,
                                                        and Trustee

 Brian Gaffney             Vice President               None

Joseph G. Galli            Assistant Vice President     None

Robert I. Gendelman        Vice President               None

                                       12
<PAGE>

                           POSITIONS AND OFFICES        POSITIONS AND OFFICES
NAME                       WITH UNDERWRITER             WITH REGISTRANT
- ----                       ----------------             ---------------

Theodore P. Giuliano       Vice President and Director  None

Michael M. Kassen          Vice President and Director  None

Robert L. Ladd             Assistant Vice President     None

Irwin Lainoff              Director                     None

Josephine Mahaney          Vice President               None

Michael F. Malouf          Vice President               None

Carmen G. Martinez         Assistant Vice President     None

Ellen Metzger              Secretary                    None

Paul Metzger               Vice President               None

S. Basu Mullick            Vice President               None

Janet W. Prindle           Vice President               None

Joseph S. Quirk            Assistant Vice President     None

Kevin L. Risen             Vice President               None

Richard Russell            Vice President               Treasurer and
                                                        Principal Accounting
                                                        Officer

Ingrid Saukaitis           Assistant Vice President     None

Benjamin Segal             Assistant Vice President     None

Jennifer K. Silver         Vice President               None

Kent C. Simons             Vice President               None

Frederick B. Soule         Vice President               None

Susan Stang                Vice President               None

Daniel J. Sullivan         Senior Vice President        Vice President

Peter E. Sundman           Senior Vice President        None

Andrea Trachtenberg        Senior Vice President        None

Judith M. Vale             Vice President               None

Josephine Velez            Assistant Vice President     None

Susan Walsh                Vice President               None

Catherine Waterworth       Vice President               None

Michael J. Weiner          Senior Vice President        Vice President and
                                                        Principal Financial
                                                        Officer

                                       13
<PAGE>

                           POSITIONS AND OFFICES        POSITIONS AND OFFICES
NAME                       WITH UNDERWRITER             WITH REGISTRANT
- ----                       ----------------             ---------------
Allan R. White III         Vice President               None

Celeste Wischerth          Assistant Vice President     Assistant Treasurer

Lawrence Zicklin           Director                     Trustee and President

      (c)   No commissions or other compensation were received directly or
indirectly from the Registrant by any principal underwriter who was not an
affiliated person of the Registrant.


Item 28.    Location of Accounts and Records.
- -------     --------------------------------

            All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder
with respect to the Registrant are maintained at the offices of State Street
Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, except
for the Registrant's Trust Instrument and By-laws, minutes of meetings of the
Registrant's Trustees and shareholders and the Registrant's policies and
contracts, which are maintained at the offices of the Registrant, 605 Third
Avenue, New York, New York 10158.

            All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder
with respect to Equity Managers Trust are maintained at the offices of State
Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110,
except for the Equity Managers Trust's Declaration of Trust and By-laws, minutes
of meetings of Equity Managers Trust's Trustees and interest holders and Equity
Managers Trust's policies and contracts, which are maintained at the offices of
the Equity Managers Trust, 605 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10158.

            All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder
with respect to Global Managers Trust are maintained at the offices of State
Street Cayman Trust Company, Ltd., Elizabethan Square, P.O. Box 1984, George
Town, Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands, BWI.


                                       14
<PAGE>


Item 29.    Management Services
- -------     -------------------

            Other than as set forth in Parts A and B of this Registration
Statement, the Registrant is not a party to any management-related service
contract.

Item 30.    Undertakings
- -------     ------------

            None.


                                       15
<PAGE>



                                   SIGNATURES

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933 and the
Investment  Company Act of 1940, the Registrant,  NEUBERGER  BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
certifies  that  it  meets  all  of  the  requirements   for   effectiveness  of
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 20 to its Registration  Statement pursuant to Rule
485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this  Post-Effective
Amendment  to its  Registration  Statement  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned,  thereto duly authorized,  in the City and State of New York on the
28th day of April, 1999.

                                      NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST


                                      By: /s/ Lawrence Zicklin
                                          --------------------
                                              Lawrence Zicklin
                                              President

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  this
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 20 has been signed below by the following  persons
in the capacities and on the date indicated.

Signature                      Title                         Date
- ---------                      -----                         ----

/s/Faith Colish                Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Faith Colish


/s/Stanley Egener              Chairman of the Board         April 28, 1999
- -------------------------       and Trustee (Chief
Stanley Egener                  Executive Officer)


/s/ Howard A. Mileaf           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Howard A. Mileaf


/s/Edward I. O'Brien           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Edward I. O'Brien


                       (signatures continued on next page)


<PAGE>

Signature                      Title                         Date
- ---------                      -----                         ----

/s/John T. Patterson, Jr.      Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
John T. Patterson, Jr.


/s/John P. Rosenthal           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
John P. Rosenthal


/s/Cornelius T. Ryan           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Cornelius T. Ryan


/s/Gustave H. Shubert          Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Gustave H. Shubert


/s/Lawrence Zicklin            President and Trustee         April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Lawrence Zicklin


/s/Michael J. Weiner           Vice President                April 28, 1999
- -------------------------      (Principal
Michael J. Weiner              Financial Officer)



/s/Richard Russell             Treasurer (Principal          April 28, 1999
- -------------------------       Accounting Officer)
Richard Russell                  



<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933 and the
Investment  Company Act of 1940,  EQUITY  MANAGERS TRUST certifies that it meets
all of the requirements for effectiveness of Post-Effective  Amendment No. 20 to
the Registration  Statement  pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of
1933 and has duly  caused  this  Post-Effective  Amendment  to the  Registration
Statement  to  be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,  thereto  duly
authorized, in the City and State of New York on the 28th day of April, 1999.

                                 EQUITY MANAGERS TRUST


                                 By: /s/ Lawrence Zicklin
                                     --------------------------
                                         Lawrence Zicklin
                                         President

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  the
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 20 has been signed below by the following  persons
in the capacities and on the date indicated.

Signature                      Title                         Date
- ---------                      -----                         ----

/s/Faith Colish                Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Faith Colish


/s/Stanley Egener              Chairman of the Board         April 28, 1999
- -------------------------       and Trustee (Chief
Stanley Egener                  Executive Officer)


/s/ Howard A. Mileaf           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Howard A. Mileaf


/s/Edward I. O'Brien           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Edward I. O'Brien


                       (signatures continued on next page)


<PAGE>

Signature                      Title                         Date
- ---------                      -----                         ----

/s/John T. Patterson, Jr.      Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
John T. Patterson, Jr.


/s/John P. Rosenthal           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
John P. Rosenthal


/s/Cornelius T. Ryan           Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Cornelius T. Ryan


/s/Gustave H. Shubert          Trustee                       April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Gustave H. Shubert


/s/Lawrence Zicklin            President and Trustee         April 28, 1999
- -------------------------
Lawrence Zicklin


/s/Michael J. Weiner           Vice President                April 28, 1999
- -------------------------      (Principal
Michael J. Weiner              Financial Officer)



/s/Richard Russell             Treasurer (Principal          April 28, 1999
- -------------------------       Accounting Officer)
Richard Russell                  




                                       2


<PAGE>



                        NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST

                 POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 20 ON FORM N-1A


                              INDEX TO EXHIBITS


    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

    (a)         (1)   Certificate of Trust.  Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      8 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (2)   Restated Certificate of Trust.  Incorporated
                      by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment 
                      No. 18 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784,
                      EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-98-000838.

                (3)   Trust Instrument of Neuberger Berman
                      Equity Trust. Incorporated by Reference
                      to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, 
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, 
                      EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (4)   Schedule A - Current Series of Neuberger
                      Berman Equity Trust. Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      19 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-99-000158.

    (b)         By-laws of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust.
                Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective 
                Amendment No. 8 to Registrant's Registration 
                Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, 
                EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

    (c)         (1)   Trust Instrument of Neuberger Berman
                      Equity Trust, Articles IV, V, and VI.
                      Incorporated by Reference to
                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                      Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (2)   By-laws of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust,
                      Articles V, VI, and VIII.  Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      8 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                                       16
<PAGE>

    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

    (d)         (1)   (i)   Management Agreement Between Equity
                            Managers Trust and Neuberger Berman
                            Management Inc..  Incorporated by
                            Reference to Post-Effective
                            Amendment No. 70 to Registration
                            Statement of Neuberger Berman Equity
                            Funds, File Nos. 2-11357 and
                            811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                            0000898432-95-000314.

                (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Equity
                            Managers Trust Currently Subject to
                            the Management Agreement. Filed
                            Herewith.

                (iii)       Schedule B - Schedule of
                            Compensation Under the Management
                            Agreement. Filed Herewith.

                (2)   (i)   Sub-Advisory Agreement Between
                            Neuberger Berman Management Inc. and
                            Neuberger Berman, LLC with Respect
                            to Equity Managers Trust.
                            Incorporated by Reference to
                            Post-Effective Amendment No. 70 to
                            Registration Statement of Neuberger
                            Berman Equity Funds, File Nos.
                            2-11357 and 811-582, EDGAR Accession
                            No. 0000898432-95-000314.

                (ii)        Schedule A -  Series of Equity
                            Managers Trust Currently Subject to
                            the Sub-Advisory Agreement. Filed
                            Herewith.

                (iii)       Substitution Agreement Among
                            Neuberger Berman Management Inc.,
                            Equity Managers Trust, Neuberger
                            Berman, L.P., and Neuberger Berman,
                            LLC.  Incorporated by Reference to
                            Amendment No. 7 to Registration
                            Statement of Equity Managers Trust,
                            File No. 811-7910, EDGAR Accession
                            No. 0000898432-96-000557.

                (3)   (i)   Management Agreement Between Global
                            Managers Trust and Neuberger Berman
                            Management Inc.. Incorporated by
                            Reference to Post-Effective
                            Amendment No. 74 to Registration
                            Statement of Neuberger Berman Equity
                            Funds, File Nos. 2-11357 and
                            811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                            0000898432-95-000426.

                                       17
<PAGE>

    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

                (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Global
                            Managers Trust Currently Subject to
                            the Management Agreement.
                            Incorporated by Reference to
                            Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to
                            Registration Statement of Neuberger
                            Berman Equity Funds, File Nos.
                            2-11357 and 811-582, EDGAR Accession
                            No. 0000898432-95-000426.

                (iii)       Schedule B - Schedule of
                            Compensation Under the Management
                            Agreement.  Incorporated by
                            Reference to Post-Effective
                            Amendment No. 74 to Registration
                            Statement of Neuberger Berman Equity
                            Funds, File Nos. 2-11357 and
                            811-582, EDGAR Accession No.
                            0000898432-95-000426.

                (4)   (i)   Sub-Advisory Agreement Between
                            Neuberger Berman Management Inc. and
                            Neuberger Berman, LLC with Respect
                            to Global Managers Trust.
                            Incorporated by Reference to
                            Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to
                            Registration Statement of Neuberger
                            Berman Equity Funds, File Nos.
                            2-11357 and 811-582, EDGAR Accession
                            No. 0000898432-95-000426.

                (ii)        Schedule A - Series of Global
                            Managers Trust Currently Subject to
                            the Sub-Advisory Agreement.
                            Incorporated by Reference to
                            Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to
                            Registration Statement of Neuberger
                            Berman Equity Funds, File Nos.
                            2-11357 and 811-582, EDGAR Accession
                            No. 0000898432-95-000426.

                                       18
<PAGE>

    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

                (iii)       Substitution Agreement among
                            Neuberger Berman Management Inc.,
                            Global Managers Trust, Neuberger
                            Berman, L.P. and Neuberger Berman,
                            LLC.  Incorporated by Reference to
                            the substantially similar agreement
                            filed in Post-Effective Amendment
                            No. 7 to the Registration Statement
                            of Equity Managers Trust, File No.
                            811-7910, EDGAR Accession No.
                            0000898432-96-000557 (the documents
                            differ only with respect to the date
                            of and the master fund party to the
                            subadvisory agreement under which
                            substitution is sought and the name
                            of the executing master fund).

    (e)   (1)   Distribution Agreement Between Neuberger Berman
                Equity Trust and Neuberger Berman Management
                Inc.. Incorporated by Reference to
                Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 to Registrant's
                Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                811-7784, EDGAR Accession
                No. 0000898432-97-000519.

          (2)   Schedule A - Series of Neuberger Berman Equity
                Trust Currently Subject to the Distribution
                Agreement. Incorporated by Reference to
                Post-Effective Amendment No. 19 to Registrant's
                Registration Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and
                811-7784, EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-99-000158.

    (f)         Bonus, Profit Sharing or Pension Plans.  None.

    (g)         (1)   Custodian Contract Between Neuberger
                      Berman Equity Trust and State Street Bank
                      and Trust Company.  Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      8 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (2)   Schedule of Compensation under the
                      Custodian Contract.  Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      10 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-96-000532.

                                       19
<PAGE>

    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

    (h)   (1)   (i)   Transfer Agency and Service Agreement
                      Between Neuberger Berman Equity Trust and
                      State Street Bank and Trust Company.
                      Incorporated by Reference to
                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                      Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (ii)  First Amendment to Transfer Agency and
                      Service Agreement between Neuberger Berman
                      Equity Trust and State Street Bank and
                      Trust Company.  Incorporated by Reference
                      to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                      Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

                (iii) Schedule of Compensation under the Transfer 
                      Agency and Service Agreement. Incorporated 
                      by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment 
                      No. 10 to Registrant's Registration 
                      Statement, File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784,
                      EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-96-000532.

                (iv)  Second Amendment to Transfer Agency and
                      Service Agreement between Neuberger Berman
                      Equity Trust and State Street Bank and
                      Trust Company.  Incorporated by reference
                      to Post-Effective Amendment No. 12 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                      Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-97-000398.

          (2)   (i)   Administration Agreement Between Neuberger
                      Berman Equity Trust and Neuberger Berman
                      Management Inc.. Incorporated by Reference
                      to Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 to
                      Registrant's Registration Statement, File
                      Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-97-000519.

                                       20
<PAGE>

    Exhibit
    Number                         Description
    -------                        -----------

                (ii)  Schedule A - Series of Neuberger Berman
                      Equity Trust Currently Subject to the
                      Administration Agreement. Incorporated by
                      Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
                      19 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR
                      Accession No. 0000898432-99-000158.

                (iii) Schedule B - Schedule of Compensation Under
                      the Administration Agreement. Incorporated 
                      by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment 
                      No. 8 to Registrant's Registration Statement,
                      File Nos. 33-64368 and 811-7784, EDGAR 
                      Accession No. 0000898432-95-000427.

    (i)        Opinion and Consent of Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP
               on Securities Matters with Respect to Neuberger 
               Berman Regency Trust. Filed Herewith.

    (j)        Consent of Independent Auditors.  None.

    (k)         Financial Statements Omitted from Prospectus.
                None.

    (l)         Letter of Investment Intent.  None.

    (m)         Form of Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1.  Filed
                Herewith.

    (n)         Financial Data Schedule.  None.

    (o)         Plan Pursuant to Rule 18f-3.  None.


                                       21
<PAGE>
                              EQUITY MANAGERS TRUST
                              MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

                                   SCHEDULE A


      The Series of Equity Managers Trust currently subject to this Agreement
are as follows:


Neuberger Berman Focus Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Genesis Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Guardian Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Manhattan Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Partners Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Socially Responsive Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Millennium Portfolio
Neuberger Berman Regency Portfolio

<PAGE>
                              EQUITY MANAGERS TRUST
                              MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

                                   SCHEDULE B


Compensation pursuant to Paragraph 3 of the Equity Managers Trust Management
Agreement shall be calculated in accordance with the following schedules:

NEUBERGER BERMAN GUARDIAN PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANHATTAN PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN PARTNERS PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN FOCUS PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN SOCIALLY RESPONSIVE PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN REGENCY PORTFOLIO

0.55% on the first $250 million of average daily net assets
0.525% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.50% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.475% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.45% on the next $500 million of average daily net assets 
0.425% on average daily net assets in excess of $1 billion

NEUBERGER BERMAN GENESIS PORTFOLIO
NEUBERGER BERMAN MILLENNIUM PORTFOLIO

0.85% on the first $250 million of average daily net assets
0.80% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.75% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.70% on the next $250 million of average daily net assets
0.65% on average daily net assets in excess of $1 billion


April 30, 1999

<PAGE>
                        NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT INC.
                             SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT

                                   SCHEDULE A


      The Series of Equity Managers Trust currently subject to this Agreement
are as follows:


Neuberger Berman Focus Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Genesis Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Guardian Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Manhattan Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Partners Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Socially Responsive
Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Millennium Portfolio

Neuberger Berman Regency Portfolio

<PAGE>
                           KIRKPATRICK & LOCKHART LLP
                         1800 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, N.W.
                                    2nd FLOOR
                          WASHINGTON, D.C. 200036-1800

                            TELEPHONE (202) 778-9000
                            FACSIMILE (202) 778-9100
                                   www.kl.com

                                 
                                 April 30, 1999


Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
605 Third Avenue, Second Floor
New York, New York  10158-0180

Ladies and Gentlemen:

      Neuberger  Berman  Equity Trust  ("Trust") is a business  trust  organized
under the laws of the State of Delaware and governed by a Trust Instrument dated
May 6,  1993.  You have  requested  our  opinion  regarding  certain  matters in
connection with the Trust's issuance of shares of beneficial interest, par value
$0.001 per share  ("Shares"),  in its new series, Neuberger Berman Regency Trust
("Fund").

      We  have,  as  counsel,   participated  in  various   business  and  other
proceedings relating to the Trust. We have examined copies,  either certified or
otherwise  proved to be genuine,  of the Trust Instrument and the By-laws of the
Trust,  the minutes of meetings  of its board of  trustees  and other  documents
relating to its organization and operation,  and we are generally  familiar with
its  business  affairs.  Based upon the  foregoing,  it is our opinion  that the
Shares of the Fund may be legally  and  validly  issued in  accordance  with the
Trust's  Trust  Instrument  and  By-laws  and  subject  to  compliance  with the
Securities Act of 1933, the Investment  Company Act of 1940 and applicable state
laws regulating the offer and sale of securities; and when so issued, the Shares
will be legally issued, fully paid and non-assessable by the Trust.

      The  Trust  is a  business  trust  established  pursuant  to the  Delaware
Business  Trust  Act  ("Delaware   Act").  The  Delaware  Act  provides  that  a
shareholder  of the  Trust  is  entitled  to the  same  limitation  of  personal
liability  extended to  shareholders of for-profit  corporations.  To the extent
that the Trust or any of its shareholders becomes subject to the jurisdiction of
courts in states  which do not have  statutory or other  authority  limiting the
liability  of  business  trust  shareholders,  such  courts  might not apply the
Delaware Act and could subject Trust shareholders to liability.

      To guard against this risk, the Trust Instrument:  (i) requires that every
written  obligation of the Trust contain a statement that such obligation may be
enforced only against the assets of the Trust;  however,  the omission of such a
disclaimer  will not operate to create personal  liability for any  shareholder;
and (ii) provides for  indemnification  out of Trust property of any shareholder
held  personally  liable,  solely  by  reason  of being a  shareholder,  for the
obligations  of the  Trust.  Thus,  the  risk of a Trust  shareholder  incurring
financial loss beyond his or her investment because of shareholder  liability is
limited to  circumstances  in which:  (i) a court refuses to apply Delaware law;
(ii) no  contractual  limitation of liability is in effect;  and (iii) the Trust
itself is unable to meet its obligations.

<PAGE>

Neuberger Berman Equity Trust
April 30, 1999
Page 2



      We express no opinion as to compliance  with the  Securities  Act of 1933,
the  Investment  Company Act of 1940, or  applicable  state  securities  laws in
connection with the sale of Shares.

      We  hereby  consent  to the  filing of this  opinion  in  connection  with
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 20 to the Trust's  Registration  Statement on Form
N-1A (File Nos.  33-64368 and  811-07784)  to be filed with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission.  We  also  consent  to the  reference  to our  firm in the
Statement of Additional Information filed as part of the Registration Statement.



                                   Sincerely,

                                    KIRKPATRICK & LOCKHART LLP


                                    By:   /s/ Arthur C. Delibert
                                          --------------------------
                                              Arthur C. Delibert
<PAGE>


                          NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
                           PLAN PURSUANT TO RULE 12B-1


        WHEREAS,   Neuberger  Berman  Equity  Trust  ("Trust")  is  an  open-end
management  investment  company  registered under the Investment  Company Act of
1940, as amended  ("1940  Act"),  and intends to offer for public sale shares of
beneficial interest in several series (each series a "Fund");

        WHEREAS,  the Trust desires to adopt a plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under
the 1940 Act and the Board of Trustees has determined that there is a reasonable
likelihood  that  adoption  of said  plan  will  benefit  the  Funds  and  their
shareholders; and

        WHEREAS,  the Trust has employed  Neuberger Berman  Management Inc. ("NB
Management") as principal underwriter of the shares of the Trust;

        NOW, THEREFORE, the Trust hereby adopts this Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1
("Plan") in accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act on the following terms
and conditions:

        1.     This Plan applies to the Funds listed on Schedule A.

        2. A. Each Fund shall pay to NB Management,  as compensation for selling
Fund shares or for providing  shareholder and administration  services, a fee at
the rate  specified for that Fund on Schedule A, such fee to be  calculated  and
accrued  daily and paid  monthly or at such other  intervals  as the Board shall
determine.

               B. The fees payable  hereunder are payable  without regard to the
aggregate amount that may be paid over the years,  provided that, so long as the
limitations  set  forth in  Article  III,  Section  26(d)  of the  Rules of Fair
Practice  ("Section 26(d)") of the National  Association of Securities  Dealers,
Inc.  ("NASD")  remain in effect and apply to  recipients of payments made under
this Plan,  the  amounts  paid  hereunder  shall not exceed  those  limitations,
including permissible interest.

        3. A. As principal  underwriter of the Trust's shares, NB Management may
spend  such  amounts  as it deems  appropriate  on any  activities  or  expenses
primarily intended to result in the sale of shares of the Funds, including,  but
not limited to,  compensation to employees of NB Management;  compensation to NB
Management and other  broker-dealers  that engage in or support the distribution
of shares;  expenses of NB Management and such other  broker-dealers,  including
overhead  and  telephone  and other  communication  expenses;  the  printing  of
prospectuses,  statements of additional information,  and reports for other than
existing shareholders;  and the preparation and distribution of sales literature
and advertising materials.

               B. NB Management  may spend such amounts as it deems  appropriate
on the administration and servicing of shareholder accounts,  including, but not
limited to, administering  periodic investment and periodic withdrawal programs;
researching  and  providing   historical   account   activity   information  for
shareholders  requesting  it;  preparing  and mailing  account and  confirmation
statements  to  account  holders;  preparing  and  mailing  tax forms to account
holders;  serving as  custodian  for  retirement  plans  investing in the Funds;
dealing  appropriately  with  abandoned  accounts;  collating  and reporting the
number of  shares  attributable  to each  state  for blue sky  registration  and
reporting purposes;  identifying and reporting transactions exempt from blue sky

<PAGE>


registration  requirements;  and providing and maintaining  ongoing  shareholder
services for the duration of the  shareholders'  investment in each Fund,  which
may include updates on fund performance, total return, other related statistical
information,  and a continual  analysis of the  suitability of the investment in
each  Fund;  and may pay  compensation  and  expenses,  including  overhead  and
telephone and other communication  expenses,  to organizations and employees who
provide such services.

        4. This Plan shall take effect on April 30,  1999 and shall  continue in
effect  with  respect to each Fund for  successive  periods of one year from its
execution for so long as such continuance is specifically  approved with respect
to such Fund at least annually together with any related agreements, by votes of
a majority of both (a) the Board of Trustees of the Trust and (b) those Trustees
who are not  "interested  persons" of the Trust, as defined in the 1940 Act, and
who have no direct or indirect  financial interest in the operation of this Plan
or any agreements related to it (the "Rule 12b-1 Trustees"), cast in person at a
meeting  or  meetings  called  for the  purpose  of voting on this Plan and such
related  agreements;  and only if the Trustees who approve the implementation or
continuation  of the Plan have reached the conclusion  required by Rule 12b-1(e)
under the 1940 Act.

        5. Any person  authorized  to direct the  disposition  of monies paid or
payable by a Fund pursuant to this Plan or any related  agreement  shall provide
to the Trust's Board of Trustees and the Board shall review, at least quarterly,
a written  report of the amounts so  expended  and the  purposes  for which such
expenditures were made.

        6. This Plan may be  terminated  with  respect  to a Fund at any time by
vote of a majority  of the Rule 12b-1  Trustees  or by vote of a majority of the
outstanding voting securities of that Fund.

        7. This Plan may not be amended  to  increase  materially  the amount of
fees to be paid by any Fund  hereunder  unless such  amendment  is approved by a
vote of at least a majority  of the  outstanding  securities  (as defined in the
1940 Act) of that  Fund,  and no  material  amendment  to the Plan shall be made
unless such  amendment is approved in the manner  provided in paragraph 4 hereof
for annual approval.

        8.  While  this Plan is in  effect,  the  selection  and  nomination  of
Trustees  who are not  interested  persons of the Trust,  as defined in the 1940
Act,  shall be committed to the  discretion of Trustees who are  themselves  not
interested persons.

        9.  The  Trust  shall  preserve  copies  of this  Plan  and any  related
agreements  for a period of not less than six years from the date of  expiration
of the Plan or  agreement,  as the case may be, the first two years in an easily
accessible  place;  and shall  preserve  copies of each report made  pursuant to
Paragraph 5 hereof for a period of not less than six years from the date of such
report, the first two years in an easily accessible place.


<PAGE>



        IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the Trust has executed  this Plan Pursuant to Rule
12b-1 as of the day and year set forth below.


Date: _______________________  NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST



Attest:                      By: _______________________



By: ___________________                        



Agreed and assented to by

NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT INC.



By:________________________________


<PAGE>



                          NEUBERGER BERMAN EQUITY TRUST
                           PLAN PURSUANT TO RULE 12B-1
                                   SCHEDULE A

        The series of Neuberger Berman Equity Trust subject to the Plan Pursuant
to 12b-1, and the applicable fee rates, are:

                                                    Fee (as a Percentage of
               Series                              Average Daily Net Assets
               ------                              ------------------------

Neuberger Berman Regency Trust                            0.25%


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