PAGE 1
Registration Nos.: 033-50319/811-7093
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D. C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 / X /
Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 / X /
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF
1940 / X /
Amendment No. 3 / X /
Fiscal Year Ended October 31, 1994
______________________________________
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
_________________________________
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202
__________________________________________ __________
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code 410-547-2000
____________
Henry H. Hopkins
100 East Pratt Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21202
_______________________________________
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering March 1, 1995
_______________
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check
appropriate box):
/ / immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
/X/ on March 1, 1995 pursuant to paragraph (b)
/ / 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
PAGE 2
/ / on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
/ / 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii)
/ / on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii) of Rule 485
If appropriate, check the following box:
/ / this post-effective amendment designates a new
effective date for a previously filed post-effective
amendment.
CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933+
______________________________________________
Pursuant to Section 24f-2 of the Investment Company Act of 1940,
the Registrant has registered an indefinite number of securities
under the Securities Act of 1933 and intends to file a 24f-2
notice by December 31, 1995.
+Not applicable, as no securities are being registered by this
Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement.
PAGE 3
The Registration Statement of the T. Rowe Price Summit
Funds, Inc. on Form N-1A (File No. 33-50319) is hereby amended
under the Securities Act of 1933 to update the Registrant's
financial statements, make other changes in the Registrant's
Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, and to
satisfy the annual amendment requirement of Rule 8b-16 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940.
This Amendment consists of the following:
Cross Reference Sheet
Part A of Form N-1A, Revised Prospectus
Part B of Form N-1A, Statement of Additional Information
Part C of Form N-1A, Other Information
Opinion of Counsel
Accountants' Consent
PAGE 4
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
N-1A Item No. Location
_____________ _________
PART A
Item 1. Cover Page Cover Page
Item 2. Synopsis Transaction and Fund
Expenses
Item 3. Condensed Financial Information Financial Highlights
Item 4. General Description of Transaction and Fund
Registrant Fund Expenses; Fund,
Market, and Risk
Characteristics; The
Funds' Organization
and Management;
Understanding Fund
Performance;
Investment Policies
and Practices; Types
of Fund Management
Practices; Ratings of
Corporate Debt
Securities
Item 5. Management of Fund Transaction and Fund
Expenses; Fund,
Market, and Risk
Characteristics; The
Funds' Organization
and Management
Item 6. Capital Stock and Other Distributions and
Securities Taxes; The Funds'
Organization and
Management
Item 7. Purchase of Securities Being Pricing Shares and
Offered Receiving Sale
Proceeds; Transaction
Procedures and Special
Requirements; Meeting
Requirements for New
Accounts; Shareholder
Services
Item 8. Redemption or Repurchase Pricing Shares and
Receiving Sale
Proceeds; Transaction
Procedures and Special
Requirements;
Exchanging and
Redeeming Shares;
Shareholder Services
Item 9. Pending Legal Proceedings +
PAGE 5
PART B
Item 10. Cover Page Cover Page
Item 11. Table of Contents Table of Contents
Item 12. General Information and History +
Item 13. Investment Objectives and Investment Objectives
Policies and Policies;
Investment Program;
Investment
Restrictions;
Investment Performance
Item 14. Management of the Registrant Management of Funds
Item 15. Control Persons and Principal Principal Holders of
Holders of Securities Securities
Item 16. Investment Advisory and Other Investment Management
Services Services; Custodian;
Independent
Accountants; Legal
Counsel
Item 17. Brokerage Allocation Portfolio
Transactions; Code of
Ethics
Item 18. Capital Stock and Other Dividends and
Securities Distributions;
Organization of the
Fund
Item 19. Purchase, Redemption and Pricing Redemptions in Kind;
of Securities Being Offered Pricing of Securities;
Net Asset Value Per
Share; Federal and
State Registration of
Shares; Ratings of
Corporate Debt
Securities
Item 20. Tax Status Tax Status
Item 21. Underwriters Distributor for the
Fund
Item 22. Calculation of Yield Quotations
of Money Market Funds Yield Information
Item 23. Financial Statements Incorporated by
Reference from Annual
Report
PART C
Information required to be included in Part C is set forth under
the appropriate item, so numbered, in Part C to this Registration
Statement
___________________________________
+ Not applicable or negative answer
PAGE 6
Facts at a Glance
Investment Goals
Money fund: Preservation of capital,
liquidity, and the highest level of
income consistent with these goals.
Bond funds: Highest level of income
consistent with each fund's
prescribed investment program.
As with all mutual funds, these
funds may not meet their objectives.
Strategy and Risk/Reward
Cash Reserves Fund. Invests
principally in the highest-quality
U.S. dollar-denominated money market
securities. Average maturity will
not exceed 90 days. YOUR
INVESTMENT IN THE FUND IS NEITHER
INSURED NOR GUARANTEED BY THE U.S.
GOVERNMENT, AND THERE IS NO
ASSURANCE THE FUND WILL BE ABLE TO
MAINTAIN A STABLE NET ASSET VALUE OF
$1.00 PER SHARE.
Risk/Reward: Lowest potential risk
and reward.
Limited-Term Bond Fund. Invests
primarily in investment-grade
corporate bonds. Average effective
maturity will range between one and
five years.
Risk/Reward: Moderate income level
and share-price fluctuation.
GNMA Fund. Invests primarily in
mortgage-backed certificates issued
by the Government National Mortgage
Association (GNMA) as well as in
other U.S. Government agency
securities. Effective maturity will
vary between three and 10 years.
Risk/Reward: Expected to provide
higher income than the Limited-Term
Bond Fund accompanied by potentially
greater share-price fluctuation.
PAGE 7
Investor Profile
Investors who seek higher yields for
the fixed-income portion of their
portfolio and can meet the funds'
$25,000 initial purchase
requirement. Appropriate for
tax-deferred retirement plans.
Fees and Charges
100% no load. No fees or charges to
buy or sell shares or to reinvest
dividends; no 12b-1 marketing fees;
free telephone exchange.
Investment Manager
Founded in 1937 T. Rowe Price
Associates and its affiliates
managed over $57 billion in
approximately three million
individual and institutional
investor accounts as of December 31,
1994.
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN
APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION,
NOR HAS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION, OR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION, PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY
OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE. T. Rowe Price
Summit Funds, Inc.
March 1, 1995
Prospectus
Contents
________________________
1 About the Funds
________________________
Transaction and Fund
Expenses
________________________
Financial Highlights
________________________
Fund, Market, and Risk
Characteristics
________________________
PAGE 8
2 About Your Account
________________________
Pricing Shares;
Receiving Sale Proceeds
________________________
Distributions and Taxes
________________________
Transaction Procedures
and Special Requirements
________________________
3 More About the Funds
________________________
Organization and
Management
________________________
Understanding Fund
Performance
________________________
Investment Policies and
Practices
________________________
4 Investing With T. Rowe
Price
________________________
Meeting Requirements for
New Accounts
________________________
Opening a New Account
________________________
Purchasing Additional
Shares
________________________
Exchanging and Redeeming
________________________
Shareholder Services
________________________
This prospectus
contains information you
should know before
investing. Please keep
it for future reference.
A Statement of
Additional Information
about the funds, dated
March 1, 1995, has been
filed with the
Securities and Exchange
Commission and is
incorporated by
PAGE 9
reference in this
prospectus. To obtain a
free copy, call
1-800-977-1577.
PAGE 10
1 About the Funds
Transaction and Fund Expenses
_________________________
Expense ratios for the
Summit funds are
substantially below their
industry averages. Each T. Rowe Price Summit fund has a
single, all-inclusive fee covering
investment management and operating
expenses. This fee will not fluctuate. In
contrast, most mutual funds have a fixed
management fee plus a fee for operating
expenses that varies according to a number
of other factors. (See "How are fund
expenses determined?" on page __.)
_________________________
Like all T. Rowe Price
funds, the Summit funds
are 100% no load. In Table 1 below, "Shareholder
Transaction Expenses" shows that you pay no
direct sales charges. All the money you
invest in a fund goes to work for you,
subject to the fees explained below.
"Annual Fund Expenses" provides an estimate
of how much it will cost to operate each
fund for a year, based on 1994 fiscal year
expenses. These are costs you pay
indirectly, because they are deducted from
the fund's total assets before the daily
share price is calculated and before
dividends and other distributions are made.
In other words, you will not see these
expenses on your account statement.
Shareholder Transaction Expenses
___________________________________________
Sales charge "load" on purchases None
___________________________________________
Sales charge "load" on
reinvested dividends None
___________________________________________
Redemption fees None
___________________________________________
Exchange fees None
___________________________________________
Annual Fund Percentage of Fiscal 1994
Expenses Average Net Assets
PAGE 11
Cash Limited- GNMA
Reserves Term Bond
___________________________________________
Management fee*0.45% 0.55% 0.60%
___________________________________________
Marketing fees
(12b-1) None None None
___________________________________________
Other expenses* 0.00 0.00 0.00
___________________________________________
Total fund
expenses* 0.45 0.55 0.60
___________________________________________
* The management fee includes operating
expenses.
Note: The funds charge a $5 fee for wire
redemptions under $5,000, subject to change
without notice.
___________________________________________
Table 1
o Hypothetical example: Assume you invest
$1,000, the fund returns 5% annually,
expense ratios remain as listed above,
and you close your account at the end of
the time periods shown. Your expenses
would be:
_________________________
The table at right is
just an example; actual
expenses can be higher or
lower than those shown. ___________________________________________
1 year3 years 5 years 10 years
___________________________________________
Cash
Reserves $5 $14 $25 $57
___________________________________________
Limited-Term
Bond $6 $18 $31 $69
___________________________________________
GNMA $6 $19 $33 $75
___________________________________________
Table 2
Financial Highlights
PAGE 12
The following table provides information
about each Fund's financial history. It is
based on a single share outstanding
throughout the fiscal year. The table is
part of each fund's financial statements
which are included in the funds' annual
report and are incorporated by reference
into the Statement of Additional
Information. This document is available to
shareholders upon request. The financial
statements in the annual report have been
audited by Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.,
independent accountants, whose unqualified
report covers the period shown.
Investment Activities Distributions
Net Realized Total
and from
Year Net Asset Net Unrealized Invest- Net
Ended, Value, Invest- Gain ment Invest- Net Total
October Beginning ment (Loss) on Activi- ment RealizedDistri-
31 of Period IncomeInvestments ties Income Gain butions
_________________________________________________________________
Cash Reserves Fund
1994 $ 1.000 $0.035 - $ 0.035 $(0.035) - $(0.035)
Limited-Term Bond Fund
1994 $ 5.00 $0.33 $(0.36) $(0.03) $(0.33) - $(0.33)
GNMA Fund
1994 $10.00 $0.69 $(0.85) $(0.16) $(0.69) - $(0.69)
_________________________________________________________________
End of Period
Ratio
Total of Net
Year Return Ratio ofInvestment
Ended Net Asset (Includes Expenses Income Portfolio
OctoberValue, EndReinvestedNet Assets to Average to AverageTurnover
31 of Period Dividends)($ Thousands)Net AssetsNet Assets Rate
_________________________________________________________________
Cash Reserves Fund
1994 $1.000 3.60% $186,523 0.45%a 4.03a% -
Limited-Term Bond Fund
1994 $4.64 (0.71)% $ 21,116 0.55%a 6.98%a 296.0%a
PAGE 13
GNMA Fund
1994 $9.15 (1.67)% $ 17,184 0.60%a 7.31%a 61.5%a
_________________________________________________________________
a Annualized
________________________________________________________________
Table 3
Fund, Market, and Risk Characteristics: What to Expect
To help you decide which of the T. Rowe
Price Summit funds may be appropriate for
you, this section takes a closer look at
their special benefits, the fixed-income
markets in which they invest, and the
investment programs for the Cash Reserves,
Limited-Term Bond, and GNMA funds.
_________________________
Benefits of investing in
the T. Rowe Price Summit
funds. How do I benefit from investing in the T.
Rowe Price Summit funds?
You gain the advantages of funds that are
tailored specifically to the needs of self-
directed individuals with substantial
assets to invest in fixed-income
securities. The funds offer such investors
three key benefits:
o Access to professionally managed,
diversified portfolios of fixed-income
securities.
o A low-cost structure that translates into
higher returns, all else being equal.
o Services designed to help you manage your
investments more effectively and
efficiently.
How do the funds achieve their low-cost
advantage?
The advantage reflects their more favorable
ratio of expenses to assets. The $25,000
initial purchase requirement means that the
average account balanced in each Summit
fund is high. Since shareholder
recordkeeping costs--a substantial portion
of fund expenses--are basically the same
for all sizes of accounts, a fund
PAGE 14
with larger account balances can spread the
expenses over more investment dollars,
achieving a low overall expense ratio.
Expenses are deducted from fund assets
before dividends are paid, as explained on
the previous page, so lower costs result in
higher dividends for Summit shareholders.
What services can I expect to be available?
Unlike some mutual funds, low costs do not
mean any reduction in service for Summit
fund investors. On the contrary, you will
not only receive the wide range of services
available to all T. Rowe Price
shareholders, but also have access to
specially trained fixed-income service
representatives and timely market
information to help you manage your
accounts.
_________________________
You may find it helpful
to review some
fundamentals of fixed-
income investing. What are the major differences between
money market and bond funds?
o Price- Like all bond funds, the fund has
a fluctuating share price. Money market
funds are managed to maintain a stable
share price.
o Maturity- Limited-term bond funds have
longer average maturities (from one to 5
years) than money market funds (90 days
or less). Longer-term bond funds have
the longest average maturities (10 years
or more). Of course, unlike a money
market fund, the share prices of bond
funds will fluctuate and your investment
may be worth more or less on redemption
than purchase.
o Income- Limited-term bond funds typically
offer more income than money market funds
and less income than longer-term bond
funds.
What are derivatives and can the funds
invest in them?
PAGE 15
In the broadest sense, a derivative is any
security whose value is derived from
underlying securities or a market
benchmark. The amount of risk represented
by derivatives varies widely from one to
another, and may not be accurately depicted
by the instrument's credit quality rating.
The quality rating assesses the issuer's
ability to make all required interest and
principal payments. However, the
particular structure of the derivative may
determine whether or not the investor (such
as the fund) actually receives the interest
and/or principal payments. The fund can
invest in derivatives to hedge against
risks as well as to enhance returns. Some
of the potentially more volatile
derivatives the fund may purchase include
futures and stripped securities. (For
additional information or derivatives and
their potential use by the fund, please see
the section beginning on page __.)
Is a fund's yield fixed or will it vary?
It will vary. The yield is calculated every
day by dividing a fund's net income per
share, expressed at annual rates, by the
share price. Since both income and share
price will fluctuate, a fund's yield will
also vary. (Although money fund prices are
stable, income is variable.)
Is a fund's "yield" the same thing as
the "total return"?
"No" for bond funds. Your total return is
the result of reinvested income and the
change in share price for a given time
period. Income is always a positive
contributor to total return and can enhance
a rise in share price or serve as an offset
to a drop in share price. Since money
funds are managed to maintain a stable
share price, however, their yield and total
return should be the same.
What is "credit quality" and how does it
affect a fund's yield?
Credit quality refers to a bond issuer's
expected ability to make all required
PAGE 16
interest and principal payments in a timely
manner. Because highly rated bond issuers
represent less risk, they can borrow at
lower interest rates than less creditworthy
issuers. Therefore, a fund investing in
high-quality securities should have a lower
yield than an otherwise comparable fund
investing in lower credit-quality
securities.
What is meant by a bonds or bond fund's
maturity?
Every bond has a stated maturity date when
the issuer must repay the bond's entire
principal value to the investor. Some types
of bonds may also have an "effective
maturity" that is shorter than the stated
date. The effective maturity of mortgage-
backed bonds is determined by the rate at
which homeowners pay down the principal on
the underlying mortgages. Many corporate
and municipal bonds are "callable," meaning
their principal can be repaid before their
stated maturity dates on (or after)
specified call dates. Bonds are most likely
to be called when interest rates are
falling, because the issuer wants to
refinance at a lower rate. In such an
environment, a bond's "effective maturity"
is usually its nearest call date.
A bond mutual fund has no maturity in
the strict sense of the word, but does have
a dollar-weighted average maturity. This
number is an average of the stated
maturities of the underlying bonds, with
each maturity. This number is an average of
the stated maturities of the underlying
bonds, with each maturity "weighted" by the
percentage of fund assets it represents.
Funds that target effective maturities
would use the effective (rather than
stated) maturities of the underlying bonds
when computing the average. Targeting
effective maturity provides additional
flexibility in portfolio management but,
all else being equal, could result in
higher volatility than a fund targeting a
stated maturity or maturity range.
PAGE 17
What is a bond's or bond fund's "duration"?
Duration is a better measure than maturity
of a bond price sensitivity to interest
rate changes because it takes into account
the time value of cash flows generated over
the bond's life. Future interest and
principal payments are discounted to
reflect their present value and then are
multiplied by the number of years they will
be received to produce a value that is
expressed in years, i.e., the duration. A
more refined measure than average maturity,
effective duration takes into account call
features and sinking fund payments which
may shorten a bond's life.
Since duration can also be computed for
bond funds, you can estimate the effect of
interest rates on a bond fund's share
price. Simply multiply the fund's duration
(available for T. Rowe Price bond funds in
our quarterly shareholder reports) by an
expected change in interest rates. For
example, the price of a bond fund with a
duration of five years would be expected to
fall approximately 5% if rates rose by one
percentage point.
What are derivatives and can the funds
invest in them?
In the broadest sense, a derivative is any
security whose value is derived from
underlying securities or a market
benchmark. The amount of risk represented
by derivatives varies widely from one to
another, and may not be accurately depicted
by the instrument's credit quality rating.
The quality rating assesses the issuer's
ability to make all required interest and
principal payments. However, the
particular structure of the derivative may
determine whether or not the investor (such
as the fund) actually receives the interest
and/or principal payments. The fund can
invest in derivatives to hedge against
risks as well as to enhance returns. Some
of the potentially more volatile
derivatives the fund may purchase include
futures and stripped securities. (For
additional information or derivatives and
PAGE 18
their potential use by the fund, please see
the section beginning on page __.)
How is a bond's price affected by changes
in interest rates?
When interest rates rise, a bond's price
usually falls, and vice versa.
_________________________
In general, the longer
the bond's maturity, the
greater the price
increase and decrease in
response to a given
change in interest rates,
as shown in the table to
the right. ___________________________________________
How Interest Rates Affect Bond Prices
Bond Maturity Coupon Price of a $1,000 Bond
If Interest Rates:
Increase Decrease
1% 2% 1% 2%
___________________________________________
1 Year 5.40% $990 $981 $1,010$1,020
___________________________________________
5 Years 6.80 959 920 1,043 1,088
___________________________________________
10 Years 7.20 933 871 1,074 1,154
___________________________________________
30 Years 7.45 892 802 1,132 1,294
___________________________________________
Table 4 Coupons reflect yields on Treasury
securities as of May 31, 1994. This
is an illustration and does not
represent expected yields or share-
price changes of any T. Rowe Price
fund.
Since the average effective maturity of
bonds held by the Limited-Term Bond Fund
is expected to be approximately five
years, the funds share price, like the
value of the underlying bonds in its
portfolio, should fluctuate less than a
fund which holds bonds with longer
average effective maturities. If
mortgage prepayments should accelerate in
a falling interest rate environment, GNMA
PAGE 19
securities may appreciate less than shown
in the example above. The amount of
appreciation would depend on the
characteristics of the mortgages, such as
their coupon or maturity.
What are the main risks of investing in
bond funds?
o Interest rate or market risk - the
decline in bond and bond fund prices that
accompanies a rise in the overall level
of interest rates. (Although there is no
guarantee, this should not apply to money
funds, which seek to maintain a stable
share price.)
o Credit risk - the chance that any of a
fund's holdings will have its credit
rating downgraded or will default (fail
to make scheduled interest and principal
payments), potentially reducing the
fund's income level and/or share price.
How does T. Rowe Price try to reduce
risk?
Consistent with each fund's objective, the
portfolio manager actively manages bond and
money funds in an effort to manage risk and
increase total return. Risk management
tools include:
o Diversification of assets to reduce the
impact of a single holding on a fund's
net asset value;
o Thorough credit research by our own
analysts; and
o Adjustments in a fund's duration to
try to reduce the negative impact of
rising interest rates or take advantage
of the favorable effects of falling
rates. Depending on market outlook, the
investment manager may shorten or
lengthen the fund's average effective
maturity within the ranges and guidelines
established in this prospectus.
Depending on market outlook, the
investment manager may shorten or lengthen
a fund's average effective maturity within
PAGE 20
the ranges and guidelines established in
this prospectus.
Some characteristics of mortgage-backed
securities.
What are mortgage-backed securities and who
issues them?
Mortgage lenders pool individual home
mortgages with similar characteristics to
back a certificate or bond, which is sold
to investors. Interest and principal
payments generated by the underlying
mortgages are passed through to the
investors. The "big three" issuers of
mortgage-backed securities are the
Government National Mortgage Association
(Ginnie Mae), the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie
Mac). Private mortgage bankers also issue
these securities.
What are the main differences between GNMAs
and other mortgage-backed securities?
GNMA is part of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD), so GNMA's
guarantee of timely interest and principal
payments is backed by the full faith and
credit of the U.S. Government. Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac are privately owned,
government-sponsored agencies which issue
their own guarantees for interest and
principal payments on the mortgage-backed
securities they issue. Their securities do
no have a direct U.S. Government guarantee,
but are of the highest credit quality.
Privately issued mortgage-backed securities
carry no government guarantees. For this
and other reasons, all these securities
usually offer higher yields than GNMAs.
Do mortgage-backed securities usually
behave like other high-quality bonds?
Generally yes, with one important
exception. These securities are always
subject to principal prepayments as
homeowners pay down or pay off their
mortgages. When interest rates fall, the
pace of mortgage refinancings picks up.
PAGE 21
Refinanced mortgages are paid off at face
value (par), causing a loss for any
investor, such as a mutual fund, who may
have purchased the security at a price
above par. This risk limits the potential
price appreciation of these securities in
such an environment and can negatively
affect the fund's net asset value. However,
when rates rise, mortgage-backed securities
have historically experienced smaller price
declines than otherwise similar bonds.
_________________________
The share price and
yield of each fund
(except Cash Reserves)
will fluctuate with
changing market
conditions and interest
rate levels. When you
sell your shares, you may
lose money. What should I consider when selecting a
fund?
Review your own financial objectives, time
horizon, and risk tolerance. Use the next
table, which summarizes each funds' main
characteristics, to choose a fund (or
funds) suitable for your particular needs.
For example, only the money fund provides
principal stability, which makes it a good
choice for money you may need for
occasional or unexpected expenses.
However, if you are investing for the
highest possible income and can tolerate
some price volatility, you should consider
a longer-term bond fund.
___________________________________________
Differences Among Funds
Fund Income Risk of Expected Credit
Share- Average Quality
Price Maturity Catego-
Fluctuation ries
___________________________________________
Cash
ReservesLower Stable No more Two
than 90 Highest
days
PAGE 22
___________________________________________
Limited-
Term
Bond Moderate Moderate 1 to 5 Primarily
years Four
Highest
___________________________________________
GNMA Higher Higher 3 to 10 Two
years Highest
___________________________________________
Table 5
How does each fund's overall credit quality
relate to its investment objective?
Investing exclusively in high-quality
securities helps the Cash Reserves Fund
pursue its primary goal -- safety of
principal. To secure a higher income with
moderate principal fluctuation, the
Limited-Term Bond Fund invests at least 90%
of assets in investment-grade securities
(rated AAA through BBB); the balance may
consist of securities rated below
investment grade, including those with the
lowest rating. Like all portfolio holdings,
these securities are subject to rigorous
credit research conducted by T. Rowe Price
analysts. (For further discussion, see
"Investment Policies and Practices -- High
Yield Investing.") In keeping with its
emphasis on high income consistent with
credit safety, the GNMA Fund's investments
are all high quality.
Is there additional information about
these funds to help me make a decision?
You should review the investment objectives
and other details about each fund set forth
on the following few pages. Also, be sure
to review "Investment Policies and
Practices" in Section 3, which reviews the
following topics: Types of Portfolio
Securities (bonds, asset-backed securities,
mortgage-backed securities, hybrid
instruments, private placements, and
foreign securities; and Types of fund
Management Practices (cash position,
borrowing money and transferring assets,
futures and options, interest rate swaps,
managing foreign currency risk, lending of
PAGE 23
portfolio securities, when issued
securities and forward commitment contracts
and portfolio transactions and high
yield/high risk investing).
_________________________
The fund or funds you
select should reflect
your individual
investment goals, but
should not represent your
complete investment
program. No fund should
be used for short-term
trading purposes. Cash Reserves Fund. The fund's objectives
are preservation of capital, liquidity,
and, consistent with these, the highest
possible current income. The fund invests
in a diversified portfolio of U.S.
dollar-denominated money market securities
issued in the U.S. and abroad, and will not
invest more than 5% of its total assets in
securities of any one issuer. The fund's
yield will fluctuate in response to changes
in interest rates, but the share price is
managed to remain stable at $1.00. Unlike
most bank accounts or certificates of
deposit, the fund is not insured or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government.
All securities purchased will have ratings
in the two highest categories as determined
by nationally recognized rating agencies
or, if unrated, will be of equivalent
quality as determined by T. Rowe Price. At
least 95% of total assets will have the
highest credit rating. Securities purchased
will generally have maturities of 13 months
or less, although the fund may purchase
U.S. Government securities with maturities
of up to 25 months. The fund's
dollar-weighted average maturity will not
exceed 90 days.
_________________________
For more detailed
descriptions of each
fund's securities, see
"Investment Policies and
Practices." Limited-Term Bond Fund. The fund's
objective is to provide a high level of
PAGE 24
income consistent with moderate fluctuation
in principal value. The fund will invest
at least 65% of total assets in short- and
intermediate-term, investment-grade bonds.
There are no maturity limitations on
individual securities purchased, but the
fund's dollar-weighted average effective
maturity will not exceed five years.
Targeting effective maturity provides
additional flexibility in portfolio
management but, all else being equal, could
result in higher volatility than would be
true of a fund targeting a stated maturity
or maturity range.
At least 90% of the fund portfolio will be
invested in securities rated in the four
highest credit categories by a nationally
recognized rating agency, or, if unrated,
of equivalent quality as determined by T.
Rowe Price. To enhance yield, up to 10% of
assets can be invested in below-
investment-grade securities, including
those with the lowest rating. The fund's
income level should be much higher than the
money fund's, but its share price will
vary.
GNMA Fund. The fund's objective is to
provide a high level of income and maximum
credit protection by investing at least 65%
of total assets in GNMA certificates backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Government. Up to 35% of assets can be
invested in other types of high-quality
securities (AAA or AA), such as direct
obligations of the U.S. Government,
securities of other U.S.
Government-sponsored agencies, privately
issued mortgage securities, and corporate
bonds. The fund's effective maturity will
vary between three and 10 years and will be
influenced by principal prepayments of GNMA
or other mortgage-backed securities. Prices
of GNMAs and other mortgage-backed
securities fluctuate like other
fixed-income securities of comparable
maturity, but may have less appreciation
potential when interest rates decline,
because prepayments usually increase.
PAGE 25
Prepayments of mortgage securities that
were purchased at a price over face value
(par) result in a capital loss. The fund
should provide the highest income of these
three funds but is expected to experience
greater share-price fluctuation.
2 About Your Account
Pricing Shares and Receiving Sale Proceeds
_________________________
The various ways you can
buy, sell, and exchange
shares are explained at
the end of this
prospectus and on the New
Account Form. Here are some procedures you should know
when investing in a fund.
How and when shares are priced
Bond and Money Funds. The share price (also
called "net asset value" or NAV per share)
for a fund is calculated at 4 p.m. ET each
day the New York Stock Exchange is open for
business. To calculate the NAV, the fund's
assets are priced and totaled, liabilities
are subtracted, and the balance, called net
assets, is divided by the number of shares
outstanding.
Money fund NAVs, which are managed to
remain at $1.00, are calculated at noon ET
each day as well as 4 p.m. Amortized cost
or amortized market value is used to value
money fund securities that mature in 60
days or less.
_________________________
When filling out the New
Account Form, you may
wish to give yourself the
widest range of options
for receiving proceeds
from a sale. How your purchase, sale, or exchange price
is determined
If we receive your request in correct form
before 4 p.m. ET, your transaction will be
priced at that day's NAV. If we receive it
after 4 p.m., it will be priced at the next
business day's NAV.
PAGE 26
We cannot accept orders that request a
particular day or price for your
transaction or any other special
conditions.
Note: The time at which transactions are
priced and until which orders are accepted
may be changed in case of an emergency or
if the New York Stock Exchange closes at a
time other than 4 p.m. ET.
How you can receive the proceeds from a
sale
If your request is received by 4 p.m. ET in
correct form, proceeds are usually sent the
next business day. Proceeds can be sent to
you by mail, or to your bank account by ACH
transfer or bank wire. Proceeds sent by
bank wire should be credited to your
account the next business day, and proceeds
sent by ACH transfer should be credited the
second day after the sale. ACH (Automated
Clearing House) is an automated method of
initiating payments from and receiving
payments in your financial institutional
account. ACH is a payment system supported
by over 20,000 banks, savings banks and
credit unions, which electronically
exchanges the transactions through the
Federal Reserve Banks.
_________________________
If for some reason we
cannot accept your
request to sell shares,
we will contact you. Exception:
o Under certain circumstances and when
deemed to be in a fund's best interests,
your proceeds may not be sent for up to
five business days after receiving your
sale or exchange request. If you were
exchanging into another bond or money
fund, your new investment would not begin
to earn dividends until the sixth
business day.
Useful Information on Distributions and Taxes
PAGE 27
_________________________
The fund distributes all
net investment income and
realized capital gains to
shareholders. Dividends and other distributions
Dividend and capital gain distributions are
reinvested in additional fund shares in
your account unless you select another
option on your New Account Form. The
advantage of reinvesting distributions
arises from compounding; that is, you
receive interest and capital gain
distributions on a rising number of shares.
Dividends not reinvested are paid by check
or transmitted to your bank account via
ACH. If the Post Office cannot deliver your
check, or if your check remains uncashed
for six months, the fund reserves the right
to reinvest your distribution check in your
account at the then current NAV and to
reinvest all subsequent distributions in
shares of the fund.
Income dividends
o Bond funds declare income dividends daily
at 4 p.m. ET to shareholders of record at
that time provided payment has been
received on the previous business day.
o Money funds declare income dividends
daily at noon ET to shareholders of
record at that time provided payment has
been received by that time.
o Bond and money fund shares will earn
dividends through the date of redemption;
shares redeemed on a Friday or prior to a
holiday will continue to earn dividends
until the next business day. Generally,
if you redeem all of your shares at any
time during the month, you will also
receive all dividends earned through the
date of redemption in the same check.
When you redeem only a portion of your
shares, all dividends accrued on those
shares will be reinvested, or paid in
cash, on the next dividend payment date.
Capital gains
PAGE 28
o A capital gain or loss is the difference
between the purchase and sale price of a
security.
o If the fund has net capital gains for the
year (after subtracting any capital
losses), they are usually declared and
paid in December to shareholders of
record on a specified date that month. If
a second distribution is necessary, it is
usually declared and paid during the
first quarter of the following year.
Tax information
You need to be aware of the possible tax
consequences when
o you sell fund shares, including an
exchange from one fund to another, or
o the fund makes a distribution to your
account.
_________________________
The fund sends timely
information for your tax
filing needs. Taxes on fund redemptions. When you sell
shares in any fund, you may realize a gain
or loss. An exchange from one fund to
another is still a sale for tax purposes.
In January, the fund will send you Form
1099-B, indicating the date and amount of
each sale you made in the fund during the
prior year. This information will also be
reported to the IRS. We will also tell you
the average cost of the shares you sold
during the year. Average cost information
is not reported to the IRS, and you do not
have to use it. You may calculate the cost
basis using other methods acceptable to the
IRS, such as "specific identification."
To help you maintain accurate records, we
send you a confirmation immediately
following each transaction (except for
systematic purchases and redemptions) you
make and a year-end statement detailing all
your transactions in each fund account
during the year.
PAGE 29
_________________________
Distributions are taxable
whether reinvested in
additional shares or
received in cash. Taxes on fund distributions. The following
summary does not apply to retirement
accounts, such as IRAs, which are
tax-deferred until you withdraw money from
them.
In January, the fund will send you Form
1099-DIV indicating the tax status of any
dividend and capital gain distribution made
to you. This information will also be
reported to the IRS. All distributions
made by these funds are taxable to you for
the year in which they were paid. The only
exception is that distributions declared
during the last three months of the year
and paid in January are taxed as though
they were paid by December 31. The fund
will send you any additional information
you need to determine your taxes on fund
distributions, such as the portion of your
dividend, if any, that may be exempt from
state income taxes.
Short-term capital gains are taxable as
ordinary income and long-term gains are
taxable at the applicable long-term gain
rate. The gain is long or short term
depending on how long the fund held the
securities, not how long you held shares in
the fund. If you realize a loss on the sale
or exchange of fund shares held six months
or less, your short-term loss recognized is
reclassified to long-term to the extent of
any capital gain distribution received.
If distributions from the Limited-Term Bond
Fund arise from transactions in foreign
currencies or securities reduce the fund's
net income, a portion of its dividends may
be classified as a return of capital. Tax
treatment of distributions is explained in
the year-end tax information we send.
Tax effect of buying shares before a
capital gain distribution. If you buy
shares shortly before or on the "record
PAGE 30
date"--the date that establishes you as the
person to receive the upcoming
distribution--you will receive in the form
of a taxable distribution a portion of the
money you just invested. Therefore, you may
wish to find out a fund's record date(s)
before investing. Of course, a fund's share
price may reflect undistributed capital
gains or unrealized appreciation, if any.
Transaction Procedures and Special
Requirements
Purchase Conditions
_________________________
Following these
procedures helps assure
timely and accurate
transactions. Nonpayment. If your payment is not received
or you pay with a check or ACH transfer
that does not clear, your purchase will be
cancelled. You will be responsible for any
losses or expenses incurred by the fund or
transfer agent, and the fund can redeem
shares you own in this or another
identically registered T. Rowe Price fund
as reimbursement. The fund and its agents
have the right to reject or cancel any
purchase, exchange, or redemption due to
nonpayment.
U.S. dollars. All purchases must be paid
for in U.S. dollars; checks must be drawn
on U.S. banks.
Sale (Redemption) Conditions
10-day hold. If you sell shares that you
just purchased and paid for by check or ACH
transfer, the fund will process your
redemption but will generally delay sending
you the proceeds for up to 10 calendar days
to allow the check or transfer to clear. If
you redemption request was sent by mail or
mailgram, proceeds will be mailed no later
than the seventh day following receipt
unless the check or ACH transfer has not
cleared. If, during the clearing period, we
receive a check drawn against your bond or
money market account, it will be returned
PAGE 31
marked "uncollected." (The 10-day hold does
not apply to purchases paid for by: bank
wire; cashier's, certified, or treasurer's
checks; or automatic purchases through your
paycheck.)
Telephone transactions. Telephone exchange
and redemption are established
automatically when you sign the New Account
Form unless you check the box which states
that you do not want these services. A fund
uses reasonable procedures (including
shareholder identity verification) to
confirm that instructions given by
telephone are genuine. If these procedures
are not followed, it is the opinion of
certain regulatory agencies that a fund may
be liable for any losses that may result
from acting on the instructions given. All
conversations are recorded, and a
confirmation is sent promptly after the
telephone transaction.
Redemptions over $250,000. Large sales can
adversely affect a portfolio manager's
ability to implement a fund's investment
strategy by causing the premature sale of
securities that would otherwise be held. If
in any 90-day period, you redeem (sell)
more than $250,000, or your sale amounts to
more than 1% of the fund's net assets, the
fund has the right to delay sending your
proceeds for up to five business days after
receiving your request, or to pay the
difference between the redemption amount
and the lesser of the two previously
mentioned figures with securities from the
fund.
_________________________
T. Rowe Price may bar
excessive traders from
purchasing shares. Excessive Trading
Frequent trades involving either
substantial fund assets, or a substantial
portion of your account or accounts
controlled by you, can disrupt management
of the fund and raise its expenses. We
define "excessive trading" as exceeding one
purchase and sale involving the same fund
within any 120-day period.
PAGE 32
For example, you are in fund A. You can
move substantial assets from A to fund B,
and, within the next 120 days, sell your
shares in fund B to return to fund A or
move to fund C.
If you exceed the number of trades
described above, you may be barred
indefinitely from further purchases of T.
Rowe Price funds.
Three types of transactions are exempt from
excessive trading guidelines: 1) trades
solely between money market funds; 2)
redemptions that are not part of exchanges;
and 3) systematic purchases or redemptions
(see "Shareholder Services").
Keeping Your Account Open
Due to the relatively high cost to the fund
of maintaining small accounts, we ask you
to maintain an account balance of at least
$10,000. If your balance is below $10,000
for three months or longer, the fund has
the right to close your account after
giving you 60 days in which to increase
your balance. (These conditions may vary
for retirement plan accounts.)
_________________________
A signature guarantee is
designed to protect you
and the fund from fraud
by verifying your
signature. Signature Guarantees
You may need to have your signature
guaranteed in certain situations, such as:
o Written requests 1) to redeem over
$50,000, or 2) to wire redemption
proceeds.
o Remitting redemption proceeds to any
person, address, or bank account not on
record.
o Transferring redemption proceeds to a T.
Rowe Price fund account with a different
registration from yours.
o Establishing certain services after the
account is opened.
PAGE 33
You can obtain a signature guarantee from
most banks, savings institutions,
broker/dealers and other guarantors
acceptable to T. Rowe Price. We cannot
accept guarantees from notaries public or
organizations that do not provide
reimbursement in the case of fraud.
3 More About the Funds
The Funds' Organization and Management
How are the funds organized?
_________________________
Shareholders benefit
from T. Rowe Price's 58
years of investment
management
experience. The funds are "diversified, open-end
investment companies," or mutual funds, and
were incorporated in Maryland in 1993.
Mutual funds pool money received from
shareholders and invest it to try to
achieve specified objectives.
What is meant by "shares"?
As with all mutual funds, investors
purchase "shares" when they invest in a
fund. These shares are part of a fund's
authorized capital stock, but share
certificates are not issued.
Each share and fractional share entitles
the shareholder to:
o receive a proportional interest in a
fund's income and capital gain
distributions;
o cast one vote per share on certain
fund matters, including the election of
fund directors/trustees, changes in
fundamental policies, or approval of
changes in a fund's management
contract.
Does each fund have an annual shareholder
meeting?
The funds are not required to hold
annual meetings and do not intend to do so
PAGE 34
except when certain matters, such as a
change in a fund's fundamental policies,
are to be decided. In addition,
shareholders representing at least 10% of
all eligible votes may call a special
meeting if they wish for the purpose of
voting on the removal of any fund
director(s)/trustee(s). If a meeting is
held and you cannot attend, you can vote by
proxy. Before the meeting, the fund will
send you proxy materials that explain the
issues to be decided and include a voting
card for you to mail back.
_________________________
All decisions
regarding the purchase
and sale of fund
investments are made by
T. Rowe Price--
specifically by the
funds' portfolio
managers. Who runs each funds?
General Oversight. The funds are governed
by a Board of Directors that meets
regularly to review the fund's investments,
performance, expenses, and other business
affairs. The Board elects the funds'
officers. The policy of the funds are that
a majority of the Board members will be
independent of T. Rowe Price.
Portfolio Management. Each fund has an
Investment Advisory Committee, whose
members are listed below. Each Committee
Chairman has day-to-day responsibility for
managing the fund and works with the
Committee in developing and executing the
fund's investment program.
Cash Reserves Fund. Edward A. Wiese,
Chairman, Patrice L. Berchtenbreiter, Brian
E. Burns, Paul W. Boltz, Robert P.
Campbell, Michael J. Conelius, Donna M.
Davis-Ennis, Laura McAree, James M.
McDonald, Joan R. Potee, Robert M. Rubino,
and Gwendolyn G. Wagner.
Limited-Term Bond Fund. Edward A.
Wiese, Chairman, Robert P. Campbell,
Christy M. DiPietro, Thomas E. Tewksbury,
PAGE 35
and Mark J. Vaselkiv. Mr. Wiese joined T.
Rowe Price in 1984 and has been managing
investments since 1985.
GNMA Fund. Peter Van Dyke, Chairman,
Paul W. Boltz, Heather R. Landon, James M.
McDonald, Edmund M. Notzon, Robert M.
Rubino, Gwendolyn G. Wagner and Charles P.
Smith. Mr. Van Dyke has been managing
investments since joining T. Rowe Price in
1985.
Marketing. T. Rowe Price Investment
Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary
of T. Rowe Price, distributes (sells)
shares of this and all other T. Rowe Price
funds.
Shareholder Services. T. Rowe Price
Services, Inc., another wholly-owned
subsidiary, acts as the funds' transfer and
dividend disbursing agent and provides
shareholder and administrative services.
Services for certain types of retirement
plans are provided by T. Rowe Price
Retirement Plan Services, Inc., also a
wholly-owned subsidiary. The address for
each is 100 East Pratt St., Baltimore, MD
21202.
How are fund expenses determined?
Under the management agreement, all
expenses of the funds will be paid by T.
Rowe Price, except interest, taxes,
brokerage commissions, directors' fees and
expenses (including counsel fees and
expenses) and extraordinary expenses. The
Board of Directors of the funds reserves
the right to impose additional fees against
shareholder accounts to defray expenses
which would otherwise be paid by T. Rowe
Price under the management agreement. The
Board does not anticipate levying such
charges; such a fee, if charged, may be
retained by the fund or paid to T. Rowe
Price.
The Management Fee. Each fund pays T. Rowe
Price an annual all-inclusive fee based on
its average daily net assets. The funds
PAGE 36
calculate and accrue the fee daily. (See
"Transaction and Fund Expenses.")
Understanding Performance Information
This section should help you understand the
terms used to describe the funds'
performance. You will come across them in
shareholder reports you receive from us
four times a year, in our newsletters,
"Insights" reports, in T. Rowe Price
advertisements, and in the media.
_________________________
Total return is the most
widely used performance
measure. Detailed
performance information
is included in the funds'
annual reports and
quarterly shareholder
reports. Total Return
This tells you how much an investment in a
fund has changed in value over a given time
period. It reflects any net increase or
decrease in the share price and assumes
that all dividends and capital gains (if
any) paid during the period were reinvested
in additional shares. Reinvesting
distributions means that total return
numbers include the effect of compounding,
i.e., you receive income and capital gain
distributions on a rising number of shares.
Advertisements for the fund may include
cumulative or compound average annual total
return figures, which may be compared with
various indices, other performance
measures, or other mutual funds.
Cumulative Total Return
This is the actual rate of return on an
investment for a specified period. A
cumulative return does not indicate how
much the value of the investment may have
fluctuated between the beginning and the
end of the period specified.
Average Annual Total Return
PAGE 37
This is always hypothetical. Working
backward from the actual cumulative return,
it tells you what constant year-by-year
return would have produced the actual,
cumulative return. By smoothing out all the
variations in annual performance, it gives
you an idea of the investment's annual
contribution to your portfolio provided you
held it for the entire period in question.
_________________________
You will see frequent
references to the funds'
yields in our reports,
advertisements, in media
stories, and so on.
Yield
The current or "dividend yield" on the fund
or any investment tells you the
relationship between the investment's
current level of annual income and its
price on a particular day. The dividend
yield reflects the actual income paid to
shareholders for a given period,
annualized, and divided by the average
price during the given period. For example,
a fund providing $5 of annual income per
share and a price of $50 has a current
yield of 10%. Yields can be calculated for
any time period. The Cash Reserves Fund may
advertise a "current" yield, reflecting the
latest 7-day income annualized, or an
"effective" yield, which assumes the income
has been reinvested in the fund.
For the bond funds, the advertised or "SEC
yield" is found by determining the net
income per share (as defined by the SEC)
earned by the fund during a 30-day base
period and dividing this amount by the
per-share price on the last day of the base
period. The "SEC yield" may differ from the
dividend yield.
Investment Policies and Practices
_________________________
Fund managers have
considerable leeway in
choosing investment
strategies and selecting
investments they believe
PAGE 38
will help the funds
achieve their objectives. This section takes a detailed look at some
of the types of securities each fund may
hold in their portfolios and the various
kinds of investment practices that may be
used in day-to-day portfolio management.
The funds' investment programs are subject
to further restrictions and risks described
in the "Statement of Additional
Information." Each fund adheres to
applicable investment restrictions and
policies at the time it makes an
investment. A later change in
circumstances will not require the sale of
an investment if it was proper at the time
it was made.
Shareholder approval is required to
substantively change a fund's objectives
and certain investment restrictions noted
in the following section as "fundamental
policies." The managers also follow certain
"operating policies" which can be changed
without shareholder approval. However,
significant changes are discussed with
shareholders in fund reports.
Each fund's holdings of certain kinds of
investments cannot exceed maximum
percentages of total assets, which are set
forth in the prospectus. For instance, the
Limited-Term Bond Fund is not permitted to
invest more than 10% of total assets in
hybrid instruments. While these
restrictions provide a useful level of
detail about a fund's investment program,
investors should not view them as an
accurate gauge of the potential risk of
such investments. For example, in a given
period, a 5% investment in hybrid
securities could have significantly more
then a 5% impact on the Limited-Term Bond
Fund's share price. The net effect of a
particular investment depends on its
volatility and the size of its overall
return in relation to the performance of
all the fund's other investments.
Change in a fund's holdings, the fund's
performance, and the contribution of
PAGE 39
various investments are discussed in the
shareholder reports we send each
quarter.
Types of Portfolio Securities
In seeking to meet its investment
objectives, each fund may invest in any
type of security or instrument (including,
except for the Cash Reserves Fund, certain
potentially high risk derivatives) whose
yield, credit quality, and maturity
characteristics are consistent with the
fund's investment program. These and some
of the other investment techniques the
funds may use are described in the
following pages.
Fundamental policy: A fund will not
purchase a security if, as a result, with
respect to 75% of the fund's total assets,
more than 5% of its total assets would be
invested in securities of the issuer or
more than 10% of the outstanding voting
securities of the issuer would be held by a
fund, provided that those limitations do
not apply to a fund's purchases of
securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities.
Bonds. A bond is an interest-bearing
security - an IOU - issued by companies or
governmental units. The issuer has a
contractual obligation to pay interest at a
stated rate on specific dates and to repay
principal (the bond's face value) on a
specified date. An issuer may have the
right to redeem or "call" a bond before
maturity, and the investor may have to
reinvest the proceeds at lower market
rates.
A bond's annual interest income, set by
its coupon rate, is usually fixed for the
life of the bond. Its yield (income as a
percent of current price) will fluctuate to
reflect changes in interest rate levels. A
bond's price usually rises when interest
PAGE 40
rates fall, and vice versa so its yield is
current.
Bonds may be unsecured (backed by the
issuer's general creditworthiness) or
secured (also backed by specified
collateral).
Certain bonds have interest rates that are
adjusted periodically in order to minimize
fluctuations of their principal value. The
maturity of those securities may be
shortened under certain specified
conditions.
Bonds may be senior or subordinated
obligations. Senior obligations generally
have the first claim on a corporation
earnings and assets and, in the event of
liquidation, are paid before subordinated
debt.
Asset-backed Securities. An underlying
pool of assets, such as credit card or
automobile trade receivables or corporate
loans or bonds, backs these bonds and
provides the interest and principal
payments to investors. Credit quality
depends primarily on the quality of the
underlying assets and the level of credit
support, if any, provided by the issuer.
The underlying assets (i.e., loans) are
subject to prepayments which can shorten
the securities' weighted average life and
may lower their return. The value of these
securities also may change because of
actual or perceived changes in the
creditworthiness of the originator,
servicing agent, or of the financial
institution providing the credit support.
There is no limit on a funds' investment in
these securities.
Mortgage-backed Securities.
(Limited-Term and GNMA Funds). The funds
may invest in a variety of mortgage-backed
securities. For a general description of
mortgage securities, see page __.
Mortgage-related securities in which the
funds may invest include:
PAGE 41
o GNMA Certificates. GNMA certificates
evidence interests in a pool of
underlying mortgages with a maximum life
of 15 or 30 years. However, due to both
scheduled and unscheduled principal
payments, GNMA certificates have a
shorter average life and, therefore, less
principal volatility than a comparable
30-year bond. Since prepayment rates
vary widely, it is not possible to
accurately predict the average life of a
particular GNMA pool. However, it is
standard industry practice to treat new
issues of GNMA certificates as 30-year
mortgage-backed securities having an
average life of no greater than 12 years.
Because the expected average life is a
better indicator of the maturity
characteristics of GNMA certificates,
principal volatility and yield may be
more comparable to 10-year Treasury
bonds.
o GNMA Project Pass-through Securities.
These securities are issued by GNMA for
multi-family projects, i.e., low to
moderate income housing, nursing homes,
apartment rehabitation, housing for the
elderly or handicapped and the like.
Unlike GNMA "modified pass through
certificates," these bonds provide call
protection for a term stated in the
issue. The project loans can be made to
either private enterprise or non-profit
groups. There are penalties assessed for
prepayments during the call protected
period, creating a disincentive for early
prepayment. These bonds incorporate the
same standardized procedures as single-
family pass-through certificates and full
and timely payment of principal and
interest is guaranteed by GNMA.
o Collateralized Mortgage Obligations
(CMOs). CMOs are debt securities that are
fully collateralized by a portfolio of
mortgages or mortgage-backed securities.
All interest and principal payments from
the underlying mortgages are passed
PAGE 42
through to the CMOs in such a way as to
create, in most cases, more definite
maturities than is the case with the
underlying mortgages. CMOs may pay fixed
or variable rates of interest, and
certain CMOs have priority over others
with respect to the receipt of
prepayments.
o Stripped Mortgage Securities. Stripped
mortgage securities (a potentially high
risk type of derivative) are created by
separating the interest and principal
payments generated by a pool of
mortgage-backed securities or a CMO to
create additional classes of securities.
Generally, one class receives only
interest payments (IOs) and one principal
payments (POs). Unlike other mortgage-
backed securities and POs, the value of
IOs tends to move in the same direction
as interest rates. The funds could use
IOs as a hedge against falling prepaying
rates (interest rates are rising) and/or
a bear market environment. POs can be
used as a hedge against rising prepayment
rates (interest rates are falling) and/or
a bull market environment. IOs and POs
are acutely sensitive to interest rate
changes and to the rate of principal
prepayments. A rapid or unexpected
increase in prepayments can severely
depress the price of IOs, while a rapid
or unexpected decrease in prepayments
could have the same effect on POs. These
securities are very volatile in price and
may have lower liquidity than most other
mortgage-backed securities. Certain non-
stripped CMOs may also exhibit these
qualities, especially those which pay
variable rates of interest which adjust
inversely with and more rapidly than
short-term interest rates. There is no
guarantee the fund's investment in CMOs,
IOs or POs will be successful, and the
fund's total return could be adversely
affected as a result.
Operating policy: The Limited-Term Bond
and GNMA funds may each invest up to 10%
PAGE 43
of its total assets in stripped mortgage
securities.
Hybrid Instruments (Limited-Term and
GNMA Funds). These instruments (a
potentially high risk type of derivative)
can combine the characteristics of
securities, futures and options. For
example, the principal amount or interest
rate of a hybrid could be tied (positively
or negatively) to the price of some
commodity, currency or securities index or
another interest rate (each a "benchmark").
Hybrids can be used as an efficient means
of pursuing a variety of investment goals,
including currency hedging, duration
management, and increased total return.
Hybrids may not bear interest or pay
dividends. The value of a hybrid or its
interest rate may be a multiple of a
benchmark and, as a result, may be
leveraged and move (up or down) more
steeply and rapidly than the benchmark.
These benchmarks may be sensitive to
economic and political events, such as
commodity shortages and currency
devaluations, which cannot be readily
foreseen by the purchaser of a hybrid.
Under certain conditions, the redemption
value of a hybrid could be zero. Hybrids
can have volatile prices and limited
liquidity. Thus, an investment in a hybrid
may entail significant market risks that
are not associated with a similar
investment in a traditional, U.S. dollar-
denominated bond that has a fixed principal
amount and pays a fixed rate or floating
rate of interest. The purchase of hybrids
also exposes the fund to the credit risk of
the issuer of the hybrid. These risks may
cause significant fluctuations in the net
asset value of the fund. There is no
assurance that the fund's investment in
hybrids will be successful.
Operating policy: The Limited-Term Bond
and GNMA funds may each invest up to 10% of
its total assets in hybrid instruments.
PAGE 44
High Yield/High Risk Investing
(Limited-Term Fund). The total return and
yield of lower quality (high yield/high
risk) bonds commonly referred to as "junk
bonds," can be expected to fluctuate more
than the total return and yield of higher
quality, shorter-term bonds, but not as
much as common stocks. Junk bonds (those
rated below BBB or in default) are regarded
as predominantly speculative with respect
to the issuer's continuing ability to meet
principal and interest payments.
Operating policy: The Limited-Term Fund
will not purchase a non-investment grade
debt security (or junk bond) if immediately
after such purchase the fund would have
more than 10% of its total assets invested
in such securities.
Private Placements (Restricted
Securities). These securities are sold
directly to a small number of investors,
usually institutions. Unlike public
offerings, such securities are not
registered with the SEC. Although certain
of these securities may be readily sold,
for example under Rule 144A, others may be
illiquid and their sale may involve
substantial delays and additional
costs.
Operating policy: No fund will invest more
than 15% of its net assets (10% for Cash
Reserves) in illiquid securities.
Foreign Securities (Cash Reserves and
Limited-Term Funds). The Limited-Term Fund
may invest in foreign securities, including
nondollar-denominated securities traded
outside of the U.S. The Cash Reserves and
Limited-Term Funds may invest without
limitation in U.S. dollar denominated
securities that are issued and principally
traded outside the U.S. Such investments
increase a portfolio's diversification and
may enhance return, but they also involve
some special risks such as exposure to
potentially adverse local political and
economic developments; nationalization and
PAGE 45
exchange controls; potentially lower
liquidity and higher volatility; possible
problems arising from accounting,
disclosure, settlement, and regulatory
practices that differ from U.S. standards;
and the chance that fluctuations in foreign
exchange rates will decrease the
investment's value (favorable changes can
increase its value).
Operating policy: The Limited-Term and Cash
Reserves Funds may invest without
limitation in U.S. dollar denominated debt
securities of foreign issuers. The
Limited-Term Fund may invest up to 10% of
its total assets in non-U.S. dollar-
denominated fixed-income securities
principally traded in financial markets
outside the United States.
Types of Management Practices
Cash Position (Limited-Term and GNMA
Funds). The funds will hold a certain
portion of their assets in U.S. (and
foreign dollar denominated) money market
securities, including repurchase
agreements, in the two highest rating
categories, maturing in one year or less.
For temporary, defensive purposes, a fund
may invest without limitation in such
securities. This reserve position provides
flexibility in meeting redemptions,
expenses, and the timing of new
investments, and serves as a short-term
defense during periods of unusual market
volatility.
Borrowing Money and Transferring Assets.
The funds can borrow money from banks as a
temporary measure for emergency purposes,
to facilitate redemption requests, or for
other purposes consistent with the funds'
investment objectives and program. Such
borrowings may be collateralized with fund
assets, subject to restrictions.
Fundamental policy: Borrowings may not
exceed 33 1/3% of total fund assets.
PAGE 46
Operating policies: The funds may not
transfer as collateral any portfolio
securities except as necessary in
connection with permissible borrowings or
investments, and then such transfers may
not exceed 33 1/3% of the fund's total
assets. The funds may not purchase
additional securities when borrowings
exceed 5% of total assets.
Futures and Options (Limited-Term and
GNMA Funds). Futures (a type of potentially
high risk derivative) are often used to
manage or hedge risk, because they enable
the investor to buy or sell an asset in the
future at an agreed upon price. Options
(another type of potentially high risk
derivative) give the investor the right,
but not the obligation, to buy or sell an
asset at a predetermined price in the
future. A fund may buy and sell futures
contracts (and options on such contracts)
for a number of reasons including: to
manage its exposure to changes in interest
rates, bond prices, and foreign currencies;
as an efficient means of adjusting its
overall exposure to certain markets; to
protect portfolio value; and to adjust the
portfolio's duration. A fund may purchase,
sell, or write call and put options on
securities, financial indices, and foreign
currencies.
Futures contracts and options may not
always be successful hedges; their prices
can be highly volatile; using them could
lower a fund's total return and the
potential loss from the use of futures can
exceed a fund's initial investment in such
contracts.
Operating policies: Futures: Initial
margin deposits and premiums on options
used for non-hedging purposes will not
equal more than 5% of a fund's net asset
value. Options on securities: The total
market value of securities against which a
fund has written call or put options may
not exceed 25% of its total assets. Each
fund will not commit more than 5% of their
PAGE 47
total assets to premiums when purchasing
call or put options.
Interest Rate Swaps (Limited-Term and GNMA
Funds). The funds may enter into various
interest rate transactions such as interest
rate swaps and the purchase or sale of
interest rate caps and floors, to preserve
a return or spread on a particular
investment or portion of its portfolio, to
create synthetic securities, or to
structure transactions designed for other
non-speculative purposes.
Operating policy: The funds will not invest
more than 10% of their total assets in
interest rate swaps.
Managing Foreign Currency Risk
(Limited-Term Fund). Investors in foreign
securities may "hedge" their exposure to
potentially unfavorable currency changes by
purchasing a contract to exchange one
currency for another on some future date at
a specified exchange rate. In certain
circumstances, a "proxy currency" may be
substituted for the currency in which the
investment is denominated, a strategy known
as "proxy hedging." The fund might also use
these contracts to create a synthetic bond-
-issued by a U.S. company, for example, but
with the dollar component transformed into
a foreign currency. Although foreign
currency transactions will be used
primarily to protect the fund's foreign
securities from adverse currency movements
relative to the dollar, they involve the
risk that anticipated currency movements
will not occur and the fund's total return
could be reduced.
Operating policy: The Limited-Term Fund
will not commit more than 10% of its total
assets to forward currency contracts.
Lending of Portfolio Securities. Like other
mutual funds, the funds may lend securities
to broker-dealers, other institutions, or
other persons to earn additional income.
PAGE 48
The principal risk is the potential
insolvency of the broker-dealer or other
borrower. In this event, the fund could
experience delays in recovering its
securities and possibly capital losses.
Fundamental policy: The value of loaned
securities may not exceed 33 1/3% of a
fund's total assets.
When-issued securities (All Funds) and
Forward Commitment Contracts (Limited-Term
and GNMA Funds). Each fund may purchase
securities on a when-issued or delayed
delivery basis or may purchase or sell
securities on a forward commitment basis.
There is no limit on a fund's investment in
these securities. The price of these
securities is fixed at the time of the
commitment to buy, but delivery and payment
can take place a month or more later.
During the interim period, the market value
of the securities can fluctuate, and no
interest accrues to the purchaser. At the
time of delivery, the value of the
securities may be more or less than the
purchase or sale price. To the extent a
fund remains fully or almost fully invested
(in securities with a remaining maturity of
more than one year) at the time it
purchases these securities, there will be
greater fluctuations in the fund's net
asset value than if the fund did not
purchase them.
Portfolio Transactions. Although the
fund will not generally trade for short-
term profits, circumstances may warrant a
sale without regard to the length of time a
security was held. A high turnover rate
may increase transaction costs and result
in additional gains. The Cash Reserves,
Limited-Term, and GNMA Fund's annualized
portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal year
ended October 31, 1994 was 0%, 296.0%,
61.5%, respectively. In executing
transactions, each fund's Board has
authorized T. Rowe Price to use certain
brokers who are indirectly related to T.
Rowe Price.
PAGE 49
Bond Ratings and High-Yield Bonds.
Larger bond issues are evaluated by rating
agencies such as Moody's and Standard &
Poor's on the basis of the issuer's ability
to meet all required interest and principal
payments. T. Rowe Price research analysts
also evaluate all portfolio holdings of the
funds, including those rated by an outside
agency. Other things being equal, lower
rated bonds have higher yields due to
greater risk. "High-yield" bonds also
called "junk", are those rated below BBB
(see Table 6).
___________________________________________
Ratings of Corporate Debt Securities
Moody's Standard Fitch Definition
Investors & Poor'sInvestors
Service, Corpora-Service,
Inc. tion Inc.
___________________________________________
Long-Term Aaa AAA AAA Highest
quality
_________________________________
Aa AA AA High
quality
_________________________________
A A A Upper
medium
grade
_________________________________
Baa BBB BBB Medium
grade
_________________________________
Ba BB BB Low
grade
_________________________________
B B B Specula-
tive
_________________________________
Caa,Ca CCC,CC CCC,CC Submar-
ginal
_________________________________
Ca C C Income
bond, no
interest
paid
_________________________________
PAGE 50
C D DDD, Probably
DD, D in
default
___________________________________________
Moody's S&P Fitch
___________________________________________
Commer- P-1 Superior A-1+ F-1+
cial quality Extremely Exception-
paper strong ally strong
quality quality
A-1 StrongF-1 Very
quality strong
quality
___________________________________
P-2 Strong A-2 F-2 Good
quality Satisfac- credit
tory quality
quality
___________________________________
P-3 A-3 F-3 Fair
Acceptable Adequate credit
quality quality quality
___________________________________
B Specu- F-S Weak
lative credit
quality quality
___________________________________
C Doubtful
quality
___________________________________________
Table 6
Asset Composition. Table 7 shows the
average credit quality allocation of the
Limited-Term Bond Fund's assets for the
fiscal year October 31, 1994. (Equities
and reserves are excluded.) Percentages
are computed on a dollar-weighted basis and
are an average of 12 monthly calculations.
Limited-Term Bond Fund Assets Composition
Percent- TRPS's
age of Assessment
Standard & Poor's Total Not Rated
Rating Assets Securities
___________________________________________
AAA 2.7 69.5
___________________________________________
PAGE 51
AA 1.5 0.1
___________________________________________
A 4.7 0.0
___________________________________________
BBB 7.7 1.2
___________________________________________
BB 2.3 0.0
___________________________________________
B 4.4 1.1
___________________________________________
CCC 0.0 0.0
___________________________________________
CC 0.0 0.0
___________________________________________
C 0.0 0.0
___________________________________________
D 0.0 0.0
___________________________________________
Not Rated 71.9 0.0
___________________________________________
95.2 71.9
___________________________________________
Table 7
4 Investing with T. Rowe Price
Meeting Requirements for New Accounts
________________________
Always verify your
transactions by carefully
reviewing the
confirmation we send
you. Please report any
discrepancies to
Shareholder Services. Tax Identification Number
We must have your correct social security
or corporate tax identification number and
a signed New Account Form or W-9 Form.
Otherwise, federal law requires the funds
to withhold a percentage (currently 31%) of
your dividends, capital gain distributions,
and redemptions, and may subject you to an
IRS fine. You will also be prohibited from
opening another account by exchange. If
this information is not received within 60
days after your account is established,
your account may be redeemed, priced at the
NAV on the date of redemption.
PAGE 52
Unless you request otherwise, one
shareholder report will be mailed to
multiple account owners with the same tax
identification number and same zip code and
to shareholders who have requested that
their account be combined with someone
else's for financial reporting.
Opening a New Account: $25,000 minimum
initial investment
Account Registration
If you own other T. Rowe Price funds, be
sure to register any new account just like
your existing accounts so you can exchange
among them easily. (The name and account
type would have to be identical.)
________________________
Regular Mail
T. Rowe Price
Account Services
P.O. Box 17300
Baltimore, MD
21298-9353
Mailgram, Express,
Registered, or Certified
Mail
T. Rowe Price
Account Services
10090 Red Run Blvd.
Owings Mills, MD 21117 By Mail
Please make your check payable to T. Rowe
Price Funds otherwise it will be returned
(we do not accept third party checks to
open new accounts) and send it together
with the New Account Form to the address at
left.
By Wire
o Call Investor Services for an account
number and give the following wire
address to your bank: Morgan Guaranty
Trust Co. of New York, ABA# 021000238,
T. Rowe Price [fund name], AC-00153938.
Provide fund name, account name(s), and
account number.
PAGE 53
o Complete a New Account Form and mail it
to one of the appropriate addresses
listed at left.
Note: No services will be established and
IRS penalty withholding may occur until a
signed New Account Form is received.
Also, retirement plans cannot be opened
by wire.
By Exchange
Call Shareholder Services. The new account
will have the same registration as the
account from which you are exchanging.
Services for the new account may be carried
over by telephone request if preauthorized
on the existing account. (See explanation
of "Excessive Trading " under "Transaction
Procedures.")
In Person
Drop off your New Account Form at any of
the locations listed below and obtain a
receipt.
Drop-off locations:
101 East Lombard St. T. Rowe Price
Baltimore, MD Financial Center
10090 Red Run. Blvd.
Owings Mills, MD
Farragut Square ARCO Tower
900 17th St., N.W. 31st Floor
Washington, D.C. 515 South Flower St.
Los Angeles, CA
Note: The fund and its agents reserve the
right to waive or lower investment
minimums; to accept initial purchases by
telephone or mailgram; cancel or rescind
any purchase or exchange upon notice to the
shareholder within five business days of
the trade or if the written confirmation
has not been received by the shareholder,
whichever is sooner (for example, if an
account has been restricted due to
excessive trading or fraud); to otherwise
modify the conditions of purchase or any
PAGE 54
services at any time; or to act on
instructions believed to be genuine.
Purchasing Additional Shares: $100 minimum
purchase; $50 minimum for retirement plans
and Automatic Asset Builder; $5,000 minimum
for telephone purchases
By ACH Transfer
Use Tele*Access(registered trademark),
PC*Access(registered trademark) or call
Investor Services if you have established
electronic transfers using the ACH network.
By Wire
Call Shareholder Services or use the wire
address in "Opening a New Account."
________________________
Regular Mail
T. Rowe Price Funds
Account Services
P.O. Box 89000
Baltimore, MD
21289-1500 By Mail
o Provide your account number and the fund
name on your check.
o Mail the check to us at the address shown
at left either with a reinvestment slip
or a note indicating the fund and account
number in which you wish to purchase
shares.
By Automatic Asset Builder
Fill out the Automatic Asset Builder
section on the New Account or Shareholder
Services Form ($50 minimum).
By Phone
Call Shareholder Services to lock in that
day's closing price; payment is due within
five days ($5,000 minimum). Note: The
current collected balance in your fund
account must equal at least 25% of your
telephone purchase for additional shares.
Exchanging and Redeeming Shares
By Phone
PAGE 55
Call Shareholder Services. If you find our
phones busy during unusually volatile
markets, please consider placing your order
by Tele*Access, PC*Access or mailgram (if
you have previously authorized telephone
services), or by express mail. For exchange
policies, please see "Transaction
Procedures and Special Requirements--
Excessive Trading."
Redemption proceeds can be mailed to your
account address, sent by ACH transfer, or
wired to your bank. For charges, see
"Electronic Transfers--By Wire" on page __.
___________________
Mailgram, Express,
Registered, or
Certified Mail
(See page __.) By Mail
Provide account name(s) and numbers, fund
name(s), and exchange or redemption amount.
For exchanges, mail to the appropriate
address below or at left, indicate the fund
you are exchanging from and the fund(s) you
are exchanging into. T. Rowe Price requires
the signatures of all owners exactly as
registered, and possibly a signature
guarantee (see "Transaction Procedures and
Special Requirements--Signature
Guarantees").
Regular Mail
For non-retirement For employer-sponsored
and IRA accounts: retirement accounts:
T. Rowe Price T. Rowe Price Trust
Account Services Company
P.O. Box 89000 P.O. Box 89000
Baltimore, MD Baltimore, MD
21289-0220 21289-0300
___________________
T. Rowe Price Trust
Company
1-800-492-7670
1-410-625-6585 Note: Redemptions from retirement accounts,
including IRAs, must be in writing. Please
call Shareholder Services to obtain an IRA
Distribution Request Form. For
employer-sponsored retirement accounts,
PAGE 56
call T. Rowe Price Trust Company or your
plan administrator for instructions.
_______________________
Shareholder Services
1-800-225-5132
1-410-625-6500 Shareholder Services
Many services are available to you as a T.
Rowe Price shareholder; some you receive
automatically and others you must authorize
on the New Account Form. By signing up for
services on the New Account Form rather
than later, you avoid having to complete a
separate form and obtain a signature
guarantee. This section reviews some of the
principal services currently offered. Our
Services Guide contains detailed
descriptions of these and other services.
If you are a new T. Rowe Price investor,
you will receive a Services Guide with our
Welcome Kit. Note: Corporate and other
institutional accounts require an original
or certified resolution to establish
services and to redeem by mail. For more
information, call Investor Services.
Retirement Plans
We offer a wide range of plans for
individuals and institutions, including
large and small businesses: IRAs, SEP-IRAs,
Keoghs (profit sharing, money purchase
pension), 401(k), and 403(b)(7). For
information on IRAs, call Investor
Services. For information on all other
retirement plans, please call our Trust
Company at 1-800-492-7670.
_________________________
Investor Services
1-800-638-5660
1-410-547-2308 Exchange Service
You can move money from one account to an
existing identically registered account, or
open a new identically registered account.
Remember, exchanges are purchases and sales
for tax purposes. (Exchanges into a state
tax-free fund are limited to investors
living in states where the funds are
registered.) Some of the T. Rowe Price
PAGE 57
funds may impose a redemption fee of .50%
to 2%, payable to such funds, on shares
held for less than one year, or in some
funds, six months.
Note: Shares purchased by telephone may
not be exchanged to another fund until
payment for the original purchase has been
received.
Automated Services
Tele*Access. 24-hour service via toll-free
number provides information such as yields,
prices, dividends, account balances, and
your latest transaction as well as the
ability to request prospectuses and account
forms and initiate purchase, redemption and
exchange orders in your accounts (see
"Electronic Transfers" below).
PC*Access. 24-hour service via dial-up
modem provides the same information as
Tele*Access, but on a personal computer.
Please call Investor Services for an
information guide.
Telephone and Walk-In Services
Buy, sell, or exchange shares by calling
one of our service representatives or by
visiting one of our four investor center
locations. For Investor Center addresses,
see "Drop-off locations" on page __.
Electronic Transfers
By ACH. With no charges to pay, you can
initiate a purchase or redemption for as
little as $100 or as much as $100,000
between your bank account and fund account
using the ACH network. Enter instructions
via Tele*Access, PC*Access or call
Shareholder Services.
By Wire. Electronic transfers can also be
conducted via bank wire. There is currently
a $5 fee for wire redemptions under $5,000,
and your bank may charge for incoming or
outgoing wire transfers regardless of
size.
PAGE 58
Checkwriting (Not available for the High
Yield Fund)
You may write an unlimited number of free
checks on any money market funds, and most
bond funds, with a minimum of $500 per
check. Keep in mind, however that a check
results in a redemption; a check written on
a bond fund will create a taxable event
which you and we must report to the IRS.
Automatic Investing ($50 minimum) You
can invest automatically in several
different ways, including:
o Automatic Asset Builder. You instruct us
to move $50 or more once a month or less
often from your bank account, or you can
instruct your employer to send all or a
portion of your paycheck to the fund or
funds you designate.
o Automatic Exchange. Enables you to set up
systematic investments from one fund
account into another, such as from a
money fund into a stock fund.
Discount Brokerage
You can trade stocks, bonds, options,
precious metals and other securities at a
substantial savings over regular commission
rates. Call Investor Services for
information.
Note: If you buy or sell T. Rowe Price
Funds through anyone other than T. Rowe
Price, such as broker-dealers or banks, you
may be charged transaction or service fees
by those institutions. No such fees are
charged by T. Rowe Price Investment
Services or the fund for transactions
conducted directly with the fund.
PAGE 59
Prospectus
To Open an Account
Investor Services T. Rowe Price
1-800-977-1577 Summit Income
Funds
For Yields & Prices
Tele*Access(registered
trademark) To help you ______________
1-800-638-2587 achieve your A choice of
24 hours, 7 days financial goals, T. Rowe Price corporate
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, bond,
Investor Centers offers a wide Inc. government
101 East Lombard St. range of stock, March 1, 1995 mortgage, and
Baltimore, MD bond, and money money market
market funds for
T. Rowe Price investments, as income-
Financial Center well as oriented
10090 Red Run Blvd. convenient investors.
Owings Mills, MD services and
timely,
Farragut Square informative
900 17th Street, N.W. reports.
Washington, D.C.
ARCO Tower
31st Floor
515 South Flower St.
Los Angeles, CA
T. Rowe Price
Invest With
Confidence
(registered
trademark)
PAGE 60
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
(the "Funds")
This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus
but should be read in conjunction with the Funds' prospectus
dated March 1, 1995, which may be obtained from T. Rowe Price
Investment Services, Inc., 100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore,
Maryland 21202.
The date of this Statement of Additional Information is
March 1, 1995.
PAGE 61
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page Page
Adjustable Rate Securities Investment Objectives
Adjustable Rate Mortgage . and Policies . . . . . .
Securities . . . . . . . . Investment Performance .
Asset-Backed Securities . . Investment Program . . .
Capital Stock . . . . . . . Investment Restrictions .
Code of Ethics . . . . . . Legal Counsel . . . . . .
Custodian . . . . . . . . . Lending of Portfolio
Distributor for Funds . . . Securities . . . . . . .
Dividends . . . . . . . . . Management of Funds . . .
Federal and State Registration Money Market Securities .
of Shares . . . . . . . . Mortgage-Related
Foreign Currency Securities . . . . . . .
Transactions . . . . . . . Net Asset Value Per
Foreign Securities . . . . Share . . . . . . . . .
Futures Contracts . . . . . Options . . . . . . . . .
Hybrid Commodity and Security Portfolio Transactions .
Instruments . . . . . . . Pricing of Securities . .
Illiquid or Restricted . . Principal Holders of
Securities . . . . . . . . Securities . . . . . . .
Independent Accountants . . Ratings of Commercial
Industry Concentration . . Paper . . . . . . . . .
Instruments . . . . . . . Ratings of Corporate
Illiquid or Restricted . . Debt Securities . . . .
Securities . . . . . . . . Repurchase Agreements . .
Independent Accountants . . Risk Factors . . . . . .
Industry Concentration . . Tax Status . . . . . . .
Interest Rate When-Issued Securities and
Transactions . . . . . . . Forward Commitment
Investment Management Contracts . . . . . . .
Services . . . . . . . . . Yield Information . . . .
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
The following information supplements the discussion of the
Funds' investment objectives and policies discussed in the
prospectus. The Funds will not make a material change in their
investment objectives without obtaining shareholder approval.
Unless otherwise specified, the investment programs and
restrictions of the Funds are not fundamental policies. Each
Fund's operating policies are subject to change by its Board of
Directors without shareholder approval. However, shareholders
will be notified of a material change in an operating policy.
Each Fund's fundamental policies may not be changed without the
approval of at least a majority of the outstanding shares of the
Fund or, if it is less, 67% of the shares represented at a
PAGE 62
meeting of shareholders at which the holders of 50% or more of
the shares are represented.
Throughout this Statement of Additional Information, "the
Fund" is intended to refer to each Fund listed on the cover page,
unless otherwise indicated.
RISK FACTORS
Cash Reserves Fund
There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its
investment objectives or be able to maintain its net asset value
per share at $1.00. The price of the Fund is not guaranteed or
insured, and its yield is not fixed. While the Fund invests in
high-grade money market instruments, investment in the Fund is
not without risk even if all portfolio instruments are paid in
full at maturity. An increase in interest rates could reduce the
value of the Fund's portfolio investments, and a decline in
interest rates could increase the value. Reference is also made
to the sections entitled "Types of Securities" and "Portfolio
Management Practices" for discussions of the risks associated
with the investments and practices described therein as they
apply to the Fund.
Limited-Term Fund
Because of its investment policy, the Fund may not be
suitable or appropriate for all investors. The Fund is not a
money market fund and is not an appropriate investment for those
whose primary objective is principal stability. There is risk in
all investment. The Fund is designed for the investor who seeks
to participate in a diversified portfolio of short- and
intermediate-term investment grade bonds and other debt
securities (up to 10% of which may be below investment grade)
which provide a higher rate of income than a money market fund
and less risk of capital fluctuation than a portfolio of long-
term debt securities. The value of the portfolio securities of
the Fund will fluctuate based upon market conditions. Although
the Fund seeks to reduce risk by investing in a diversified
portfolio, such diversification does not eliminate all risk.
There can, of course, be no assurance that the Fund will achieve
these results. Reference is also made to the sections entitled
"Types of Securities" and "Portfolio Management Practices" for
discussions of the risks associated with the investments and
practices described therein as they apply to the Fund.
PAGE 63
GNMA Fund
The Fund may or may not be suitable or appropriate for all
investors. The Fund is designed for investors seeking the
highest current income and credit protection available from
investment in securities which are backed by the full faith and
credit of the U.S. Government and other securities rated within
the highest two credit categories established by a nationally
recognized public rating agency, or, if unrated, of equivalent
quality as determined by T. Rowe Price. Consistent with a long-
term investment approach, investors in the Fund should not rely
on the Fund for their short-term financial needs. The value of
the portfolio securities of the Fund will fluctuate based upon
market conditions. Although the Fund seeks to reduce risk by
investing in a diversified portfolio, such diversification does
not eliminate all risk. There can, of course, be no assurance
that the Fund will achieve these results. Reference is also made
to the sections entitled "Types of Securities" and "Portfolio
Management Practices" for discussions of the risks associated
with the investments and practices described therein as they
apply to the Fund.
Because they consist of underlying mortgages, GNMA
Securities may not be an effective means of "locking in" long-
term interest rates due to the need for the Fund to reinvest
scheduled and unscheduled principal payments. The incidence of
unscheduled principal prepayments is also likely to increase in
mortgage pools owned by the Fund when prevailing mortgage loan
rates fall below the mortgage rates of the securities underlying
the individual pool. The effect of such prepayments in a falling
rate environment is to (1) cause the Fund to reinvest principal
payments at the then lower prevailing interest rate, and (2)
reduce the potential for capital appreciation beyond the face
amount of the security and adversely affect the return to the
Fund. Conversely, in a rising interest rate environment such
prepayments can be reinvested at higher prevailing interest rates
which will reduce the potential effect of capital depreciation to
which bonds are subject when interest rates rise. In addition,
prepayments of mortgage securities purchased at a premium (or
discount) will cause such securities to be paid off at par,
resulting in a loss (gain) to the Fund. T. Rowe Price will
actively manage the Fund's portfolio in an attempt to reduce the
risk associated with investment in mortgage-backed securities.
Debt Obligations
Yields on short, intermediate, and long-term securities are
dependent on a variety of factors, including the general
PAGE 64
conditions of the money and bond markets, the size of a
particular offering, the maturity of the obligation, and the
credit quality and rating of the issue. Debt securities with
longer maturities tend to have higher yields and are generally
subject to potentially greater capital appreciation and
depreciation than obligations with shorter maturities and lower
yields. The market prices of debt securities usually vary,
depending upon available yields. An increase in interest rates
will generally reduce the value of portfolio debt securities, and
a decline in interest rates will generally increase the value of
portfolio debt securities. The ability of the Fund to achieve
its investment objective is also dependent on the continuing
ability of the issuers of the debt securities in which the Fund
invests to meet their obligations for the payment of interest and
principal when due. Although the Fund seeks to reduce risk by
portfolio diversification, credit analysis, and attention to
trends in the economy, industries and financial markets, such
efforts will not eliminate all risk. There can, of course, be no
assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.
After purchase by the Fund, a debt security may cease to be
rated or its rating may be reduced below the minimum required for
purchase by the Fund. For the Prime Reserve and U.S. Treasury
Money Funds, the procedures set forth in Rule 2a-7, under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, may require the prompt sale of
any such security. For the other Funds, neither event will
require a sale of such security by the Fund. However, T. Rowe
Price will consider such event in its determination of whether
the Fund should continue to hold the security. To the extent
that the ratings given by Moody's or S&P may change as a result
of changes in such organizations or their rating systems, the
Fund will attempt to use comparable ratings as standards for
investments in accordance with the investment policies contained
in the prospectus. When purchasing unrated securities, T. Rowe
Price, under the supervision of the Fund's Board of Directors,
determines whether the unrated security is of a qualify
comparable to that which the Fund is allowed to purchase.
Reference is also made to the sections entitled "Types of
Securities" and "Portfolio Management Practices" for discussions
of the risks associated with the investments and practices
described therein as they apply to the Fund.
All Funds (except Cash Reserves Fund)
Because of its investment policy, the Fund may or may not be
suitable or appropriate for all investors. The Fund is not a
money market fund and is not an appropriate investment for those
PAGE 65
whose primary objective is principal stability. The value of the
portfolio securities of the Fund will fluctuate based upon market
conditions. Although the Fund seeks to reduce risk by investing
in a diversified portfolio, such diversification does not
eliminate all risk. There can, of course, be no assurance that
the Fund will achieve its investment objective.
Cash Reserves Fund
There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve their
investment objectives or be able to maintain their net asset
value per share at $1.00. The price of the Fund is not
guaranteed or insured by the U.S. Government and its yield is not
fixed. An increase in interest rates could reduce the value of
the Fund's portfolio investments, and a decline in interest rates
could increase the value.
All Funds (except Cash Reserves Fund)
Mortgage securities differ from conventional bonds in that
principal is paid back over the life of the security rather than
at maturity. As a result, the holder of a mortgage security
(i.e., the Fund) receives monthly scheduled payments of principal
and interest, and may receive unscheduled principal payments
representing prepayments on the underlying mortgages. The
incidence of unscheduled principal prepayments is also likely to
increase in mortgage pools owned by the Fund when prevailing
mortgage loan rates fall below the mortgage rates of the
securities underlying the individual pool. The effect of such
prepayments in a falling rate environment is to (1) cause the
Fund to reinvest principal payments at the then lower prevailing
interest rate, and (2) reduce the potential for capital
appreciation beyond the face amount of the security. Conversely,
the Fund may realize a gain on prepayments of mortgage pools
trading at a discount. Such prepayments will provide an early
return of principal which may then be reinvested at the then
higher prevailing interest rate.
The market value of adjustable rate mortgage securities
("ARMs"), like other U.S. government securities, will generally
vary inversely with changes in market interest rates, declining
when interest rates rise and rising when interest rates decline.
Because of their periodic adjustment feature, ARMs should be more
sensitive to short-term interest rates than long-term rates.
They should also display less volatility than long-term mortgage
securities. Thus, while having less risk of a decline during
periods of rapidly rising rates, ARMs may also have less
potential for capital appreciation than other investments of
comparable maturities. Interest rate caps on mortgages
underlying ARM securities may prevent income on the ARM from
PAGE 66
increasing to prevailing interest rate levels and cause the
securities to decline in value. In addition, to the extent ARMs
are purchased at a premium, mortgage foreclosures and unscheduled
principal prepayments may result in some loss of the holders'
principal investment to the extent of the premium paid. On the
other hand, if ARMs are purchased at a discount, both a scheduled
payment of principal and an unscheduled prepayment of principal
will increase current and total returns and will accelerate the
recognition of income which when distributed to shareholders will
be taxable as ordinary income.
Cash Reserves Limited-Term Bond Funds
Risk Factors of Foreign Investing
There are special risks in foreign investing. Certain of
these risks are inherent in any mutual fund investing in foreign
securities while others relate more to the countries in which the
Funds will invest. Many of the risks are more pronounced for
investments in developing or emerging countries, such as many of
the countries of Southeast Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe
and the Middle East. Although there is no universally accepted
definition, a developing country is generally considered to be a
country which is in the initial stages of its industrialization
cycle with a per capita gross national product of less than
$8,000.
Political and Economic Factors. Individual foreign
economies of certain countries may differ favorably or
unfavorably from the United States' economy in such respects as
growth of gross national product, rate of inflation, capital
reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency and balance of payments
position. The internal politics of certain foreign countries are
not as stable as in the United States. For example, in 1991, the
existing government in Thailand was overthrown in a military
coup. In 1992, there were two military coup attempts in
Venezuela and in 1992 the President of Brazil was impeached. In
addition, significant external political risks currently affect
some foreign countries. Both Taiwan and China still claim
sovereignty of one another and there is a demilitarized border
between North and South Korea.
Governments in certain foreign countries continue to
participate to a significant degree, through ownership interest
or regulation, in their respective economies. Action by these
governments could have a significant effect on market prices of
securities and payment of dividends. The economies of many
foreign countries are heavily dependent upon international trade
and are accordingly affected by protective trade barriers and
economic conditions of their trading partners. The enactment by
PAGE 67
these trading partners of protectionist trade legislation could
have a significant adverse effect upon the securities markets of
such countries.
Currency Fluctuations. The Funds will invest in securities
denominated in various currencies. Accordingly, a change in the
value of any such currency against the U.S. dollar will result in
a corresponding change in the U.S. dollar value of the Funds'
assets denominated in that currency. Such changes will also
affect the Funds' income. Generally, when a given currency
appreciates against the dollar (the dollar weakens) the value of
the Fund's securities denominated in that currency will rise.
When a given currency depreciates against the dollar (the dollar
strengthens) the value of the Funds' securities denominated in
that currency would be expected to decline.
Investment and Repatriation of Restrictions. Foreign
investment in the securities markets of certain foreign countries
is restricted or controlled in varying degrees. These
restrictions may limit at times and preclude investment in
certain of such countries and may increase the cost and expenses
of the Funds. Investments by foreign investors are subject to a
variety of restrictions in many developing countries. These
restrictions may take the form of prior governmental approval,
limits on the amount or type of securities held by foreigners,
and limits on the types of companies in which foreigners may
invest. Additional or different restrictions may be imposed at
any time by these or other countries in which the Funds invest.
In addition, the repatriation of both investment income and
capital from several foreign countries is restricted and
controlled under certain regulations, including in some cases the
need for certain government consents. For example, capital
invested in Chile normally cannot be repatriated for one year.
Market Characteristics. Foreign stock and bond markets are
generally not as developed or efficient as, and may be more
volatile than, those in the United States. While growing in
volume, they usually have substantially less volume than U.S.
markets and the Funds' portfolio securities may be less liquid
and subject to more rapid and erratic price movements than
securities of comparable U.S. companies. Equity securities may
trade at price/earnings multiples higher than comparable United
States securities and such levels may not be sustainable. Fixed
commissions on foreign stock exchanges are generally higher than
negotiated commissions on United States exchanges, although the
Funds will endeavor to achieve the most favorable net results on
their portfolio transactions. There is generally less government
supervision and regulation of foreign stock exchanges, brokers
and listed companies than in the United States. Moreover,
settlement practices for transactions in foreign markets may
PAGE 68
differ from those in United States markets. Such differences may
include delays beyond periods customary in the United States and
practices, such as delivery of securities prior to receipt of
payment, which increase the likelihood of a "failed settlement."
Failed settlements can result in losses to a Fund.
Investment Funds. The Funds may invest in investment funds
which have been authorized by the governments of certain
countries specifically to permit foreign investment in securities
of companies listed and traded on the stock exchanges in these
respective countries. The Funds' investment in these funds is
subject to the provisions of the 1940 Act. If the Funds invest
in such investment funds, the Funds' shareholders will bear not
only their proportionate share of the expenses of the Funds
(including operating expenses and the fees of the investment
manager), but also will bear indirectly similar expenses of the
underlying investment funds. In addition, the securities of
these investment funds may trade at a premium over their net
asset value.
Information and Supervision. There is generally less
publicly available information about foreign companies comparable
to reports and ratings that are published about companies in the
United States. Foreign companies are also generally not subject
to uniform accounting, auditing and financial reporting
standards, practices and requirements comparable to those
applicable to United States companies. It also may be more
difficult to keep currently informed of corporate actions which
affect the prices of portfolio securities.
Taxes. The dividends and interest payable on certain of the
Funds' foreign portfolio securities may be subject to foreign
withholding taxes, thus reducing the net amount of income
available for distribution to the Funds' shareholders.
Other. With respect to certain foreign countries,
especially developing and emerging ones, there is the possibility
of adverse changes in investment or exchange control regulations,
expropriation or confiscatory taxation, limitations on the
removal of funds or other assets of the Funds, political or
social instability, or diplomatic developments which could affect
investments by U.S. persons in those countries.
Eastern Europe and Russia. Changes occurring in Eastern
Europe and Russia today could have long-term potential
consequences. As restrictions fall, this could result in rising
standards of living, lower manufacturing costs, growing consumer
spending, and substantial economic growth. However, investment
in the countries of Eastern Europe and Russia is highly
PAGE 69
speculative at this time. Political and economic reforms are too
recent to establish a definite trend away from centrally-planned
economies and state owned industries. In many of the countries
of Eastern Europe and Russia, there is no stock exchange or
formal market for securities. Such countries may also have
government exchange controls, currencies with no recognizable
market value relative to the established currencies of western
market economies, little or no experience in trading in
securities, no financial reporting standards, a lack of a banking
and securities infrastructure to handle such trading, and a legal
tradition which does not recognize rights in private property.
In addition, these countries may have national policies which
restrict investments in companies deemed sensitive to the
country's national interest. Further, the governments in such
countries may require governmental or quasi-governmental
authorities to act as custodian of a Fund's assets invested in
such countries and these authorities may not qualify as a foreign
custodian under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and exemptive
relief from such Act may be required. All of these
considerations are among the factors which could cause
significant risks and uncertainties to investment in Eastern
Europe and Russia. Each Fund will only invest in a company
located in, or a government of, Eastern Europe and Russia, if it
believes the potential return justifies the risk. To the extent
any securities issued by companies in Eastern Europe and Russia
are considered illiquid, each Fund will be required to include
such securities within its 15% restriction on investing in
illiquid securities.
Limited-Term Bond Fund
Special Risks of Investing in Junk Bonds
The following special considerations are additional risk
factors associated with the Fund's investments in lower rated
debt securities.
Youth and Growth of the Lower Rated Debt Securities Market.
The market for lower rated debt securities is relatively new and
its growth has paralleled a long economic expansion. Past
experience may not, therefore, provide an accurate indication of
future performance of this market, particularly during periods of
economic recession. An economic downturn or increase in interest
rates is likely to have a greater negative effect on this market,
the value of lower rated debt securities in the Fund's portfolio,
the Fund's net asset value and the ability of the bonds' issuers
to repay principal and interest, meet projected business goals
and obtain additional financing than on higher rated securities.
These circumstances also may result in a higher incidence of
defaults than with respect to higher rated securities. An
PAGE 70
investment in this Fund is more speculative than investment in
shares of a fund which invests only in higher rated debt
securities.
Sensitivity to Interest Rate and Economic Changes. Prices
of lower rated debt securities may be more sensitive to adverse
economic changes or corporate developments than higher rated
investments. Debt securities with longer maturities, which may
have higher yields, may increase or decrease in value more than
debt securities with shorter maturities. Market prices of lower
rated debt securities structured as zero coupon or pay-in-kind
securities are affected to a greater extent by interest rate
changes and may be more volatile than securities which pay
interest periodically and in cash. Where it deems it appropriate
and in the best interests of Fund shareholders, the Fund may
incur additional expenses to seek recovery on a debt security on
which the issuer has defaulted and to pursue litigation to
protect the interests of security holders of its portfolio
companies.
Liquidity and Valuation. Because the market for lower rated
securities may be thinner and less active than for higher rated
securities, there may be market price volatility for these
securities and limited liquidity in the resale market. Nonrated
securities are usually not as attractive to as many buyers as
rated securities are, a factor which may make nonrated securities
less marketable. These factors may have the effect of limiting
the availability of the securities for purchase by the Fund and
may also limit the ability of the Fund to sell such securities at
their fair value either to meet redemption requests or in
response to changes in the economy or the financial markets.
Adverse publicity and investor perceptions, whether or not based
on fundamental analysis, may decrease the values and liquidity of
lower rated debt securities, especially in a thinly traded
market. To the extent the Fund owns or may acquire illiquid or
restricted lower rated securities, these securities may involve
special registration responsibilities, liabilities and costs, and
liquidity and valuation difficulties. Changes in values of debt
securities which the Fund owns will affect its net asset value
per share. If market quotations are not readily available for
the Fund's lower rated or nonrated securities, these securities
will be valued by a method that the Fund's Board of Directors
believes accurately reflects fair value. Judgment plays a
greater role in valuing lower rated debt securities than with
respect to securities for which more external sources of
quotations and last sale information are available.
Congressional Action. New and proposed laws may have an
impact on the market for lower rated debt securities. For
example, as a result of the Financial Institution's Reform,
PAGE 71
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, savings and loan
associations were required to dispose of their high yield bonds
no later than July 1, 1994. Qualified affiliates of savings and
loan associations, however, may purchase and retain these
securities, and savings and loan associations may divest these
securities by sale to their qualified affiliates. T. Rowe Price
is unable at this time to predict what effect, if any, the
legislation may have on the market for lower rated debt
securities.
Taxation. Special tax considerations are associated with
investing in lower rated debt securities structured as zero
coupon or pay-in-kind securities. The Fund accrues income on
these securities prior to the receipt of cash payments. The Fund
must distribute substantially all of its income to its
shareholders to qualify for pass-through treatment under the tax
laws and may, therefore, have to dispose of its portfolio
securities to satisfy distribution requirements.
Reference is also made to the sections entitled "Types of
Securities" and "Portfolio Management Practices" for discussions
of the risks associated with the investments and practices
described therein as they apply to the Fund.
INVESTMENT PROGRAM
Set forth below is additional information about certain of
the investments described in the Fund's prospectus.
TYPES OF SECURITIES
Adjustable Rate Securities
Generally, the maturity of a security is deemed to be the
period remaining until the date (noted on the face of the
instrument) on which the principal amount must be paid, or in the
case of an instrument called for redemption, the date on which
the redemption payment must be made. However, certain securities
may be issued with adjustable interest rates that are reset
periodically by pre-determined formulas or indexes in order to
minimize movements in the principal value of the investment.
Such securities may have long-term maturities, but may be treated
as a short-term investment under certain conditions. Generally,
as interest rates decrease or increase, the potential for capital
appreciation or depreciation on these securities is less than for
fixed-rate obligations. These securities may take the following
forms:
PAGE 72
Variable Rate Securities. Variable rate instruments may
take the form of domestic certificates of deposit which
provide for the adjustment of their interest rate on set
dates and which, upon adjustment, can reasonably be expected
to have a market value which approximates its par value. A
variable rate instrument, the principal amount of which is
scheduled to be paid in 397 calendar days or less, is deemed
to have a maturity equal to the period remaining until the
next readjustment of the interest rate. A variable rate
instrument which is subject to a demand feature which
entitles the purchaser to receive the principal amount of
the underlying security or securities, either (i) upon
notice of no more than 30 days, or (ii) at specified
intervals not exceeding 397 calendar days and upon no more
than 30 days' notice, is deemed to have a maturity equal to
the longer of the period remaining until the next
readjustment of the interest rate or the period remaining
until the principal amount can be recovered through demand.
Floating Rate Securities. Floating rate may take the form
of corporate or bank holding company notes or Eurodollar
certificates of deposit. These instruments provide for the
adjustment of their interest rates whenever a specified
interest rate changes and which, at any time, can reasonably
be expected to have a market value that approximates its par
value. Floating rate instruments with demand features are
deemed to have a maturity equal to the period remaining
until the principal amount can be recovered through demand.
An instrument that is issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or any agency thereof which has a variable rate
of interest readjusted no less frequently than every 762
days may be deemed to have a maturity equal to the period
remaining until the next readjustment of the interest rate.
Put Option Bonds. Long-term obligations with maturities
longer than one year may provide purchasers an optional or
mandatory tender of the security at par value at
predetermined intervals, often ranging from one month to
several years (e.g., a 30-year bond with a five-year tender
period). These instruments are deemed to have a maturity
equal to the period remaining to the put date.
When-Issued Securities and Forward Commitment Contracts
The Funds may purchase securities on a "when-issued" or
delayed delivery basis ("When-Issueds") and the Limited-Term and
GNMA Funds may purchase securities on a forward commitment basis
("Forwards"). The price of such securities, which may be
expressed in yield terms, is fixed at the time the commitment to
purchase is made, but delivery and payment for take place at a
PAGE 73
later date. Normally, the settlement date occurs within 90 days
of the purchase for When-Issueds, but may be substantially longer
for Forwards. During the period between purchase and settlement,
no payment is made by the Fund to the issuer and no interest
accrues to the Fund. The purchase of these securities will
result in a loss if their value declines prior to the settlement
date. This could occur, for example, if interest rates increase
prior to settlement. The longer the period between purchase and
settlement the greater these risks are. At the time the Fund
makes the commitment to purchase these securities, it will record
the transaction and reflect the value of the security in
determining its net asset value. The Fund will cover these
securities by maintaining cash and/or liquid, high-grade debt
securities with its custodian bank equal in value to commitments
for them during the time between purchase and settlement.
Therefore, the longer this period, the longer the time during
which alternative investment options are not available to the
Fund (to the extent of the securities used for cover). Such
securities either will mature or, if necessary, be sold on or
before the settlement date.
To the extent the Fund remains fully or almost fully
invested (in securities with a remaining maturity of more than
one year) at the same time it purchases these securities, there
will be greater fluctuations in the Fund's net asset value than
if the Fund did not purchase them.
Money Market Securities
The money market securities that the Funds may invest in are
generally limited to those described below.
U.S. Government Obligations. Bills, notes, bonds, and other
debt securities issued by the U.S. Treasury. These are direct
obligations of the U.S. Government and differ mainly in the
length of their maturities.
U.S. Government Agency Securities. Issued or guaranteed by
U.S. Government sponsored enterprises and federal agencies.
These include securities issued by the Federal National Mortgage
Association, Government National Mortgage Association, Federal
Home Loan Bank, Federal Land Banks, Farmers Home Administration,
Banks for Cooperatives, Federal Intermediate Credit Banks,
Federal Financing Bank, Farm Credit Banks, the Small Business
Association, and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Some of these
securities are supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Treasury; and the remainder are supported only by the credit of
the instrumentality, which may or may not include the right of
the issuer to borrow from the Treasury.
PAGE 74
Bank Obligations. Certificates of deposit, bankers'
acceptances, and other short-term debt obligations. Certificates
of deposit are short-term obligations of commercial banks. A
bankers' acceptance is a time draft drawn on a commercial bank by
a borrower, usually in connection with international commercial
transactions. Certificates of deposit may have fixed or variable
rates. The Funds may invest in U.S. banks, foreign branches of
U.S. banks, U.S. branches of foreign banks and foreign branches
of foreign banks.
Short-term Corporate Debt Securities. Outstanding
nonconvertible corporate debt securities (e.g., bonds and
debentures) which have one year or less remaining to maturity.
Corporate notes may have fixed, variable, or floating rates.
Commercial Paper. Short-term promissory notes issued by
corporations primarily to finance short-term credit needs.
Certain notes may have floating or variable rates.
Foreign Government Securities. Issued or guaranteed by a
foreign government, province, instrumentality, political
subdivision or similar unit thereof. However, the Cash Reserves
Fund will only purchase these securities if they are payable in
U.S. dollars.
Savings and Loan Obligations. Negotiable certificates of
deposit and other short-term debt obligations of savings and loan
associations.
Supranational Agencies. The Funds may also invest in the
securities of certain supranational entities, such as the
International Development Bank.
First Tier Money Market Securities Defined. At least 95% of
the Cash Reserves Fund's total assets will be maintained in first
tier money market securities. First tier money market securities
are those which are described as First Tier Securities under Rule
2a-7 of the Investment Company Act of 1940. These include any
security with a remaining maturity of 397 days or less that is
rated (or that has been issued by an issuer that is rated with
respect to a class of short-term debt obligations, or any
security within that class that is comparable in priority and
security with the security) by any two nationally recognized
statistical rating organizations (NRSROs) (or if only one NRSRO
has issued a rating, that NRSRO) in the highest rating category
for short-term debt obligations (within which there may be sub-
categories). First Tier Securities also include unrated
securities comparable in quality to rated securities, as
determined by T. Rowe Price pursuant to written guidelines
established in accordance with Rule 2a-7 under the Investment
PAGE 75
Company Act of 1940 under the supervision of the Fund's Board of
Directors.
Mortgage-Related Securities
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Mortgage-related securities in which the Fund's may invest
include, but are not limited to those described below. The GNMA
Fund will invest at least 65% of its assets in GNMA mortgage
securities.
Mortgage-Backed Securities. Mortgage-backed securities are
securities representing an interest in a pool of mortgages. The
mortgages may be of a variety of types, including adjustable
rate, conventional 30-year fixed rate, graduated payment, and 15-
year. Principal and interest payments made on the mortgages in
the underlying mortgage pool are passed through to the Fund.
This is in contrast to traditional bonds where principal is
normally paid back at maturity in a lump sum. Unscheduled
prepayments of principal shorten the securities' weighted average
life and may lower their total return. (When a mortgage in the
underlying mortgage pool is prepaid, an unscheduled principal
prepayment is passed through to the Fund. This principal is
returned to the Fund at par. As a result, if a mortgage security
were trading at a premium, its total return would be lowered by
prepayments, and if a mortgage security were trading at a
discount, its total return would be increased by prepayments.)
The value of these securities also may change because of changes
in the market's perception of the creditworthiness of the federal
agency that issued them. In addition, the mortgage securities
market in general may be adversely affected by changes in
governmental regulation or tax policies.
U.S. Government Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities. These
are obligations issued or guaranteed by the United States
Government or one of its agencies or instrumentalities, such as
the Government National Mortgage Association ("Ginnie Mae" or
"GNMA"), the Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae"
or "FNMA") and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
("Freddie Mac" or "FHLMC"), and the Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation ("Farmer Mac" or "FAMC"). FNMA, FHLMC and FAMC
obligations are not backed by the full faith and credit of the
U.S. Government as GNMA certificates are, but FNMA and FHLMC
securities are supported by the instrumentality's right to borrow
from the United States Treasury. U.S. Government Agency
Mortgage-Backed Certificates provide for the pass-through to
PAGE 76
investors of their pro-rata share of monthly payments (including
any prepayments) made by the individual borrowers on the pooled
mortgage loans, net of any fees paid to the guarantor of such
securities and the servicer of the underlying mortgage loans.
Each of GNMA, FNMA, FHLMC and FAMC guarantees timely
distributions of interest to certificate holders. GNMA and FNMA
guarantee timely distributions of scheduled principal. FHLMC has
in the past guaranteed only the ultimate collection of principal
of the underlying mortgage loan; however, FHLMC now issues
Mortgage-Backed Securities (FHLMC Gold PCs) which also guarantee
timely payment of monthly principal reductions.
Ginnie Mae Certificates. Ginnie Mae is a wholly-owned
corporate instrumentality of the United States within the
Department of Housing and Urban Development. The National
Housing Act of 1934, as amended (the "Housing Act"), authorizes
Ginnie Mae to guarantee the timely payment of the principal of
and interest on certificates that are based on and backed by a
pool of mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing
Administration under the Housing Act, or Title V of the Housing
Act of 1949 ("FHA Loans"), or guaranteed by the Department of
Veterans Affairs under the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944,
as amended ("VA Loans"), or by pools of other eligible mortgage
loans. The Housing Act provides that the full faith and credit
of the United States government is pledged to the payment of all
amounts that may be required to be paid under any guaranty. In
order to meet its obligations under such guaranty, Ginnie Mae is
authorized to borrow from the United States Treasury with no
limitations as to amount.
Fannie Mae Certificates. Fannie Mae is a federally
chartered and privately owned corporation organized and existing
under the Federal National Mortgage Association Charter Act of
1938. FNMA Certificates represent a pro-rata interest in a group
of mortgage loans purchased by Fannie Mae. FNMA guarantees the
timely payment of principal and interest on the securities it
issues. The obligations of FNMA are not backed by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. Government.
Freddie Mac Certificates. Freddie Mac is a corporate
instrumentality of the United States created pursuant to the
Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970, as amended (the "FHLMC Act").
Freddie Mac Certificates represent a pro-rata interest in a group
of mortgage loans (a "Freddie Mac Certificate group") purchased
by Freddie Mac. Freddie Mac guarantees timely payment of
interest and principal on certain securities it issues and timely
payment of interest and eventual payment of principal on other
securities is issues. The obligations of Freddie Mac are
obligations solely of Freddie Mac and are not backed by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
PAGE 77
Farmer Mac Certificates. The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation ("Farmer Mac") is a federally chartered
instrumentality of the United States established by Title VIII of
the Farm Credit Act of 1971, as amended ("Charter Act"). Farmer
Mac was chartered primarily to attract new capital for financing
of agricultural real estate by making a secondary market in
certain qualified agricultural real estate loans. Farmer Mac
provides guarantees of timely payment of principal and interest
on securities representing interests in, or obligations backed
by, pools of mortgages secured by first liens on agricultural
real estate ("Farmer Mac Certificates"). Similar to Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, Farmer Mac's Certificates are not supported by
the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government; rather, Farmer
Mac may borrow up from the U.S. Treasury to meet its guaranty
obligations.
As discussed above, prepayments on the underlying mortgages
and their effect upon the rate of return of a Mortgage-Backed
Security, is the principal investment risk for a purchaser of
such securities, like the Fund. Over time, any pool of mortgages
will experience prepayments due to a variety of factors,
including (1) sales of the underlying homes (including
foreclosures), (2) refinancings of the underlying mortgages, and
(3) increased amortization by the mortgagee. These factors, in
turn, depend upon general economic factors, such as level of
interest rates and economic growth. Thus, investors normally
expect prepayment rates to increase during periods of strong
economic growth or declining interest rates, and to decrease in
recessions and rising interest rate environments. Accordingly,
the life of the Mortgage-Backed Security is likely to be
substantially shorter than the stated maturity of the mortgages
in the underlying pool. Because of such variation in prepayment
rates, it is not possible to predict the life of a particular
Mortgage-Backed Security, but FHA statistics indicate that 25- to
30-year single family dwelling mortgages have an average life of
approximately 12 years. The majority of Ginnie Mae Certificates
are backed by mortgages of this type, and, accordingly, the
generally accepted practice treats Ginnie Mae Certificates as 30-
year securities which prepay full in the 12th year. FNMA and
Freddie Mac Certificates may have differing prepayment
characteristics.
Fixed Rate Mortgage-Backed Securities bear a stated "coupon
rate" which represents the effective mortgage rate at the time of
issuance, less certain fees to GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC for providing
the guarantee, and the issuer for assembling the pool and for
passing through monthly payments of interest and principal.
PAGE 78
Payments to holders of Mortgage-Backed Securities consist of
the monthly distributions of interest and principal less the
applicable fees. The actual yield to be earned by a holder of
Mortgage-Backed Securities is calculated by dividing interest
payments by the purchase price paid for the Mortgage-Backed
Securities (which may be at a premium or a discount from the face
value of the certificate).
Monthly distributions of interest, as contrasted to semi-
annual distributions which are common for other fixed interest
investments, have the effect of compounding and thereby raising
the effective annual yield earned on Mortgage-Backed Securities.
Because of the variation in the life of the pools of mortgages
which back various Mortgage-Backed Securities, and because it is
impossible to anticipate the rate of interest at which future
principal payments may be reinvested, the actual yield earned
from a portfolio of Mortgage-Backed Securities will differ
significantly from the yield estimated by using an assumption of
a certain life for each Mortgage-Backed Security included in such
a portfolio as described above.
Fixed Rate Mortgage-Backed Securities bear a stated "coupon
rate" which represents the effective mortgage rate at the time of
issuance, less certain fees to GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC for providing
the guarantee, and the issuer for assembling the pool and for
passing through monthly payments of interest and principal.
Payments to holders of Mortgage-Backed Securities consist of
the monthly distributions of interest and principal less the
applicable fees. The actual yield to be earned by a holder of
Mortgage-Backed Securities is calculated by dividing interest
payments by the purchase price paid for the Mortgage-Backed
Securities (which may be at a premium or a discount from the face
value of the certificate).
Monthly distributions of interest, as contrasted to semi-
annual distributions which are common for other fixed interest
investments, have the effect of compounding and thereby raising
the effective annual yield earned on Mortgage-Backed Securities.
Because of the variation in the life of the pools of mortgages
which back various Mortgage-Backed Securities, and because it is
impossible to anticipate the rate of interest at which future
principal payments may be reinvested, the actual yield earned
from a portfolio of Mortgage-Backed Securities will differ
significantly from the yield estimated by using an assumption of
a certain life for each Mortgage-Backed Security included in such
a portfolio as described above.
PAGE 79
U.S. Government Agency Multiclass Pass-Through Securities.
Unlike CMOs, U.S. Government Agency Multiclass Pass-Through
Securities, which include FNMA Guaranteed REMIC Pass-Through
Certificates and FHLMC Multi-Class Mortgage Participation
Certificates, are ownership interests in a pool of Mortgage
Assets. Unless the context indicates otherwise, all references
herein to CMOs include multiclass pass-through securities.
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs). The Limited-
Term and GNMA Funds may invest up to 30% and 20% of their total
assets, respectively, in collateralized mortgage obligations
(CMOs).
CMOs are bonds that are collateralized by whole loan
mortgages or mortgage pass-through securities. The bonds issued
in a CMO deal are divided into groups, and each group of bonds is
referred to as a "tranche." Under the traditional CMO structure,
the cash flows generated by the mortgages or mortgage pass-
through securities in the collateral pool are used to first pay
interest and then pay principal to the CMO bondholders. The
bonds issued under a CMO structure are retired sequentially as
opposed to the pro rata return of principal found in traditional
pass-through obligations. Subject to the various provisions of
individual CMO issues, the cash flow generated by the underlying
collateral (to the extent it exceeds the amount required to pay
the stated interest) is used to retire the bonds. Under the CMO
structure, the repayment of principal among the different
tranches is prioritized in accordance with the terms of the
particular CMO issuance. The "fastest-pay" tranche of bonds, as
specified in the prospectus for the issuance, would initially
receive all principal payments. When that tranche of bonds is
retired, the next tranche, or tranches, in the sequence, as
specified in the prospectus, receive all of the principal
payments until they are retired. The sequential retirement of
bond groups continues until the last tranche, or group of bonds,
is retired. Accordingly, the CMO structure allows the issuer to
use cash flows of long maturity, monthly-pay collateral to
formulate securities with short, intermediate and long final
maturities and expected average lives.
CMO structures may also include floating rate CMOs, planned
amortization classes, accrual bonds and CMO residuals. These
structures affect the amount and timing of principal and interest
received by each tranche from the underlying collateral. Under
certain of these structures, given classes of CMOs have priority
over others with respect to the receipt of prepayments on the
mortgages. Therefore, depending on the type of CMOs in which the
Fund invests, the investment may be subject to a greater or
lesser risk of prepayment than other types of mortgage-related
securities.
PAGE 80
The primary risk of any mortgage security is the uncertainty
of the timing of cash flows. For CMOs, the primary risk results
from the rate of prepayments on the underlying mortgages serving
as collateral. An increase or decrease in prepayment rates
(resulting from a decrease or increase in mortgage interest
rates) will affect the yield, average life and price of CMOs.
The prices of certain CMOs, depending on their structure and the
rate of prepayments, can be volatile. Some CMOs may also not be
as liquid as other securities.
Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities. The Limited-Term Fund
may invest up to 10% of its total assets in stripped mortgage
securities. The GNMA Fund may invest up to 10% of its total
assets in these securities, however, it has no current intention
of investing more than 5% of its total assets in them.
Stripped Agency Mortgage-Backed securities represent
interests in a pool of mortgages, the cash flow of which has been
separated into its interest and principal components. "IOs"
(interest only securities) receive the interest portion of the
cash flow while "POs" (principal only securities) receive the
principal portion. Stripped Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities
may be issued by U.S. Government Agencies or by private issuers
similar to those described below with respect to CMOs and
privately-issued mortgage-backed certificates. As interest rates
rise and fall, the value of IOs tends to move in the same
direction as interest rates. The value of the other
mortgage-backed securities described herein, like other debt
instruments, will tend to move in the opposite direction compared
to interest rates. Under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code"), POs may generate taxable income from the
current accrual of original issue discount, without a
corresponding distribution of cash to the Fund.
The cash flows and yields on IO and PO classes are extremely
sensitive to the rate of principal payments (including
prepayments) on the related underlying mortgage assets. In the
case of IOs, prepayments affect the amount, but not the timing,
of cash flows provided to the investor. In contrast, prepayments
on the mortgage pool affect the timing, but not the amount, of
cash flows received by investors in POs. A rapid or slow rate of
principal payments may have a material adverse effect on the
prices of IOs or POs, respectively. If the underlying mortgage
assets experience greater than anticipated prepayments of
principal, an investor may fail to recoup fully its initial
investment in an IO class of a stripped mortgage-backed security,
even if the IO class is rated AAA or Aaa or is derived from a
PAGE 81
full faith and credit obligation. Conversely, if the underlying
mortgage assets experience slower than anticipated prepayments of
principal, the price on a PO class will be affected more severely
than would be the case with a traditional mortgage-backed
security.
The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission has
advised the Fund that it believes the Fund should treat IOs and
POs, other than government-issued IOs or POs backed by fixed rate
mortgages, as illiquid securities and, accordingly, limit its
investments in such securities, together with all other illiquid
securities, to 15% of the Fund's net assets. Under the Staff's
position, the determination of whether a particular
government-issued IO and PO backed by fixed rate mortgages may be
made on a case by case basis under guidelines and standards
established by the Fund's Board of Directors. The Fund's Board
of Directors has delegated to T. Rowe Price the authority to
determine the liquidity of these investments based on the
following guidelines: the type of issuer; type of collateral,
including age and prepayment characteristics; rate of interest on
coupon relative to current market rates and the effect of the
rate on the potential for prepayments; complexity of the issue's
structure, including the number of tranches; size of the issue
and the number of dealers who make a market in the IO or PO. The
Fund will treat non-government-issued IOs and POs not backed by
fixed or adjustable rate mortgages as illiquid unless and until
the Securities and Exchange Commission modifies its position.
Multi-Class Residential Mortgage Securities. Such
securities represent interests in pools of mortgage loans to
residential home buyers made by commercial banks, savings and
loan associations or other financial institutions. Unlike GNMA,
FNMA and FHLMC securities, the payment of principal and interest
on Multi-Class Residential Mortgage Securities is not guaranteed
by the U.S. Government or any of its agencies. Accordingly,
yields on Multi-Class Residential Mortgage Securities have been
historically higher than the yields on U.S. government mortgage
securities. However, the risk of loss due to default on such
instruments is higher since they are not guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or its agencies. Additionally, pools of such
securities may be divided into senior or subordinated segments.
Although subordinated mortgage securities may have a higher yield
than senior mortgage securities, the risk of loss of principal is
greater because losses on the underlying mortgage loans must be
borne by persons holding subordinated securities before those
holding senior mortgage securities.
Privately-Issued Mortgage-Backed Certificates. The Fund may
also invest in pass-through certificates issued by non-
PAGE 82
governmental issuers. Pools of conventional residential mortgage
loans created by such issuers generally offer a higher rate of
interest than government and government-related pools because
there are no direct or indirect government guarantees of payment.
Timely payment of interest and principal of these pools is,
however, generally supported by various forms of insurance or
guarantees, including individual loan, title, pool and hazard
insurance. The insurance and guarantees are issued by government
entities, private insurance or the mortgage poolers. Such
insurance and guarantees and the creditworthiness of the issuers
thereof will be considered in determining whether a mortgage-
related security meets the Fund's quality standards. The Fund
may buy mortgage-related securities without insurance or
guarantees if through an examination of the loan experience and
practices of the poolers, the investment manager determines that
the securities meet the Fund's quality standards.
The Fund expects that governmental, government-related or
private entities may create mortgage loan pools offering pass-
through investments in addition to those described above. The
mortgages underlying these securities may be alternative mortgage
instruments, that is, mortgage instruments whose principal or
interest payments may vary or whose terms to maturity may differ
from customary long-term fixed rate mortgages. As new types of
mortgage-related securities are developed and offered to
investors, the investment manager will, consistent with the
Fund's objective, policies and quality standards, consider making
investments in such new types of securities.
Adjustable Rate Mortgage Securities ("ARMs"). ARMs, like
fixed rate mortgages, have a specified maturity date, and the
principal amount of the mortgage is repaid over the life of the
mortgage. Unlike fixed rate mortgages, the interest rate on ARMs
is adjusted at regular intervals based on a specified, published
interest rate "index" such as a Treasury rate index. The new
rate is determined by adding a specific interest amount, the
"margin," to the interest rate of the index. Investment in ARM
securities allows the Fund to participate in changing interest
rate levels through regular adjustments in the coupons of the
underlying mortgages, resulting in more variable current income
and lower price volatility than longer term fixed rate mortgage
securities. The ARM securities in which the Fund expects to
invest will generally adjust their interest rates at regular
intervals of one year or less. ARM securities are a less
effective means of locking in long-term rates than fixed rate
mortgages since the income from adjustable rate mortgages will
increase during periods of rising interest rates and decline
during periods of falling rates.
PAGE 83
Characteristics of Adjustable Rate Mortgage Securities. The
interest rates paid on the mortgages underlying ARM securities
are reset at regular intervals by adding an interest rate margin
to a specified interest rate index. There are three main
categories of indices: those based on U.S. Treasury securities
such as the constant maturity treasury rate (CMT); those derived
from a calculated measure such as a cost of funds index (COFI) or
a moving average of mortgage rates; and those based on certain
actively traded or prominent short-term rates such as the LIBOR.
Some indices, such as the one-year constant maturity Treasury
rate, closely mirror changes in interest rate levels. Others,
such as COFI tend to lag behind changes in market rate levels but
reset monthly thus tending to be somewhat less volatile. Such a
delay in adjusting to changes in interest rates may cause
securities owned by the Fund to increase or decrease in value,
particularly during periods between interest adjustment dates.
ARMs will frequently have caps and floors which limit the
maximum amount by which the interest rate to the residential
borrower may move up or down, respectively, each adjustment
period and over the life of the loan. Interest rate caps on ARM
securities may cause them to decrease in value in an increasing
interest rate environment. Such caps may also prevent their
income from increasing to levels commensurate with prevailing
interest rates. Conversely, interest rate floors on ARM
securities may cause their income to remain higher than
prevailing interest rate levels and result in an increase in the
value of such securities. However, this increase may be tempered
by the acceleration of prepayments.
Mortgage securities generally have a maximum maturity of up
to 30 years. However, due to the adjustable rate feature of ARM
securities, their prices are considered to have volatility
characteristics which approximate the average period of time
until the next adjustment of the interest rate. As a result, the
principal volatility of ARM securities may be more comparable to
short- and intermediate-term securities than to longer term fixed
rate mortgage securities. Prepayments however, will increase
their principal volatility. See also the discussion of Mortgage-
Backed Securities on page 8.
Asset-Backed Securities
Each Fund may invest a portion of its assets in debt
obligations known as asset-backed securities.
The credit quality of most asset-backed securities depends
primarily on the credit quality of the assets underlying such
securities, how well the entity issuing the security is insulated
from the credit risk of the originator or any other affiliated
PAGE 84
entities and the amount and quality of any credit support
provided to the securities. The rate of principal payment on
asset-backed securities generally depends on the rate of
principal payments received on the underlying assets which in
turn may be affected by a variety of economic and other factors.
As a result, the yield on any asset-backed security is difficult
to predict with precision and actual yield to maturity may be
more or less than the anticipated yield to maturity. Asset-
backed securities may be classified either as pass-through
certificates or collateralized obligations.
Pass-through certificates are asset-backed securities which
represent an undivided fractional ownership interest in an
underlying pool of assets. Pass-through certificates usually
provide for payments of principal and interest received to be
passed through to their holders, usually after deduction for
certain costs and expenses incurred in administering the pool.
Because pass-through certificates represent an ownership interest
in the underlying assets, the holders thereof bear directly the
risk of any defaults by the obligors on the underlying assets not
covered by any credit support. See "Types of Credit Support".
Asset-backed securities issued in the form of debt
instruments, also known as collateralized or pay-through
obligations, are generally issued as the debt of a special
purpose entity organized solely for the purpose of owning such
assets and issuing such debt. Such assets are most often trade,
credit card or automobile receivables. The assets
collateralizing such asset-backed securities are pledged to a
trustee or custodian for the benefit of the holders thereof.
Such issuers generally hold no assets other than those underlying
the asset-backed securities and any credit support provided. As
a result, although payments on such asset-backed securities are
obligations of the issuers, in the event of defaults on the
underlying assets not covered by any credit support (see "Types
of Credit Support"), the issuing entities are unlikely to have
sufficient assets to satisfy their obligations on the related
asset-backed securities.
Methods of Allocating Cash Flows. While many asset-backed
securities are issued with only one class of security, many
asset-backed securities are issued in more than one class, each
with different payment terms. Multiple class asset-backed
securities are issued for two main reasons. First, multiple
classes may be used as a method of providing credit support.
This is accomplished typically through creation of one or more
classes whose right to payments on the asset-backed security is
made subordinate to the right to such payments of the remaining
class or classes. See "Types of Credit Support". Second,
multiple classes may permit the issuance of securities with
PAGE 85
payment terms, interest rates or other characteristics differing
both from those of each other and from those of the underlying
assets. Examples include so-called "strips" (asset-backed
securities entitling the holder to disproportionate interests
with respect to the allocation of interest and principal of the
assets backing the security), and securities with class or
classes having characteristics which mimic the characteristics of
non-asset-backed securities, such as floating interest rates
(i.e., interest rates which adjust as a specified benchmark
changes) or scheduled amortization of principal.
Asset-backed securities in which the payment streams on the
underlying assets are allocated in a manner different than those
described above may be issued in the future. The Fund may invest
in such asset-backed securities if such investment is otherwise
consistent with its investment objectives and policies and with
the investment restrictions of the Fund.
Types of Credit Support. Asset-backed securities are often
backed by a pool of assets representing the obligations of a
number of different parties. To lessen the effect of failures by
obligors on underlying assets to make payments, such securities
may contain elements of credit support. Such credit support
falls into two classes: liquidity protection and protection
against ultimate default by an obligor on the underlying assets.
Liquidity protection refers to the provision of advances,
generally by the entity administering the pool of assets, to
ensure that scheduled payments on the underlying pool are made in
a timely fashion. Protection against ultimate default ensures
ultimate payment of the obligations on at least a portion of the
assets in the pool. Such protection may be provided through
guarantees, insurance policies or letters of credit obtained from
third parties, ("external credit enhancement") through various
means of structuring the transaction ("internal credit
enhancement") or through a combination of such approaches.
Examples of asset-backed securities with credit support arising
out of the structure of the transaction include "senior-
subordinated securities" (multiple class asset-backed securities
with certain classes subordinate to other classes as to the
payment of principal thereon, with the result that defaults on
the underlying assets are borne first by the holders of the
subordinated class) and asset-backed securities that have
"reserve funds" (where cash or investments, sometimes funded from
a portion of the initial payments on the underlying assets, are
held in reserve against future losses) or that have been
"overcollateralized" (where the scheduled payments on, or the
principal amount of, the underlying assets substantially exceeds
that required to make payment of the asset-backed securities and
pay any servicing or other fees). The degree of credit support
provided on each issue is based generally on historical
PAGE 86
information respecting the level of credit risk associated with
such payments. Depending upon the type of assets securitized,
historical information on credit risk and prepayment rates may be
limited or even unavailable. Delinquency or loss in excess of
that anticipated could adversely affect the return on an
investment in an asset-backed security.
Automobile Receivable Securities. The Fund may invest in
Asset-Backed Securities which are backed by receivables from
motor vehicle installment sales contracts or installment loans
secured by motor vehicles ("Automobile Receivable Securities").
Since installment sales contracts for motor vehicles or
installment loans related thereto ("Automobile Contracts")
typically have shorter durations and lower incidences of
prepayment, Automobile Receivable Securities generally will
exhibit a shorter average life and are less susceptible to
prepayment risk.
Most entities that issue Automobile Receivable Securities
create an enforceable interest in their respective Automobile
Contracts only by filing a financing statement and by having the
servicer of the Automobile Contracts, which is usually the
originator of the Automobile Contracts, take custody thereof. In
such circumstances, if the servicer of the Automobile Contracts
were to sell the same Automobile Contracts to another party, in
violation of its obligation not to do so, there is a risk that
such party could acquire an interest in the Automobile Contracts
superior to that of the holders of Automobile Receivable
Securities. Also although most Automobile Contracts grant a
security interest in the motor vehicle being financed, in most
states the security interest in a motor vehicle must be noted on
the certificate of title to create an enforceable security
interest against competing claims of other parties. Due to the
large number of vehicles involved, however, the certificate of
title to each vehicle financed, pursuant to the Automobile
Contracts underlying the Automobile Receivable Security, usually
is not amended to reflect the assignment of the seller's security
interest for the benefit of the holders of the Automobile
Receivable Securities. Therefore, there is the possibility that
recoveries on repossessed collateral may not, in some cases, be
available to support payments on the securities. In addition,
various state and federal securities laws give the motor vehicle
owner the right to assert against the holder of the owner's
Automobile Contract certain defenses such owner would have
against the seller of the motor vehicle. The assertion of such
defenses could reduce payments on the Automobile Receivable
Securities.
Credit Card Receivable Securities. The Fund may invest in
Asset Backed Securities backed by receivables from revolving
PAGE 87
credit card agreements ("Credit Card Receivable Securities").
Credit balances on revolving credit card agreements ("Accounts")
are generally paid down more rapidly than are Automobile
Contracts. Most of the Credit Card Receivable Securities issued
publicly to date have been Pass-Through Certificates. In order
to lengthen the maturity of Credit Card Receivable Securities,
most such securities provide for a fixed period during which only
interest payments on the underlying Accounts are passed through
to the security holder and principal payments received on such
Accounts are used to fund the transfer to the pool of assets
supporting the related Credit Card Receivable Securities of
additional credit card charges made on an Account. The initial
fixed period usually may be shortened upon the occurrence of
specified events which signal a potential deterioration in the
quality of the assets backing the security, such as the
imposition of a cap on interest rates. The ability of the issuer
to extend the life of an issue of Credit Card Receivable
Securities thus depends upon the continued generation of
additional principal amounts in the underlying accounts during
the initial period and the non-occurrence of specified events.
An acceleration in cardholders' payment rates or any other event
which shortens the period during which additional credit card
charges on an Account may be transferred to the pool of assets
supporting the related Credit Card Receivable Security could
shorten the weighted average life and yield of the Credit Card
Receivable Security.
Credit cardholders are entitled to the protection of a
number of state and federal consumer credit laws, many of which
give such holder the right to set off certain amounts against
balances owed on the credit card, thereby reducing amounts paid
on Accounts. In addition, unlike most other Asset Backed
Securities, Accounts are unsecured obligations of the cardholder.
Other Assets. Asset Backed Securities backed by assets
other than those described above, including, but not limited to,
small business loans and accounts receivable, equipment leases,
commercial real estate loans, boat loans and manufacturing
housing loans. The Fund may invest in such securities in the
future if such investment is otherwise consistent with its
investment objective and policies.
There are, of course, other types of securities that are, or
may become available, which are similar to the foregoing and the
Fund reserves the right to invest in these securities.
PAGE 88
Hybrid Instruments
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
The Funds may invest up to 10% of their total assets in
hybrid instruments.
Hybrid Instruments (a type of potentially high risk
derivative) have been developed and combine the elements of
futures contracts or options with those of debt, preferred equity
or a depository instrument (hereinafter "Hybrid Instruments").
Generally, a Hybrid Instrument will be a debt security, preferred
stock, depository share, trust certificate, certificate of
deposit or other evidence of indebtedness on which a portion of
or all interest payments, and/or the principal or stated amount
payable at maturity, redemption or retirement, is determined by
reference to prices, changes in prices, or differences between
prices, of securities, currencies, intangibles, goods, articles
or commodities (collectively "Underlying Assets") or by another
objective index, economic factor or other measure, such as
interest rates, currency exchange rates, commodity indices, and
securities indices (collectively "Benchmarks"). Thus, Hybrid
Instruments may take a variety of forms, including, but not
limited to, debt instruments with interest or principal payments
or redemption terms determined by reference to the value of a
currency or commodity or securities index at a future point in
time, preferred stock with dividend rates determined by reference
to the value of a currency, or convertible securities with the
conversion terms related to a particular commodity.
Hybrid Instruments can be an efficient means of creating
exposure to a particular market, or segment of a market, with the
objective of enhancing total return. For example, a Fund may
wish to take advantage of expected declines in interest rates in
several European countries, but avoid the transactions costs
associated with buying and currency-hedging the foreign bond
positions. One solution would be to purchase a U.S. dollar-
denominated Hybrid Instrument whose redemption price is linked to
the average three year interest rate in a designated group of
countries. The redemption price formula would provide for
payoffs of greater than par if the average interest rate was
lower than a specified level, and payoffs of less than par if
rates were above the specified level. Furthermore, the Fund
could limit the downside risk of the security by establishing a
minimum redemption price so that the principal paid at maturity
could not be below a predetermined minimum level if interest
rates were to rise significantly. The purpose of this
arrangement, known as a structured security with an embedded put
option, would be to give the Fund the desired European bond
PAGE 89
exposure while avoiding currency risk, limiting downside market
risk, and lowering transactions costs. Of course, there is no
guarantee that the strategy will be successful and the Fund could
lose money if, for example, interest rates do not move as
anticipated or credit problems develop with the issuer of the
Hybrid.
The risks of investing in Hybrid Instruments reflect a
combination of the risks of investing in securities, options,
futures and currencies. Thus, an investment in a Hybrid
Instrument may entail significant risks that are not associated
with a similar investment in a traditional debt instrument that
has a fixed principal amount, is denominated in U.S. dollars or
bears interest either at a fixed rate or a floating rate
determined by reference to a common, nationally published
Benchmark. The risks of a particular Hybrid Instrument will, of
course, depend upon the terms of the instrument, but may include,
without limitation, the possibility of significant changes in the
Benchmarks or the prices of Underlying Assets to which the
instrument is linked. Such risks generally depend upon factors
which are unrelated to the operations or credit quality of the
issuer of the Hybrid Instrument and which may not be readily
foreseen by the purchaser, such as economic and political events,
the supply and demand for the Underlying Assets and interest rate
movements. In recent years, various Benchmarks and prices for
Underlying Assets have been highly volatile, and such volatility
may be expected in the future. Reference is also made to the
discussion of futures, options, and forward contracts herein for
a discussion of the risks associated with such investments.
Hybrid Instruments are potentially more volatile and carry
greater market risks than traditional debt instruments.
Depending on the structure of the particular Hybrid Instrument,
changes in a Benchmark may be magnified by the terms of the
Hybrid Instrument and have an even more dramatic and substantial
effect upon the value of the Hybrid Instrument. Also, the prices
of the Hybrid Instrument and the Benchmark or Underlying Asset
may not move in the same direction or at the same time.
Hybrid Instruments may bear interest or pay preferred
dividends at below market (or even relatively nominal) rates.
Alternatively, Hybrid Instruments may bear interest at above
market rates but bear an increased risk of principal loss (or
gain). The latter scenario may result if "leverage" is used to
structure the Hybrid Instrument. Leverage risk occurs when the
Hybrid Instrument is structured so that a given change in a
Benchmark or Underlying Asset is multiplied to produce a greater
value change in the Hybrid Instrument, thereby magnifying the
risk of loss as well as the potential for gain.
PAGE 90
Hybrid Instruments may also carry liquidity risk since the
instruments are often "customized" to meet the portfolio needs of
a particular investor, and therefore, the number of investors
that are willing and able to buy such instruments in the
secondary market may be smaller than that for more traditional
debt securities. In addition, because the purchase and sale of
Hybrid Instruments could take place in an over-the-counter market
without the guarantee of a central clearing organization or in a
transaction between the Fund and the issuer of the Hybrid
Instrument, the creditworthiness of the counter party or issuer
of the Hybrid Instrument would be an additional risk factor which
the Fund would have to consider and monitor. Hybrid Instruments
also may not be subject to regulation of the Commodities Futures
Trading Commission ("CFTC"), which generally regulates the
trading of commodity futures by U.S. persons, the SEC, which
regulates the offer and sale of securities by and to U.S.
persons, or any other governmental regulatory authority.
The various risks discussed above, particularly the market
risk of such instruments, may in turn cause significant
fluctuations in the net asset value of the Fund. Accordingly,
the Fund will limit its investments in Hybrid Instruments to 10%
of net assets. However, because of their volatility, it is
possible that the Fund's investment in Hybrid Instruments will
account for more than 10% of the Fund's return (positive or
negative).
Illiquid or Restricted Securities
Restricted securities may be sold only in privately
negotiated transactions or in a public offering with respect to
which a registration statement is in effect under the Securities
Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act"). Where registration is required,
the Fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the registration
expenses and a considerable period may elapse between the time of
the decision to sell and the time the Fund may be permitted to
sell a security under an effective registration statement. If,
during such a period, adverse market conditions were to develop,
the Fund might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed when
it decided to sell. Restricted securities will be priced at fair
value as determined in accordance with procedures prescribed by
the Fund's Board of Directors. If through the appreciation of
illiquid securities or the depreciation of liquid securities, the
Fund should be in a position where more than 15% (10% for Cash
Reserves) of the value of its net assets are invested in illiquid
assets, including restricted securities, the Fund will take
appropriate steps to protect liquidity.
PAGE 91
Notwithstanding the above, the Fund may purchase securities
which, while privately placed, are eligible for purchase and sale
under Rule 144A under the 1933 Act. This rule permits certain
qualified institutional buyers, such as the Fund, to trade in
privately placed securities even though such securities are not
registered under the 1933 Act. T. Rowe Price under the
supervision of the Fund's Board of Directors, will consider
whether securities purchased under Rule 144A are illiquid and
thus subject to the Fund's restriction of investing no more than
15% (10% for Cash Reserves) of its assets in illiquid securities.
A determination of whether a Rule 144A security is liquid or not
is a question of fact. In making this determination, T. Rowe
Price will consider the trading markets for the specific security
taking into account the unregistered nature of a Rule 144A
security. In addition, T. Rowe Price could consider the (1)
frequency of trades and quotes, (2) number of dealers and
potential purchases, (3) dealer undertakings to make a market,
and (4) the nature of the security and of marketplace trades
(e.g., the time needed to dispose of the security, the method of
soliciting offers and the mechanics of transfer). The liquidity
of Rule 144A securities would be monitored, and if as a result of
changed conditions it is determined that a Rule 144A security is
no longer liquid, a Fund's holdings of illiquid securities would
be reviewed to determine what, if any, steps are required to
assure that the Fund does not invest more than 15% (10% for Cash
Reserves) of its assets in illiquid securities. Investing in
Rule 144A securities could have the effect of increasing the
amount of a Fund's assets invested in illiquid securities if
qualified institutional buyers are unwilling to purchase such
securities.
There are, of course, other types of securities that are, or
may become available, which are similar to the foregoing and the
Funds may invest in these securities.
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
Foreign Currency Transactions
Limited-Term Fund
A forward foreign currency contract ("forward contract")
involves an obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at
a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from the
date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set
at the time of the contract. These contracts are principally
traded in the interbank market conducted directly between
currency traders (usually large, commercial banks) and their
customers. A forward contract generally has no deposit
PAGE 92
requirement, and no commissions are charged at any stage for
trades.
The Limited-Term Fund may enter into forward contracts for a
variety of purposes in connection with the management of the
foreign securities portion of its portfolio. The Fund's use of
such contracts would include, but not be limited to, the
following:
First, when the Fund enters into a contract for the purchase
or sale of a security denominated in a foreign currency, it may
desire to "lock in" the U.S. dollar price of the security. By
entering into a forward contract for the purchase or sale, for a
fixed amount of dollars, of the amount of foreign currency
involved in the underlying security transactions, the Fund will
be able to protect itself against a possible loss resulting from
an adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar and
the subject foreign currency during the period between the date
the security is purchased or sold and the date on which payment
is made or received.
Second, when T. Rowe Price believes that one currency may
experience a substantial movement against another currency,
including the U.S. dollar, it may enter into a forward contract
to sell or buy the amount of the former foreign currency,
approximating the value of some or all of the Fund's portfolio
securities denominated in such foreign currency. Alternatively,
where appropriate, the Fund may hedge all or part of its foreign
currency exposure through the use of a basket of currencies or a
proxy currency where such currency or currencies act as an
effective proxy for other currencies. In such a case, the Fund
may enter into a forward contract where the amount of the foreign
currency to be sold exceeds the value of the securities
denominated in such currency. The use of this basket hedging
technique may be more efficient and economical than entering into
separate forward contracts for each currency held in the Fund.
The precise matching of the forward contract amounts and the
value of the securities involved will not generally be possible
since the future value of such securities in foreign currencies
will change as a consequence of market movements in the value of
those securities between the date the forward contract is entered
into and the date it matures. The projection of short-term
currency market movement is extremely difficult, and the
successful execution of a short-term hedging strategy is highly
uncertain. Under normal circumstances, consideration of the
prospect for currency parities will be incorporated into the
longer term investment decisions made with regard to overall
diversification strategies. However, T. Rowe Price believes that
it is important to have the flexibility to enter into such
PAGE 93
forward contracts when it determines that the best interests of
the Fund will be served.
Third, the Fund may use forward contracts when the Fund
wishes to hedge out of the dollar into a foreign currency in
order to create a synthetic bond or money market instrument --
the security would be issued in U.S. dollars but the dollar
component would be transformed into a foreign currency through a
forward contract.
The Fund may enter into forward contracts for any other
purpose consistent with the Fund's investment objective and
program. However, the Fund will not enter into a forward
contract, or maintain exposure to such contract(s), if the amount
of foreign currency requires to be delivered thereunder would
exceed the Fund's holdings of liquid, high-grade debt securities
and currency available for cover of the forward contract(s). In
determining the amount to be delivered under a contract, the Fund
may net offsetting positions.
At the maturity of a forward contract, the Fund may sell the
portfolio security and make delivery of the foreign currency, or
it may retain the security and either extend the maturity of the
forward contract (by "rolling" that contract forward) or may
initiate a new forward contract.
If the Fund retains the portfolio security and engages in an
offsetting transaction, the Fund will incur a gain or a loss (as
described below) to the extent that there has been movement in
forward contract prices. If the Fund engages in an offsetting
transaction, it may subsequently enter into a new forward
contract to sell the foreign currency. Should forward prices
decline during the period between the Fund's entering into a
forward contract for the sale of a foreign currency and the date
it enters into an offsetting contract for the purchase of the
foreign currency, the Fund will realize a gain to the extent the
price of the currency it has agreed to sell exceeds the price of
the currency it has agreed to purchase. Should forward prices
increase, the Fund will suffer a loss to the extent of the price
of the currency it has agreed to purchase exceeds the price of
the currency it has agreed to sell.
The Fund's dealing in forward foreign currency exchange
contracts will generally be limited to the transactions described
above. However, the Fund reserves the right to enter into
forward foreign currency contracts for different purposes and
under different circumstances. Of course, the Fund is not
required to enter into forward contracts with regard to its
PAGE 94
foreign currency-denominated securities and will not do so unless
deemed appropriate by T. Rowe Price. It also should be realized
that this method of hedging against a decline in the value of a
currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the underlying prices
of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of exchange at a
future date. Additionally, although such contracts tend to
minimize the risk of loss due to a decline in the value of the
hedged currency, at the same time, they tend to limit any
potential gain which might result from an increase in the value
of that currency.
Although the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S.
dollars, it does not intend to convert its holdings of foreign
currencies into U.S. dollars on a daily basis. It will do so
from time to time, and investors should be aware of the costs of
currency conversion. Although foreign exchange dealers do not
charge a fee for conversion, they do realize a profit based on
the difference (the "spread") between the prices at which they
are buying and selling various currencies. Thus, a dealer may
offer to sell a foreign currency to the Fund at one rate, while
offering a lesser rate of exchange should the Fund desire to
resell that currency to the dealer.
Lending of Portfolio Securities
Securities loans are made to broker-dealers or institutional
investors or other persons, pursuant to agreements requiring that
the loans be continuously secured by collateral at least equal at
all times to the value of the securities lent marked to market on
a daily basis. The collateral received will consist of cash,
U.S. government securities, letters of credit or such other
collateral as may be permitted under its investment program.
While the securities are being lent, each Fund will continue to
receive the equivalent of the interest or dividends paid by the
issuer on the securities, as well as interest on the investment
of the collateral or a fee from the borrower. Each Fund has a
right to call each loan and obtain the securities on five
business days' notice or, in connection with securities trading
on foreign markets, within such longer period of time which
coincides with the normal settlement period for purchases and
sales of such securities in such foreign markets. The Funds will
not have the right to vote securities while they are being lent,
but it will call a loan in anticipation of any important vote.
The risks in lending portfolio securities, as with other
extensions of secured credit, consist of possible delay in
receiving additional collateral or in the recovery of the
securities or possible loss of rights in the collateral should
the borrower fail financially. Loans will only be made to firms
deemed by T. Rowe Price to be of good standing and will not be
PAGE 95
made unless, in the judgment of T. Rowe Price, the consideration
to be earned from such loans would justify the risk.
Other Lending/Borrowing
Subject to approval by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and certain state regulatory agencies, each Fund may
make loans to, or borrow funds from, other mutual funds sponsored
or advised by T. Rowe Price or Price-Fleming (collectively,
"Price Funds"). The Funds have no current intention of engaging
in these practices at this time.
Repurchase Agreements
Each Fund may enter into a repurchase agreement through
which an investor (such as the Fund) purchases a security (known
as the "underlying security") from a well-established securities
dealer or a bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System.
Any such dealer or bank will be on T. Rowe Price's approved list.
At that time, the bank or securities dealer agrees to repurchase
the underlying security at the same price, plus specified
interest. Repurchase agreements are generally for a short period
of time, often less than a week. Repurchase agreements which do
not provide for payment within seven days will be treated as
illiquid securities. Each Fund will only enter into repurchase
agreements where (i) (A) Cash Reserves Fund -- the underlying
securities are either U.S. government securities or securities
that, at the time the repurchase agreement is entered into, are
rated in the highest rating category by the requisite number of
NRSROs (as required by Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act) and
otherwise are of the type (excluding maturity limitations) which
the Fund's investment guidelines would allow it to purchase
directly (however, the underlying securities will either be U.S.
government securities or securities which, at the time the
repurchase agreement is entered into, are rated in the highest
rating category by pubic rating agencies), (B) Limited-Term and
GNMA Funds -- the underlying securities are of the type
(excluding maturity limitations) which each Fund's investment
guidelines would allow it to purchase directly, (ii) the market
value of the underlying security, including interest accrued,
will be at all times equal to or exceed the value of the
repurchase agreement, and (iii) payment for the underlying
security is made only upon physical delivery or evidence of book-
entry transfer to the account of the custodian or a bank acting
as agent. In the event of a bankruptcy or other default of a
seller of a repurchase agreement, a Fund could experience both
delays in liquidating the underlying security and losses,
including: (a) possible decline in the value of the underlying
security during the period while the Fund seeks to enforce its
PAGE 96
rights thereto; (b) possible subnormal levels of income and lack
of access to income during this period; and (c) expenses of
enforcing its rights.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements
Although the Fund has no current intention, in the
foreseeable future, of engaging in reverse repurchase agreements,
the Fund reserves the right to do so. Reverse repurchase
agreements are ordinary repurchase agreements in which a Fund is
the seller of, rather than the investor in, securities, and
agrees to repurchase them at an agreed upon time and price. Use
of a reverse repurchase agreement may be preferable to a regular
sale and later repurchase of the securities because it avoids
certain market risks and transaction costs. A reverse repurchase
agreement may be viewed as a type of borrowing by the Fund,
subject to Investment Restriction (1). (See "Investment
Restrictions," page __.)
Options
Options are a type of potentially high risk derivative.
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Writing Covered Call Options
Each Fund may write (sell) American or European style
"covered" call options and purchase options to close out options
previously written by a Fund. In writing covered call options, a
Fund expects to generate additional premium income which should
serve to enhance the Fund's total return and reduce the effect of
any price decline of the security or currency involved in the
option. Covered call options will generally be written on
securities or currencies which, in T. Rowe Price's opinion, are
not expected to have any major price increases or moves in the
near future but which, over the long term, are deemed to be
attractive investments for a Fund.
A call option gives the holder (buyer) the "right to
purchase" a security or currency at a specified price (the
exercise price) at expiration of the option (European style) or
at any time until a certain date (the expiration date) (American
style). So long as the obligation of the writer of a call option
continues, he may be assigned an exercise notice by the broker-
dealer through whom such option was sold, requiring him to
deliver the underlying security or currency against payment of
the exercise price. This obligation terminates upon the
expiration of the call option, or such earlier time at which the
PAGE 97
writer effects a closing purchase transaction by repurchasing an
option identical to that previously sold. To secure his
obligation to deliver the underlying security or currency in the
case of a call option, a writer is required to deposit in escrow
the underlying security or currency or other assets in accordance
with the rules of a clearing corporation.
The Funds will write only covered call options. This means
that a Fund will own the security or currency subject to the
option or an option to purchase the same underlying security or
currency, having an exercise price equal to or less than the
exercise price of the "covered" option, or will establish and
maintain with its custodian for the term of the option, an
account consisting of cash, U.S. government securities or other
liquid high-grade debt obligations having a value equal to the
fluctuating market value of the optioned securities or
currencies.
Portfolio securities or currencies on which call options may
be written will be purchased solely on the basis of investment
considerations consistent with each Fund's investment objective.
The writing of covered call options is a conservative investment
technique believed to involve relatively little risk (in contrast
to the writing of naked or uncovered options, which the Funds
will not do), but capable of enhancing a Fund's total return.
When writing a covered call option, a Fund, in return for the
premium, gives up the opportunity for profit from a price
increase in the underlying security or currency above the
exercise price, but conversely retains the risk of loss should
the price of the security or currency decline. Unlike one who
owns securities or currencies not subject to an option, a Fund
has no control over when it may be required to sell the
underlying securities or currencies, since it may be assigned an
exercise notice at any time prior to the expiration of its
obligation as a writer. If a call option which a Fund has
written expires, the Fund will realize a gain in the amount of
the premium; however, such gain may be offset by a decline in the
market value of the underlying security or currency during the
option period. If the call option is exercised, the Fund will
realize a gain or loss from the sale of the underlying security
or currency. The Funds do not consider a security or currency
covered by a call to be "pledged" as that term is used in the
Funds' policy which limits the pledging or mortgaging of its
assets.
The premium received is the market value of an option. The
premium a Fund will receive from writing a call option will
reflect, among other things, the current market price of the
underlying security or currency, the relationship of the exercise
price to such market price, the historical price volatility of
PAGE 98
the underlying security or currency, and the length of the option
period. Once the decision to write a call option has been made,
T. Rowe Price, in determining whether a particular call option
should be written on a particular security or currency, will
consider the reasonableness of the anticipated premium and the
likelihood that a liquid secondary market will exist for those
options. The premium received by a Fund for writing covered call
options will be recorded as a liability of the Fund. This
liability will be adjusted daily to the option's current market
value, which will be the latest sale price at the time at which
the net asset value per share of a Fund is computed (close of the
New York Stock Exchange), or, in the absence of such sale, the
latest asked price. The option will be terminated upon
expiration of the option, the purchase of an identical option in
a closing transaction, or delivery of the underlying security or
currency upon the exercise of the option.
Closing transactions will be effected in order to realize a
profit on an outstanding call option, to prevent an underlying
security or currency from being called, or, to permit the sale of
the underlying security or currency. Furthermore, effecting a
closing transaction will permit a Fund to write another call
option on the underlying security or currency with either a
different exercise price or expiration date or both. If a Fund
desires to sell a particular security or currency from its
portfolio on which it has written a call option, or purchased a
put option, it will seek to effect a closing transaction prior
to, or concurrently with, the sale of the security or currency.
There is, of course, no assurance that a Fund will be able to
effect such closing transactions at favorable prices. If a Fund
cannot enter into such a transaction, it may be required to hold
a security or currency that it might otherwise have sold. When a
Fund writes a covered call option, it runs the risk of not being
able to participate in the appreciation of the underlying
securities or currencies above the exercise price, as well as the
risk of being required to hold on to securities or currencies
that are depreciating in value. This could result in higher
transaction costs. Each Fund will pay transaction costs in
connection with the writing of options to close out previously
written options. Such transaction costs are normally higher than
those applicable to purchases and sales of portfolio securities.
Call options written by a Fund will normally have expiration
dates of less than nine months from the date written. The
exercise price of the options may be below, equal to, or above
the current market values of the underlying securities or
currencies at the time the options are written. From time to
time, a Fund may purchase an underlying security or currency for
delivery in accordance with an exercise notice of a call option
PAGE 99
assigned to it, rather than delivering such security or currency
from its portfolio. In such cases, additional costs may be
incurred.
A Fund 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 the writing of the option. Because
increases in the market price of a call option will generally
reflect increases in the market price of the underlying security
or currency, 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 or currency owned by the Fund. In
order to comply with the requirements of several states, a Fund
will not write a covered call option if, as a result, the
aggregate market value of all portfolio securities or currencies
covering call or put options exceeds 25% of the market value of a
Fund's net assets. Should these state laws change or should the
Funds obtain a waiver of its application, the Fund reserves the
right to increase this percentage. In calculating the 25% limit,
the Funds will offset against the value of assets covering
written calls and puts, the value of purchased calls and puts on
identical securities with identical maturity dates.
Writing Covered Put Options
The Funds may write American or European style covered put
options and purchase options to close out options previously
written by the Fund. A put option gives the purchaser of the
option the right to sell, and the writer (seller) has the
obligation to buy, the underlying security or currency at the
exercise price during the option period (American style) or at
the expiration of the option (European style). So long as the
obligation of the writer continues, he may be assigned an
exercise notice by the broker-dealer through whom such option was
sold, requiring him to make payment of the exercise price against
delivery of the underlying security or currency. The operation
of put options in other respects, including their related risks
and rewards, is substantially identical to that of call options.
Each Fund would write put options only on a covered basis,
which means that the Fund would maintain in a segregated account
cash, U.S. government securities or other liquid high-grade debt
obligations in an amount not less than the exercise price or each
Fund will own an option to sell the underlying security or
currency subject to the option having an exercise price equal to
or greater than the exercise price of the "covered" option at all
times while the put option is outstanding. (The rules of a
clearing corporation currently require that such assets be
deposited in escrow to secure payment of the exercise price.)
PAGE 100
A Fund would generally write covered put options in
circumstances where T. Rowe Price wishes to purchase the
underlying security or currency for the Fund's portfolio at a
price lower than the current market price of the security or
currency. In such event a Fund would write a put option at an
exercise price which, reduced by the premium received on the
option, reflects the lower price it is willing to pay. Since a
Fund would also receive interest on debt securities or currencies
maintained to cover the exercise price of the option, this
technique could be used to enhance current return during periods
of market uncertainty. The risk in such a transaction would be
that the market price of the underlying security or currency
would decline below the exercise price less the premiums
received. Such a decline could be substantial and result in a
significant loss to the Fund. In addition, a Fund, because it
does not own the specific securities or currencies which it may
be required to purchase in exercise of the put, cannot benefit
from appreciation, if any, with respect to such specific
securities or currencies.
In order to comply with the requirements of several states,
the Funds will not write a covered put option if, as a result,
the aggregate market value of all portfolio securities or
currencies covering put or call options exceeds 25% of the market
value of each Fund's net assets. Should these state laws change
or should each Fund obtain a waiver of their application, each
Fund reserves the right to increase this percentage. In
calculating the 25% limit, each Fund will offset, against the
value of assets covering written puts and calls, the value of
purchased puts and calls on identical securities or currencies
with identical maturity dates.
Purchasing Put Options
Each Fund may purchase American or European style put
options. As the holder of a put option, each Fund has the right
to sell the underlying security or currency at the exercise price
at any time during the option period (American style) or at the
expiration of the option (European style). Each Fund may enter
into closing sale transactions with respect to such options,
exercise them or permit them to expire. Each Fund may purchase
put options for defensive purposes in order to protect against an
anticipated decline in the value of its securities or currencies.
An example of such use of put options is provided below.
A Fund may purchase a put option on an underlying security
or currency (a "protective put") owned by the Fund as a defensive
technique in order to protect against an anticipated decline in
the value of the security or currency. Such hedge protection is
provided only during the life of the put option when a Fund, as
PAGE 101
the holder of the put option, is able to sell the underlying
security or currency at the put exercise price regardless of any
decline in the underlying security's market price or currency's
exchange value. For example, a put option may be purchased in
order to protect unrealized appreciation of a security or
currency where T. Rowe Price deems it desirable to continue to
hold the security or currency because of tax considerations. The
premium paid for the put option and any transaction costs would
reduce any capital gain otherwise available for distribution when
the security or currency is eventually sold.
Each Fund may also purchase put options at a time when the
Fund does not own the underlying security or currency. By
purchasing put options on a security or currency it does not own,
a Fund seeks to benefit from a decline in the market price of the
underlying security or currency. If the put option is not sold
when it has remaining value, and if the market price of the
underlying security or currency remains equal to or greater than
the exercise price during the life of the put option, a Fund will
lose its entire investment in the put option. In order for the
purchase of a put option to be profitable, the market price of
the underlying security or currency must decline sufficiently
below the exercise price to cover the premium and transaction
costs, unless the put option is sold in a closing sale
transaction.
To the extent required by the laws of certain states, each
Fund may not be permitted to commit more than 5% of its assets to
premiums when purchasing put and call options. Should these
state laws change or should each Fund obtain a waiver of their
application, each Fund may commit more than 5% of its assets to
premiums when purchasing call and put options. The premium paid
by a Fund when purchasing a put option will be recorded as an
asset of the Fund. This asset will be adjusted daily to the
option's current market value, which will be the latest sale
price at the time at which the net asset value per share of each
Fund is computed (close of New York Stock Exchange), or, in the
absence of such sale, the latest bid price. This asset will be
terminated upon expiration of the option, the selling (writing)
of an identical option in a closing transaction, or the delivery
of the underlying security or currency upon the exercise of the
option.
Purchasing Call Options
Each Fund may purchase American or European style call
options. As the holder of a call option, each Fund has the right
to purchase the underlying security or currency at the exercise
price at any time during the option period (American style) or at
the expiration of the option (European style). Each Fund may
PAGE 102
enter into closing sale transactions with respect to such
options, exercise them or permit them to expire. Each Fund may
purchase call options for the purpose of increasing its current
return or avoiding tax consequences which could reduce its
current return. Each Fund may also purchase call options in
order to acquire the underlying securities or currencies.
Examples of such uses of call options are provided below.
Call options may be purchased by a Fund for the purpose of
acquiring the underlying securities or currencies for its
portfolio. Utilized in this fashion, the purchase of call
options enables a Fund to acquire the securities or currencies at
the exercise price of the call option plus the premium paid. At
times the net cost of acquiring securities or currencies in this
manner may be less than the cost of acquiring the securities or
currencies directly. This technique may also be useful to a Fund
in purchasing a large block of securities or currencies that
would be more difficult to acquire by direct market purchases.
So long as it holds such a call option rather than the underlying
security or currency itself, a Fund is partially protected from
any unexpected decline in the market price of the underlying
security or currency and in such event could allow the call
option to expire, incurring a loss only to the extent of the
premium paid for the option.
To the extent required by the laws of certain states, each
Fund may not be permitted to commit more than 5% of its assets to
premiums when purchasing call and put options. Should these
state laws change or should each Fund obtain a waiver of their
application, each Fund may commit more than 5% of its assets to
premiums when purchasing call and put options. Each Fund may
also purchase call options on underlying securities or currencies
it owns in order to protect unrealized gains on call options
previously written by it. A call option would be purchased for
this purpose where tax considerations make it inadvisable to
realize such gains through a closing purchase transaction. Call
options may also be purchased at times to avoid realizing losses.
Dealer (Over-the-Counter) Options
The Funds may engage in transactions involving dealer
options. Certain risks are specific to dealer options. While a
Fund would look to a clearing corporation to exercise exchange-
traded options, if the Fund were to purchase a dealer option, it
would rely on the dealer from whom it purchased the option to
perform if the option were exercised. Failure by the dealer to
do so would result in the loss of the premium paid by a Fund as
well as loss of the expected benefit of the transaction.
PAGE 103
Exchange-traded options generally have a continuous liquid
market while dealer options have none. Consequently, a Fund will
generally be able to realize the value of a dealer option it has
purchased only by exercising it or reselling it to the dealer who
issued it. Similarly, when a Fund writes a dealer 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 which the Fund originally wrote the option.
While each Fund will seek to enter into dealer options only with
dealers who will agree to and which are expected to be capable of
entering into closing transactions with the Fund, there can be no
assurance that the Fund will be able to liquidate a dealer option
at a favorable price at any time prior to expiration. Until a
Fund, as a covered dealer call option writer, is able to effect a
closing purchase transaction, it will not be able to liquidate
securities (or other assets) or currencies used as cover until
the option expires or is exercised. In the event of insolvency
of the contra party, a Fund may be unable to liquidate a dealer
option. With respect to options written by a Fund, the inability
to enter into a closing transaction may result in material losses
to the Fund. For example, since a Fund must maintain a secured
position with respect to any call option on a security it writes,
the Fund may not sell the assets which it has segregated to
secure the position while it is obligated under the option. This
requirement may impair a Fund's ability to sell portfolio
securities or currencies at a time when such sale might be
advantageous.
The Staff of the SEC has taken the position that purchased
dealer options and the assets used to secure the written dealer
options are illiquid securities. The Funds may treat the cover
used for written OTC options as liquid if the dealer agrees that
the Fund may repurchase the OTC option it has written for a
maximum price to be calculated by a predetermined formula. In
such cases, the OTC option would be considered illiquid only to
the extent the maximum repurchase price under the formula exceeds
the intrinsic value of the option. Accordingly, each Fund will
treat dealer options as subject to the Fund's limitation on
unmarketable securities. If the SEC changes its position on the
liquidity of dealer options, each Fund will change its treatment
of such instrument accordingly.
Interest Rate Transactions
Limited-Term Fund and GNMA Fund
The Funds may enter into various interest rate transactions
such as interest rate swaps and the purchase or sale of interest
rate caps and floors, to preserve a return or spread on a
particular investment or portion of its portfolio, to create
PAGE 104
synthetic securities, or to structure transactions designed for
other non-speculative purposes.
Interest rate swaps involve the exchange by the Funds with
third parties of their respective commitments to pay or receive
interest, e.g., an exchange of floating rate payments for fixed
rate payments. The purchase of an interest rate cap entitles the
purchaser, to the extent that a specified index exceeds a
predetermined interest rate, to receive payments of interest on a
contractually-based principal amount from the party selling the
interest rate cap. The purchase of an interest rate floor
entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index
falls below a predetermined interest rate, to receive payments of
interest on a contractually-based principal amount from the party
selling the interest rate floor. In circumstances in which T.
Rowe Price anticipates that interest rates will decline, the
Funds might, for example, enter into an interest rate swap as the
floating rate payor. In the case where the Funds purchase such
an interest rate swap, if the floating rate payments fell below
the level of the fixed rate payment set in the swap agreement,
the Funds counterparties would pay the Funds' amounts equal to
interest computed at the difference between the fixed and
floating rates over the national principal amount. Such payments
would offset or partially offset the decrease in the payments the
Funds would receive in respect of floating rate assets being
hedged. In the case of purchasing an interest rate floor, if
interest rates declined below the floor rate, the Funds would
receive payments from the counterparties which would wholly or
partially offset the decrease in the payments they would receive
in respect of the financial instruments being hedged.
The Funds will usually enter into interest rate swaps on a
net basis, i.e., the two payment streams are netted out, with the
Funds receiving or paying, as the case may be, only the net
amount of the two payments. The net amount of the excess, if
any, of the Funds' obligations over its entitlements with respect
to each interest rate swap will be accrued on a daily basis and
an amount of cash or high-quality liquid securities having an
aggregate net asset value at least equal to the accrued excess
will be maintained in an account by the Funds' custodian. If the
Funds enter into an interest rate swap on other than a net basis,
the Funds would maintain an account in the full amount accrued on
a daily basis of the Funds' obligations with respect to the swap.
To the extent the Funds sell (i.e., writes) caps and floors, it
will maintain in an account cash or high-quality liquid debt
securities having an aggregate net asset value at least equal to
the full amount, accrued on a daily basis, of the Funds'
obligations with respect to any caps or floors. The Funds will
not enter into any interest rate swap, cap or floor transaction
unless the unsecured senior debt or the claims paying ability of
PAGE 105
the counterparty thereto is rated at least A by S&P. T. Rowe
Price will monitor the creditworthiness of counterparties on an
ongoing basis. If there is a default by the other parties to
such a transaction, the Funds will have contractual remedies
pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction.
The swap market has grown substantially in recent years with
a large number of banks and investment banking firms acting both
as principals and as agents utilizing standardized swap
documentation. T. Rowe Price has determined that, as a result,
the swap market has become relative liquid. The Funds may enter
into interest rate swaps only with respect to positions held in
their portfolios. Interest rate swaps do not involve the
delivery of securities or other underlying assets or principal.
Accordingly, the risk of loss with respect to interest rate swaps
is limited to the net amount of interest payments that the Funds
are contractually obligated to make. If the other parties to
interest rate swaps default, the Funds' risk of loss consists of
the net amount of interest payments that the Funds are
contractually entitled to receive. Since interest rate swaps are
individually negotiated, the Funds expect to achieve an
acceptable degree of correlation between their right to receive
interest on loan interests and their right and obligation to
receive and pay interest pursuant to interest rate swaps.
The aggregate purchase price of caps and floors held by the
Funds may not exceed 10% of the Funds' total assets. The Funds
may sell (i.e., write) caps and floors without limitation,
subject to the account coverage requirement described above.
Futures Contracts
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Transactions in Futures
The Fund may enter into futures contracts (a type of
potentially high risk derivative), including stock index,
interest rate and currency futures ("futures or futures
contracts").
Stock index futures contracts may be used to provide a hedge
for a portion of the Fund's portfolio, as a cash management tool,
or as an efficient way for T. Rowe Price to implement either an
increase or decrease in portfolio market exposure in response to
changing market conditions. The Fund may purchase or sell
futures contracts with respect to any stock index. Nevertheless,
to hedge the Fund's portfolio successfully, the Fund must sell
futures contacts with respect to indices or subindices whose
PAGE 106
movements will have a significant correlation with movements in
the prices of the Fund's portfolio securities.
Interest rate or currency futures contracts may be used as a
hedge against changes in prevailing levels of interest rates or
currency exchange rates in order to establish more definitely the
effective return on securities or currencies held or intended to
be acquired by the Fund. In this regard, the Fund could sell
interest rate or currency futures as an offset against the effect
of expected increases in interest rates or currency exchange
rates and purchase such futures as an offset against the effect
of expected declines in interest rates or currency exchange
rates.
The Fund will enter into futures contracts which are traded
on national or foreign futures exchanges, and are standardized as
to maturity date and underlying financial instrument. Futures
exchanges and trading in the United States are regulated under
the Commodity Exchange Act by the CFTC. Futures are traded in
London, at the London International Financial Futures Exchange,
in Paris, at the MATIF, and in Tokyo, at the Tokyo Stock
Exchange. Although techniques other than the sale and purchase
of futures contracts could be used for the above-referenced
purposes, futures contracts offer an effective and relatively low
cost means of implementing the Fund's objectives in these areas.
Regulatory Limitations
The Fund will engage in futures contracts and options
thereon only for bona fide hedging, yield enhancement, and risk
management purposes, in each case in accordance with rules and
regulations of the CFTC and applicable state law.
The Fund may not purchase or sell futures contracts or
related options if, with respect to positions which do not
qualify as bona fide hedging under applicable CFTC rules, the sum
of the amounts of initial margin deposits and premiums paid on
those positions would exceed 5% of the net asset value of the
Fund after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized
losses on any such contracts it has entered into; provided,
however, that in the case of an option that is in-the-money at
the time of purchase, the in-the-money amount may be excluded in
calculating the 5% limitation. For purposes of this policy
options on futures contracts and foreign currency options traded
on a commodities exchange will be considered "related options".
This policy may be modified by the Board of Directors/Trustees
without a shareholder vote and does not limit the percentage of
the Fund's assets at risk to 5%.
PAGE 107
In accordance with the rules of the State of California, the
Fund may have to apply the above 5% test without excluding the
value of initial margin and premiums paid for bona fide hedging
positions.
The Fund's use of futures contracts will not result in
leverage. Therefore, to the extent necessary, in instances
involving the purchase of futures contracts or the writing of
call or put options thereon by the Fund, an amount of cash, U.S.
government securities or other liquid, high-grade debt
obligations, equal to the market value of the futures contracts
and options thereon (less any related margin deposits), will be
identified in an account with the Fund's custodian to cover the
position, or alternative cover (such as owning an offsetting
position) will be employed. Assets used as cover or held in an
identified account cannot be sold while the position in the
corresponding option or future is open, unless they are replaced
with similar assets. As a result, the commitment of a large
portion of a Fund's assets to cover or identified accounts could
impede portfolio management or the fund's ability to meet
redemption requests or other current obligations.
If the CFTC or other regulatory authorities adopt different
(including less stringent) or additional restrictions, the Fund
would comply with such new restrictions.
Trading in Futures Contracts
A futures contract provides for the future sale by one party
and purchase by another party of a specified amount of a specific
financial instrument (e.g., units of a debt security) for a
specified price, date, time and place designated at the time the
contract is made. Brokerage fees are incurred when a futures
contract is bought or sold and margin deposits must be
maintained. Entering into a contract to buy is commonly referred
to as buying or purchasing a contract or holding a long position.
Entering into a contract to sell is commonly referred to as
selling a contract or holding a short position.
Unlike when the Fund purchases or sells a security, no price
would be paid or received by the Fund upon the purchase or sale
of a futures contract. Upon entering into a futures contract,
and to maintain the Fund's open positions in futures contracts,
the Fund would be required to deposit with its custodian in a
segregated account in the name of the futures broker an amount of
cash, U.S. government securities, suitable money market
instruments, or liquid, high-grade debt securities, known as
"initial margin." The margin required for a particular futures
contract is set by the exchange on which the contract is traded,
and may be significantly modified from time to time by the
PAGE 108
exchange during the term of the contract. Futures contracts are
customarily purchased and sold on margins that may range upward
from less than 5% of the value of the contract being traded.
If the price of an open futures contract changes (by
increase in the case of a sale or by decrease in the case of a
purchase) so that the loss on the futures contract reaches a
point at which the margin on deposit does not satisfy margin
requirements, the broker will require an increase in the margin.
However, if the value of a position increases because of
favorable price changes in the futures contract so that the
margin deposit exceeds the required margin, the broker will pay
the excess to the Fund.
These subsequent payments, called "variation margin," to and
from the futures broker, are made on a daily basis as the price
of the underlying assets fluctuate making the long and short
positions in the futures contract more or less valuable, a
process known as "marking to the market." The Fund expects to
earn interest income on its margin deposits.
Although certain futures contracts, by their terms, require
actual future delivery of and payment for the underlying
instruments, in practice most futures contracts are usually
closed out before the delivery date. Closing out an open futures
contract purchase or sale is effected by entering into an
offsetting futures contract sale or purchase, respectively, for
the same aggregate amount of the identical securities and the
same delivery date. If the offsetting purchase price is less
than the original sale price, the Fund realizes a gain; if it is
more, the Fund realizes a loss. Conversely, if the offsetting
sale price is more than the original purchase price, the Fund
realizes a gain; if it is less, the Fund realizes a loss. The
transaction costs must also be included in these calculations.
There can be no assurance, however, that the Fund will be able to
enter into an offsetting transaction with respect to a particular
futures contract at a particular time. If the Fund is not able
to enter into an offsetting transaction, the Fund will continue
to be required to maintain the margin deposits on the futures
contract.
As an example of an offsetting transaction in which the
underlying instrument is not delivered, the contractual
obligations arising from the sale of one contract of September
Treasury Bills on an exchange may be fulfilled at any time before
delivery of the contract is required (i.e., on a specified date
in September, the "delivery month") by the purchase of one
contract of September Treasury Bills on the same exchange. In
such instance, the difference between the price at which the
futures contract was sold and the price paid for the offsetting
PAGE 109
purchase, after allowance for transaction costs, represents the
profit or loss to the Fund.
A futures contract on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index,
composed of 500 selected common stocks, most of which are listed
on the New York Stock Exchange, provides an example of how
futures contracts operate. The S&P 500 Index assigns relative
weightings to the common stocks included in the Index, and the
Index fluctuates with changes in the market values of those
common stocks. In the case of futures contracts on the S&P 500
Index, the contracts are to buy or sell 500 units. Thus, if the
value of the S&P 500 Index were $150, one contract would be worth
$75,000 (500 units x $150). The contract specifies that no
delivery of the actual stocks making up the index will take
place. Instead, settlement in cash occurs. Over the life of the
contract, the gain or loss realized by the Fund will equal the
difference between the purchase (or sale) price of the contract
and the price at which the contract is terminated. For example,
if the Fund enters into the example contract above and the S&P
500 Index is at $154 on the termination date, the Fund will gain
$2,000 (500 units x gain of $4). If, however, the S&P 500 Index
is at $148 on that future date, the Fund will lose $1,000 (500
units x loss of $2).
Special Risks of Transactions in Futures Contracts
Volatility and Leverage. The prices of futures contracts
are volatile and are influenced, among other things, by actual
and anticipated changes in the market and interest rates, which
in turn are affected by fiscal and monetary policies and national
and international political and economic events.
Most United States futures exchanges limit the amount of
fluctuation permitted in futures contract prices during a single
trading day. The daily limit establishes the maximum amount that
the price of a futures contract may vary either up or down from
the previous day's settlement price at the end of a trading
session. Once the daily limit has been reached in a particular
type of futures contract, no trades may be made on that day at a
price beyond that limit. The daily limit governs only price
movement during a particular trading day and therefore does not
limit potential losses, because the limit may prevent the
liquidation of unfavorable positions. Futures contract prices
have occasionally moved to the daily limit for several
consecutive trading days with little or no trading, thereby
preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions and subjecting
some futures traders to substantial losses.
Because of the low margin deposits required, futures trading
involves an extremely high degree of leverage. As a result, a
PAGE 110
relatively small price movement in a futures contract may result
in immediate and substantial loss, as well as gain, to the
investor. For example, if at the time of purchase, 10% of the
value of the futures contract is deposited as margin, a
subsequent 10% decrease in the value of the futures contract
would result in a total loss of the margin deposit, before any
deduction for the transaction costs, if the account were then
closed out. A 15% decrease would result in a loss equal to 150%
of the original margin deposit, if the contract were closed out.
Thus, a purchase or sale of a futures contract may result in
losses in excess of the amount invested in the futures contract.
However, the Fund would presumably have sustained comparable
losses if, instead of the futures contract, it had invested in
the underlying financial instrument and sold it after the
decline. Furthermore, in the case of a futures contract
purchase, in order to be certain that the Fund has sufficient
assets to satisfy its obligations under a futures contract, the
Fund earmarks to the futures contract money market instruments
equal in value to the current value of the underlying instrument
less the margin deposit.
Liquidity. The Fund may elect to close some or all of its
futures positions at any time prior to their expiration. The
Fund would do so to reduce exposure represented by long futures
positions or short futures positions. The Fund may close its
positions by taking opposite positions which would operate to
terminate the Fund's position in the futures contracts. Final
determinations of variation margin would then be made, additional
cash would be required to be paid by or released to the Fund, and
the Fund would realize a loss or a gain.
Futures contracts may be closed out only on the exchange or
board of trade where the contracts were initially traded.
Although the Fund intends to purchase or sell futures contracts
only on exchanges or boards of trade where there appears to be an
active market, there is no assurance that a liquid market on an
exchange or board of trade will exist for any particular contract
at any particular time. In such event, it might not be possible
to close a futures contract, and in the event of adverse price
movements, the Fund would continue to be required to make daily
cash payments of variation margin. However, in the event futures
contracts have been used to hedge the underlying instruments, the
Fund would continue to hold the underlying instruments subject to
the hedge until the futures contracts could be terminated. In
such circumstances, an increase in the price of underlying
instruments, if any, might partially or completely offset losses
on the futures contract. However, as described below, there is
no guarantee that the price of the underlying instruments will,
in fact, correlate with the price movements in the futures
PAGE 111
contract and thus provide an offset to losses on a futures
contract.
Hedging Risk. A decision of whether, when, and how to hedge
involves skill and judgment, and even a well-conceived hedge may
be unsuccessful to some degree because of unexpected market
behavior, market or interest rate trends. There are several
risks in connection with the use by the Fund of futures contracts
as a hedging device. One risk arises because of the imperfect
correlation between movements in the prices of the futures
contracts and movements in the prices of the underlying
instruments which are the subject of the hedge. T. Rowe Price
will, however, attempt to reduce this risk by entering into
futures contracts whose movements, in its judgment, will have a
significant correlation with movements in the prices of the
Fund's underlying instruments sought to be hedged.
Successful use of futures contracts by the Fund for hedging
purposes is also subject to T. Rowe Price's ability to correctly
predict movements in the direction of the market. It is possible
that, when the Fund has sold futures to hedge its portfolio
against a decline in the market, the index, indices, or
instruments underlying futures might advance and the value of the
underlying instruments held in the Fund's portfolio might
decline. If this were to occur, the Fund would lose money on the
futures and also would experience a decline in value in its
underlying instruments. However, while this might occur to a
certain degree, T. Rowe Price believes that over time the value
of the Fund's portfolio will tend to move in the same direction
as the market indices used to hedge the portfolio. It is also
possible that if the Fund were to hedge against the possibility
of a decline in the market (adversely affecting the underlying
instruments held in its portfolio) and prices instead increased,
the Fund would lose part or all of the benefit of increased value
of those underlying instruments that it has hedged, because it
would have offsetting losses in its futures positions. In
addition, in such situations, if the Fund had insufficient cash,
it might have to sell underlying instruments to meet daily
variation margin requirements. Such sales of underlying
instruments might be, but would not necessarily be, at increased
prices (which would reflect the rising market). The Fund might
have to sell underlying instruments at a time when it would be
disadvantageous to do so.
In addition to the possibility that there might be an
imperfect correlation, or no correlation at all, between price
movements in the futures contracts and the portion of the
portfolio being hedged, the price movements of futures contracts
might not correlate perfectly with price movements in the
PAGE 112
underlying instruments due to certain market distortions. First,
all participants in the futures market are subject to margin
deposit and maintenance requirements. Rather than meeting
additional margin deposit requirements, investors might close
futures contracts through offsetting transactions, which could
distort the normal relationship between the underlying
instruments and futures markets. Second, the margin requirements
in the futures market are less onerous than margin requirements
in the securities markets, and as a result the futures market
might attract more speculators than the securities markets do.
Increased participation by speculators in the futures market
might also cause temporary price distortions. Due to the
possibility of price distortion in the futures market and also
because of the imperfect correlation between price movements in
the underlying instruments and movements in the prices of futures
contracts, even a correct forecast of general market trends by T.
Rowe Price might not result in a successful hedging transaction
over a very short time period.
Options on Futures Contracts
The Fund may purchase and sell options on the same types of
futures in which it may invest.
Options on futures are similar to options on underlying
instruments except that options on futures give the purchaser the
right, in return for the premium paid, to assume a position in a
futures contract (a long position if the option is a call and a
short position if the option is a put), rather than to purchase
or sell the futures contract, at a specified exercise price at
any time during the period of the option. Upon exercise of the
option, the delivery of the futures position by the writer of the
option to the holder of the option will be accompanied by the
delivery of the accumulated balance in the writer's futures
margin account which represents the amount by which the market
price of the futures contract, at exercise, exceeds (in the case
of a call) or is less than (in the case of a put) the exercise
price of the option on the futures contract. Purchasers of
options who fail to exercise their options prior to the exercise
date suffer a loss of the premium paid.
As an alternative to writing or purchasing call and put
options on interest rate futures, the Fund may write or purchase
call and put options on financial indices. Such options would be
used in a manner similar to the use of options on futures
contracts. From time to time, a single order to purchase or sell
futures contracts (or options thereon) may be made on behalf of
the Fund and other T. Rowe Price Funds. Such aggregated orders
would be allocated among the Funds and the other T. Rowe Price
Funds in a fair and non-discriminatory manner.
PAGE 113
Special Risks of Transactions in Options on Futures Contracts
The risks described under "Special Risks of Transactions on
Futures Contracts" are substantially the same as the risks of
using options on futures. In addition, where the Fund seeks to
close out an option position by writing or buying an offsetting
option covering the same index, underlying instrument or contract
and having the same exercise price and expiration date, its
ability to establish and close out positions on such options will
be subject to the maintenance of a liquid secondary market.
Reasons for the absence of a liquid secondary market on an
exchange include the following: (i) there may be insufficient
trading interest in certain options; (ii) restrictions may be
imposed by an exchange on opening transactions or closing
transactions or both; (iii) trading halts, suspensions or other
restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular classes or
series of options, or underlying instruments; (iv) unusual or
unforeseen circumstances may interrupt normal operations on an
exchange; (v) the facilities of an exchange or a clearing
corporation may not at all times be adequate to handle current
trading volume; or (vi) one or more exchanges could, for economic
or other reasons, decide or be compelled at some future date to
discontinue the trading of options (or a particular class or
series of options), in which event the secondary market on that
exchange (or in the class or series of options) would cease to
exist, although outstanding options on the exchange that had been
issued by a clearing corporation as a result of trades on that
exchange would continue to be exercisable in accordance with
their terms. There is no assurance that higher than anticipated
trading activity or other unforeseen events might not, at times,
render certain of the facilities of any of the clearing
corporations inadequate, and thereby result in the institution by
an exchange of special procedures which may interfere with the
timely execution of customers' orders.
Additional Futures and Options Contracts
Although the Fund has no current intention of engaging in
futures or options transactions other than those described above,
it reserves the right to do so. Such futures and options trading
might involve risks which differ from those involved in the
futures and options described above.
Foreign Futures and Options--Limited-Term Fund
Participation in foreign futures and foreign options
transactions involves the execution and clearing of trades on or
subject to the rules of a foreign board of trade. Neither the
National Futures Association nor any domestic exchange regulates
PAGE 114
activities of any foreign boards of trade, including the
execution, delivery and clearing of transactions, or has the
power to compel enforcement of the rules of a foreign board of
trade or any applicable foreign law. This is true even if the
exchange is formally linked to a domestic market so that a
position taken on the market may be liquidated by a transaction
on another market. Moreover, such laws or regulations will vary
depending on the foreign country in which the foreign futures or
foreign options transaction occurs. For these reasons, customers
who trade foreign futures or foreign options contracts may not be
afforded certain of the protective measures provided by the
Commodity Exchange Act, the CFTC's regulations and the rules of
the National Futures Association and any domestic exchange,
including the right to use reparations proceedings before the
Commission and arbitration proceedings provided by the National
Futures Association or any domestic futures exchange. In
particular, funds received from customers for foreign futures or
foreign options transactions may not be provided the same
protections as funds received in respect of transactions on
United States futures exchanges. In addition, the price of any
foreign futures or foreign options contract and, therefore, the
potential profit and loss thereon may be affected by any variance
in the foreign exchange rate between the time your order is
placed and the time it is liquidated, offset or exercised.
Federal Tax Treatment of Options, Futures Contracts and Forward
Foreign Exchange Contracts--Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
The discussion herein may refer to transactions in which the
GNMA Fund does not engage. The Fund's prospectus sets forth the
types of transactions permissible for the Fund.
The Funds may enter into certain option, futures, and
forward foreign exchange contracts, including options and futures
on currencies, which will be treated as Section 1256 contracts or
straddles.
Transactions which are considered Section 1256 contracts
will be considered to have been closed at the end of a Fund's
fiscal year and any gains or losses will be recognized for tax
purposes at that time. Such gains or losses from the normal
closing or settlement of such transactions will be characterized
as 60% long-term capital gain or loss and 40% short-term capital
gain or loss regardless of the holding period of the instrument.
A Fund will be required to distribute net gains on such
transactions to shareholders even though it may not have closed
the transaction and received cash to pay such distributions.
Options, futures and forward foreign exchange contracts,
including options and futures on currencies, which offset a
PAGE 115
foreign dollar denominated bond or currency position may be
considered straddles for tax purposes in which case a loss on any
position in a straddle will be subject to deferral to the extent
of unrealized gain in an offsetting position. The holding period
of the securities or currencies comprising the straddle will be
deemed not to begin until the straddle is terminated. For
securities offsetting a purchased put, this adjustment of the
holding period may increase the gain from sales of securities
held less than three months. The holding period of the security
offsetting an "in-the-money qualified covered call" option on an
equity security will not include the period of time the option is
outstanding.
Losses on written covered calls and purchased puts on
securities, excluding certain "qualified covered call" options on
equity securities, may be long-term capital loss, if the security
covering the option was held for more than twelve months prior to
the writing of the option.
In order for each Fund to continue to qualify for federal
income tax treatment as a regulated investment company, at least
90% of its gross income for a taxable year must be derived from
qualifying income; i.e., dividends, interest, income derived from
loans of securities, and gains from the sale of securities or
currencies. Pending tax regulations could limit the extent that
net gain realized from option, futures or foreign forward
exchange contracts on currencies is qualifying income for
purposes of the 90% requirement. In addition, gains realized on
the sale or other disposition of securities, including option,
futures or foreign forward exchange contracts on securities or
securities indexes and, in some cases, currencies, held for less
than three months, must be limited to less than 30% of a Fund's
annual gross income. In order to avoid realizing excessive gains
on securities or currencies held less than three months, a Fund
may be required to defer the closing out of option, futures or
foreign forward exchange contracts beyond the time when it would
otherwise be advantageous to do so. It is anticipated that
unrealized gains on Section 1256 option, futures and foreign
forward exchange contracts, which have been open for less than
three months as of the end of a Fund's fiscal year and which are
recognized for tax purposes, will not be considered gains on
securities or currencies held less than three months for purposes
of the 30% test.
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
Fundamental policies may not be changed without the approval
of the lesser of (1) 67% of a Fund's shares present at a meeting
of shareholders if the holders of more than 50% of the
PAGE 116
outstanding shares are present in person or by proxy or (2) more
than 50% of a Fund's outstanding shares. Other restrictions in
the form of operating policies are subject to change by the
Funds' Board of Directors without shareholder approval. Any
investment restriction which involves a maximum percentage of
securities or assets shall not be considered to be violated
unless an excess over the percentage occurs immediately after,
and is caused by, an acquisition of securities or assets of, or
borrowings by, a Fund.
Fundamental Policies
As a matter of fundamental policy, the Funds may not:
(1) Borrowing. Borrow money except that the Fund may (i)
borrow for non-leveraging, temporary or emergency
purposes and (ii) engage in reverse repurchase
agreements and make other investments or engage in
other transactions, which may involve a borrowing, in
a manner consistent with the Fund's investment
objective and program, provided that the combination
of (i) and (ii) shall not exceed 33 1/3% of the value
of the Fund's total assets (including the amount
borrowed) less liabilities (other than borrowings) or
such other percentage permitted by law. Any
borrowings which come to exceed this amount will be
reduced in accordance with applicable law. The Fund
may borrow from banks, other Price Funds or other
persons to the extent permitted by applicable law.
(2) Commodities. Purchase or sell commodities or
commodity contracts; except that it may enter into
futures contracts and options thereon;
(3) Industry Concentration. Purchase the securities of
any issuer if, as a result, more than 25% of the
value of the Fund's total assets would be invested in
the securities of issuers having their principal
business activities in the same industry;
(4) Loans. Make loans, although the Fund may (i) lend
portfolio securities and participate in an interfund
lending program with other Price Funds provided that
no such loan may be made if, as a result, the
aggregate of such loans would exceed 33 1/3% of the
value of the Fund's total assets; (ii) purchase money
market securities and enter into repurchase
agreements; and (iii) acquire publicly-distributed or
PAGE 117
privately-placed debt securities and purchase
debt;
(5) Percent Limit on Assets Invested in Any One Issuer.
Purchase a security if, as a result, with respect to
75% of the value of its total assets, more than 5% of
the value of the Fund's total assets would be
invested in the securities of a single issuer, except
securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities;
(6) Percent Limit on Share Ownership of Any One Issuer.
Purchase a security if, as a result, with respect to
75% of the value of the Fund's total assets, more
than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any
issuer would be held by the Fund (other than
obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities);
(7) Real Estate. Purchase or sell real estate, including
limited partnership interests therein, unless
acquired as a result of ownership of securities or
other instruments (but this shall not prevent the
Fund from investing in securities or other
instruments backed by real estate or securities of
companies engaged in the real estate business);
(8) Senior Securities. Issue senior securities except in
compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;
or
(9) Underwriting. Underwrite securities issued by other
persons, except to the extent that the Fund may be
deemed to be an underwriter within the meaning of the
Securities Act of 1933 in connection with the
purchase and sale of its portfolio securities in the
ordinary course of pursuing its investment program.
NOTES
The following Notes should be read in connection with
the above-described fundamental policies. The Notes
are not fundamental policies.
With respect to investment restrictions (1) and (4)
the Funds will not borrow from or lend to any other
T. Rowe Price Fund unless each Fund applies for and
receives an exemptive order from the SEC or the SEC
issues rules permitting such transactions. The Funds
PAGE 118
have no current intention of engaging in any such
activity and there is no assurance the SEC would
grant any order requested by the Funds or promulgate
any rules allowing the transactions.
With respect to investment restriction (1), the Cash
Reserves Fund has no current intention of engaging in
any borrowing transactions.
With respect to investment restriction (2), the Funds
do not consider currency contracts or hybrid
instruments to be commodities.
For purposes of investment restriction (3), U.S.,
state or local governments, or related agencies or
instrumentalities, are not considered an industry.
Industries are determined by reference to the
classifications of industries set forth in the Funds
Semi-annual and Annual Reports.
Operating Policies
As a matter of operating policy, the Funds may not:
(1) Borrowing. The Funds will not purchase additional
securities when money borrowed exceeds 5% of its
total assets.
(2) Control of Portfolio Companies. Invest in companies
for the purpose of exercising management or control;
(3) Futures Contracts. Purchase a futures contract or an
option thereon if, with respect to positions in
futures or options on futures which do not represent
bona fide hedging, the aggregate initial margin and
premiums on such positions would exceed 5% of the
Fund's net asset value.
(4) Illiquid Securities. Purchase illiquid securities
and securities of unseasoned issuers if, as a result,
more than 15% (10% Cash Reserves) of its net assets
would be invested in such securities, provided that
the Fund will not invest more than 5% of its total
assets in restricted securities and not more than 5%
in securities of unseasoned issuers. Securities
eligible for resale under Rule 144A of the Securities
Act of 1933 are not included in the 5% limitation but
are subject to the 15% (10% Cash Reserves)
limitation;
PAGE 119
(5) Investment Companies. Purchase securities of open-
end or closed-end investment companies except in
compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940
and applicable state law, and in the case of the Cash
Reserves Fund, only securities of other money market
fund's. Duplicate fees may result from such
purchases;
(6) Margin. Purchase securities on margin, except (i)
for use of short-term credit necessary for clearance
of purchases of portfolio securities and (ii) it may
make margin deposits in connection with futures
contracts or other permissible investments;
(7) Mortgaging. Mortgage, pledge, hypothecate or, in any
manner, transfer any security owned by the Fund as
security for indebtedness except as may be necessary
in connection with permissible borrowings or
investments and then such mortgaging, pledging or
hypothecating may not exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's
total assets at the time of borrowing or investment;
(8) Oil and Gas Programs. Purchase participations or
other direct interests or enter into leases with
respect to, oil, gas, or other mineral exploration or
development programs;
(9) Options, Etc. Invest in puts, calls, straddles,
spreads, or any combination thereof, except to the
extent permitted by the prospectus and Statement of
Additional Information;
(10) Ownership of Portfolio Securities by Officers and
Directors. Purchase or retain the securities of any
issuer if, those officers and directors of the Fund,
and of its investment manager, who each own
beneficially more than .5% of the outstanding
securities of such issuer, together own beneficially
more than 5% of such securities;
(11) Short Sales. Effect short sales of securities;
(12) Unseasoned Issuers. Purchase a security (other than
obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S., any
foreign, state or local government, their agencies or
instrumentalities) if, as a result, more than 5% of
the value of the Fund's total assets would be
invested in the securities issuers which at the time
of purchase had been in operation for less than three
years (for this purpose, the period of operation of
PAGE 120
any issuer shall include the period of operation of
any predecessor or unconditional guarantor of such
issuer). This restriction does not apply to
securities of pooled investment vehicles or mortgage
or asset-backed securities; or
(13) Warrants. Invest in warrants if, as a result
thereof, more than 2% of the value of the net assets
of the Fund would be invested in warrants which are
not listed on the New York Stock Exchange, the
American Stock Exchange, or a recognized foreign
exchange, or more than 5% of the value of the net
assets of the Fund would be invested in warrants
whether or not so listed. For purposes of these
percentage limitations, the warrants will be valued
at the lower of cost or market and warrants acquired
by the Funds in units or attached to securities may
be deemed to be without value.
Notwithstanding anything in the above fundamental and
operating restrictions to the contrary, each Fund may invest all
of its assets in a single investment company or a series thereof
in connection with a "master-feeder" arrangement. Such an
investment would be made where the Fund (a "Feeder"), and one or
more other Funds with the same investment objective and program
as the Fund, sought to accomplish its investment objective and
program by investing all of its assets in the shares of another
investment company (the "Master"). The Master would, in turn,
have the same investment objective and program as the Fund. The
Fund would invest in this manner in an effort to achieve the
economies of scale associated with having a Master fund make
investments in portfolio companies on behalf of a number of
Feeder funds.
MANAGEMENT OF FUNDS
The officers and directors of the Funds are listed below.
Unless otherwise noted, the address of each is 100 East Pratt
Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202. Except as indicated, each has
been an employee of T. Rowe Price for more than five years. In
the list below, the Funds' directors who are considered
"interested persons" of T. Rowe Price as defined under
Section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 are noted
with an asterisk (*). These directors are referred to as inside
directors by virtue of their officership, directorship, and/or
employment with T. Rowe Price.
PAGE 121
ROBERT P. BLACK, Director--Retired; formerly President, Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond; Address: 10 Dahlgren Road, Richmond,
Virginia 23233
CALVIN W. BURNETT, PH.D., Director--President, Coppin State
College; Director, Maryland Chamber of Commerce and Provident
Bank of Maryland; Former President, Baltimore Area Council Boy
Scouts of America; Vice President, Board of Directors, The
Walters Art Gallery; Address: 2000 North Warwick Avenue,
Baltimore, Maryland 21216
*GEORGE J. COLLINS, Chairman of the Board--President, Chief
Executive Officer and Managing Director, T. Rowe Price; Director,
Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc., T. Rowe Price Retirement
Plan Services, Inc. and T. Rowe Price Trust Company; Chartered
Investment Counselor
ANTHONY W. DEERING, Director--Director, President and Chief
Executive Officer, The Rouse Company, real estate developers,
Columbia, Maryland; Advisory Director, Kleinwort, Benson (North
America) Corporation, a registered broker-dealer; Address: 10275
Little Patuxent Parkway, Columbia, Maryland 21044
F. PIERCE LINAWEAVER, Director--President, F. Pierce Linaweaver &
Associates, Inc.; formerly (1987-1991) Executive Vice President,
EA Engineering, Science, and Technology, Inc., and (1987-1990)
President, EA Engineering, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland; Address:
The Legg Mason Tower, 111 South Calvert Street, Suite 2700,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202
*JAMES S. RIEPE, Vice President and Director--Managing Director,
T. Rowe Price; Chairman of the Board, T. Rowe Price Services,
Inc., T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price Trust Company; President and Director, T. Rowe Price
Investment Services, Inc.; Director, Rhone-Poulenc Rorer, Inc.
JOHN G. SCHREIBER, Director--President, Schreiber Investments,
Inc., a real estate investment company; Director, AMLI
Residential Properties Trust; Partner, Blackstone Real Estate
Partners, L.P.; Director and formerly (12/70-12/90) Executive
Vice President, JMB Realty Corporation, a national real estate
investment manager and developer; Address: 1115 East Illinois
Road, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045
ANNE MARIE WHITTEMORE, Director--Partner, law firm of McGuire,
Woods, Battle & Boothe, Richmond, Virginia; formerly, Chairman
(1991-1993) and Director (1989-1993), Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond; Director, Owens & Minor, Inc., USF&G Corporation, Old
Dominion University, and James River Corporation; Member,
Richmond Bar Association and American Bar Association; Address:
One James Center, 901 East Cary Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219-
4030
WILLIAM T. REYNOLDS, President--Managing Director, T. Rowe Price
PETER VAN DYKE, Executive Vice President--Managing Director, T.
Rowe Price; Vice President, Rowe Price-Fleming International,
Inc.
PAGE 122
EDWARD A. WIESE, Executive Vice President--Vice President, T.
Rowe Price, Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price Trust Company
ROBERT P. CAMPBELL, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
and Rowe Price-Fleming International Inc.; formerly (4/80-5/90)
Vice President and Director, Private Finance, New York Life
Insurance Company, New York, New York
PATRICE L. BERCHTENBREITER, Vice President--Vice President, T.
Rowe Price
PAUL W. BOLTZ, Vice President--Vice President and Financial
Economist of T. Rowe Price
MICHAEL J. CONELIUS, Vice President--Vice President, Rowe-Price
Fleming and Assistant Vice President, T. Rowe Price
CHRISTY M. DIPIETRO, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe
Price and T. Rowe Price Trust Company
HENRY H. HOPKINS, Vice President--Vice President, Price-Fleming
and T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services, Inc.; Managing
Director, T. Rowe Price; Vice President and Director, T. Rowe
Price Investment Services, Inc., T. Rowe Price Services, Inc. and
T. Rowe Price Trust Company
VEENA A. KUTLER, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
and Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc.
HEATHER R. LANDON, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price,
T. Rowe Price Trust Company and Rowe Price-Fleming International,
Inc.
JAMES M. MCDONALD, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
EDMUND M. NOTZON, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
and T. Rowe Price Trust Company; formerly, (1972-1989) charter
member of the U.S. Senior Executive Services and Director,
Analysis and Evaluation Division in the Office of Water
Regulations and Standards of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
JOAN R. POTEE, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
ROBERT M. RUBINO, Vice President--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
CHARLES P. SMITH, Vice President--Managing Director, T. Rowe
Price; Vice President, Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc.
LENORA V. HORNUNG, Secretary--Vice President, T. Rowe Price
PATRICIA S. BUTCHER, Assistant Secretary--Assistant Vice
President, T. Rowe Price; Assistant Vice President, T. Rowe Price
Investment Services, Inc.
CARMEN F. DEYESU, Treasurer--Vice President, T. Rowe Price, T.
Rowe Price Services, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Trust Company
DAVID S. MIDDLETON, Controller--Vice President, T. Rowe Price, T.
Rowe Price Services, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Trust Company
ROGER L. FIERY, III, Assistant Vice President--Vice President,
Price-Fleming and Vice President, T. Rowe Price
EDWARD T. SCHNEIDER, Assistant Vice President--Vice President, T.
Rowe Price Services, Inc.
INGRID I. VORDEMBERGE, Assistant Vice President--Employee, T.
Rowe Price
PAGE 123
COMPENSATION TABLE
_________________________________________________________________
Pension or Total Compensation
Aggregate Retirement from Fund and
Name of Compensation Benefits Fund Group
Person, from Fund Accrued as Paid to
Position Expensesa Part of Fundb Directorsc
_________________________________________________________________
Summit Cash Reserves
Robert P. Black, $1,041 N/A $52,667
Director
Calvin W. Burnett, 1,041 N/A 55,583
PH.D, Director
Anthony W. Deering, 1,041 N/A 66,333
Director
F. Pierce Linaweaver, 1,041 N/A 55,583
Director
John G. Schreiber, 1,041 N/A 55,667
Director
Anne Marie Whittemore, 1,041 N/A 32,667
Director
George J. Collins, -- N/A --
Chairman of the Boardd
James S. Riepe, -- N/A --
Directord
Summit Limited-Term Bond
Robert P. Black, $1,041 N/A $52,667
Director
Calvin W. Burnett, 1,041 N/A 55,583
PH.D, Director
Anthony W. Deering, 1,041 N/A 66,333
Director
F. Pierce Linaweaver, 1,041 N/A 55,583
Director
PAGE 124
John G. Schreiber, 1,041 N/A 55,667
Director
Anne Marie Whittemore, 1,041 N/A 32,667
Director
George J. Collins, -- N/A --
Chairman of the Boardd
James S. Riepe, -- N/A --
Directord
Summit GNMA
Robert P. Black, $1,041 N/A $52,667
Director
Calvin W. Burnett, 1,041 N/A 55,583
PH.D, Director
Anthony W. Deering, 1,041 N/A 66,333
Director
F. Pierce Linaweaver, 1,041 N/A 55,583
Director
John G. Schreiber, 1,041 N/A 55,667
Director
Anne Marie Whittemore, 1,041 N/A 32,667
Director
George J. Collins, -- N/A --
Chairman of the Boardd
James S. Riepe, -- N/A --
Directord
a Amounts in this Column are for the period June 1, 1993
through May 31, 1994.
b Not applicable. The Fund does not pay pension or retirement
benefits to officers or directors/trustees of the Fund.
c Amounts in this column are for calendar year 1994, included
64 funds at December 31, 1994.
d Any director/trustee of the Fund who is an officer or
employee of T. Rowe Price receives no renumeration from the
Fund.
The Funds' Executive Committee, comprised of Messrs. Collins
and Riepe, has been authorized by its Board of Directors to
PAGE 125
exercise all powers of the Board to manage the Fund in the
intervals between meetings of the Board, except the powers
prohibited by statute from being delegated.
PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF SECURITIES
As of the date of the prospectus, the officers and directors
of the Funds, as a group, owned less than 1% of the outstanding
shares of each Fund.
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Services Provided by T. Rowe Price
Under the Management Agreement with the Corporation relating
to each Fund, T. Rowe Price provides each Fund with discretionary
investment services. Specifically, T. Rowe Price is responsible
for supervising and directing the investments of each Fund in
accordance with its investment objectives, programs, and
restrictions as provided in the prospectus and this Statement of
Additional Information. T. Rowe Price is also responsible for
effecting all security transactions on behalf of each Fund,
including the allocation of principal business and portfolio
brokerage and the negotiation of commissions. In addition to
these services, T. Rowe Price provides each Fund with certain
corporate administrative services, including: maintaining the
Fund's corporate existence, corporate records, and registering
and qualifying the Fund's shares under federal and state laws;
monitoring the financial, accounting, and administrative
functions of each Fund; maintaining liaison with the agents
employed by each Fund such as the Fund's custodian and transfer
agent; assisting each Fund in the coordination of such agents'
activities; and permitting T. Rowe Price's employees to serve as
officers, directors, and committee members of each Fund without
cost to the Fund.
Each Fund's Management Agreement also provides that T. Rowe
Price, its directors, officers, employees, and certain other
persons performing specific functions for the Fund will only be
liable to the Fund for losses resulting from willful misfeasance,
bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of duty.
Management Fee
Each Fund pays T. Rowe Price an annual all-inclusive fee
(the "Fee") of: 0.45% for the Cash Reserves Fund; 0.55% for the
Limited-Term Fund; and 0.60% for the GNMA Fund. The Fee is paid
monthly to the T. Rowe Price on the first business day of the
PAGE 126
next succeeding calendar month and is the sum of the daily Fee
accruals for each month. The daily Fee accrual for any
particular day is calculated by multiplying the fraction of one
(1) over the number of calendar days in the year by the
appropriate Fee rate and multiplying this product by the net
assets of the Fund for that day as determined in accordance with
the Funds' prospectus as of the close of business from the
previous business day on which the Fund was open for business.
The Management Agreement between each Fund and T. Rowe Price
provides that T. Rowe Price will pay all expenses of each Fund's
operations, except interest, taxes, brokerage commissions and
other charges incident to the purchase, sale or lending of the
Fund's portfolio securities, directors' fees and expenses
(including counsel fees and expenses) and such nonrecurring or
extraordinary expenses that may arise, including the costs of
actions, suits, or proceedings to which the Fund is a party and
the expenses the Fund may incur as a result of its obligation to
provide indemnification to its officers, directors and agents.
However, the Board of Directors of the Fund reserves the right to
impose additional fees against shareholder accounts to defray
expenses which would otherwise be paid by T. Rowe Price under the
Management Agreement. The Board does not anticipate levying such
charges; such a fee, if charged, may be retained by the Fund or
paid to T. Rowe Price.
DISTRIBUTOR FOR FUNDS
T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc. ("Investment
Services"), a Maryland corporation formed in 1980 as a wholly-
owned subsidiary of T. Rowe Price, serves as the distributor of
the Funds. Investment Services is registered as a broker-dealer
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. The offering of
each Fund's shares is continuous.
Investment Services is located at the same address as the
Funds and T. Rowe T. Rowe Price -- 100 East Pratt Street,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202.
Investment Services serves as distributor to the Funds
pursuant to individual Underwriting Agreements ("Underwriting
Agreements"), which provide that Investment Services will pay all
fees and expenses in connection with: registering and qualifying
the Funds' shares under the various state "blue sky" laws;
preparing, setting in type, printing, and mailing its
prospectuses and reports to shareholders; issuing its shares,
including expenses of confirming purchase orders; printing and
distributing prospectuses and reports for use in offering and
PAGE 127
selling shares for each Fund; preparing, setting in type,
printing, and mailing all sales literature and advertising;
Investment Services' federal and state registrations as a
broker-dealer; and offering and selling shares for each Fund.
The Underwriting Agreements provide that the Fund is responsible
for interest, taxes and such nonrecurring or extraordinary
expenses that may arise, including the costs of actions, suits or
proceedings to which the Fund is a party and the expenses the
Fund may incur as a result of its obligation to provide
indemnification to Investment Services. Investment Services'
expenses are paid by T. Rowe Price.
Investment Services acts as the agent of the Funds in
connection with the sale of their shares in all states in which
the shares are qualified and in which Investment Services is
qualified as a broker-dealer. Under the Underwriting Agreement,
Investment Services accepts orders for Fund shares at net asset
value. No sales charges are paid by investors or the Funds.
CUSTODIAN
State Street Bank and Trust Company is the custodian for
each Fund's securities and cash, but it does not participate in
the Funds' investment decisions. Portfolio securities purchased
in the U.S. are maintained in the custody of the Bank and may be
entered into the Federal Reserve Book Entry System, or the
security depository system of the Depository Trust Corporation.
The Bank and the Limited-Term Fund have entered into a Custodian
Agreement with The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., London, pursuant
to which portfolio securities which are purchased outside the
United States are maintained in the custody of various foreign
branches of The Chase Manhattan Bank and such other custodians,
including foreign banks and foreign securities depositories as
are approved by the Fund's Board of Directors in accordance with
regulations under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The Bank's
main office is at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts
02110. The address for The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., London is
Woolgate House, Coleman Street, London, EC2P 2HD, England.
CODE OF ETHICS
The Funds' investment adviser (T. Rowe Price) has a written
Code of Ethics which requires all employees to obtain prior
clearance before engaging in any personal securities
transactions. In addition, all employees must report their
personal securities transactions within ten days of their
execution. Employees will not be permitted to effect
PAGE 128
transactions in a security: If there are pending client orders in
the security; the security has been purchased or sold by a client
within seven calendar days; the security is being considered for
purchase for a client; a change has occurred in T. Rowe Price's
rating of the security within five days; or the security is
subject to internal trading restrictions. Any material violation
of the Code of Ethics is reported to the Board of the Fund. The
Board also reviews the administration of the Code of Ethics on an
annual basis.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
Investment or Brokerage Discretion
Decisions with respect to the purchase and sale of portfolio
securities on behalf of the Funds are made by T. Rowe Price. T.
Rowe Price is also responsible for implementing these decisions,
including the negotiation of commissions and the allocation of
portfolio brokerage and principal business. Each Fund's
purchases and sales of portfolio securities are normally done on
a principal basis and do not involve the payment of a commission
although they may involve the designation of selling concessions.
That part of the discussion below relating solely to brokerage
commissions would not normally apply to a Fund. However, it is
included because T. Rowe Price does manage a significant number
of common stock portfolios which do engage in agency transactions
and pay commissions and because some research and services
resulting from the payment of such commissions may benefit the
Funds.
How Brokers and Dealers are Selected
Fixed Income Securities
Fixed income securities are generally purchased from the
issuer or a primary market-maker acting as principal for the
securities on a net basis, with no brokerage commission being
paid by the client, although the price usually includes an
undisclosed compensation. Transactions placed through dealers
serving as primary market-makers reflect the spread between the
bid and asked prices. Securities may also be purchased from
underwriters at prices which include underwriting fees.
T. Rowe Price may effect principal transactions on behalf of
a Fund with a broker or dealer who furnishes brokerage and/or
research services, designate any such broker or dealer to receive
selling concessions, discounts or other allowances, or otherwise
deal with any such broker or dealer in connection with the
acquisition of securities in underwritings. T. Rowe Price may
PAGE 129
receive brokerage and research services in connection with such
designations in fixed priced underwritings.
How Evaluations are Made of the Overall Reasonableness of
Brokerage Commissions Paid
On a continuing basis, T. Rowe Price seeks to determine what
levels of commission rates are reasonable in the marketplace for
transactions executed on behalf of the Funds. In evaluating the
reasonableness of commission rates, T. Rowe Price considers: (a)
historical commission rates, both before and since rates have
been fully negotiable; (b) rates which other institutional
investors are paying, based on available public information; (c)
rates quoted by brokers and dealers; (d) the size of a particular
transaction, in terms of the number of shares, dollar amount, and
number of clients involved; (e) the complexity of a particular
transaction in terms of both execution and settlement; (f) the
level and type of business done with a particular firm over a
period of time; and (g) the extent to which the broker or dealer
has capital at risk in the transaction.
Description of Research Services Received from Brokers and
Dealers
T. Rowe Price receives a wide range of research services
from brokers and dealers. These services include information on
the economy, industries, groups of securities, individual
companies, statistical information, accounting and tax law
interpretations, political developments, legal developments
affecting portfolio securities, technical market action, pricing
and appraisal services, credit analysis, risk measurement
analysis, performance analysis and analysis of corporate
responsibility issues. These services provide both domestic and
international perspective. Research services are received
primarily in the form of written reports, computer generated
services, telephone contacts and personal meetings with security
analysts. In addition, such services may be provided in the form
of meetings arranged with corporate and industry spokespersons,
economists, academicians and government representatives. In some
cases, research services are generated by third parties but are
provided to T. Rowe Price by or through broker-dealers.
Research services received from brokers and dealers are
supplemental to T. Rowe Price's own research effort and, when
utilized, are subject to internal analysis before being
incorporated by T. Rowe Price into its investment process. As a
practical matter, it would not be possible for T. Rowe Price's
Equity Research Division to generate all of the information
presently provided by brokers and dealers. T. Rowe Price pays
PAGE 130
cash for certain research services received from external
sources. T. Rowe Price also allocates brokerage for research
services which are available for cash. While receipt of research
services from brokerage firms has not reduced T. Rowe Price's
normal research activities, the expenses of T. Rowe Price could
be materially increased if it attempted to generate such
additional information through its own staff. To the extent that
research services of value are provided by brokers or dealers, T.
Rowe Price may be relieved of expenses which it might otherwise
bear.
T. Rowe Price has a policy of not allocating brokerage
business in return for products or services other than brokerage
or research services. In accordance with the provisions of
Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, T. Rowe
Price may from time to time receive services and products which
serve both research and non-research functions. In such event,
T. Rowe Price makes a good faith determination of the anticipated
research and non-research use of the product or service and
allocates brokerage only with respect to the research component.
Commissions to Brokers who Furnish Research Services
Certain brokers and dealers who provide quality brokerage
and execution services also furnish research services to T. Rowe
Price. With regard to the payment of brokerage commissions, T.
Rowe Price has adopted a brokerage allocation policy embodying
the concepts of Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, which permits an investment adviser to cause an account to
pay commission rates in excess of those another broker or dealer
would have charged for effecting the same transaction, if the
adviser determines in good faith that the commission paid is
reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research
services provided. The determination may be viewed in terms of
either the particular transaction involved or the overall
responsibilities of the adviser with respect to the accounts over
which it exercises investment discretion. Accordingly, while T.
Rowe Price cannot readily determine the extent to which
commission rates or net prices charged by broker-dealers reflect
the value of their research services, T. Rowe Price would expect
to assess the reasonableness of commissions in light of the total
brokerage and research services provided by each particular
broker. T. Rowe Price may receive research, as defined in
Section 28(e), in connection with selling concessions and
designations in fixed price offerings in which the Funds
participate.
PAGE 131
Internal Allocation Procedures
T. Rowe Price has a policy of not precommitting a specific
amount of business to any broker or dealer over any specific time
period. Historically, the majority of brokerage placement has
been determined by the needs of a specific transaction such as
market-making, availability of a buyer or seller of a particular
security, or specialized execution skills. However, T. Rowe
Price does have an internal brokerage allocation procedure for
that portion of its discretionary client brokerage business where
special needs do not exist, or where the business may be
allocated among several brokers or dealers which are able to meet
the needs of the transaction.
Each year, T. Rowe Price assesses the contribution of the
brokerage and research services provided by brokers and dealers,
and attempts to allocate a portion of its brokerage and selling
concession business in response to these assessments. Research
analysts, counselors, various investment committees, and the
Trading Department each seek to evaluate the brokerage and
research services they receive from brokers and dealers and make
judgments as to the level of business which would recognize such
services. In addition, brokers and dealers sometimes suggest a
level of business they would like to receive in return for the
various brokerage and research services they provide. Actual
brokerage business received by any firm may be less than the
suggested allocations but can, and often does, exceed the
suggestions, because the total business is allocated on the basis
of all the considerations described above. In no case is a
broker or dealer excluded from receiving business from T. Rowe
Price because it has not been identified as providing research
services.
Miscellaneous
T. Rowe Price's brokerage allocation policy is consistently
applied to all its fully discretionary accounts, which represent
a substantial majority of all assets under management. Research
services furnished by brokers through which T. Rowe Price effects
securities transactions may be used in servicing all accounts
(including non-Fund accounts) managed by T. Rowe Price.
Conversely, research services received from brokers which execute
transactions for the Fund are not necessarily used by T. Rowe
Price exclusively in connection with the management of the Fund.
From time to time, orders for clients may be placed through
a computerized transaction network.
Each Fund does not allocate business to any broker-dealer on
the basis of its sales of the Fund's shares. However, this does
PAGE 132
not mean that broker-dealers who purchase Fund shares for their
clients will not receive business from the Fund.
Some of T. Rowe Price's other clients have investment
objectives and programs similar to those of the Funds. T. Rowe
Price may occasionally make recommendations to other clients
which result in their purchasing or selling securities
simultaneously with the Funds. As a result, the demand for
securities being purchased or the supply of securities being sold
may increase, and this could have an adverse effect on the price
of those securities. It is T. Rowe Price's policy not to favor
one client over another in making recommendations or in placing
orders. T. Rowe Price frequently follows the practice of
grouping orders of various clients for execution which generally
results in lower commission rates being attained. In certain
cases, where the aggregate order is executed in a series of
transactions at various prices on a given day, each participating
client's proportionate share of such order reflects the average
price paid or received with respect to the total order. T. Rowe
Price has established a general investment policy that it will
ordinarily not make additional purchases of a common stock of a
company for its clients (including the T. Rowe Price Funds) if,
as a result of such purchases, 10% or more of the outstanding
common stock of such company would be held by its clients in the
aggregate.
To the extent possible, T. Rowe Price intends to recapture
solicitation fees paid in connection with tender offers through
T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc., the Fund's distributor.
At the present time, T. Rowe Price does not recapture commissions
or underwriting discounts or selling group concessions in
connection with taxable securities acquired in underwritten
offerings. T. Rowe Price does, however, attempt to negotiate
elimination of all or a portion of the selling-group concession
or underwriting discount when purchasing tax-exempt municipal
securities on behalf of its clients in underwritten offerings.
Transactions with Related Brokers and Dealers--Limited-Term Fund
As provided in the Investment Management Agreement between
the Fund and T. Rowe Price, T. Rowe Price is responsible not only
for making decisions with respect to the purchase and sale of the
Fund's portfolio securities, but also for implementing these
decisions, including the negotiation of commissions and the
allocation of portfolio brokerage and principal business. It is
expected that T. Rowe Price may place orders for the Fund's
portfolio transactions with broker-dealers through the same
trading desk T. Rowe Price uses for portfolio transactions in
domestic securities. The trading desk accesses brokers and
PAGE 133
dealers in various markets in which the Fund's foreign securities
are located. These brokers and dealers may include of certain
affiliates of Robert Fleming Holdings Limited ("Robert Fleming
Holdings") and Jardine Fleming Group Limited ("JFG"), persons
indirectly related to T. Rowe Price. Robert Fleming Holdings,
through Copthall Overseas Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary,
owns 25% of the common stock of Rowe Price-Fleming International,
Inc. ("RPFI"), an investment adviser registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Fifty percent of the common
stock of RPFI is owned by TRP Finance, Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of T. Rowe Price, and the remaining 25% is owned by
Jardine Fleming International Holdings Limited, a subsidiary of
JFG. JFG is 50% owned by Robert Fleming Holdings and 50% owned
by Jardine Matheson Holdings Limited. The affiliates through
whose trading desks such orders may be placed include Fleming
Investment Management Limited ("FIM"), and Robert Fleming & Co.
Limited ("RF&Co."). FIM and RF&Co. are wholly owned subsidiaries
of Robert Fleming. These trading desks will operate under strict
instructions from the Fund's portfolio manager with respect to
the terms of such transactions. Neither Robert Fleming, JFG, nor
their affiliates will receive any commission fee, or other
renumeration for the use of their trading desks, although orders
for a Fund's portfolio transactions may be placed with affiliates
of Robert Fleming and JFG who may receive a commission.
The Board of Directors of the Fund has authorized T. Rowe
Price to utilize certain affiliates of Robert Fleming and JFG in
the capacity of broker in connection with the execution of the
Fund's portfolio transactions, provided that T. Rowe Price
believes that doing so will result in an economic advantage (in
the form of lower execution costs or otherwise) being obtained
for each Fund. These affiliates include, but are not limited to,
Jardine Fleming (Securities) Limited ("JFS"), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of JFG, RF&Co., Jardine Fleming Australia Securities
Limited, and Robert Fleming, Inc. (a New York brokerage
firm).
The above-referenced authorization was made in accordance
with Section 17(e) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the
"1940 Act") and Rule 17e-1 thereunder which require the Funds'
independent directors to approve the procedures under which
brokerage allocation to affiliates is to be made and to monitor
such allocations on a continuing basis. Except with respect to
tender offers, it is not expected that any portion of the
commissions, fees, brokerage, or similar payments received by the
affiliates of Robert Fleming in such transactions will be
recaptured by the Funds. The directors have reviewed and from
time to time may continue to review whether other recapture
opportunities are legally permissible and available and, if they
PAGE 134
appear to be, determine whether it would be advisable for a Fund
to seek to take advantage of them.
Other
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994, the Cash
Reserves Fund engaged in portfolio transactions involving broker-
dealers totaling $2,176,128,000. The entire amounts for the year
represented principal transactions as to which the Cash Reserves
Fund has no knowledge of the profits or losses realized by the
respective broker-dealers. For fiscal year ended October 31,
1994, approximately 81% was placed with firms which provided
research, statistical, or other services to T. Rowe Price in
connection with the management of the Cash Reserves Fund or, in
some cases, to the Cash Reserves Fund.
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994, the Limited-Term
Bond Fund engaged in portfolio transactions involving broker-
dealers totaling $218,628,000. The entire amounts for the year
represented principal transactions as to which the Limited-Term
Bond Fund has no knowledge of the profits or losses realized by
the respective broker-dealers. For the fiscal year ending
October 31, 1994, $3,566,000 involved trades with brokers acting
as agents or underwriters, in which such brokers received total
commission, including discounts received in connection with
underwritings of $84,895. For fiscal year ended October 31,
1994, approximately 81% was placed with firms which provided
research, statistical, or other services to T. Rowe Price in
connection with the management of the Fund or, in some cases, to
the Fund.
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994, the GNMA Fund
engaged in portfolio transactions involving broker-dealers
totaling $34,027,000. The entire amounts for the year
represented principal transactions as to which the GNMA Fund has
no knowledge of the profits or losses realized by the respective
broker-dealers. For fiscal year ended October 31, 1994,
approximately 83% was placed with firms which provided research,
statistical, or other services to T. Rowe Price in connection
with the management of the Fund or, in some cases, to the Fund.
The portfolio turnover rates of the Limited-Term Bond and
GNMA Funds for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1994, were: 296%
and 61.5%, respectively.
PAGE 135
PRICING OF SECURITIES
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Fixed income securities are generally traded in the over-
the-counter market. Investments in domestic securities with
remaining maturities of one year or more and foreign securities
are stated at fair value using a bid-side valuation as furnished
by dealers who make markets in such securities or by an
independent pricing service, which considers yield or price of
bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity, and type, as well
as prices quoted by dealers who make markets in such securities.
Domestic securities with remaining maturities less than one year
are stated at fair value which is determined by using a matrix
system that establishes a value for each security based on bid-
side money market yields.
There are a number of pricing services available, and the
Board of Directors, on the basis of ongoing evaluation of these
services, may use or may discontinue the use of any pricing
service in whole or in part.
Cash Reserves Fund
Securities with more than 60 days remaining to maturity are
stated at fair value which is determined by using a matrix system
that establishes a value for each security based on money market
yields. Securities originally purchased with remaining
maturities of 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost. In
addition, securities purchased with maturities in excess of 60
days, but which currently have maturities of 60 days or less, are
valued at their amortized cost for the 60 days prior to maturity-
-such amortization being based on the fair value of the
securities on the 61st day prior to maturity.
For the purposes of determining the Fund's net asset value
per share, all assets and liabilities initially expressed in
foreign currencies are converted into U.S. dollars at the mean of
the bid and offer prices of such currencies against U.S. dollars
quoted by any major bank.
Assets and liabilities for which the above valuation
procedures are inappropriate or are deemed not to reflect fair
value are stated at fair value, as determined in good faith by or
under the supervision of officers of the Funds, as authorized by
the Board of Directors.
PAGE 136
Maintenance of Net Asset Value Per Share
It is the policy of the Fund to attempt to maintain a net
asset value of $1.00 per share by rounding to the nearest one
cent. This method of valuation is commonly referred to as "penny
rounding" and is permitted by Rule 2a-7 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940. Under Rule 2a-7:
(a) the Board of Directors of the Fund must undertake
to assure, to the extent reasonably practical taking into
account current market conditions affecting the Fund's
investment objectives, that the Fund's net asset value will
not deviate from $1.00 per share;
(b) the Fund must (i) maintain a dollar-weighted
average portfolio maturity appropriate to its objective of
maintaining a stable price per share, (ii) not purchase any
instrument with a remaining maturity greater than 397 days
(or in the case of U.S. government securities greater than
762 days), and (iii) maintain a dollar-weighted average
portfolio maturity of 90 days or less;
(c) the Fund must limit its purchase of portfolio
instruments, including repurchase agreements, to those U.S.
dollar-denominated instruments which the Fund's Board of
Directors determines present minimal credit risks, and
which are eligible securities as defined by Rule 2a-7; and
(d) the Board of Directors must determine that (i) it
is in the best interest of the Fund and its shareholders to
maintain a stable price per share under the penny rounding
method; and (ii) the Fund will continue to use the penny
rounding method only so long as the Board of Directors
believes that it fairly reflects the market based net asset
value per share.
Although the Fund believes that it will be able to maintain
its net asset value at $1.00 per share under most conditions,
there can be no absolute assurance that it will be able to do so
on a continuous basis. If the Fund's net asset value per share
declined, or was expected to decline, below $1.00 (rounded to the
nearest one cent), the Board of Directors of the Fund might
temporarily reduce or suspend dividend payments in an effort to
maintain the net asset value at $1.00 per share. As a result of
such reduction or suspension of dividends, an investor would
receive less income during a given period than if such a
reduction or suspension had not taken place. Such action could
result in an investor receiving no dividend for the period during
which he holds his shares and in his receiving, upon redemption,
a price per share lower than that which he paid. On the other
PAGE 137
hand, if the Fund's net asset value per share were to increase,
or were anticipated to increase above $1.00 (rounded to the
nearest one cent), the Board of Directors of the Fund might
supplement dividends in an effort to maintain the net asset value
at $1.00 per share.
Prime Money Market Securities Defined. Prime money market
securities are those which are described as First Tier Securities
under Rule 2a-7 of the Investment Company Act of 1940. These
include any security with a remaining maturity of 397 days or
less that is rated (or that has been issued by an issuer that is
rated with respect to a class of short-term debt obligations, or
any security within that class that is comparable in priority and
security with the security) by any two nationally recognized
statistical rating organizations (NRSROs) (or if only one NRSRO
has issued a rating, that NRSRO) in the highest rating category
for short-term debt obligations (within which there may be sub-
categories). First Tier Securities also include unrated
securities comparable in quality to rated securities, as
determined by T. Rowe Price under the supervision of the Fund's
Board of Directors.
Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Fixed income securities are generally traded in the over-
the-counter market. Investments in domestic securities with
remaining maturities of one year or more and foreign securities
are stated at fair value using bid-side valuation as furnished by
dealers who make markets in such securities or by an independent
pricing service, which considers yield or price of bonds of
comparable quality, coupon, maturity, and type, as well as prices
quoted by dealers who make markets in such securities. Domestic
securities with remaining maturities less than one year are
stated at fair value which is determined by using a matrix system
that establishes a value for each security based on bid-side
money market yields.
There are a number of pricing services available, and the
Board of Directors, on the basis of an ongoing evaluation of
these services, may use or may discontinue the use of any pricing
service in whole or in part.
For the purposes of determining a Fund's net asset value
per share, all assets and liabilities initially expressed in
foreign currencies are converted into U.S. dollars at the mean of
the bid and offer prices of such currencies against U.S. dollars
quoted by any major bank.
Assets and liabilities for which the above valuation
procedures are inappropriate or are deemed not to reflect fair
PAGE 138
value are stated at fair value, as determined in good faith by or
under the supervision of officers of the Fund as authorized by
its Board of Directors.
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE
The purchase and redemption price of the Funds' shares is
equal to the Funds' net asset value per share or share price.
Each Fund determines its net asset value per share by subtracting
the Funds' liabilities (including accrued expenses and dividends
payable) from its total assets (the market value of the
securities the Fund holds plus cash and other assets, including
income accrued but not yet received) and dividing the result by
the total number of shares outstanding. The net asset value per
share of each Fund is calculated as of the close of trading on
the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") every day the NYSE is open
for trading. The net asset value of the Money Fund is also
calculated as of 12:00 noon (Eastern time) every day the NYSE is
open for trading. The NYSE is closed on the following days: New
Year's Day, Washington's Birthday, Good Friday, Memorial Day,
Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day.
Determination of net asset value (and the offering, sale,
redemption and repurchase of shares) for a Fund may be suspended
at times (a) during which the NYSE is closed, other than
customary weekend and holiday closings, (b) during which trading
on the NYSE is restricted, (c) during which an emergency exists
as a result of which disposal by a Fund of securities owned by it
is not reasonably practicable or it is not reasonably practicable
for the Fund fairly to determine the value of its net assets, or
(d) during which a governmental body having jurisdiction over the
Fund may by order permit such a suspension for the protection of
the Fund's shareholders; provided that applicable rules and
regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (or any
succeeding governmental authority) shall govern as to whether the
conditions prescribed in (b), (c), or (d) exist.
DIVIDENDS
Unless you elect otherwise, the Fund's annual capital gain
distributions, if any, will be reinvested on the reinvestment
date using the NAV per share of that date. The reinvestment date
normally precedes the payment date by about 10 days although the
exact timing is subject to change.
PAGE 139
TAX STATUS
Each Fund intends to qualify as a "regulated investment
company" under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended ("Code").
A portion of the dividends paid by each Fund may be
eligible for the dividends-received deduction for corporate
shareholders. For tax purposes, it does not make any difference
whether dividends and capital gain distributions are paid in cash
or in additional shares. Each Fund must declare dividends by
December 31 of each year equal to at least 98% of ordinary income
(as of December 31) and capital gains (as of October 31) in order
to avoid a federal excise tax and distribute within 12 months
100% of ordinary income and capital gains as of its tax year-end
to avoid federal income tax.
At the time of your purchase, a Fund's net asset value may
reflect undistributed capital gains or net unrealized
appreciation of securities held by the Fund. A subsequent
distribution to you of such amounts, although constituting a
return of your investment, would be taxable as a capital gain
distribution. For federal income tax purposes, a Fund is
permitted to carry forward its net realized capital losses, if
any, for eight years and realize net capital gains up to the
amount of such losses without being required to pay taxes on, or
distribute such gains. On October 31, 1994, the books of each
Fund indicated that each Fund's aggregate net assets included
undistributed net income, net realized capital gains, and
unrealized appreciation which are listed below.
Net Realized Unrealized
Undistributed Capital Appreciation/
Fund Net Income Gains/(Losses) (Depreciation)
Cash Reserves $3,647,000 $ 1,000 $ (83,000)
Limited-Term Bond 1,057,000 (1,132,000) (305,000)
GNMA 1,001,000 (223,000) (1,266,000)
If, in any taxable year, the Funds should not qualify as
regulated investment companies under the Code: (i) each Fund
would be taxed at normal corporate rates on the entire amount of
its taxable income, if any, without deduction for dividends or
other distributions to shareholders; and (ii) each Fund's
distributions to the extent made out of the Fund's current or
accumulated earnings and profits would be taxable to shareholders
as ordinary dividends (regardless of whether they would otherwise
have been considered capital gain dividends).
PAGE 140
Taxation of Foreign Shareholders
The Code provides that dividends from net income will be
subject to U.S. tax. For shareholders who are not engaged in a
business in the U.S., this tax would be imposed at the rate of
30% upon the gross amount of the dividends in the absence of a
Tax Treaty providing for a reduced rate or exemption from U.S.
taxation. Distributions of net long-term capital gains realized
by the Fund are not subject to tax unless the foreign shareholder
is a nonresident alien individual who was physically present in
the U.S. during the tax year for more than 182 days.
Foreign Currency Gains and Losses--Limited-Term Fund
Foreign currency gains and losses, including the portion of
gain or loss on the sale of debt securities attributable to
foreign exchange rate fluctuations, are taxable as ordinary
income. If the net effect of these transactions is a gain, the
ordinary income dividend paid by the Fund will be increased; if
the result is a loss, a portion of its ordinary income divided
may be classified as a return of capital. Adjustments to reflect
these gains and losses will be made at the end of the Fund's
taxable year.
To the extent a Fund invests in foreign securities, the
following would apply:
Passive Foreign Investment Companies
Each Fund may purchase the securities of certain foreign
investment funds or trusts called passive foreign investment
companies. Capital gains on the sale of such holdings will be
deemed to be ordinary income regardless of how long the Fund
holds its investment. In addition to bearing their proportionate
share of the funds expenses (management fees and operating
expenses) shareholders will also indirectly bear similar expenses
of such funds. In addition, the Funds may be subject to
corporate income tax and an interest charge on certain dividends
and capital gains earned from these investments, regardless of
whether such income and gains were distributed to shareholders.
In accordance with tax regulations, the Funds intend to
treat these securities as sold on the last day of a Fund's fiscal
year and recognize any gains for tax purposes at that time;
losses will not be recognized. Such gains will be considered
ordinary income which a Fund will be required to distribute even
though it has not sold the security and received cash to pay such
distributions.
PAGE 141
YIELD INFORMATION
Cash Reserves Fund
The Cash Reserves Fund's current and historical yield for a
period is calculated by dividing the net change in value of an
account (including all dividends accrued and dividends reinvested
in additional shares) by the account value at the beginning of
the period to obtain the base period return. This base period
return is divided by the number of days in the period then
multiplied by 365 to arrive at the annualized yield for that
period. The Fund's annualized compound yield for such period is
compounded by dividing the base period return by the number of
days in the period, and compounding that figure over 365 days.
The seven day yield ending October 31, 1994 for the Fund
was 4.69%.
Limited-Term Fund
An income factor is calculated for each security in the
portfolio based upon the security's market value at the beginning
of the period and yield as determined in conformity with
regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The income
factors are then totalled for all securities in the portfolio.
Next, expenses of the Fund for the period net of expected
reimbursement are deducted from the income to arrive at net
income, which is then converted to a per-share amount by dividing
net income by the average number of shares outstanding during the
period. The net income per share is divided by the net asset
value on the last day of the period to produce a monthly yield
which is then annualized. Quoted yield factors are for
comparison purposes only, and are not intended to indicate future
performance or forecast the dividend per share of the Fund.
The yield of the Fund calculated under the above-described
method for the month ended October 31, 1994 was 7.08%.
GNMA Fund
In conformity with regulations of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, an income factor is calculated for each
security in the portfolio based upon the security's coupon rate.
The income factors are then adjusted for any gains or losses
which have resulted from prepayments of principal during the
period. The income factors are then totalled for all securities
in the portfolio. Next, expenses of the Fund for the period, net
of expected reimbursements, are deducted from the income to
PAGE 142
arrive at net income, which is then converted to a per-share
amount by dividing net income by the average number of shares
outstanding during the period. The net income per share is
divided by the net asset value on the last day of the period to
produce a monthly yield which is then annualized. Quoted yield
factors are for comparison purposes only, and are not intended to
indicate future performance or forecast the dividend per share of
the Fund.
The yield of the Fund calculated under the above-described
method for the month ended October 31, 1994 was 7.09%.
INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE
Total Return Performance--Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
Each Fund's calculation of total return performance
includes the reinvestment of all capital gain distributions and
income dividends for the period or periods indicated, without
regard to tax consequences to a shareholder in the Fund. Total
return is calculated as the percentage change between the
beginning value of a static account in each Fund and the ending
value of that account measured by the then current net asset
value, including all shares acquired through reinvestment of
income and capital gains dividends. The results shown are
historical and should not be considered indicative of the future
performance of a Fund. Each average annual compound rate of
return is derived from the cumulative performance of each Fund
over the time period specified. The annual compound rate of
return for each Fund over any other period of time will vary from
the average.
Cumulative Performance Percentage Change
1 Yr. Since
Ended Inception
10/31/94 10/29/94
Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
Cash Reserves Fund 3.60% 3.60%
Lipper Money Market Investment
Funds Average 3.28 3.28
PAGE 143
Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
Limited-Term Bond Fund -0.71% -0.71%
Lehman Bros. 1-3 year
Gov't./Corp. Bond Index 1.23% 1.23%
Lipper Short Investment
Grade Debt Funds Average 0.10% 0.10%
GNMA Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
GNMA Fund -1.67% -1.67%
Salomon Brothers 30-year
GNMA Index -1.42% -1.42%
Lehman Brothers GNMA
Bond Index -1.54% -1.54%
Average Annual Compound Rates of Return
1 Yr. Since
Ended Inception
10/31/94 10/29/94
Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
Cash Reserves Fund 3.60% 3.60%
Lipper Money Market Investment
Funds Average 3.28% 3.28%
Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
Limited-Term Bond Fund -0.71% -0.71%
Lehman Bros. 1-3 year
Gov't./Corp. Bond Index 1.23% 1.23%
Lipper Short Investment
Grade Debt Funds Average 0.10% 0.10%
PAGE 144
GNMA Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit
GNMA Fund -1.67% -1.67%
Salomon Brothers 30-year
GNMA Index -1.42% -1.42%
Lehman Brothers GNMA
Bond Index -1.54% -1.54%
Outside Sources of Information
From time to time, in reports and promotional literature,
one or more of the T. Rowe Price funds, including this Fund, may
compare its performance to Overnight Government Repurchase
Agreements, Treasury bills, notes, and bonds, certificates of
deposit, and money market deposit accounts. Performance may also
be compared to (1) indices of broad groups of managed and
unmanaged securities considered to be representative of or
similar to Fund portfolio holdings; (2) other mutual funds; or
(3) other measures of performance set forth in publications such
as:
Advertising News Service, Inc., "Bank Rate Monitor+ - The
Weekly Financial Rate Reporter" is a weekly publication
which lists the yields on various money market instruments
offered to the public by 100 leading banks and thrift
institutions in the U.S., including loan rates offered by
these banks. Bank certificates of deposit differ from
mutual funds in several ways: the interest rate
established by the sponsoring bank is fixed for the term of
a CD; there are penalties for early withdrawal from CDs;
and the principal on a CD is insured.
Bloomberg Financial Markets (Cash Reserves Fund only), a
comprehensive financial data distribution network which
tracks a broad range of financial markets.
Donoghue Organization, Inc., "Donoghue's Money Fund Report"
is a weekly publication which tracks net assets, yield,
maturity and portfolio holdings on approximately 380 money
market mutual funds offered in the U.S. These funds are
broken down into various categories such as U.S. Treasury,
Domestic Prime and Euros, Domestic Prime and Euros and
Yankees, and Aggressive.
Donoghue's "Money Fund Insights" (Cash Reserves Fund only)
a monthly publication which tracks net assets, monthly
PAGE 145
yields and 12-month yields on approximately 735 money
market mutual funds offered in the U.S. These funds are
broken down into various categories such as U.S. Treasury,
Domestic Prime and Euros, and Domestic Prime and Euros and
Yankees.
Knight Ridder Financial Services Market Data (Cash Reserves
Fund only), a financial data delivery network which tracks
current and historical data on the fixed-income markets.
First Boston High Yield Index (Limited-Term and GNMA Funds
only). It shows statistics on the Composite Index and
analytical data on new issues in the marketplace and low-
grade issuers.
Lipper Analytical Services, Inc., "Lipper-Fixed Income Fund
Performance Analysis" is a monthly publication which tracks
net assets, total return, principal return and yield on
over 1900 fixed income mutual funds offered in the United
States.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., "Taxable Bond
Indices" is a monthly publication which lists principal,
coupon and total return on over 100 different taxable bond
indices tracked by Merrill Lynch, together with the par
weighted characteristics of each Index.
Morningstar, Inc. - is a widely used independent research
firm which rates mutual funds by overall performance,
investment objectives, and assets.
Salomon Brothers Inc., "Analytical Record of Yields and
Yield Spreads" is a publication which tracks historical
yields and yield spreads on short-term market rates, public
obligations of the U.S. Treasury and agencies of the U.S.
Government, public corporate debt obligations, municipal
debt obligations and preferred stocks.
Salomon Brothers Inc., "Bond Market Round-up" is a weekly
publication which tracks the yields and yield spreads on a
large, but select, group of money market instruments,
public corporate debt obligations, and public obligations
of the U.S. Treasury and agencies of the U.S. Government.
Salomon Brothers Inc., "Market Performance" - a monthly
publication which tracks principal return, total return and
yield on the Salomon Brothers Broad investment - Grade Bond
Index and the components of the Index as well as some money
market instruments not included in the index.
PAGE 146
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc., "The Bond Market Report" -
a monthly publication which tracks principal, coupon and
total return on the Shearson Lehman Govt./Corp. Index and
Shearson Lehman Aggregate Bond Index, as well as all the
components of these Indices.
Telerate Systems, Inc., a market data distribution network
computer system which tracks a broad range of financial
markets including, the daily rates on money market
instruments, public corporate debt obligations and public
obligations of the U.S. Treasury and agencies of the U.S.
Government.
Wall Street Journal, is a national daily financial news
publication which lists the yields and current market
values on money market instruments, public corporate debt
obligations, public obligations of the U.S. Treasury and
agencies of the U.S. Government as well as common stocks,
preferred stocks, convertible preferred stocks, options and
commodities; in addition to indices prepared by the
research departments of such financial organizations as
Shearson Lehman/American Express Inc., and Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner and Smith, Inc., including information
provided by the Federal Reserve Board.
Performance rankings and ratings reported periodically in
national financial publications such as MONEY, FORBES, BUSINESS
WEEK, BARRON'S, etc. will also be used.
Benefits of Investing in High-Quality Bond Funds--Limited-Term
and GNMA Funds
o Higher Income
Bonds have generally provided a higher income than money
market securities because yield usually increased with
longer maturities. For instance, the yield on the 30-year
Treasury bond usually exceeds the yield on the 1-year
Treasury bill or 5-year Treasury note. However, securities
with longer maturities fluctuate more in price than those
with shorter maturities. Therefore, the investor must
weigh the advantages of higher yields against the
possibility of greater fluctuation in the principal value
of your investment.
o Income Compounding
Investing in bond mutual funds allows investors to benefit
from easy and convenient compounding because you can
PAGE 147
automatically reinvest monthly dividends in additional fund
shares. Each month investors earn interest on a larger
number of shares. Also, reinvesting dividends removes the
temptation to spend the income.
o Broad Diversification
Each share of a mutual fund represents an interest in a
large pool of securities, so even a small investment is
broadly diversified by maturity. Since most bonds trade
efficiently only in very large blocks, mutual funds provide
a degree of diversification that may be difficult for
individual investors to achieve on their own.
o Lower Portfolio Volatility
Investing a portion of one's assets in longer term, high-
quality bonds can help smooth out the fluctuations in your
overall investment results, because bond prices do not
necessarily move with stock prices. Also, bonds usually
have higher income yields than stocks, thus increasing the
total income component of your portfolio. This strategy
should also add stability to overall results, as income is
always a positive component of total return.
o Liquidity
A bond fund can supplement a money market fund or bank
account as a source of capital for unexpected
contingencies. T. Rowe Price fixed-income funds offer you
easy access to money through free checkwriting and
convenient redemption and exchange features. Of course,
the value of a bond fund's shares redeemed through
checkwriting may be worth more or less than their value at
the time of their original purchase.
Suitability
High-quality bond funds are most suitable for the following
objectives: obtaining a higher current income with minimal
credit risk; compounding of income over time; or
diversifying overall investments to reduce volatility.
IRAs--All Funds
An IRA is a long-term investment whose objective is to
accumulate personal savings for retirement. Due to the long-term
nature of the investment, even slight differences in performance
will result in significantly different assets at retirement.
PAGE 148
Mutual funds, with their diversity of choice, can be used for IRA
investments. Generally, individuals may need to adjust their
underlying IRA investments as their time to retirement and
tolerance for risk changes.
Other Features and Benefits--All Funds
Each Fund is a member of the T. Rowe Price Family of Funds
and may help investors achieve various long-term investment
goals, such as investing money for retirement, saving for a down
payment on a home, or paying college costs. To explain how the
Fund could be used to assist investors in planning for these
goals and to illustrate basic principles of investing, various
worksheets and guides prepared by T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
and/or T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc. may be made
available. These currently include: the Asset Mix Worksheet
which is designed to show shareholders how to reduce their
investment risk by developing a diversified investment plan: the
College Planning Guide which discusses various aspects of
financial planning to meet college expenses and assists parents
in projecting the costs of a college education for their
children; the Retirement Planning Kit (also available in a PC
version) which includes a detailed workbook to determine how much
money you may need for retirement and suggests how you might
invest to reach your goal; and the Retirees Financial Guide which
includes a detailed workbook to determine how much money you can
afford to spend and still preserve your purchasing power and
suggest how you might invest to reach your goal. From time to
time, other worksheets and guides may be made available as well.
Of course, an investment in the Fund cannot guarantee that such
goals will be met.
To assist investors in understanding the different returns
and risk characteristics of various investments, the
aforementioned guides will include presentation of historical
returns of various investments using published indices. An
example of this is shown on the next page.
Historical Returns for Different Investments
Annualized returns for periods ended 12/31/94
50 years 20 years 10 years 5 years
Small-Company Stocks 14.4% 20.3% 11.1% 11.8%
Large-Company Stocks 11.9 14.6 14.4 8.7
Foreign Stocks N/A 16.3 17.9 1.8
PAGE 149
Long-Term Corporate Bonds 5.3 10.0 11.6 8.4
Intermediate-Term U.S.
Gov't. Bonds 5.6 9.3 9.4 7.5
Treasury Bills 4.7 7.3 5.8 4.7
U.S. Inflation 4.5 5.5 3.6 3.5
Sources: Ibbotson Associates, Morgan Stanley. Foreign stocks
reflect performance of The Morgan Stanley Capital International
EAFE Index, which includes some 1,000 companies representing the
stock markets of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and the Far
East. This chart is for illustrative purposes only and should
not be considered as performance for, or the annualized return
of, any T. Rowe Price Fund. Past performance does not guarantee
future results.
Also included will be various portfolios demonstrating how these
historical indices would have performed in various combinations
over a specified time period in terms of return. An example of
this is shown on the next page.
Performance of Retirement Portfolios*
Asset Mix Average Annualized Value
Returns 20 Years of
Ended 12/31/94 $10,000
Investment
After Period
________________ __________________ ____________
Nominal Real Best Worst
Portfolio GrowthIncomeSafety ReturnReturn**Year Year
I. Low
Risk 40% 40% 20% 12.4% 6.9% 24.9% 0.1% $ 92,515
II. Moderate
Risk 60% 30% 10% 13.5% 8.1% 29.1% -1.8% $118,217
III. High
Risk 80% 20% 0% 14.5% 9.1% 33.4% -5.2% $149,200
Source: T. Rowe Price Associates; data supplied by Lehman
Brothers, Wilshire Associates, and Ibbotson Associates.
* Based on actual performance for the 20 years ended 1993 of
stocks (85% Wilshire 5000 and 15% Europe, Australia, Far
PAGE 150
East [EAFE] Index), bonds (Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond
Index from 1976-94 and Lehman Brothers Government/Corporate
Bond Index from 1975), and 30-day Treasury bills from
January 1975 through December 1994. Past performance does
not guarantee future results. Figures include changes in
principal value and reinvested dividends and assume the same
asset mix is maintained each year. This exhibit is for
illustrative purposes only and is not representative of the
performance of any T. Rowe Price fund.
** Based on inflation rate of 5.5% for the 20-year period ended
12/31/94.
Insights
From time to time, Insights, a T. Rowe Price publication of
reports on specific investment topics and strategies, may be
included in the Fund's fulfillment kit. Such reports may include
information concerning: calculating taxable gains and losses on
mutual fund transactions, coping with stock market volatility,
benefiting from dollar cost averaging, understanding
international markets, investing in high-yield "junk" bonds,
growth stock investing, conservative stock investing, value
investing, investing in small companies, tax-free investing,
fixed income investing, investing in mortgage-backed securities,
as well as other topics and strategies.
Other Publications
From time to time, in newsletters and other publications
issued by T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc., reference may
be made to economic, financial and political developments in the
U.S. and abroad and their effect on securities prices. Such
discussions may take the form of commentary on these developments
by T. Rowe Price mutual fund portfolio managers and their views
and analysis on how such developments could affect investments in
mutual funds.
Redemptions in Kind
In the unlikely event a shareholder of the Fund were to
receive an in kind redemption of portfolio securities of the
Fund, brokerage fees could be incurred by the shareholder in
subsequent sale of such securities.
Issuance of Fund Shares for Securities
Transactions involving issuance of Fund shares for securities
or assets other than cash will be limited to (1) bona fide
reorganizations; (2) statutory mergers; or (3) other acquisitions
of portfolio securities that: (a) meet the investment objective
PAGE 151
and policies of the Fund; (b) are acquired for investment and not
for resale except in accordance with applicable law; (c) have a
value that is readily ascertainable via listing on or trading in
a recognized United States or international exchange or market;
and (d) are not illiquid.
CAPITAL STOCK
The Charter of the T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. (the
"Corporation") authorizes its Board of Directors to classify and
reclassify any and all shares which are then unissued, including
unissued shares of capital stock into any number of classes or
series, each class or series consisting of such number of shares
and having such designations, such powers, preferences, rights,
qualifications, limitations, and restrictions, as shall be
determined by the Board subject to the Investment Company Act and
other applicable law. The shares of any such additional classes
or series might therefore differ from the shares of the present
class and series of capital stock and from each other as to
preferences, conversions or other rights, voting powers,
restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications or
terms or conditions of redemption, subject to applicable law, and
might thus be superior or inferior to the capital stock or to
other classes or series in various characteristics. The
Corporation's Board of Directors may increase or decrease the
aggregate number of shares of stock or the number of shares of
stock of any class or series that the Funds have authorized to
issue without shareholder approval.
Except to the extent that the Corporation's Board of Directors
might provide by resolution that holders of shares of a
particular class are entitled to vote as a class on specified
matters presented for a vote of the holders of all shares
entitled to vote on such matters, there would be no right of
class vote unless and to the extent that such a right might be
construed to exist under Maryland law. The Charter contains no
provision entitling the holders of the present class of capital
stock to a vote as a class on any matter. Accordingly, the
preferences, rights, and other characteristics attaching to any
class of shares, including the present class of capital stock,
might be altered or eliminated, or the class might be combined
with another class or classes, by action approved by the vote of
the holders of a majority of all the shares of all classes
entitled to be voted on the proposal, without any additional
right to vote as a class by the holders of the capital stock or
of another affected class or classes.
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held
(and fractional votes for fractional shares held) and will vote
PAGE 152
in the election of or removal of directors (to the extent
hereinafter provided) and on other matters submitted to the vote
of shareholders. There will normally be no meetings of
shareholders for the purpose of electing directors unless and
until such time as less than a majority of the directors holding
office have been elected by shareholders, at which time the
directors then in office will call a shareholders' meeting for
the election of directors. Except as set forth above, the
directors shall continue to hold office and may appoint successor
directors. Voting rights are not cumulative, so that the holders
of more than 50% of the shares voting in the election of
directors can, if they choose to do so, elect all the directors
of the Fund, in which event the holders of the remaining shares
will be unable to elect any person as a director. As set forth
in the By-Laws of the Corporation, a special meeting of
shareholders of the Corporation shall be called by the Secretary
of the Corporation on the written request of shareholders
entitled to cast at least 10% of all the votes of the Corporation
entitled to be cast at such meeting. Shareholders requesting
such a meeting must pay to the Corporation the reasonably
estimated costs of preparing and mailing the notice of the
meeting. The Corporation, however, will otherwise assist the
shareholders seeking to hold the special meeting in communicating
to the other shareholders of the Corporation to the extent
required by Section 16(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
FEDERAL AND STATE REGISTRATION OF SHARES
Each Fund's shares are registered for sale under the
Securities Act of 1933, and the Fund or its shares are registered
under the laws of all states which require registration, as well
as the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
LEGAL COUNSEL
Shereff, Friedman, Hoffman, & Goodman, L.L.P., whose address
is 919 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10022, is legal counsel
to the Funds.
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., 217 East Redwood Street,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202, are independent accountants to the
Fund. The financial statements of the Fund for the year ended
October 31, 1994, and the report of independent accountants are
included in the Fund's Annual Report for the year ended October
PAGE 153
31, 1994. A copy of the Annual Report accompanies this Statement
of Additional Information. The following financial statements
and the report of independent accountants appearing in the Annual
Report for the year ended October 31, 1994, are incorporated into
this Statement of Additional Information by reference:
Cash
Reserves Limited-Term
Fund GNMA Fund Bond Fund
________ ___________ ___________
Report of Independent
Accountants 19 19 19
Statement of Net Assets,
October 31, 1994 7-9 13-14 10-12
Statement of Operations,
October 29, 1993 (Commencement
of Operations) to
October 31, 1994 15 15 15
Statement of Changes in Net
Assets, October 29, 1993
(Commencement of Operations)
to October 31, 1994 16 16 16
Notes to Financial Statements,
October 31, 1994 17-18 17-18 17-18
Financial Highlights,
October 29, 1993 (Commencement
of Operations) to
October 31, 1994 18 18 18
RATINGS OF COMMERCIAL PAPER
Moody's Investors Service, Inc. The rating of Prime-1 is the
highest commercial paper rating assigned by Moody's. Among the
factors considered by Moody's in assigning ratings are the
following: valuation of the management of the issuer; economic
evaluation of the issuer's industry or industries and an
appraisal of speculative-type risks which may be inherent in
certain areas; evaluation of the issuer's products in relation to
competition and customer acceptance; liquidity; amount and
quality of long-term debt; trend of earnings over a period of 10
years; financial strength of the parent company and the
relationships which exist with the issuer; and recognition by the
management of obligations which may be present or may arise as a
result of public interest questions and preparations to meet such
obligations. These factors are all considered in determining
whether the commercial paper is rated P1, P2, or P3.
PAGE 154
Standard & Poor's Corporation. Commercial paper rated A (highest
quality) by S&P has the following characteristics: liquidity
ratios are adequate to meet cash requirements; long-term senior
debt is rated "A" or better, although in some cases "BBB" credits
may be allowed. The issuer has access to at least two additional
channels of borrowing. Basic earnings and cash flow have an
upward trend with allowance made for unusual circumstances.
Typically, the issuer's industry is well established and the
issuer has a strong position within the industry. The
reliability and quality of management are unquestioned. The
relative strength or weakness of the above factors determines
whether the issuer's commercial paper is rated A1, A2, or A3.
Fitch Investors Service, Inc.: Fitch 1 - Highest grade.
Commercial paper assigned this rating is regarded as having the
strongest degree of assurance for timely payment. Fitch 2 - Very
good grade. Issues assigned this rating reflect an assurance of
timely payment only slightly less in degree than the strongest
issues.
RATINGS OF CORPORATE DEBT SECURITIES
Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
Aaa - Bonds rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality. They
carry the smallest degree of investment risk.
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.
A - Bonds rated A possess many favorable investment attributes
and are to be considered as upper medium grade obligations.
Baa - Bonds rated Baa are considered as medium grade obligations,
i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured.
Interest payments and principal security appear adequate for the
present but certain protective elements may be lacking or may be
characteristically unreliable over any great length of time.
Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.
Ba - Bonds 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 characterize
bonds in this class.
PAGE 155
B - Bonds rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments of or
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 which are speculative
in a high degree. Such issues are often in default or have other
marked short-comings.
C - Lowest-rated; extremely poor prospects of ever attaining
investment standing.
Standard & Poor's Corporation
AAA - This is the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's to
a debt obligation and indicates an extremely strong capacity to
pay principal and interest.
AA - Bonds rated AA also qualify as high-quality debt
obligations. Capacity to pay principal and interest is very
strong.
A - Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay principal and
interest, although they are somewhat more susceptible to the
adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic
conditions.
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 the A category.
BB, B, CCC, CC - Bonds rated BB, B, CCC, and CC are regarded on
balance, as predominantly speculative with respect to the
issuer's capacity to pay interest and repay principal in
accordance with the terms of the obligation. BB indicates the
lowest degree of speculation and CC the highest degree of
speculation. While such bonds will likely have some quality and
protective characteristics, these are outweighed by large
uncertainties or major risk exposures to adverse conditions.
D - In default.
PAGE 156
Fitch Investors Service, Inc.
AAA - High grade, broadly marketable, suitable for investment by
trustees and fiduciary institutions, and liable to but slight
market fluctuation other than through changes in the money rate.
The prime feature of a "AAA" bond is the showing of earnings
several times or many times interest requirements for such
stability of applicable interest that safety is beyond reasonable
question whenever changes occur in conditions. Other features
may enter, such as a wide margin of protection through
collateral, security or direct lien on specific property.
Sinking funds or voluntary reduction of debt by call or purchase
are often factors, while guarantee or assumption by parties other
than the original debtor may influence their rating.
AA - Of safety virtually beyond question and readily salable.
Their merits are not greatly unlike those of "AAA" class but a
bond so rated may be junior though of strong lien, or the margin
of safety is less strikingly broad. The issue may be the
obligation of a small company, strongly secured, but influenced
as to rating by the lesser financial power of the enterprise and
more local type of market.
PAGE 157
PART C
OTHER INFORMATION
Item 24. Financial Statements and Exhibits
(a) Condensed Financial Information (Financial Highlights) is
included in Part A of the Registration Statement.
Statement of Net Assets, Statement of Operations, and
Statement of Changes in Net Assets are included in the
Annual Report to Shareholders, the pertinent portions of
which are incorporated by reference in Part B of the
Registration Statement.
(b) Exhibits
(1)(a) Articles of Incorporation of Registrant, dated
September 14, 1993 (electronically filed with
initial Registration Statement dated September 17,
1993)
(1)(b) Articles of Amendment, dated October 21, 1993
(electronically filed with Amendment No. 1 dated
October 25, 1993)
(2) By-Laws of Registrant (electronically filed with
initial Registration Statement dated September 17,
1993)
(3) Inapplicable
(4) See Article SIXTH, Capital Stock, Paragraphs (b)-(g)
of the Articles of Incorporation, Article II,
Shareholders, Sections 2.01-2.11 and Article VIII,
Capital Stock, Sections 8.01-8.07 of the Bylaws
filed as Exhibits to this Registration Statement.
(5)(a) Investment Management Agreement between Registrant,
on behalf of T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves
Fund, and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., dated
September 16, 1993 Rowe Price Associates, Inc.,
dated September 16, 1993 (electronically filed with
Amendment No. 1 dated October 25, 1993)
(5)(b) Investment Management Agreement between Registrant,
on behalf of T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond
Fund, and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., dated
September 16, 1993 (electronically filed with
Amendment No. 1 dated October 25, 1993)
PAGE 158
(5)(c) Investment Management Agreement between Registrant,
on behalf of T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund, and T.
Rowe Price Associates, Inc., dated September 16,
1993 (electronically filed with Amendment No. 1
dated October 25, 1993)
(6) Underwriting Agreement between Registrant and T.
Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc., dated
September 16, 1993 (electronically filed with
Amendment No. 1 dated October 25, 1993)
(7) Inapplicable
(8)(a) Custodian Agreement between T. Rowe Price Funds and
State Street Bank and Trust Company, dated September
28, 1987, as amended to June 24, 1988, October 19,
1988, February 22, 1989, July 19, 1989, September
15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990,
July 18, 1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991,
March 6, 1991, September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991,
April 23, 1992, September 2, 1992, November 3, 1992,
December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992, January 28,
1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November
3, 1993, March 1, 1994, April 21, 1994, July 27,
1994, September 21, 1994, November 1, 1994, and
November 2, 1994
(8)(b) Global Custody Agreement between The Chase Manhattan
Bank, N.A. and T. Rowe Price Funds, dated January 3,
1994, as amended April 18, 1994, August 15, 1994,
and November 28, 1994
(9)(a) Transfer Agency and Service Agreement between T.
Rowe Price Services, Inc. and T. Rowe Price Funds
(to be filed by Amendment)
(9)(b) Agreement between T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and
T. Rowe Price Funds for Fund Accounting Services (to
be filed by Amendment)
(9)(c) Agreement between T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan
Services, Inc. and the Taxable Funds (to be filed by
Amendment)
(10) Opinion of Counsel, dated February 14, 1995
(11) Consent of Independent Accountants
(12) Inapplicable
PAGE 159
(13) Inapplicable
(14) Inapplicable
(15) Inapplicable
(16) Inapplicable
(17) Financial Data Schedules for T. Rowe Price Summit
Cash Reserves Fund, T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-
Term Bond Fund, and T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
as of October 31, 1994.
Item 25. Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control With
Registrant.
None.
Item 26. Number of Holders of Securities
As of January 31, 1995, there were 3,143 shareholders in the
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund.
As of January 31, 1995, there were 285 shareholders in the
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund.
As of January 31, 1995, there were 254 shareholders in the
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund.
Item 27. Indemnification
The Registrant maintains comprehensive Errors and Omissions
and Officers and Directors insurance policies written by the
Evanston Insurance Company, The Chubb Group and ICI Mutual.
These policies provide coverage for the named insureds, which
include T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. ("Manager"), Rowe
Price-Fleming International, Inc. ("Price-Fleming"), T. Rowe
Price Investment Services, Inc., T. Rowe Price Services, Inc., T.
Rowe Price Trust Company, T. Rowe Price Stable Asset Management,
Inc., RPF International Bond Fund and thirty-nine other
investment companies, namely, T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund,
Inc., T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price New
Era Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc., T. Rowe
Price Prime Reserve Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Income
Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Exempt Money Fund, Inc., T. Rowe
Price International Funds, Inc., T. Rowe Price Growth & Income
Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Short-Intermediate Fund, Inc.,
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price High
Yield Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free High Yield Fund, Inc.,
PAGE 160
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, T. Rowe Price Equity
Income Fund, T. Rowe Price GNMA Fund, T. Rowe Price Capital
Appreciation Fund, T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free Income Trust, T.
Rowe Price California Tax-Free Income Trust, T. Rowe Price
Science & Technology Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value
Fund, Inc., Institutional International Funds, Inc., T. Rowe
Price U.S. Treasury Funds, Inc., T. Rowe Price Index Trust, Inc.,
T. Rowe Price Spectrum Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund,
Inc., T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price OTC
Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Insured Intermediate Bond
Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc., T. Rowe
Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal
Funds, Inc., T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc., T. Rowe Price
International Series, Inc., T. Rowe Price Fixed Income Series,
Inc., T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc., T. Rowe Price
Value Fund, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Capital Opportunity Fund,
Inc. The Registrant and the thirty-nine investment companies
listed above, with the exception of T. Rowe Price Equity Series,
Inc., T. Rowe Price Fixed Income Series, Inc., T. Rowe Price
International Series, Inc. and Institutional International Funds,
Inc., will be collectively referred to as the Price Funds. The
investment manager for the Price Funds, including T. Rowe Price
Equity Series, Inc. and T. Rowe Price Fixed Income Series, Inc.,
is the Manager. Price-Fleming is the manager to T. Rowe Price
International Funds, Inc., T. Rowe Price International Series,
Inc. and Institutional International Funds, Inc. and is 50% owned
by TRP Finance, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager,
25% owned by Copthall Overseas Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary
of Robert Fleming Holdings Limited, and 25% owned by Jardine
Fleming Holdings Limited. In addition to the corporate insureds,
the policies also cover the officers, directors, and employees of
each of the named insureds. The premium is allocated among the
named corporate insureds in accordance with the provisions of
Rule 17d-1(d)(7) under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
General. The Charter of the Corporation provides that
to the fullest extent permitted by Maryland or federal law,
no director of officer of the Corporation shall be
personally liable to the Corporation or the holders of
Shares for money damages and each director and officer shall
be indemnified by the Corporation; provided, however, that
nothing herein shall be deemed to protect any director or
officer of the Corporation against any liability to the
Corporation of the holders of Shares to which such director
or officer would otherwise be subject by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless
disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his or
her office.
PAGE 161
Article X, Section 10.01 of the Registrant's By-Laws
provides as follows:
Section 10.01 Indemnification and Payment of Expenses
in Advance. The Corporation shall indemnify any individual
("Indemnitee") who is a present or former director, officer,
employee, or agent of the Corporation, or who is or has been
serving at the request of the Corporation as a director,
officer, employee or agent of another corporation,
partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, who,
by reason of his position was, is, or is threatened to be
made a party to any threatened, pending, or completed
action, suit, or proceeding, whether civil, criminal,
administrative, or investigative (hereinafter collectively
referred to as a "Proceeding") against any judgments,
penalties, fines, settlements, and reasonable expenses
(including attorneys' fees) incurred by such Indemnitee in
connection with any Proceeding, to the fullest extent that
such indemnification may be lawful under applicable Maryland
law, as from time to time amended. The Corporation shall
pay any reasonable expenses so incurred by such Indemnitee
in defending a Proceeding in advance of the final
disposition thereof to the fullest extent that such advance
payment may be lawful under applicable Maryland law, as from
time to time amended. Subject to any applicable limitations
and requirements set forth in the Corporation's Articles of
Incorporation and in these By-Laws, any payment of
indemnification or advance of expenses shall be made in
accordance with the procedures set forth in applicable
Maryland law, as from time to time amended.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing herein shall
protect or purport to protect any Indemnitee against any
liability to which he would otherwise be subject by reason
of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or
reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
his office ("Disabling Conduct").
Anything in this Article X to the contrary
notwithstanding, no indemnification shall be made by the
Corporation to any Indemnitee unless:
(a) there is a final decision on the merits by a court or
other body before whom the Proceeding was brought that
the Indemnitee was not liable by reason of Disabling
Conduct; or
(b) in the absence of such a decision, there is a
reasonable determination, based upon a review of the
facts, that the Indemnitee was not liable by reason of
PAGE 162
Disabling Conduct, which determination shall be made
by:
(i) the vote of a majority of a quorum of directors
who are neither "interested persons" of the
Corporation as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, nor parties to the
Proceeding; or
(ii) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.
Anything in this Article X to the contrary
notwithstanding, any advance of expenses by the Corporation
to any Indemnitee shall be made only upon the undertaking by
such Indemnitee to repay the advance unless it is ultimately
determined that such Indemnitee is entitled to
indemnification as above provided, and only if one of the
following conditions is met:
(a) the Indemnitee provides a security for his
undertaking; or
(b) the Corporation shall be insured against losses
arising by reason of any lawful advances; or
(c) there is a determination, based on a review of
readily available facts, that there is reason to
believe that the Indemnitee will ultimately be
found entitled to indemnification, which
determination shall be made by:
(i) a majority of a quorum of directors who are
neither "interested persons" of the
Corporation as defined in Section 2(a)(19)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940, nor
parties to the Proceeding; or
(ii) an independent legal counsel in a written
opinion.
Section 10.02 of the Registrant's By-Laws provides as
follows:
Section 10.02 Insurance of Officers, Directors,
Employees and Agents. To the fullest extent permitted by
applicable Maryland law and by Section 17(h) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as from time to time
amended, the Corporation may purchase and maintain insurance
on behalf of any person who is or was a director, officer,
employee, or agent of the Corporation, or who is or was
PAGE 163
serving at the request of the Corporation as a director,
officer, employee, or agent of another corporation,
partnership, joint venture, trust, or other enterprise,
against any liability asserted against him and incurred by
him in or arising out of his position, whether or not the
Corporation would have the power to indemnify him against
such liability.
Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the
Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to directors,
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 director,
officer or controlling person of the registrant in the
successful defense of any action, suit proceeding) is
asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in
connection with the securities being registered, the
registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the
matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to
a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification by it is against public policy as
expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final
adjudication of such issue.
Item 28. Business and Other Connections of Investment Manager.
Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc. ("Price-Fleming"), a
Maryland corporation, is a corporate joint venture 50% owned by
TRP Finance, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager.
Price-Fleming was organized in 1979 to provide investment counsel
service with respect to foreign securities for institutional
investors in the United States. In addition to managing private
counsel client accounts, Price-Fleming also sponsors registered
investment companies which invest in foreign securities, serves
as general partner of RPFI International Partners, Limited
Partnership, and provides investment advice to the T. Rowe Price
Trust Company, trustee of the International Common Trust
Fund.
T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc. ("Investment Services"),
a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, is a Maryland
corporation organized in 1980 for the purpose of acting as the
principal underwriter and distributor for the Price Funds.
Investment Services is registered as a broker-dealer under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the National
PAGE 164
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. In 1984, Investment
Services expanded its activities to include a discount brokerage
service.
TRP Distribution, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Investment
Services, is a Maryland corporation organized in 1991. It was
organized for and engages in the sale of certain investment
related products prepared by Investment Services.
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc., was organized in 1981
for the purpose of making charitable contributions to religious,
charitable, scientific, literary and educational organizations.
The Foundation (which is not a subsidiary of the Manager) is
funded solely by contributions from the Manager and income from
investments.
T. Rowe Price Services, Inc. ("Price Services"), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Manager, is a Maryland corporation organized in
1982 and is registered as a transfer agent under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. Price Services provides transfer agent,
dividend disbursing, and certain other services, including
shareholder services, to the Price Funds.
T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services, Inc. ("RPS"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, was incorporated in
Maryland in 1991 and is registered as a transfer agent under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. RPS provides administrative,
recordkeeping, and subaccounting services to administrators of
employee benefit plans.
T. Rowe Price Trust Company ("Trust Company"), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Manager, is a Maryland-chartered limited
purpose trust company, organized in 1983 for the purpose of
providing fiduciary services. The Trust Company serves as
trustee/custodian for employee benefit plans, individual
retirement accounts and common trust funds and as
trustee/investment agent for a few trusts.
T. Rowe Price Threshold Fund Associates, Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Manager, is a Maryland corporation organized in
1994 and serves as the general partner of T. Rowe Price Threshold
Fund III, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership established in
1994.
T. Rowe Price Threshold Fund II, L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership, was organized in 1986 by the Manager, and invests in
private financings of small companies with high growth potential;
the Manager is the General Partner of the partnership.
PAGE 165
T. Rowe Price Threshold Fund III, L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership was organized in 1994 by the Manager, and invests in
private financings of small companies with high growth potential;
T. Rowe Price Threshold Fund Associates, Inc. is the General
Partner of this partnership.
RPFI International Partners, Limited Partnership, is a Delaware
limited partnership organized in 1985 for the purpose of
investing in a diversified group of small and medium-sized
non-U.S. companies. Price-Fleming is the general partner of this
partnership, and certain institutional investors, including
advisory clients of Price-Fleming are its limited partners.
T. Rowe Price Real Estate Group, Inc. ("Real Estate Group"), is a
Maryland corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager
established in 1986 to provide real estate services.
Subsidiaries of Real Estate Group are: T. Rowe Price Realty
Income Fund I Management, Inc., a Maryland corporation (General
Partner of T. Rowe Price Realty Income Fund I, A No-Load Limited
Partnership), T. Rowe Price Realty Income Fund II Management,
Inc., a Maryland corporation (General Partner of T. Rowe Price
Realty Income Fund II, America's Sales-Commission-Free Real
Estate Limited Partnership), T. Rowe Price Realty Income Fund III
Management, Inc., a Maryland corporation (General Partner of T.
Rowe Price Realty Income Fund III, America's
Sales-Commission-Free Real Estate Limited Partnership, a Delaware
limited partnership), and T. Rowe Price Realty Income Fund IV
Management, Inc., a Maryland corporation (General Partner of T.
Rowe Price Realty Income Fund IV, America's Sales-Commission-Free
Real Estate Limited Partnership). Real Estate Group serves as
investment manager to T. Rowe Price Renaissance Fund, Ltd., A
Sales-Commission-Free Real Estate Investment, established in 1989
as a Maryland corporation which qualifies as a REIT.
T. Rowe Price Stable Asset Management, Inc. ("Stable Asset
Management") is a Maryland corporation organized in 1988 as a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager. Stable Asset Management,
which is registered as an investment adviser under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, specializes in the management of investment
portfolios which seek stable and consistent investment returns
through the use of guaranteed investment contracts, bank
investment contracts, structured investment contracts, and
short-term fixed-income securities.
T. Rowe Price Recovery Fund Associates, Inc., a Maryland
corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager
organized in 1988 for the purpose of serving as the General
Partner of T. Rowe Price Recovery Fund, L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership which invests in financially distressed companies.
PAGE 166
T. Rowe Price (Canada), Inc. ("TRP Canada") is a Maryland
corporation organized in 1988 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Manager. This entity is registered as an investment adviser
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, and as a non-Canadian
Adviser under the Securities Act (Ontario). TRP Canada provides
certain services to the RPF International Bond Fund, a trust
(whose shares are sold in Canada), and Price-Fleming serves as
investment adviser to TRP Canada.
Since 1983, the Manager has organized several distinct Maryland
limited partnerships, which are informally called the Pratt
Street Ventures partnerships, for the purpose of acquiring
interests in growth-oriented businesses.
Tower Venture, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, is
a Maryland corporation organized in 1989 for the purpose of
serving as a general partner of 100 East Pratt St., L.P., a
Maryland limited partnership whose limited partners also include
the Manager. The purpose of the partnership is to further
develop and improve the property at 100 East Pratt Street, the
site of the Manager's headquarters, through the construction of
additional office, retail and parking space.
TRP Suburban, Inc. is a Maryland corporation organized in 1990 as
a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager. TRP Suburban has
entered into agreements with McDonogh School and
CMANE-McDonogh-Rowe Limited Partnership to construct an office
building in Owings Mills, Maryland, which houses the Manager's
transfer agent, plan administrative services, retirement plan
services and operations support functions.
TRP Finance, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager,
and TRP Finance MRT, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of TRP
Finance, Inc., are Delaware corporations organized in 1990 to
manage certain passive corporate investments and other intangible
assets. TRP Finance MRT, Inc. was dissolved on October 4,
1993.
T. Rowe Price Strategic Partners Fund, L.P. is a Delaware limited
partnership organized in 1990 for the purpose of investing in
small public and private companies seeking capital for expansion
or undergoing a restructuring of ownership. The general partner
of the Fund is T. Rowe Price Strategic Partners, L.P., a Delaware
limited partnership whose general partner is T. Rowe Price
Strategic Partners Associates, Inc., ("Strategic Associates"), a
Maryland corporation which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Manager. Strategic Associates also serves as the general partner
of T. Rowe Price Strategic Partners II, L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership established in 1992, which in turn serves as general
PAGE 167
partner of T. Rowe Price Strategic Partners Fund II, L.P., a
Delaware limited partnership organized in 1992.
Listed below are the directors of the Manager who have other
substantial businesses, professions, vocations, or employment
aside from that of Director of the Manager:
JAMES E. HALBKAT, JR., Director of the Manager. Mr. Halbkat is
President of U.S. Monitor Corporation, a provider of public
response systems. Mr. Halbkat's address is: P.O. Box 23109,
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina 29925.
JOHN W. ROSENBLUM, Director of the Manager. Mr. Rosenblum is the
Tayloe Murphy Professor at the University of Virginia, and a
director of: Chesapeake Corporation, a manufacturer of paper
products, Cadmus Communications Corp., a provider of printing and
communication services; Comdial Corporation, a manufacturer of
telephone systems for businesses; and Cone Mills Corporation, a
textiles producer. Mr. Rosenblum's address is: P.O. Box 6550,
Charlottesville, Virginia 22906.
ROBERT L. STRICKLAND, Director of the Manager. Mr. Strickland
is Chairman of Lowe's Companies, Inc., a retailer of specialty
home supplies and a Director of Hannaford Bros., Co., a food
retailer. Mr. Strickland's address is 604 Two Piedmont Plaza
Building, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27104.
PHILIP C. WALSH, Director of the Manager. Mr. Walsh is a
Consultant to Cyprus Amax Minerals Company, Englewood, Colorado,
and a director of Piedmont Mining Company, Inc., Charlotte, North
Carolina. Mr. Walsh's address is: 200 East 66th Street, Apt. A-
1005, New York, New York 10021.
With the exception of Messrs. Halbkat, Rosenblum, Strickland, and
Walsh, all of the directors of the Manager are employees of the
Manager.
George J. Collins, who is Chief Executive Officer, President, and
a Managing Director of the Manager, is a Director of
Price-Fleming.
George A. Roche, who is Chief Financial Officer and a Managing
Director of the Manager, is a Vice President and a Director of
Price-Fleming.
M. David Testa, who is a Managing Director of the Manager, is
Chairman of the Board of Price-Fleming.
PAGE 168
Henry H. Hopkins, Charles P. Smith, and Peter Van Dyke, who are
Managing Directors of the Manager, are Vice Presidents of
Price-Fleming.
Robert P. Campbell, Roger L. Fiery, III, Robert C. Howe, Veena
A. Kutler, Heather R. Landon, Nancy M. Morris, George A.
Murnaghan, William F. Wendler, II, and Edward A. Wiese, who are
Vice Presidents of the Manager, are Vice Presidents of
Price-Fleming.
Michael J. Conelius, who is an Assistant Vice President of the
Manager, is a Vice President of Price-Fleming.
Kimberly A. Haker, an employee of the Manager, is Assistant Vice
President and Controller of Price-Fleming.
Alvin M. Younger, Jr., who is a Managing Director and the
Secretary and Treasurer of the Manager, is Secretary and
Treasurer of Price-Fleming.
Nolan L. North, who is a Vice President and Assistant Treasurer
of the Manager, is Assistant Treasurer of Price-Fleming.
Leah P. Holmes, who is an Assistant Vice President of the
Manager, is a Vice President of Price-Fleming.
Barbara A. Van Horn, who is Assistant Secretary of the Manager,
is Assistant Secretary of Price-Fleming.
Certain directors and officers of the Manager are also officers
and/or directors of one or more of the Price Funds and/or one or
more of the affiliated entities listed herein.
See also "Management of Fund," in Registrant's Statement of
Additional Information.
Item 29. Principal Underwriters.
(a) The principal underwriter for the Registrant is
Investment Services. Investment Services acts as the principal
underwriter for the other thirty-nine Price Funds. Investment
Services, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, is registered
as a broker-dealer under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
is a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. Investment Services was formed for the limited purpose of
distributing the shares of the Price Funds and will not engage in
the general securities business. Since the Price Funds are sold
on a no-load basis, Investment Services does not receive any
commission or other compensation for acting as principal
underwriter.
PAGE 169
(b) The address of each of the directors and officers of
Investment Services listed below is 100 East Pratt Street,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202.
Positions and Positions and
Name and Principal Offices With Offices With
Business Address Underwriter Registrant
__________________ _____________________ _____________
James S. Riepe President and Vice President
Director and Director
Henry H. Hopkins Vice President and Vice President
Director
Charles E. Vieth Vice President and None
Director
Mark E. Rayford Director None
Patricia M. Archer Vice President None
Edward C. Bernard Vice President None
Joseph C. Bonasorte Vice President None
Meredith C. Callanan Vice President None
Laura H. Chasney Vice President None
Victoria C. Collins Vice President None
Christopher W. Dyer Vice President None
Forrest R. Foss Vice President None
Patricia O'Neil Goodyear Vice President None
James W. Graves Vice President None
Andrea G. Griffin Vice President None
David J. Healy Vice President None
Joseph P. Healy Vice President None
Walter J. Helmlinger Vice President None
Eric G. Knauss Vice President None
Douglas G. Kremer Vice President None
Sharon Renae Krieger Vice President None
Keith Wayne Lewis Vice President None
David L. Lyons Vice President None
Sarah McCafferty Vice President None
Maurice Albert Minerbi Vice President None
Nancy M. Morris Vice President None
George A. Murnaghan Vice President None
Steven Ellis Norwitz Vice President None
Kathleen M. O'Brien Vice President None
Pamela D. Preston Vice President None
Lucy Beth Robins Vice President None
John Richard Rockwell Vice President None
Monica R. Tucker Vice President None
William F. Wendler, II Vice President None
Terri L. Westren Vice President None
Jane F. White Vice President None
Thomas R. Woolley Vice President None
PAGE 170
Alvin M. Younger, Jr. Secretary and Treasurer None
Mark S. Finn Controller None
Richard J. Barna Assistant Vice President None
Catherine L. Berkenkemper Assistant Vice President None
Ronae M. Brock Assistant Vice President None
Brenda E. Buhler Assistant Vice President None
Patricia S. Butcher Assistant Vice President Assistant
Secretary
John A. Galateria Assistant Vice President None
Janelyn A. Healey Assistant Vice President None
Keith J. Langrehr Assistant Vice President None
C. Lillian Matthews Assistant Vice President None
Janice D. McCrory Assistant Vice President None
Sandra J. McHenry Assistant Vice President None
JeanneMarie B. Patella Assistant Vice President None
Kristin E. Seeberger Assistant Vice President None
Arthur J. Silber Assistant Vice President None
Nolan L. North Assistant Vice President None
Barbara A. VanHorn Assistant Secretary None
(c) Not applicable. Investment Services will not receive
any compensation with respect to its activities as underwriter
for the Price Funds since the Price Funds are sold on a no-load
basis.
Item 30. Location of Accounts and Records.
All accounts, books, and other documents required to be
maintained by T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. under Section
31(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the rules
thereunder will be maintained by T. Rowe Price Summit Funds,
Inc., at its offices at 100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore,
Maryland 21202. Transfer, dividend disbursing, and
shareholder service activities are performed by T. Rowe
Price Services, Inc., at 100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore,
Maryland 21202. Custodian activities for T. Rowe Price
Summit Funds, Inc. are performed at State Street Bank and
Trust Company's Service Center (State Street South), 1776
Heritage Drive, Quincy, Massachusetts 02171. Custody of
Limited-Term Bond Fund series portfolio securities which are
purchased outside the United States is maintained by The
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., London in its foreign branches
or with other U.S. banks. The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.,
London is located at Woolgate House, Coleman Street, London
EC2P 2HD, England.
Item 31. Management Services.
The Registrant is not a party to any management-related
service contract, other than as set forth in the Prospectus.
PAGE 171
Item 32. Undertakings.
(a) Each series of the Registrant agrees to furnish, upon
request and without charge, a copy of its latest Annual
Report to each person to whom as prospectus is
delivered.
PAGE 172
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended,
the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the requirements
for effectiveness of this Registration Statement pursuant to Rule
485(b) and the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this
Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Baltimore,
State of Maryland, this 16th day of February, 1995.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
/s/George J. Collins
By: George J. Collins,
Chairman of the Board
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended, this Registration Statement has been signed below by
the following persons in the capacities and on the dates
indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
_________ ______ _____
/s/George J. Collins Chairman of the Board February 16, 1995
George J. Collins (Principal Executive Officer)
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu Treasurer February 16, 1995
Carmen F. Deyesu (Principal Financial Officer)
/s/Robert P. Black Director February 16, 1995
Robert P. Black
/s/Calvin W. Burnett Director February 16, 1995
Calvin W. Burnett
/s/Anthony W. Deering Director February 16, 1995
Anthony W. Deering
/s/F. Pierce Linaweaver Director February 16, 1995
F. Pierce Linaweaver
/s/James S. Riepe Vice President and February 16, 1995
James S. Riepe Director
/s/John G. Schreiber Director February 16, 1995
John G. Schreiber
/s/Anne Marie Whittemore Director February 16, 1995
Anne Marie Whittemore
The Custodian Agreement dated September 28, 1987, as
amended, between State Street Bank and Trust Company and T. Rowe
Price Funds should be inserted here.
PAGE 1
CUSTODIAN CONTRACT
Between
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
and
EACH OF THE PARTIES INDICATED
ON APPENDIX A
DATED: SEPTEMBER 28, 1987
FRF 07/87
PAGE 2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Employment of Custodian and Property to be Held By It1
2. Duties of the Custodian with Respect to Property of the Fund
Held by the Custodian in the United States. . . 2
2.1 Holding Securities . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2.2 Delivery of Securities . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1) Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2) Repurchase Agreement . . . . . . . . . . 2
3) Securities System . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
4) Tender Offer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
5) Redemption by Issuer . . . . . . . . . . 3
6) Transfer to Issuer, Nominee, Exchange . . 3
7) Sale to Broker . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
8) Exchange or Conversion . . . . . . . . . 4
9) Warrants, Rights . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
10) Loans of Securities . . . . . . . . . . . 4
11) Borrowings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
12) Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
13) Futures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
14) In-Kind Distributions . . . . . . . . . . 5
15) Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
16) Type of Payment . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.3 Registration of Securities . . . . . . . . . 6
2.4 Bank Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.5 Sale of Shares and Availability of Federal Funds7
2.6 Collection of Income, Dividends . . . . . . . 7
2.7 Payment of Fund Monies . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1) Purchases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2) Exchanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3) Redemptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
4) Expense and Liability . . . . . . . . . . 9
5) Dividends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6) Short Sale Dividend . . . . . . . . . . . 10
7) Loan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
8) Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.8 Liability for Payment in Advance of Receipt of
Securities Purchased . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.9 Appointment of Agents . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.10 Deposit of Securities in Securities System . 10
1) Account of Custodian . . . . . . . . . . 11
2) Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3) Payment of Fund Monies, Delivery of
Securities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4) Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5) Annual Certificate . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6) Indemnification . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
2.11 Fund Assets Held in the Custodian's Direct Paper
System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
2.12 Segregated Account . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
PAGE 3
2.13 Ownership Certificates for Tax Purposes . . . 15
2.14 Proxies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
2.15 Communications Relating to Fund Portfolio
Securities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
2.16 Reports to Fund by Independent Public
Accountants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
3. Duties of the Custodian with Respect to Property
of the Fund Held Outside of the United States . 16
3.1 Appointment of Foreign Sub-Custodians . . . . 16
3.2 Assets to be Held . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.3 Foreign Securities Depositories . . . . . . . 17
3.4 Segregation of Securities . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.5 Access of Independent Accountants of the Fund 17
3.6 Reports by Custodian . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.7 Transactions in Foreign Assets of the Fund . 18
3.8 Responsibility of Custodian, Sub-Custodian and
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.9 Monitoring Responsibilities . . . . . . . . . 19
3.10 Branches of U.S. Banks . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4. Payments for Repurchases or Redemptions and Sales of
Shares of the Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
5. Proper Instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6. Actions Permitted Without Express Authority . . . 21
7. Evidence of Authority, Reliance on Documents . . . 21
8. Duties of Custodian with Respect to the Books of
Account and Calculations of Net Asset Value and
Net Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9. Records, Inventory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
10. Opinion of Fund's Independent Accountant . . . . . 23
11. Compensation of Custodian . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
12. Responsibility of Custodian . . . . . . . . . . . 23
13. Effective Period, Termination and Amendment . . . 25
14. Successor Custodian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
15. Interpretive and Additional Provisions . . . . . . 28
16. Notice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
17. Bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
18. Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
19. Exemption from Liens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
20. Massachusetts Law to Apply . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
21. Prior Contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
22. The Parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
23. Governing Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
24. Subcustodian Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
25. Directors and Trustees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
26. Massachusetts Business Trust . . . . . . . . . . . 30
27. Successors of Parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
PAGE 4
CUSTODIAN CONTRACT
This Contract by and between State Street Bank and Trust
Company, a Massachusetts trust company, having its principal
place of business at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts,
02110 (hereinafter called the "Custodian"), and each fund which
is listed on Appendix A (as such Appendix may be amended from
time to time) and which evidences its agreement to be bound
hereby by executing a copy of this Contract (each such fund
individually hereinafter called the "Fund," whose definition may
be found in Section 22),
WITNESSETH: That in consideration of the mutual covenants
and agreements hereinafter contained, the parties hereto agree as
follows:
1. Employment of Custodian and Property to be Held by It
The Fund hereby employs the Custodian as the custodian of
its assets, including securities it desires to be held in places
within the United States ("domestic securities") and securities
it desires to be held outside the United States ("foreign
securities") pursuant to the Governing Documents of the Fund.
The Fund agrees to deliver to the Custodian all securities and
cash now or hereafter owned or acquired by it, and all payments
of income, payments of principal or capital distributions
received by it with respect to all securities owned by the Fund
from time to time, and the cash consideration received by it for
such new or treasury shares of capital stock ("Shares") of the
Fund as may be issued or sold from time to time. The Custodian
shall not be responsible for any property of the Fund held or
received by the Fund and not delivered to the Custodian.
With respect to domestic securities, upon receipt of "Proper
Instructions" (within the meaning of Article 5), the Custodian
shall from time to time employ one or more sub-custodians located
in the United States, but only in accordance with an applicable
vote by the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund, and provided
that the Custodian shall have no more or less responsibility or
liability to the Fund on account of any actions or omissions of
any sub-custodian so employed than any such sub-custodian has to
the Custodian, and further provided that the Custodian shall not
release the sub-custodian from any responsibility or liability
unless mutually agreed upon by the parties in writing. With
respect to foreign securities and other assets of the Fund held
outside the United States, the Custodian shall employ Chase
Manhattan Bank, N.A., as a sub-custodian for the Fund in
accordance with the provisions of Article 3.
2. Duties of the Custodian with Respect to Property of the Fund
Held By the Custodian in the United States
2.1 Holding Securities. The Custodian shall hold and
physically segregate for the account of the Fund all
PAGE 5
non-cash property, to be held by it in the United States,
including all domestic securities owned by the Fund, other
than (a) securities which are maintained pursuant to Section
2.10 in a clearing agency which acts as a securities
depository or in a book-entry system authorized by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, collectively referred to herein
as "Securities System," and (b) commercial paper of an
issuer for which the Custodian acts as issuing and paying
agent ("Direct Paper") which is deposited and/or maintained
in the Direct Paper System of the Custodian pursuant to
Section 2.11.
2.2 Delivery of Securities. The Custodian shall release
and deliver domestic securities owned by the Fund held by
the Custodian or in a Securities System account of the
Custodian or in the Custodian's Direct Paper book entry
system account ("Direct Paper System Account") only upon
receipt of Proper Instructions, which may be continuing
instructions when deemed appropriate by mutual agreement of
the parties, and only in the following cases:
1) Sale. Upon sale of such securities for the
account of the Fund and receipt of payment
therefor;
2) Repurchase Agreement. Upon the receipt of payment
in connection with any repurchase agreement
related to such securities entered into by the
Fund;
3) Securities System. In the case of a sale effected
through a Securities System, in accordance with
the provisions of Section 2.10 hereof;
4) Tender Offer. To the depository agent or other
receiving agent in connection with tender or other
similar offers for portfolio securities of the
Fund;
5) Redemption by Issuer. To the issuer thereof or
its agent when such securities are called,
redeemed, retired or otherwise become payable;
provided that, in any such case, the cash or other
consideration is to be delivered to the Custodian;
6) Transfer to Issuer, Nominee. Exchange. To the
issuer thereof, or its agent, for transfer into
the name of the Fund or into the name of any
nominee or nominees of the Custodian or into the
name or nominee name of any agent appointed
pursuant to Section 2.9 or into the name or
nominee name of any sub-custodian appointed
pursuant to Article 1; or for exchange for a
different number of bonds, certificates or other
evidence representing the same aggregate face
amount or number of units and bearing the same
interest rate, maturity date and call provisions,
PAGE 6
if any; provided that, in any such case, the new
securities are to be delivered to the Custodian;
7) Sale to Broker or Dealer. Upon the sale of such
securities for the account of the Fund, to the
broker or its clearing agent or dealer, against a
receipt, for examination in accordance with
"street delivery" custom; provided that in any
such case, the Custodian shall have no
responsibility or liability for any loss arising
from the delivery of such securities prior to
receiving payment for such securities except as
may arise from the Custodian's failure to act in
accordance with its duties as set forth in
Section 12.
8) Exchange or Conversion. For exchange or
conversion pursuant to any plan of merger,
consolidation, recapitalization, reorganization,
split-up of shares, change of par value or
readjustment of the securities of the issuer of
such securities, or pursuant to provisions for
conversion contained in such securities, or
pursuant to any deposit agreement provided that,
in any such case, the new securities and cash, if
any, are to be delivered to the Custodian;
9) Warrants, Rights. In the case of warrants, rights
or similar securities, the surrender thereof in
the exercise of such warrants, rights or similar
securities or the surrender of interim receipts or
temporary securities for definitive securities;
provided that, in any such case, the new
securities and cash, if any, are to be delivered
to the Custodian;
10) Loans of Securities. For delivery in connection
with any loans of securities made by the Fund, but
only against receipt of adequate collateral as
agreed upon from time to time by the Custodian and
the Fund, which may be in the form of cash,
obligations issued by the United States
government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or
such other property as mutually agreed by the
parties, except that in connection with any loans
for which collateral is to be credited to the
Custodian's account in the book-entry system
authorized by the U.S. Department of the Treasury,
the Custodian will not be held liable or
responsible for the delivery of securities owned
by the Fund prior to the receipt of such
collateral, unless the Custodian fails to act in
accordance with its duties set forth in
Article 12;
PAGE 7
11) Borrowings. For delivery as security in
connection with any borrowings by the Fund
requiring a pledge of assets by the Fund, but only
against receipt of amounts borrowed, except where
additional collateral is required to secure a
borrowing already made, subject to Proper
Instructions, further securities may be released
for that purpose;
12) Options. For delivery in accordance with the
provisions of any agreement among the Fund, the
Custodian and a broker-dealer registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange
Act") and a member of The National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), relating to
compliance with the rules of The Options Clearing
Corporation, any registered national securities
exchange, any similar organization or
organizations, or the Investment Company Act of
1940, regarding escrow or other arrangements in
connection with transactions by the Fund;
13) Futures. For delivery in accordance with the
provisions of any agreement among the Fund, the
Custodian, and a Futures Commission Merchant
registered under the Commodity Exchange Act,
relating to compliance with the rules of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission and/or any
Contract Market, any similar organization or
organizations, or the Investment Company Act of
1940, regarding account deposits in connection
with transactions by the Fund;
14) In-Kind Distributions. Upon receipt of
instructions from the transfer agent ("Transfer
Agent") for the Fund, for delivery to such
Transfer Agent or to the holders of shares in
connection with distributions in kind, as may be
described from time to time in the Fund's
currently effective prospectus and statement of
additional information ("prospectus"), in
satisfaction of requests by holders of Shares for
repurchase or redemption;
15) Miscellaneous. For any other proper corporate
purpose, but only upon receipt of, in addition to
Proper Instructions, a certified copy of a
resolution of the Board of Directors/Trustees or
of the Executive Committee signed by an officer of
the Fund and certified by the Secretary or an
Assistant Secretary, specifying the securities to
be delivered, setting forth the purpose for which
such delivery is to be made, declaring such
PAGE 8
purpose to be a proper corporate purpose, and
naming the person or persons to whom delivery of
such securities shall be made; and
16) Type of Payment. In any or all of the above
cases, payments to the Fund shall be made in cash,
by a certified check upon or a treasurer's or
cashier's check of a bank, by effective bank wire
transfer through the Federal Reserve Wire System
or, if appropriate, outside of the Federal Reserve
Wire System and subsequent credit to the Fund's
Custodian account, or, in case of delivery through
a stock clearing company, by book-entry credit by
the stock clearing company in accordance with the
then current street custom, or such other form of
payment as may be mutually agreed by the parties,
in all such cases collected funds to be promptly
credited to the Fund.
2.3 Registration of Securities. Domestic securities held
by the Custodian (other than bearer securities) shall be
registered in the name of the Fund or in the name of any
nominee of the Fund or of any nominee of the Custodian which
nominee shall be assigned exclusively to the Fund, unless
the Fund has authorized in writing the appointment of a
nominee to be used in common with other registered
investment companies having the same investment adviser as
the Fund, or in the name or nominee name of any agent
appointed pursuant to Section 2.9 or in the name or nominee
name of any sub-custodian appointed pursuant to Article 1.
All securities accepted by the Custodian on behalf of the
Fund under the terms of this Contract shall be in "street
name" or other good delivery form.
2.4 Bank Accounts. The Custodian shall open and maintain a
separate bank account or accounts in the United States in
the name of the Fund, subject only to draft or order by the
Custodian acting pursuant to the terms of this Contract, and
shall hold in such account or accounts, subject to the
provisions hereof all cash received by it from or for the
account of the Fund, other than cash maintained by the Fund
in a bank account established and used in accordance with
Rule 17f-3 under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Funds
held by the Custodian for the Fund may be deposited for the
Fund's credit in the Banking Department of the Custodian or
in such other banks or trust companies as the Custodian may
in its discretion deem necessary or desirable; provided,
however, that every such bank or trust company shall be
qualified to act as a custodian under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 and that each such bank or trust company and the
funds to be deposited with each such bank or trust company
shall be approved by vote of a majority of the Board of
Directors/Trustees of the Fund. Such funds shall be
PAGE 9
deposited by the Custodian in its capacity as Custodian and
shall be withdrawable by the Custodian only in that
capacity.
2.5 Sale of Shares and Availability of Federal Funds. Upon
mutual agreement between the Fund and the Custodian, the
Custodian shall, upon the receipt of Proper Instructions,
make federal funds available to the Fund as of specified
times agreed upon from time to time by the Fund and the
Custodian in the amount of checks received in payment for
Shares of the Fund which are deposited into the Fund's
account.
2.6 Collection of Income, Dividends. The Custodian shall
collect on a timely basis all income and other payments with
respect to United States registered securities held
hereunder to which the Fund shall be entitled either by law
or pursuant to custom in the securities business, and shall
collect on a timely basis all income and other payments with
respect to United States bearer securities if, on the date
of payment by the issuer, such securities are held by the
Custodian or its agent thereof and shall credit such income
or other payments, as collected, to the Fund's custodian
account. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
the Custodian shall detach and present for payment all
coupons and other income items requiring presentation as and
when they become due and shall collect interest when due on
securities held hereunder. The Custodian will also receive
and collect all stock dividends, rights and other items of
like nature as and when they become due or payable. Income
due the Fund on United States securities loaned pursuant to
the provisions of Section 2.2 (10) shall be the
responsibility of the Fund. The Custodian will have no duty
or responsibility in connection therewith, other than to
provide the Fund with such information or data as may be
necessary to assist the Fund in arranging for the timely
delivery to the Custodian of the income to which the Fund is
properly entitled.
2.7 Payment of Fund Monies. Upon receipt of Proper
Instructions,
which may be continuing instructions when deemed appropriate
by mutual agreement of the parties, the Custodian shall pay
out monies of the Fund in the following cases only:
1) Purchases. Upon the purchase of domestic
securities, options, futures contracts or options
on futures contracts for the account of the Fund
but only (a) against the delivery of such
securities, or evidence of title to such options,
futures contracts or options on futures contracts,
to the Custodian (or any bank, banking firm or
trust company doing business in the United States
or abroad which is qualified under the Investment
PAGE 10
Company Act of 1940, as amended, to act as a
custodian and has been designated by the Custodian
as its agent for this purpose in accordance with
Section 2.9 hereof) registered in the name of the
Fund or in the name of a nominee of the Fund or of
the Custodian referred to in Section 2.3 hereof or
in other proper form for transfer; (b) in the case
of a purchase effected through a Securities
System, in accordance with the conditions set
forth in Section 2.10 hereof or (c) in the case of
a purchase involving the Direct Paper System, in
accordance with the conditions set forth in
Section 2.11; or (d) in the case of repurchase
agreements entered into between the Fund and the
Custodian, or another bank, or a broker-dealer
which is a member of NASD, (i) against delivery of
the securities either in certificate form or
through an entry crediting the Custodian's account
at the Federal Reserve Bank with such securities
or (ii) against delivery of the receipt evidencing
purchase by the Fund of securities owned by the
Custodian along with written evidence of the
agreement by the Custodian to repurchase such
securities from the Fund. All coupon bonds
accepted by the Custodian shall have the coupons
attached or shall be accompanied by a check
payable on coupon payable date for the interest
due on such date.
2) Exchanges. In connection with conversion,
exchange or surrender of securities owned by the
Fund as set forth in Section 2.2 hereof;
3) Redemptions. For the redemption or repurchase of
Shares issued by the Fund as set forth in Article
4 hereof;
4) Expense and Liability. For the payment of any
expense or liability incurred by the Fund,
including but not limited to the following
payments for the account of the Fund: interest,
taxes, management, accounting, transfer agent and
legal fees, and operating expenses of the Fund
whether or not such expenses are to be in whole or
part capitalized or treated as deferred expenses;
5) Dividends. For the payment of any dividends or
other distributions to shareholders declared
pursuant to the Governing Documents of the Fund;
6) Short Sale Dividend. For payment of the amount of
dividends received in respect of securities sold
short;
7) Loan. For repayment of a loan upon redelivery of
pledged securities and upon surrender of the
PAGE 11
note(s), if any, evidencing the loan;
8) Miscellaneous. For any other proper purpose, but
only upon receipt of, in addition to Proper
Instructions, a certified copy of a resolution of
the Board of Directors/Trustees or of the
Executive Committee of the Fund signed by an
officer of the Fund and certified by its Secretary
or an Assistant Secretary, specifying the amount
of such payment, setting forth the purpose for
which such payment is to be made, declaring such
purpose to be a proper purpose, and naming the
person or persons to whom such payment is to be
made.
2.8 Liability for Payment in Advance of Receipt of
Securities Purchased. In any and every case where payment
for purchase of domestic securities for the account of the
Fund is made by the Custodian in advance of receipt of the
securities purchased in the absence of specific written
instructions from the Fund to so pay in advance, the
Custodian shall be absolutely liable to the Fund for such
securities to the same extent as if the securities had been
received by the Custodian.
2.9 Appointment of Agents. The Custodian may at any time
or times in its discretion appoint (and may at any time
remove) any other bank or trust company, which is itself
qualified under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, to act as a custodian, as its agent to carry out
such of the provisions of this Article 2 as the Custodian
may from time to time direct; provided, however, that the
appointment of any agent shall not relieve the Custodian of
its responsibilities or liabilities hereunder.
2.10 Deposit of Securities in Securities Systems. The
Custodian may deposit and/or maintain domestic securities
owned by the Fund in a clearing agency registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission under Section 17A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which acts as a securities
depository, or in the book-entry system authorized by the
U.S. Department of the Treasury and certain federal
agencies, collectively referred to herein as "Securities
System" in accordance with applicable Federal Reserve Board
and Securities and Exchange Commission rules and
regulations, if any, and subject to the following
provisions:
1) Account of Custodian. The Custodian may keep
domestic securities of the Fund in a Securities
System provided that such securities are
represented in an account ("Account") of the
Custodian in the Securities System which shall not
include any assets of the Custodian other than
assets held as a fiduciary, custodian or otherwise
PAGE 12
for customers;
2) Records. The records of the Custodian, with
respect to domestic securities of the Fund which
are maintained in a Securities System, shall
identify by book-entry those securities belonging
to the Fund;
3) Payment of Fund Monies, Delivery of Securities.
Subject to Section 2.7, the Custodian shall pay
for domestic securities purchased for the account
of the Fund upon (i) receipt of advice from the
Securities System that such securities have been
transferred to the Account, and (ii) the making of
an entry on the records of the Custodian to
reflect such payment and transfer for the account
of the Fund. Subject to Section 2.2, the
Custodian shall transfer domestic securities sold
for the account of the Fund upon (i) receipt of
advice from the Securities System that payment for
such securities has been transferred to the
Account, and (ii) the making of an entry on the
records of the Custodian to reflect such transfer
and payment for the account of the Fund. Copies
of all advices from the Securities System of
transfers of domestic securities for the account
of the Fund shall identify the Fund, be maintained
for the Fund by the Custodian and be provided to
the Fund at its request. The Custodian shall
furnish the Fund confirmation of each transfer to
or from the account of the Fund in the form of a
written advice or notice and shall furnish to the
Fund copies of daily transaction sheets reflecting
each day's transactions in the Securities System
for the account of the Fund;
4) Reports. The Custodian shall provide the Fund
with any report obtained by the Custodian on the
Securities System's accounting system, internal
accounting control and procedures for safeguarding
domestic securities deposited in the Securities
System, and further agrees to provide the Fund
with copies of any documentation it has relating
to its arrangements with the Securities Systems as
set forth in this Agreement or as otherwise
required by the Securities and Exchange
Commission;
5) Annual Certificate. The Custodian shall have
received the initial or annual certificate, as the
case may be, required by Article 13 hereof;
6) Indemnification. Anything to the contrary in this
Contract notwithstanding, the Custodian shall be
liable to the Fund for any loss or expense,
PAGE 13
including reasonable attorneys fees, or damage to
the Fund resulting from use of the Securities
System by reason of any failure by the Custodian
or any of its agents or of any of its or their
employees or agents or from failure of the
Custodian or any such agent to enforce effectively
such rights as it may have against the Securities
System; at the election of the Fund, it shall be
entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the
Custodian with respect to any claim against the
Securities System or any other person which the
Custodian may have as a consequence of any such
loss, expense or damage if and to the extent that
the Fund has not been made whole for any such
loss, expense or damage.
2.11 Fund Assets Held in the Custodian's Direct Paper
System. The Custodian may deposit and/or maintain
securities owned by the Fund in the Direct Paper System of
the Custodian subject to the following provisions:
1) No transaction relating to securities in the
Direct Paper System will be effected in the
absence of Proper Instructions;
2) The Custodian may keep securities of the Fund in
the Direct Paper System only if such securities
are represented in an account ("Account") of the
Custodian in the Direct Paper System which shall
not include any assets of the Custodian other than
assets held as a fiduciary, custodian or otherwise
for customers;
3) The records of the Custodian with respect to
securities of the Fund which are maintained in the
Direct Paper System shall identify by book-entry
those securities belonging to the Fund;
4) The Custodian shall pay for securities purchased
for the account of the Fund upon the making of an
entry on the records of the Custodian to reflect
such payment and transfer of securities to the
account of the Fund. The Custodian shall transfer
securities sold for the account of the Fund upon
the making of an entry on the records of the
Custodian to reflect such transfer and receipt of
payment for the account of the Fund;
5) The Custodian shall furnish the Fund confirmation
of each transfer to or from the account of the
Fund, in the form of a written advice or notice,
of Direct Paper on the next business day following
such transfer and shall furnish to the Fund copies
of daily transaction sheets reflecting each day's
transaction in the Securities System for the
account of the Fund;
PAGE 14
6) The Custodian shall provide the Fund with any
report on its system of internal accounting
control as the Fund may reasonably request from
time to time;
2.12 Segregated Account. The Custodian shall, upon receipt
of Proper Instructions, which may be of a continuing nature
where deemed appropriate by mutual agreement of the parties,
establish and maintain a segregated account or accounts for
and on behalf of the Fund, into which account or accounts
may be transferred cash and/or securities, including
securities maintained in an account by the Custodian
pursuant to Section 2.10 hereof, (i) in accordance with the
provisions of any agreement among the Fund, the Custodian
and a broker-dealer registered under the Exchange Act and a
member of the NASD (or any futures commission merchant
registered under the Commodity Exchange Act), relating to
compliance with the rules of The Options Clearing
Corporation and of any registered national securities
exchange (or the Commodity Futures Trading Commission or any
registered contract market), or of any similar organization
or organizations, regarding escrow or other arrangements in
connection with transactions by the Fund, (ii) for purposes
of segregating cash or government securities in connection
with options purchased, sold or written by the Fund or
commodity futures contracts or options thereon purchased or
sold by the Fund, (iii) for the purposes of compliance by
the Fund with the procedures required by Investment Company
Act Release No. 10666, or any subsequent release, rule or
policy, of the Securities and Exchange Commission relating
to the maintenance of segregated accounts by registered
investment companies and (iv) for other proper corporate
purposes, but only, in the case of clause (iv), upon receipt
of, in addition to Proper Instructions, a certified copy of
a resolution of the Board of Directors/Trustees or of the
Executive Committee signed by an officer of the Fund and
certified by the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary,
setting forth the purpose or purposes of such segregated
account and declaring such purposes to be proper corporate
purposes.
2.13 Ownership Certificates for Tax Purposes. The Custodian
shall execute ownership and other certificates and
affidavits for all federal and state tax purposes in
connection with receipt of income or other payments with
respect to domestic securities of the Fund held by it and in
connection with transfers of such securities.
2.14 Proxies. If the securities are registered other than
in the name of the Fund or a nominee of the Fund, the
Custodian shall, with respect to the domestic securities
held hereunder, cause to be promptly executed by the
PAGE 15
registered holder of such securities, all proxies, without
indication of the manner in which such proxies are to be
voted, and shall promptly deliver to the Fund such proxies,
all proxy soliciting materials and all notices relating to
such securities.
2.15 Communications Relating to Fund Portfolio Securities.
The Custodian shall transmit promptly to the Fund all
written information (including, without limitation, pendency
of calls and maturities of domestic securities and
expirations of rights in connection therewith and notices of
exercise of call and put options written by the Fund and the
maturity of futures contracts purchased or sold by the Fund)
received by the Custodian from issuers of the domestic
securities being held for the Fund by the Custodian, an
agent appointed under Section 2.9, or sub-custodian
appointed under Section 1. With respect to tender or
exchange offers, the Custodian shall transmit promptly to
the Fund all written information received by the Custodian,
an agent appointed under Section 2.9, or sub-custodian
appointed under Section 1 from issuers of the domestic
securities whose tender or exchange is sought and from the
party (or his agents) making the tender or exchange offer.
If the Fund desires to take action with respect to any
tender offer, exchange offer or any other similar
transaction, the Fund shall notify the Custodian of such
desired action at least 72 hours (excluding holidays and
weekends) prior to the time such action must be taken under
the terms of the tender, exchange offer, or other similar
transaction, and it will be the responsibility of the
Custodian to timely transmit to the appropriate person(s)
the Fund's notice. Where the Fund does not notify the
Custodian of its desired action within the aforesaid 72 hour
period, the Custodian shall use its best efforts to timely
transmit the Fund's notice to the appropriate person.
2.16 Reports to Fund by Independent Public Accountants. The
Custodian shall provide the Fund, at such times as the Fund
may reasonably require, with reports by independent public
accountants on the accounting system, internal accounting
control and procedures for safeguarding securities, futures
contracts and options on futures contracts, including
domestic securities deposited and/or maintained in a
Securities System, relating to the services provided by the
Custodian under this Contract; such reports shall be of
sufficient scope and in sufficient detail, as may reasonably
be required by the Fund to provide reasonable assurance that
any material inadequacies existing or arising since the
prior examination would be disclosed by such examination.
The reports must describe any material inadequacies
disclosed and, if there are no such inadequacies, the
reports shall so state.
PAGE 16
3. Duties of the Custodian with Respect to Property of the Fund
Held Outside of the United States
3.1 Appointment of Foreign Sub-Custodians. The Custodian
is authorized and instructed to employ Chase Manhattan Bank,
N.A, ("Chase") as sub-custodian for the Fund's securities,
cash and other assets maintained outside of the United
States ("foreign assets") all as described in the
Subcustodian Agreement between the Custodian and Chase.
Upon receipt of "Proper Instructions", together with a
certified resolution of the Fund's Board of
Directors/Trustees, the Custodian and the Fund may agree to
designate additional proper institutions and foreign
securities depositories to act as sub-custodians of the
Fund's foreign assets. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions
from the Fund, the Custodian shall cease the employment of
any one or more of such sub-custodians for maintaining
custody of the Fund's foreign assets.
3.2 Assets to be Held. The Custodian shall limit the
foreign assets maintained in the custody of foreign sub-
custodians to foreign assets specified under the terms of
the Subcustodian Agreement between the Custodian and Chase.
3.3 Foreign Securities Depositories. Except as may
otherwise be agreed upon in writing by the Custodian and the
Fund, foreign assets of the Fund shall be maintained in
foreign securities depositories only through arrangements
implemented by the banking institutions serving as sub-
custodians pursuant to the terms hereof.
3.4 Segregation of Securities. The Custodian shall
identify on its books as belonging to the Fund, the foreign
assets of the Fund held by Chase and by each foreign sub-
custodian.
3.5 Access of Independent Accountants of the Fund. Upon
request of the Fund, the Custodian will use its best efforts
(subject to applicable law) to arrange for the independent
accountants, officers or other representatives of the Fund
or the Custodian to be afforded access to the books and
records of Chase and any banking or other institution
employed as a sub-custodian for the Fund by Chase or the
Custodian insofar as such books and records relate to the
performance of Chase or such banking or other institution
under any agreement with the Custodian or Chase. Upon
request of the Fund, the Custodian shall furnish to the Fund
such reports (or portions thereof) of Chase's external
auditors as are available to the Custodian and which relate
directly to Chase's system of internal accounting controls
applicable to Chase's duties as a subcustodian or which
relate to the internal accounting controls of any
subcustodian employed by Chase with respect to foreign
assets of the Fund.
PAGE 17
3.6 Reports by Custodian. The Custodian will supply to the
Fund from time to time, as mutually agreed upon, statements
in respect of the foreign assets of the Fund held pursuant
to the terms of the Subcustodian Agreement between the
Custodian and Chase, including but not limited, to an
identification of entities having possession of the Fund's
foreign assets and advices or notifications of any transfers
of foreign assets to or from each custodial account
maintained by any sub-custodian on behalf of the Fund
indicating, as to foreign assets acquired for the Fund, the
identity of the entity having physical possession of such
foreign assets.
3.7 Transactions in Foreign Assets of the Fund. All
transactions with respect to the Fund's foreign assets shall
be in accordance with, and subject to, the provisions of the
Subcustodian Agreement between Chase and the Custodian.
3.8 Responsibility of Custodian, Sub-Custodian, and Fund.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Custodian
Contract, the Custodian shall not be liable to the Fund for
any loss, damage, cost, expense, liability or claim arising
out of or in connection with the maintenance of custody of
the Fund's foreign assets by Chase or by any other banking
institution or securities depository employed pursuant to
the terms of any Subcustodian Agreement between Chase and
the Custodian, except that the Custodian shall be liable for
any such loss, damage, cost, expense, liability or claim to
the extent provided in the Subcustodian Agreement between
Chase and the Custodian or attributable to the failure of
the Custodian to exercise the standard of care set forth in
Article 12 hereof in the performance of its duties under
this Contract or such Subcustodian Agreement. At the
election of the Fund, the Fund shall be entitled to be
subrogated to the rights of the Custodian under the
Subcustodian Agreement with respect to any claims arising
thereunder against Chase or any other banking institution or
securities depository employed by Chase if and to the extent
that the Fund has not been made whole therefor. As between
the Fund and the Custodian, the Fund shall be solely
responsible to assure that the maintenance of foreign
securities and cash pursuant to the terms of the
Subcustodian Agreement complies with all applicable rules,
regulations, interpretations and orders of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, and the Custodian assumes no
responsibility and makes no representations as to such
compliance.
3.9 Monitoring Responsibilities. With respect to the
Fund's foreign assets, the Custodian shall furnish annually
to the Fund, during the month of June, information
concerning the sub-custodians employed by the Custodian.
PAGE 18
Such information shall be similar in kind and scope to that
furnished to the Fund in connection with the initial
approval of this Contract. In addition, the Custodian will
promptly inform the Fund in the event that the Custodian
learns of a material adverse change in the financial
condition of a sub-custodian.
3.10 Branches of U.S. Banks. Except as otherwise set forth
in this Contract, the provisions of this Article 3 shall not
apply where the custody of the Fund's assets is maintained
in a foreign branch of a banking institution which is a
"bank" as defined by Section 2(a)(5) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 which meets the qualification set forth
in Section 26(a) of said Act. The appointment of any such
branch as a sub-custodian shall be governed by Section 1 of
this Contract.
4. Payments for Repurchases or Redemptions and Sales of Shares
of the Fund
From such funds as may be available for the purpose but
subject to the limitations of the Governing Documents of the Fund
and any applicable votes of the Board of Directors/Trustees of
the Fund pursuant thereto, the Custodian shall, upon receipt of
instructions from the Transfer Agent, make funds available for
payment to holders of Shares who have delivered to the Transfer
Agent a request for redemption or repurchase of their Shares. In
connection with the redemption or repurchase of Shares of the
Fund, the Custodian is authorized upon receipt of instructions
from the Transfer Agent to wire funds to or through a commercial
bank designated by the redeeming shareholder. In connection with
the redemption or repurchase of Shares of the Fund, the Custodian
shall honor checks drawn on the Custodian by a holder of Shares,
which checks have been furnished by the Fund to the holder of
Shares, when presented to the Custodian in accordance with such
procedures and controls as are mutually agreed upon from time to
time between the Fund and the Custodian.
The Custodian shall receive from the distributor for the
Fund's Shares or from the Transfer Agent of the Fund and deposit
as received into the Fund's account such payments as are received
for Shares of the Fund issued or sold from time to time by the
Fund. The Custodian will provide timely notification to the Fund
and the Transfer Agent of any receipt by it of payments for
Shares of the Fund.
5. Proper Instructions
Proper Instructions as used herein means a writing signed or
initialled by one or more person or persons as the Board of
Directors/Trustees shall have from time to time authorized. Each
such writing shall set forth the specific transaction or type of
transaction involved, including a specific statement of the
purpose for which such action is requested, or shall be a blanket
instruction authorizing specific transactions of a repeated or
PAGE 19
routine nature. Oral instructions will be considered Proper
Instructions if the Custodian reasonably believes them to have
been given by a person authorized to give such instructions with
respect to the transaction involved. The Fund shall cause all
oral instructions to be confirmed in writing. Upon receipt of a
certificate of the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary as to the
authorization by the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund
accompanied by a detailed description of procedures approved by
the Board of Directors/Trustees, Proper Instructions may include
communications effected directly between electro-mechanical or
electronic devices provided that the Board of Directors/Trustees
and the Custodian are satisfied that such procedures afford
adequate safeguards for the Fund's assets.
6. Actions Permitted without Express Authority
The Custodian may in its discretion, without express
authority from the Fund:
1) make payments to itself or others for minor
expenses of handling securities or other similar
items relating to its duties under this Contract,
provided that all such payments shall be accounted
for to the Fund;
2) surrender securities in temporary form for
securities in definitive form;
3) endorse for collection, in the name of the Fund,
checks, drafts and other negotiable instruments on
the same day as received; and
4) in general, attend to all non-discretionary
details in connection with the sale, exchange,
substitution, purchase, transfer and other
dealings with the securities and property of the
Fund except as otherwise directed by the Board of
Directors/Trustees of the Fund.
7. Evidence of Authority, Reliance on Documents
The Custodian shall be protected in acting upon any
instructions, notice, request, consent, certificate or other
instrument or paper reasonably and in good faith believed by it
to be genuine and to have been properly executed by or on behalf
of the Fund in accordance with Article 5 hereof. The Custodian
may receive and accept a certified copy of a vote of the Board of
Directors/Trustees of the Fund as conclusive evidence (a) of the
authority of any person to act in accordance with such vote or
(b) of any determination or of any action by the Board of
Directors/Trustees pursuant to the Governing Documents of the
Fund as described in such vote, and such vote may be considered
as in full force and effect until receipt by the Custodian of
written notice to the contrary. So long as and to the extent
that it is in the exercise of the standard of care set forth in
Article 12 hereof, the Custodian shall not be responsible for the
title, validity or genuineness of any property or evidence of
title thereto received by it or delivered by it pursuant to this
PAGE 20
Contract and shall be held harmless in acting upon any notice,
request, consent, certificate or other instrument reasonably
believed by it to be genuine and to be signed by the proper party
or parties.
8. Duties of Custodian with Respect to the Books of Account and
Calculation of Net Asset Value and Net Income
The Custodian shall cooperate with and supply necessary
information to the person or persons appointed by the Board of
Directors/Trustees of the Fund to keep the books of account of
the Fund and/or compute the net asset value per share of the
outstanding shares of the Fund or, if directed in writing to do
so by the Fund, shall itself keep such books of account and/or
compute such net asset value per share. If so directed, the
Custodian shall also calculate daily the net income of the Fund
as described in the Fund's currently effective prospectus and
shall advise the Fund and the Transfer Agent daily of the total
amounts of such net income and, if instructed in writing by an
officer of the Fund to do so, shall advise the Transfer Agent
periodically of the division of such net income among its various
components. The calculations of the net asset value per share
and the daily income of the Fund shall be made at the time or
times and in the manner described from time to time in the Fund's
currently effective prospectus.
9. Records, Inventory
The Custodian shall create and maintain all records relating
to its activities and obligations under this Contract in such
manner as will meet the obligations of the Fund under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, with particular attention to
Section 31 thereof and Rules 31a-1 and 31a-2 thereunder,
applicable federal and state tax laws and any other law or
administrative rules or procedures which may be applicable to the
Fund. All such records shall be the property of the Fund and
shall at all times during the regular business hours of the
Custodian be open for inspection and audit by duly authorized
officers, employees or agents of the Fund and employees and
agents of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and, in the
event of termination of this Agreement, will be delivered in
accordance with Section 14 hereof. The Custodian shall, at the
Fund's request, supply the Fund with a tabulation of securities
owned by the Fund and held by the Custodian and shall, when
requested to do so by the Fund and for such compensation as shall
be agreed upon between the Fund and the Custodian, include
certificate numbers in such tabulations. The Custodian shall
conduct a periodic inventory of all securities and other property
subject to this Agreement and provide to the Fund a periodic
reconciliation of the vaulted position of the Fund to the
appraised position of the Fund. The Custodian will promptly
report to the Fund the results of the reconciliation, indicating
any shortages or discrepancies uncovered thereby, and take
appropriate action to remedy any such shortages or discrepancies.
PAGE 21
10. Opinion of Fund's Independent Accountant
The Custodian shall cooperate with the Fund's independent
public accountants in connection with the annual and other audits
of the books and records of the Fund and take all reasonable
action, as the Fund may from time to time request, to provide
from year to year the necessary information to such accountants
for the expression of their opinion without any qualification as
to the scope of their examination, including but not limited to,
any opinion in connection with the preparation of the Fund's Form
N-lA, and Form N-SAR or other annual reports to the Securities
and Exchange Commission and with respect to any other
requirements of such Commission.
11. Compensation of Custodian
The Custodian shall be entitled to reasonable compensation
for its services and expenses as Custodian, as agreed upon from
time to time between the Fund and the Custodian.
12. Responsibility of Custodian
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement,
the Custodian shall be held to the exercise of reasonable care in
carrying out the provisions of this Contract, but shall be kept
indemnified by and shall be without liability to the Fund for any
action taken or omitted by it in good faith without negligence.
In order for the indemnification provision contained in this
Section to apply, it is understood that if in any case the Fund
may be asked to indemnify or save the Custodian harmless, the
Fund shall be fully and promptly advised of all pertinent facts
concerning the situation in question, and it is further
understood that the Custodian will use all reasonable care to
identify and notify the Fund promptly concerning any situation
which presents or appears likely to present the probability of
such a claim for indemnification against the Fund. The Fund,
shall have the option to defend the Custodian against any claim
which may be the subject of this indemnification, and in the
event that the Fund so elects, it will so notify the Custodian,
and thereupon the Fund shall take over complete defense of the
claim and the Custodian shall in such situation initiate no
further legal or other expenses for which it shall seek
indemnification under this Section. The Custodian shall in no
case confess any claim or make any compromise in any case in
which the Fund will be asked to indemnify the Custodian except
with the Fund's prior written consent. Nothing herein shall be
construed to limit any right or cause of action on the part of
the Custodian under this Contract which is independent of any
right or cause of action on the part of the Fund. The Custodian
shall be entitled to rely on and may act upon advice of counsel
(who may be counsel for the Fund or such other counsel as may be
agreed to by the parties) on all matters, and shall be without
liability for any action reasonably taken or omitted pursuant to
such advice. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the responsibility
PAGE 22
of the Custodian with respect to redemptions effected by check
shall be in accordance with a separate Agreement entered into
between the Custodian and the Fund.
If the Fund requires the Custodian to take any action with
respect to securities, which action involves the payment of money
or which action may, in the opinion of the Custodian, result in
the Custodian or its nominee assigned to the Fund being liable
for the payment of money or incurring liability of some other
form, the Fund, as a prerequisite to requiring the Custodian to
take such action, shall provide indemnity to the Custodian in an
amount and form satisfactory to it.
If the Fund requires the Custodian to advance cash or
securities for any purpose or in the event that the Custodian or
its nominee shall incur or be assessed any taxes, charges,
expenses, assessments, claims or liabilities in connection with
the performance of this Contract, except such as may arise from
its or its nominee's own negligent action, negligent failure to
act or willful misconduct, any property at any time held for the
account of the Fund shall be security therefor and should the
Fund fail to repay the Custodian promptly, the Custodian shall be
entitled to utilize available cash and to dispose of the Fund's
assets to the extent necessary to obtain reimbursement, provided
that the Custodian gives the Fund reasonable notice to repay such
cash or securities advanced, however, such notice shall not
preclude the Custodian's right to assert any lien under this
provision.
13. Effective Period, Termination and Amendment
This Contract shall become effective as of its execution,
shall continue in full force and effect until terminated as
hereinafter provided, may be amended at any time by mutual
agreement of the parties hereto and may be terminated by either
party by an instrument in writing delivered or mailed, postage
prepaid to the other party, such termination to take effect not
sooner than sixty (60) days after the date of such delivery or
mailing in the case of a termination by the Fund, and not sooner
than 180 days after the date of such delivery or mailing in the
case of a termination by the Custodian; provided, however that
the Custodian shall not act under Section 2.10 hereof in the
absence of receipt of an initial certificate of the Secretary or
an Assistant Secretary that the Board of Directors/Trustees of
the Fund has approved the initial use of a particular Securities
System and the receipt of an annual certificate of the Secretary
or an Assistant Secretary that the Board of Directors/Trustees
has reviewed the use by the Fund of such Securities System, as
required in each case by Rule 17f-4 under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended and that the Custodian shall not act
under Section 2.11 hereof in the absence of receipt of an initial
certificate of the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary that the
Board of Directors/Trustees has approved the initial use of the
Direct Paper System and the receipt of an annual certificate of
PAGE 23
the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary that the Board of
Directors/Trustees has reviewed the use by the Fund of the Direct
Paper System; provided further, however, that the Fund shall not
amend or terminate this Contract in contravention of any
applicable federal or state regulations, or any provision of the
Governing Documents of the Fund, and further provided, that the
Fund may at any time by action of its Board of Directors/Trustees
(i) substitute another bank or trust company for the Custodian by
giving notice as described above to the Custodian, or (ii)
immediately terminate this Contract in the event of the
appointment of a conservator or receiver for the Custodian by the
Comptroller of the Currency or upon the happening of a like event
at the direction of an appropriate regulatory agency or court of
competent jurisdiction.
Upon termination of the Contract, the Fund shall pay to the
Custodian such compensation as may be due as of the date of such
termination and shall likewise reimburse the Custodian for its
costs, expenses and disbursements, provided that the Custodian
shall not incur any costs, expenses or disbursements specifically
in connection with such termination unless it has received prior
approval from the Fund, which approval shall not be unreasonably
withheld.
14. Successor Custodian
If a successor custodian shall be appointed by the Board of
Directors/Trustees of the Fund, the Custodian shall, upon
termination, deliver to such successor custodian at the office of
the Custodian, duly endorsed and in the form for transfer, all
securities, funds and other properties then held by it hereunder
and shall transfer to an account of the successor custodian all
of the Fund's securities held in a Securities System. The
Custodian shall also use its best efforts to assure that the
successor custodian will continue any subcustodian agreement
entered into by the Custodian and any subcustodian on behalf of
the Fund.
If no such successor custodian shall be appointed, the
Custodian shall, in like manner, upon receipt of a certified copy
of a vote of the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund, deliver
at the office of the Custodian and transfer such securities,
funds and other properties in accordance with such vote.
In the event that no written order designating a successor
custodian or certified copy of a vote of the Board of
Directors/Trustees shall have been delivered to the Custodian on
or before the date when such termination shall become effective,
then the Custodian shall have the right to deliver to a bank
or trust company, which is a "bank" as defined in the Investment
Company Act of 1940, doing business in Boston, Massachusetts, of
its own selection, having an aggregate capital, surplus, and
undivided profits, as shown by its last published report, of not
PAGE 24
less than $25,000,000, all securities, funds and other properties
held by the Custodian and all instruments held by the Custodian
relative thereto and all other property held by it under this
Contract and to transfer to an account of such successor
custodian all of the Fund's securities held in any Securities
System. Thereafter, such bank or trust company shall be the
successor of the Custodian under this Contract.
In the event that securities, funds and other properties
remain in the possession of the Custodian after the date of
termination hereof owing to failure of the Fund to procure the
certified copy of the vote referred to or of the Board of
Directors/Trustees to appoint a successor custodian, the
Custodian shall be entitled to fair compensation for its services
during such period as the Custodian retains possession of such
securities, funds and other properties and the provisions of this
Contract relating to the duties and obligations of the Custodian
shall remain in full force and effect. If while this Contract is
in force the Fund shall be liquidated pursuant to law, the
Custodian shall distribute, either in cash or (if the Fund so
orders) in the portfolio securities and other assets of the Fund,
pro rata among the holders of shares of the Fund as certified by
the Transfer Agent, the property of the Fund which remains after
paying or satisfying all expenses and liabilities of the Fund.
Section 12 hereof shall survive any termination of this Contract.
15. Interpretive and Additional Provisions
In connection with the operation of this Contract, the
Custodian and the Fund may from time to time agree on such
provisions interpretive of or in addition to the provisions of
this Contract as may in their joint opinion be consistent with
the general tenor of this Contract. Any such interpretive or
additional provisions shall be in a writing signed by both
parties and shall be annexed hereto, provided that no such
interpretive or additional provisions shall contravene any
applicable federal or state regulations or any provision of the
Governing Documents of the Fund. No interpretive or additional
provisions made as provided in the preceding sentence shall be
deemed to be an amendment of this Contract.
16. Notice
Any notice shall be sufficiently given when sent by
registered or certified mail, or by such other means as the
parties shall agree, to the other party at the address of such
party set forth above or at such other address as such party may
from time to time specify in writing to the other party.
17. Bond
The Custodian shall, at all times, maintain a bond in such
form and amount as is acceptable to the Fund which shall be
issued by a reputable fidelity insurance company authorized to do
business in the place where such bond is issued against larceny
PAGE 25
and embezzlement, covering each officer and employee of the
Custodian who may, singly or jointly with others, have access to
securities or funds of the Fund, either directly or through
authority to receive and carry out any certificate instruction,
order request, note or other instrument required or permitted by
this Agreement. The Custodian agrees that it shall not cancel,
terminate or modify such bond insofar as it adversely affects the
Fund except after written notice given to the Fund not less than
10 days prior to the effective date of such cancellation,
termination or modification. The Custodian shall furnish to the
Fund a copy of each such bond and each amendment thereto.
18. Confidentiality
The Custodian agrees to treat all records and other
information relative to the Fund and its prior, present or future
shareholders as confidential, and the Custodian, on behalf of
itself and its employees, agrees to keep confidential all such
information except, after prior notification to and approval in
writing by the Fund, which approval shall not be unreasonably
withheld and may not be withheld where the Custodian may be
exposed to civil or criminal contempt proceedings for failure to
comply, when requested to divulge such information by duly
constituted authorities, or when so requested by the Fund.
19. Exemption from Liens
The securities and other assets held by the Custodian for
the Fund shall be subject to no lien or charge of any kind in
favor of the Custodian or any person claiming through the
Custodian, but nothing herein shall be deemed to deprive the
Custodian of its right to invoke any and all remedies available
at law or equity to collect amounts due it under this Agreement.
Neither the Custodian nor any sub-custodian appointed pursuant to
Section 1 hereof shall have any power or authority to assign,
hypothecate, pledge or otherwise dispose of any securities held
by it for the Fund, except upon the direction of the Fund, duly
given as herein provided, and only for the account of the Fund.
20. Massachusetts Law to Apply
This Contract shall be construed and the provisions thereof
interpreted under and in accordance with laws of The Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.
21. Prior Contracts
Without derogating any of the rights established by such
contracts, this Contract supersedes and terminates, as of the
date hereof, all prior contracts between the Fund and the
Custodian relating to the custody of the Fund's assets.
22. The Parties
All references herein to "the Fund" are to each of the funds
listed on Appendix A individually, as if this Contract were
between such individual fund and the Custodian. In the case of a
series fund or trust, all references to "the Fund" are to the
individual series or portfolio of such fund or trust, or to such
fund or trust on behalf of the individual series or portfolio, as
PAGE 26
appropriate. Any reference in this Contract to "the parties"
shall mean the Custodian and such other individual Fund as to
which the matter pertains.
23. Governing Documents.
The term "Governing Documents" means the Articles of
Incorporation, Agreement of Trust, By-Laws and Registration
Statement filed under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from
time to time.
24. Subcustodian Agreement.
Reference to the "Subcustodian Agreement" between the
Custodian and Chase shall mean any such agreement which shall be
in effect from time to time between Chase and the Custodian with
respect to foreign assets of the Fund.
25. Directors and Trustees.
It is understood and is expressly stipulated that neither
the holders of shares in the Fund nor any Directors or Trustees
of the Fund shall be personally liable hereunder.
26. Massachusetts Business Trust
With respect to any Fund which is a party to this Contract
and which is organized as a Massachusetts business trust, the
term Fund means and refers to the trustees from time to time
serving under the applicable trust agreement (Declaration of
Trust) of such Trust as the same may be amended from time to
time. It is expressly agreed that the obligations of any such
Trust hereunder shall not be binding upon any of the trustees,
shareholders, nominees, officers, agents or employees of the
Trust, personally, but bind only the trust property of the Trust,
as provided in the Declaration of Trust of the Trust. The
execution and delivery of this Contract has been authorized by
the trustees and signed by an authorized officer of the Trust,
acting as such, and neither such authorization by such Trustees
nor such execution and delivery by such officer shall be deemed
to have been made by any of them but shall bind only the trust
property of the Trust as provided in its Declaration of Trust.
27. Successors of Parties.
This Contract shall be binding on and shall inure to the
benefit of the Fund and the Custodian and their respective
successors.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the parties has caused this
instrument to be executed in its name and behalf by its duly
authorized representative and its seal to be hereunder affixed as
of the dates indicated below.
DATED: September 28, 1987
__________________
PAGE 27
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST
COMPANY
ATTEST:
/s/Kathleen M. Kubit By/s/Charles Cassidy
_____________________ _________________________________
Assistant Secretary Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
PAGE 28
(SIGNATURES CONTINUED)
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
DATED: September 28, 1987
___________________
ATTEST:
/s/Nancy J. Wortman By/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
____________________________ __________________________________
PAGE 29
Appendix A
The following Funds are parties to this Agreement and have
so indicated their intention to be bound by such Agreement by
executing the Agreement on the dates indicated thereon.
T. Rowe Price California Tax-Free Income Trust on behalf of
the
California Tax-Free Bond Fund and
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Fund
T. Rowe Price GNMA Fund
T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Institutional Trust on behalf of the
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. Rowe Price International Trust on behalf of the
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund and
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Prime Reserve Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Science & Technology Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free Income Trust on behalf of the
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund,
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund and
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. Rowe Price Tax-Exempt Money Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Tax-Free High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Short-Intermediate Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price U.S. Treasury Money Fund, Inc.
PAGE 30
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
THIS AGREEMENT, made as of this 24th day of June, 1988, by
and between: T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price
New Horizons Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc., T.
Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Prime Reserve
Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price International Trust, T. Rowe Price U.S.
Treasury Money Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund,
Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Exempt Money Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price
Tax-Free Income Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Short-
Intermediate Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund,
Inc., T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price Tax-Free
High Yield Fund, Inc., T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, T.
Rowe Price Equity Income Fund, T. Rowe Price GNMA Fund, T. Rowe
Price Capital Appreciation Fund, T. Rowe Price Institutional
Trust, T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free Income Trust, T. Rowe Price
California Tax-Free Income Trust, T. Rowe Price Science &
Technology Fund, Inc., (hereinafter together called the "Funds"
and individually "Fund") and State Street Bank and Trust Company,
a Massachusetts trust,
W I T N E S S E T H:
It is mutually agreed that the Custodian Contract made by
the parties on the 28th day of September, 1987, is hereby amended
by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
PAGE 31
(SIGNATURES CONTINUED)
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H.Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
PAGE 32
(SIGNATURES CONTINUED)
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
/s/ Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
PAGE 33
(SIGNATURES CONTINUED)
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/William Blackwell
______________________________________________
By:
PAGE 34
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, between State Street Bank and Trust Company and
each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of October 19, 1988, by adding thereto the T.
Rowe Price International Discovery Fund, Inc., a separate series
of T. Rowe Price International Trust.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
PAGE 35
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/Guy R. Sturgeon
______________________________________________
By:
PAGE 36
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988 and October 19, 1988, between State Street Bank and
Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A
thereto is hereby further amended, as of February 22, 1989, by
adding thereto the T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
PAGE 37
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/K. Donelson
______________________________________________
By:
PAGE 38
AMENDMENT NO. 4 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988 and February 22, 1989, between
State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties
listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of
July 19, 1989, by adding thereto the Institutional International
Funds, Inc., on behalf of the Foreign Equity Fund.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
PAGE 39
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
______________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________________
By:
PAGE 40
AMENDMENT NO. 5 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, and July 19,
1989 between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the
Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended,
as of September 15, 1989, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price
U.S. Treasury Funds, Inc., on behalf of the U.S. Treasury
Intermediate Fund and the U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
PAGE 41
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
____________________________________
By:
PAGE 42
AMENDMENT NO. 6 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19, 1989
and September 15, 1989, between State Street Bank and Trust
Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is
hereby further amended, as of December 15, 1989, by restating
Section 2.15 as follows:
2.15 Communications Relating to Fund Portfolio Securities. The
Custodian shall transmit promptly to the Fund all written
information (including, without limitation, pendency of calls and
maturities of domestic securities and expirations of rights in
connection therewith and notices of exercise of call and put
options written by the Fund and the maturity of futures contracts
purchased or sold by the Fund) received by the Custodian from
issuers of the domestic securities being held for the Fund by the
Custodian, an agent appointed under Section 2.9, or sub-custodian
appointed under Section 1. With respect to tender or exchange
offers, the Custodian shall transmit promptly to the Fund all
written information received by the Custodian, an agent appointed
under Section 2.9, or sub-custodian appointed under Section 1
from issuers of the domestic securities whose tender or exchange
is sought and from the party (or his agents) making the tender or
exchange offer. If the Fund desires to take action with respect
to any tender offer, exchange offer or any other similar
transaction, the Fund shall notify the Custodian of such desired
action at least 48 hours (excluding holidays and weekends) prior
to the time such action must be taken under the terms of the
tender, exchange offer, or other similar transaction, and it will
be the responsibility of the Custodian to timely transmit to the
appropriate person(s) the Fund's notice. Where the Fund does not
notify the custodian of its desired action within the aforesaid
48 hour period, the Custodian shall use its best efforts to
timely transmit the Fund's notice to the appropriate person. It
is expressly noted that the parties may negotiate and agree to
alternative procedures with respect to such 48 hour notice period
on a selective and individual basis.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
PAGE 43
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
PAGE 44
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U. S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U. S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U. S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
_________________________________________
By: Carmen F. Deyesu,
Treasurer
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/ E. D. Hawkes, Jr.
_________________________________________
By: E. D. Hawkes, Jr.
Vice President
PAGE 45
Amendment No. 7 filed on Form SE January 25, 1990 with
International Trust (CIK 313212) Post Effective Amendment No. 17.
PAGE 46
AMENDMENT NO. 8 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, and December 20,
1989, between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the
Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended,
as of January 25, 1990, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price
European Stock Fund, a separate series of T. Rowe Price
International Trust.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 47
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
_________________________________________
By:
PAGE 48
AMENDMENT NO. 9 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
and January 25, 1990 between State Street Bank and Trust Company
and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of February 21, 1990, by adding thereto the
T. Rowe Price Index Trust, Inc., on behalf of the T. Rowe Price
Equity Index Fund.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 49
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins
Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 50
AMENDMENT NO. 10 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, between State Street Bank
and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A
thereto is hereby further amended, as of June 12, 1990, by adding
thereto the T. Rowe Price Spectrum Fund, Inc., on behalf of the
Spectrum Growth Fund and the Spectrum Income Fund.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL TRUST
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 51
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 52
AMENDMENT NO. 11 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, and June 12, 1990 between
State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties
listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of
July 18, 1990, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund,
a separate series of the T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
PAGE 53
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/ Guy R. Sturgeon
______________________________________
By: Guy R. Sturgeon
PAGE 54
AMENDMENT NO. 12 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, and July 18,
1990 between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the
Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended,
as of October 15, 1990, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price
Global Government Bond Fund, a separate series of the T. Rowe
Price International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 55
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE INSTITUTIONAL TRUST
Tax-Exempt Reserve Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/ Guy R. Sturgeon
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 56
AMENDMENT NO. 13 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, and October 15, 1990, between State Street Bank and Trust
Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is
hereby further amended, as of February 13, 1991, by adding
thereto the Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund and New Jersey Tax-Free
Bond Fund, two separate series of the T. Rowe Price State Tax-
Free Income Trust
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 57
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/ Guy Sturgeon
______________________________________
By: Vice President
PAGE 58
AMENDMENT NO. 14 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, and February 13, 1991, between State
Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on
Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of March 6,
1991, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 59
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 60
AMENDMENT NO. 15 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, and March 6, 1991,
between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the
Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended,
as of September 12, 1991, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price
Adjustable Rate U.S. Government Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
PAGE 61
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S.
GOVERNMENT FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
PAGE 62
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 63
AMENDMENT NO. 16 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991 and
September 12, 1991, between State Street Bank and Trust Company
and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of November 6, 1991, by adding thereto the T.
Rowe Price Japan Fund, a separate series of the T. Rowe Price
International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 64
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME
TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL
EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S.
GOVERNMENT FUND, INC.
PAGE 65
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_____________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
______________________________________
By:
PAGE 66
AMENDMENT NO. 17 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991 and November 6, 1991, between State Street
Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on
Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of April 23,
1992, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund,
Inc. and T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund, a separate
series of the T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 67
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
PAGE 68
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
____________________________________
By:
PAGE 69
AMENDMENT NO. 18 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, and April 23, 1992, between
State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties
listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of
September 2, 1992, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price OTC Fund,
a series of the T. Rowe Price OTC Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
PAGE 70
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
PAGE 71
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
__________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
__________________________________
By:
PAGE 72
AMENDMENT NO. 19 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, and
September 2, 1992, between State Street Bank and Trust Company
and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of November 3, 1992, by adding thereto the T.
Rowe Price Tax-Free Insured Intermediate Bond Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 73
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
PAGE 74
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
_________________________________________
By:
PAGE 75
AMENDMENT NO. 20 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, and November 3, 1992, between State Street Bank and
Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A
thereto is hereby further amended, as of December 16, 1992, by
adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 76
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
PAGE 77
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
_________________________________________
By:
PAGE 78
AMENDMENT NO. 21 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, and December 16, 1992, between State
Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on
Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of December 21,
1992, by adding thereto the Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond
Fund, an additional series to the T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free
Income Trust.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
PAGE 79
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
PAGE 80
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
_________________________________________
By:
PAGE 81
AMENDMENT NO. 22 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, and December 21,
1992, between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the
Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended,
as of January 28, 1993, by adding thereto the Georgia Tax-Free
Bond Fund and the Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund,
additional series to the T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free Income
Trust.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
PAGE 82
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
PAGE 83
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
_________________________________________
By:
PAGE 84
AMENDMENT NO. 23 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
and January 28, 1993, between State Street Bank and Trust Company
and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of April 22, 1993, by adding thereto the T.
Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
PAGE 85
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
PAGE 86
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
_________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
__________________________________________
By:
PAGE 87
AMENDMENT NO. 24 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, between State Street Bank and
Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A
thereto is hereby further amended, as of September 16, 1993, by
adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price Summit Municipal Funds, Inc.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, it is
understood that the T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price Summit Municipal Funds, Inc. (collectively referred to as
the "Funds") shall not be responsible for paying any of the fees
or expenses set forth herein but that, in accordance with the
Investment Management Agreement, dated September 16, 1993,
between the Funds and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. ("T. Rowe
Price"), the Funds will require T. Rowe Price to pay all such
fees and expenses.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
PAGE 88
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
PAGE 89
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 90
AMENDMENT NO. 25 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, and September 16, 1993, between
State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties
listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of
November 3, 1993, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Latin
America Fund, a separate series of the T. Rowe Price
International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
PAGE 91
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
PAGE 92
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 93
AMENDMENT NO. 26 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, and
November 3, 1993, between State Street Bank and Trust Company and
each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby
further amended, as of March 1, 1994, by adding thereto the T.
Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio and T. Rowe Price New America
Growth Portfolio, two separate series of the T. Rowe Price Equity
Series, Inc. and T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio, a
separate series of the T. Rowe Price International Series, Inc.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, it is
understood that the T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price International Series, Inc. (collectively referred to as the
"Funds") shall not be responsible for paying any of the fees or
expenses set forth herein but that, in accordance with the
Investment Management Agreements, dated March 1, 1994, between
the Funds and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and Rowe Price-
Fleming International, Inc. (collectively referred to as "T. Rowe
Price"), the Funds will require T. Rowe Price to pay all such
fees and expenses.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
PAGE 94
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
PAGE 95
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
PAGE 96
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 97
AMENDMENT NO. 27 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, and March 1, 1994, between State Street Bank and Trust
Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is
hereby further amended, as of April 21, 1994, by adding thereto
the T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio, a separate series
of the T. Rowe Price Fixed Income Series, Inc.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, it is
understood that the T. Rowe Price Fixed Income Series, Inc.
(referred to as the "Fund") shall not be responsible for paying
any of the fees or expenses set forth herein but that, in
accordance with the Investment Management Agreement, dated April
21, 1994, between the Fund and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
(referred to as "T. Rowe Price"), the Fund will require T. Rowe
Price to pay all such fees and expenses.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
PAGE 98
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
PAGE 99
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
PAGE 100
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 101
AMENDMENT NO. 28 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, March 1, 1994, and April 21, 1994, between State Street
Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on
Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of July 27,
1994, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy
Balanced Fund, T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund, and
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund, three separate
series of the T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, it is
understood that the T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc.
(collectively referred to as the "Funds") shall not be
responsible for paying any of the fees or expenses set forth
herein but that, in accordance with the Investment Management
Agreements, dated July 27, 1994, between the Funds and T. Rowe
Price Associates, Inc. (referred to as "T. Rowe Price"), the
Funds will require T. Rowe Price to pay all such fees and
expenses.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
PAGE 102
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
PAGE 103
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
PAGE 104
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE PERSONAL STRATEGY FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 105
AMENDMENT NO. 29 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, March 1, 1994, and April 21, 1994, between State Street
Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties listed on
Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of July 27,
1994, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy
Balanced Strategy Balanced Portfolio, a separate series of the T.
Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, it is
understood that the T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced
Portfolio, a separate series of the T. Rowe Price Equity Series,
Inc. (referred to as the "Fund) shall not be responsible for
paying any of the fees or expenses set forth herein but that, in
accordance with the Investment Management Agreement, dated July
27, 1994, between the Fund and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
(referred to as "T. Rowe Price"), the Fund will require T. Rowe
Price to pay all such fees and expenses.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
PAGE 106
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
PAGE 107
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced
Portfolio
PAGE 108
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE PERSONAL STRATEGY FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/
________________________________________
By:
PAGE 109
AMENDMENT NO. 30 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, March 1, 1994, April 21, 1994, and July 27, 1994 between
State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of the Parties
listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further amended, as of
September 21, 1994, by adding thereto the T. Rowe Price Value
Fund, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
PAGE 110
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
PAGE 111
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced
Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE PERSONAL STRATEGY FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
PAGE 112
T. ROWE PRICE VALUE FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By:Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/Carol C. Ayotte
________________________________________
By:Carol C. Ayotte, Vice President
PAGE 113
AMENDMENT NO. 31 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, March 1, 1994, April 21, 1994, July 27, 1994, and September
21, 1994 between State Street Bank and Trust Company and each of
the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is hereby further
amended, as of November 1, 1994, by adding thereto the T. Rowe
Price Virginia Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund, a separate series
of the T. Rowe Price State Tax-Free Income Trust.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
PAGE 114
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Virginia Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
PAGE 115
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced
Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE PERSONAL STRATEGY FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
PAGE 116
T. ROWE PRICE VALUE FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/Carol C. Ayotte
________________________________________
By:Carol C. Ayotte, Vice President
PAGE 117
AMENDMENT NO. 32 TO CUSTODIAN CONTRACT BETWEEN
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AND
THE T. ROWE PRICE FUNDS
W I T N E S S E T H:
The Custodian Contract of September 28, 1987, as amended
June 24, 1988, October 19, 1988, February 22, 1989, July 19,
1989, September 15, 1989, December 15, 1989, December 20, 1989,
January 25, 1990, February 21, 1990, June 12, 1990, July 18,
1990, October 15, 1990, February 13, 1991, March 6, 1991,
September 12, 1991, November 6, 1991, April 23, 1992, September
2, 1992, November 3, 1992, December 16, 1992, December 21, 1992,
January 28, 1993, April 22, 1993, September 16, 1993, November 3,
1993, March 1, 1994, April 21, 1994, July 27, 1994, September 21,
1994, and November 1, 1994 between State Street Bank and Trust
Company and each of the Parties listed on Appendix A thereto is
hereby further amended, as of November 2, 1994, by adding thereto
the T. Rowe Price Capital Opportunity Fund, Inc. and the T. Rowe
Price Emerging Markets Bond Fund, a separate series of the T.
Rowe Price International Funds, Inc.
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH STOCK FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW HORIZONS FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW ERA FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE PRIME RESERVE FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets Bond Fund
T. ROWE PRICE GROWTH & INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SHORT-TERM BOND FUND, INC.
PAGE 118
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INCOME FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-EXEMPT MONEY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE SHORT-INTERMEDIATE FUND,
INC.
T. ROWE PRICE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE HIGH YIELD FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH FUND
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME FUND
T. ROWE PRICE GNMA FUND
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND
T. ROWE PRICE STATE TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
Maryland Tax-Free Bond Fund
Maryland Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Bond Fund
New York Tax-Free Money Fund
Virginia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Virginia Short-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund
New Jersey Tax-Free Bond Fund
Georgia Tax-Free Bond Fund
Florida Insured Intermediate Tax-Free Fund
T. ROWE PRICE CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST
California Tax-Free Bond Fund
California Tax-Free Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SMALL-CAP VALUE FUND, INC.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUNDS, INC.
Foreign Equity Fund
T. ROWE PRICE U.S. TREASURY FUNDS, INC.
U.S. Treasury Intermediate Fund
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Fund
U.S. Treasury Money Fund
T. ROWE PRICE INDEX TRUST, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Index Fund
PAGE 119
T. ROWE PRICE SPECTRUM FUND, INC.
Spectrum Growth Fund
Spectrum Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE BALANCED FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE OTC FUND, INC.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. ROWE PRICE TAX-FREE INSURED INTERMEDIATE BOND
FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE DIVIDEND GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE BLUE CHIP GROWTH FUND, INC.
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT MUNICIPAL FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Money Market
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Intermediate
Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Municipal Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced
Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE FIXED INCOME SERIES, INC.
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. ROWE PRICE PERSONAL STRATEGY FUNDS, INC.
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
T. ROWE PRICE VALUE FUND, INC.
PAGE 120
T. ROWE PRICE CAPITAL OPPORTUNITY FUND, INC.
/s/Henry H. Hopkins
________________________________________
By: Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
/s/Carol C. Ayotte
________________________________________
By:Carol C. Ayotte, Vice President
The Global Custody Agreement dated January 3, 1994, as
amended, between The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. and T. Rowe Price
Funds should be inserted here.
PAGE 1
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
This AGREEMENT is effective January 3, 1994, and is between
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A. (the "Bank") and EACH OF THE
ENTITIES LISTED ON SCHEDULE A HERETO, Individually and Separately
(each individually, the "Customer").
1. Customer Accounts.
The Bank agrees to establish and maintain the following
accounts ("Accounts"):
(a) A custody account in the name of the Customer
("Custody Account") for any and all stocks, shares, bonds,
debentures, notes, mortgages or other obligations for the payment
of money, bullion, coin and any certificates, receipts, warrants
or other instruments representing rights to receive, purchase or
subscribe for the same or evidencing or representing any other
rights or interests therein and other similar property whether
certificated or uncertificated as may be received by the Bank or
its Subcustodian (as defined in Section 3) for the account of the
Customer ("Securities"); and
(b) A deposit account in the name of the Customer ("Deposit
Account") for any and all cash in any currency received by the
Bank or its Subcustodian for the account of the Customer, which
cash shall not be subject to withdrawal by draft or check.
The Customer warrants its authority to: 1) deposit the cash
and Securities ("Assets") received in the Accounts and 2) give
Instructions (as defined in Section 11) concerning the Accounts.
The Bank may deliver securities of the same class in place of
those deposited in the Custody Account.
Upon written agreement between the Bank and the Customer,
additional Accounts may be established and separately accounted
for as additional Accounts under the terms of this Agreement.
2. Maintenance of Securities and Cash at Bank and Subcustodian
Locations.
Unless Instructions specifically require another location
acceptable to the Bank:
(a) Securities will be held in the country or other
jurisdiction in which the principal trading market for such
Securities is located, where such Securities are to be presented
for payment or where such Securities are acquired; and
PAGE 2
(b) Cash will be credited to an account in a country or
other jurisdiction in which such cash may be legally deposited or
is the legal currency for the payment of public or private debts.
Cash may be held pursuant to Instructions in either interest
or non-interest bearing accounts as may be available for the
particular currency. To the extent Instructions are issued and
the Bank can comply with such Instructions, the Bank is
authorized to maintain cash balances on deposit for the Customer
with itself or one of its affiliates at such reasonable rates of
interest as may from time to time be paid on such accounts, or in
non-interest bearing accounts as the Customer may direct, if
acceptable to the Bank.
If the Customer wishes to have any of its Assets held in the
custody of an institution other than the established
Subcustodians as defined in Section 3 (or their securities
depositories), such arrangement must be authorized by a written
agreement, signed by the Bank and the Customer.
3. Subcustodians and Securities Depositories.
The Bank may act under this Agreement through the
subcustodians listed in Schedule B of this Agreement with which
the Bank has entered into subcustodial agreements
("Subcustodians"). The Customer authorizes the Bank to hold
Assets in the Accounts in accounts which the Bank has established
with one or more of its branches or Subcustodians. The Bank and
Subcustodians are authorized to hold any of the Securities in
their account with any securities depository in which they
participate.
The Bank reserves the right to add new, replace or remove
Subcustodians. The Customer will be given reasonable notice by
the Bank of any amendment to Schedule B. Upon request by the
Customer, the Bank will identify the name, address and principal
place of business of any Subcustodian of the Customer's Assets
and the name and address of the governmental agency or other
regulatory authority that supervises or regulates such
Subcustodian.
4. Use of Subcustodian.
(a) The Bank will identify such Assets on its books as
belonging to the Customer.
(b) A Subcustodian will hold such Assets together with
assets belonging to other customers of the Bank in accounts
identified on such Subcustodian's books as special custody
accounts for the exclusive benefit of customers of the Bank.
(c) Any Assets in the Accounts held by a Subcustodian will
be subject only to the instructions of the Bank or its agent.
PAGE 3
Any Securities held in a securities depository for the account of
a Subcustodian will be subject only to the instructions of such
Subcustodian.
(d) Any agreement the Bank enters into with a Subcustodian
for holding its customer's assets shall provide that such assets
will not be subject to any right, charge, security interest, lien
or claim of any kind in favor of such Subcustodian or its
creditors except for a claim for payment for safe custody or
administration, and that the beneficial ownership of such assets
will be freely transferable without the payment of money or value
other than for safe custody or administration. The foregoing
shall not apply to the extent of any special agreement or
arrangement made by the Customer with any particular
Subcustodian.
5. Deposit Account Transactions.
(a) The Bank or its Subcustodians will make payments from
the Deposit Account upon receipt of Instructions which include
all information required by the Bank.
(b) In the event that any payment to be made under this
Section 5 exceeds the funds available in the Deposit Account, the
Bank, in its discretion, may advance the Customer such excess
amount which shall be deemed a loan payable on demand, bearing
interest at the rate customarily charged by the Bank on similar
loans.
(c) If the Bank credits the Deposit Account on a payable
date, or at any time prior to actual collection and
reconciliation to the Deposit Account, with interest, dividends,
redemptions or any other amount due, the Customer will promptly
return any such amount upon oral or written notification: (i)
that such amount has not been received in the ordinary course of
business or (ii) that such amount was incorrectly credited. If
the Customer does not promptly return any amount upon such
notification, the Bank shall be entitled, upon oral or written
notification to the Customer, to reverse such credit by debiting
the Deposit Account for the amount previously credited. The Bank
or its Subcustodian shall have no duty or obligation to institute
legal proceedings, file a claim or a proof of claim in any
insolvency proceeding or take any other action with respect to
the collection of such amount, but may act for the Customer upon
Instructions after consultation with the Customer.
6. Custody Account Transactions.
(a) Securities will be transferred, exchanged or delivered
by the Bank or its Subcustodian upon receipt by the Bank of
Instructions which include all information required by the Bank.
Settlement and payment for Securities received for, and delivery
of Securities out of, the Custody Account may be made in
PAGE 4
accordance with the customary or established securities trading
or securities processing practices and procedures in the
jurisdiction or market in which the transaction occurs,
including, without limitation, delivery of Securities to a
purchaser, dealer or their agents against a receipt with the
expectation of receiving later payment and free delivery.
Delivery of Securities out of the Custody Account may also be
made in any manner specifically required by Instructions
acceptable to the Bank.
(b) The Bank, in its discretion, may credit or debit the
Accounts on a contractual settlement date with cash or Securities
with respect to any sale, exchange or purchase of Securities.
Otherwise, such transactions will be credited or debited to the
Accounts on the date cash or Securities are actually received by
the Bank and reconciled to the Account.
(i) The Bank may reverse credits or debits made to the
Accounts in its discretion if the related transaction
fails to settle within a reasonable period, determined
by the Bank in its discretion, after the contractual
settlement date for the related transaction.
(ii) If any Securities delivered pursuant to this
Section 6 are returned by the recipient thereof, the
Bank may reverse the credits and debits of the
particular transaction at any time.
7. Actions of the Bank.
The Bank shall follow Instructions received regarding assets
held in the Accounts. However, until it receives Instructions to
the contrary, the Bank will:
(a) Present for payment any Securities which are called,
redeemed or retired or otherwise become payable and all coupons
and other income items which call for payment upon presentation,
to the extent that the Bank or Subcustodian is actually aware of
such opportunities.
(b) Execute in the name of the Customer such ownership and
other certificates as may be required to obtain payments in
respect of Securities.
(c) Exchange interim receipts or temporary Securities for
definitive Securities.
(d) Appoint brokers and agents for any transaction
involving the Securities, including, without limitation,
affiliates of the Bank or any Subcustodian.
(e) Issue statements to the Customer, at times mutually
agreed upon, identifying the Assets in the Accounts.
PAGE 5
The Bank will send the Customer an advice or notification of
any transfers of Assets to or from the Accounts. Such
statements, advices or notifications shall indicate the identity
of the entity having custody of the Assets. Unless the Customer
sends the Bank a written exception or objection to any Bank
statement within ninety (90) days of receipt, the Customer shall
be deemed to have approved such statement. The Bank shall, to
the extent permitted by law, be released, relieved and discharged
with respect to all matters set forth in such statement or
reasonably implied therefrom as though it had been settled by the
decree of a court of competent jurisdiction in an action where
the Customer and all persons having or claiming an interest in
the Customer or the Customer's Accounts were parties if: (a) the
Customer has failed to provide a written exception or objection
to any Bank statement within ninety (90) days of receipt and
where the Customer's failure to so provide a written exception or
objection within such ninety (90) day period has limited the
Bank's (i) access to the records, materials and other information
required to investigate the Customer's exception or objection,
and (ii) ability to recover from third parties any amounts for
which the Bank may become liable in connection with such
exception or objection, or (b) where the Customer has otherwise
explicitly approved any such statement.
All collections of funds or other property paid or
distributed in respect of Securities in the Custody Account shall
be made at the risk of the Customer. The Bank shall have no
liability for any loss occasioned by delay in the actual receipt
of notice by the Bank or by its Subcustodians of any payment,
redemption or other transaction regarding Securities in the
Custody Account in respect of which the Bank has agreed to take
any action under this Agreement.
8. Corporate Actions; Proxies.
Whenever the Bank receives information concerning the
Securities which requires discretionary action by the beneficial
owner of the Securities (other than a proxy), such as
subscription rights, bonus issues, stock repurchase plans and
rights offerings, or legal notices or other material intended to
be transmitted to securities holders ("Corporate Actions"), the
Bank will give the Customer notice of such Corporate Actions to
the extent that the Bank's central corporate actions department
has actual knowledge of a Corporate Action in time to notify its
customers.
When a rights entitlement or a fractional interest resulting
from a rights issue, stock dividend, stock split or similar
Corporate Action is received which bears an expiration date, the
Bank will endeavor to obtain Instructions from the Customer or
its Authorized Person, but if Instructions are not received in
time for the Bank to take timely action, or actual notice of such
Corporate Action was received too late to seek Instructions, the
PAGE 6
Bank is authorized to sell such rights entitlement or fractional
interest and to credit the Deposit Account with the proceeds or
take any other action it deems, in good faith, to be appropriate
in which case it shall be held harmless for any such action.
The Bank will deliver proxies to the Customer or its
designated agent pursuant to special arrangements which may have
been agreed to in writing. Such proxies shall be executed in the
appropriate nominee name relating to Securities in the Custody
Account registered in the name of such nominee but without
indicating the manner in which such proxies are to be voted; and
where bearer Securities are involved, proxies will be delivered
in accordance with Instructions.
9. Nominees.
Securities which are ordinarily held in registered form may
be registered in a nominee name of the Bank, Subcustodian or
securities depository, as the case may be. The Bank may without
notice to the Customer cause any such Securities to cease to be
registered in the name of any such nominee and to be registered
in the name of the Customer. In the event that any Securities
registered in a nominee name are called for partial redemption by
the issuer, the Bank may allot the called portion to the
respective beneficial holders of such class of security pro rata
or in any other manner that is fair, equitable and practicable.
The Customer agrees to hold the Bank, Subcustodians, and their
respective nominees harmless from any liability arising directly
or indirectly from their status as a mere record holder of
Securities in the Custody Account.
10. Authorized Persons.
As used in this Agreement, the term "Authorized Person"
means employees or agents including investment managers as have
been designated by written notice from the Customer or its
designated agent to act on behalf of the Customer under this
Agreement. Such persons shall continue to be Authorized Persons
until such time as the Bank receives Instructions from the
Customer or its designated agent that any such employee or agent
is no longer an Authorized Person.
11. Instructions.
The term "Instructions" means instructions of any Authorized
Person received by the Bank, via telephone, telex, TWX, facsimile
transmission, bank wire or other teleprocess or electronic
instruction or trade information system acceptable to the Bank
which the Bank believes in good faith to have been given by
Authorized Persons or which are transmitted with proper testing
or authentication pursuant to terms and conditions which the Bank
may specify. Unless otherwise expressly provided, all
PAGE 7
Instructions shall continue in full force and effect until
canceled or superseded.
Any Instructions delivered to the Bank by telephone shall
promptly thereafter be confirmed in writing by an Authorized
Person (which confirmation may bear the facsimile signature of
such Person), but the Customer will hold the Bank harmless for
the failure of an Authorized Person to send such confirmation in
writing, the failure of such confirmation to conform to the
telephone instructions received or the Bank's failure to produce
such confirmation at any subsequent time. The Bank may
electronically record any Instructions given by telephone, and
any other telephone discussions with respect to the Custody
Account. The Customer shall be responsible for safeguarding any
testkeys, identification codes or other security devices which
the Bank shall make available to the Customer or its Authorized
Persons.
12. Standard of Care; Liabilities.
(a) The Bank shall be responsible for the performance of
only such duties as are set forth in this Agreement or expressly
contained in Instructions which are consistent with the
provisions of this Agreement. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in this Agreement:
(i) The Bank will use reasonable care with respect to
its obligations under this Agreement and the
safekeeping of Assets. The Bank shall be liable to the
Customer for any loss which shall occur as the result
of the failure of a Subcustodian to exercise reasonable
care with respect to the safekeeping of such Assets to
the same extent that the Bank would be liable to the
Customer if the Bank were holding such Assets in New
York. In the event of any loss to the Customer by
reason of the failure of the Bank or its Subcustodian
to utilize reasonable care, the Bank shall be liable to
the Customer only to the extent of the Customer's
direct damages, and shall in no event be liable for any
special or consequential damages.
(ii) The Bank will not be responsible for any act,
omission, default or for the solvency of any broker or
agent which it or a Subcustodian appoints unless such
appointment was made negligently or in bad faith or for
any loss due to the negligent act of such broker or
agent except to the extent that such broker or agent
(other than a Subcustodian) performs in a negligent
manner which is the cause of the loss to the Customer
and the Bank failed to exercise reasonable care in
monitoring such broker's or agent's performance where
Customer has requested and Bank has agreed to accept
such monitoring responsibility.
PAGE 8
(iii) The Bank shall be indemnified by, and
without liability to the Customer for any action taken
or omitted by the Bank whether pursuant to Instructions
or otherwise within the scope of this Agreement if such
act or omission was in good faith, without negligence.
In performing its obligations under this Agreement, the
Bank may rely on the genuineness of any document which
it believes in good faith to have been validly
executed.
(iv) The Customer agrees to pay for and hold the Bank
harmless from any liability or loss resulting from the
imposition or assessment of any taxes or other
governmental charges, and any related expenses with
respect to income from or Assets in the Accounts,
except to the extent that the Bank has failed to
exercise reasonable care in performing any obligations
which the Bank may have agreed to assume (in addition
to those stated in this Agreement) with respect to
taxes and such failure by the Bank is the direct cause
of such imposition or assessment of such taxes, charges
or expenses.
(v) The Bank shall be entitled to rely, and may act,
upon the advice of counsel (who may be counsel for the
Customer) on all legal matters and shall be without
liability for any action reasonably taken or omitted
pursuant to such advice; provided, that the Bank gives
(to the extent practicable) prior notice to Customer of
Bank's intention to so seek advice of counsel and an
opportunity for consultation with Customer on the
proposed contact with counsel.
(vi) The Bank represents and warrants that it currently
maintain a banker's blanket bond which provides
standard fidelity and non-negligent loss coverage with
respect to the Securities and Cash which may be held by
Subcustodians pursuant to this Agreement. The Bank
agrees that if at any time it for any reason
discontinues such coverage, it shall immediately give
sixty (60) days' prior written notice to the Customer.
The Bank need not maintain any insurance for the
benefit of the Customer.
(vii) Without limiting the foregoing, the Bank
shall not be liable for any loss which results from:
(1) the general risk of investing, or (2) investing or
holding Assets in a particular country including, but
not limited to, losses resulting from nationalization,
expropriation or other governmental actions; regulation
of the banking or securities industry; currency
restrictions, devaluations or fluctuations; and market
PAGE 9
conditions which prevent the orderly execution of securities
transactions or affect the value of Assets.
(viii) Neither party shall be liable to the other
for any loss due to forces beyond their control
including, but not limited to strikes or work
stoppages, acts of war or terrorism, insurrection,
revolution, nuclear fusion, fission or radiation, or
acts of God.
(b) Consistent with and without limiting the first
paragraph of this Section 12, it is specifically acknowledged
that the Bank shall have no duty or responsibility to:
(i) question Instructions or make any suggestions to
the Customer or an Authorized Person regarding such
Instructions;
(ii) supervise or make recommendations with respect to
investments or the retention of Securities;
(iii) advise the Customer or an Authorized Person
regarding any default in the payment of principal or
income of any security other than as provided in
Section 5(c) of this Agreement;
(iv) evaluate or report to the Customer or an
Authorized Person regarding the financial condition of
any broker, agent (other than a Subcustodian) or other
party to which Securities are delivered or payments are
made pursuant to this Agreement;
(v) review or reconcile trade confirmations received
from brokers. The Customer or its Authorized Persons
(as defined in Section 10) issuing Instructions shall
bear any responsibility to review such confirmations
against Instructions issued to and statements issued by
the Bank.
(c) The Customer authorizes the Bank to act under this
Agreement notwithstanding that the Bank or any of its divisions
or affiliates may have a material interest in a transaction, or
circumstances are such that the Bank may have a potential
conflict of duty or interest including the fact that the Bank or
any of its affiliates may provide brokerage services to other
customers, act as financial advisor to the issuer of Securities,
act as a lender to the issuer of Securities, act in the same
transaction as agent for more than one customer, have a material
interest in the issue of Securities, or earn profits from any of
the activities listed herein.
13. Fees and Expenses.
PAGE 10
The Customer agrees to pay the Bank for its services under
this Agreement such amount as may be agreed upon in writing,
together with the Bank's reasonable out-of-pocket or incidental
expenses, including, but not limited to, reasonable legal fees.
The Bank shall have a lien on and is authorized to charge any
Accounts of the Customer for any amount owing to the Bank under
any provision of this Agreement upon notice to the Customer.
14. Miscellaneous.
(a) Foreign Exchange Transactions. Pursuant to
Instructions, which may be standing Instructions, to facilitate
the administration of the Customer's trading and investment
activity, the Bank is authorized to enter into spot or forward
foreign exchange contracts with the Customer or an Authorized
Person for the Customer and may also provide foreign exchange
through its subsidiaries or Subcustodians. The Bank may
establish rules or limitations concerning any foreign exchange
facility made available. In all cases where the Bank, its
subsidiaries, affiliates or Subcustodians enter into a foreign
exchange contract related to Accounts, the terms and conditions
of the then current foreign exchange contract of the Bank, its
subsidiary, affiliate or Subcustodian and, to the extent not
inconsistent, this Agreement shall apply to such transaction.
(b) Certification of Residency, etc. The Customer
certifies that it is a resident of the United States and agrees
to notify the Bank of any changes in residency. The Bank may
rely upon this certification or the certification of such other
facts as may be required to administer the Bank's obligations
under this Agreement. The Customer will indemnify the Bank
against all losses, liability, claims or demands arising directly
or indirectly from any such certifications.
(c) Access to Records. The Bank shall allow the Customer's
independent public accountants, officers and advisers reasonable
access to the records of the Bank relating to the Assets as is
required in connection with their examination of books and
records pertaining to the Customer's affairs. Subject to
restrictions under applicable law, the Bank shall also obtain an
undertaking to permit the Customer's independent public
accountants reasonable access to the records of any Subcustodian
which has physical possession of any Assets as may be required in
connection with the examination of the Customer's books and
records.
(d) Governing Law; Successors and Assigns. This Agreement
shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York and shall
not be assignable by either party, but shall bind the successors
in interest of the Customer and the Bank.
PAGE 11
(e) Entire Agreement; Applicable Riders. Customer
represents that the Assets deposited in the Accounts are (Check
one):
X * Employee Benefit Plan or other assets subject to the
Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, as amended ("ERISA");
X ** Mutual Fund assets subject to certain Securities
and Exchange Commission
("SEC") rules and regulations;
X *** Neither of the above.
With respect to each Customer, this Agreement consists
exclusively of this document together with Schedules A, B,
Exhibits I - _______ and the following Rider(s) to the
extent indicated on Schedule A hereto opposite the name of
the Customer under the column headed "Applicable Riders to
Agreement":
X ERISA
X MUTUAL FUND
SPECIAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS
There are no other provisions of this Agreement and this
Agreement supersedes any other agreements, whether written or
oral, between the parties. Any amendment to this Agreement must
be in writing, executed by both parties.
(f) Severability. In the event that one or more provisions
of this Agreement are held invalid, illegal or enforceable in any
respect on the basis of any particular circumstances or in any
jurisdiction, the validity, legality and enforceability of such
provision or provisions under other circumstances or in other
jurisdictions and of the remaining provisions will not in any way
____________________
* With respect to each Customer listed on Schedule A
hereto under the heading "ERISA Trusts".
** With respect to each Customer listed on Schedule A
hereto under the heading "Investment
Companies/Portfolios Registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940".
*** With respect to certain of the Customers listed on
Schedule A hereto under the heading "Separate Accounts"
as indicated on Schedule A.
be affected or impaired.
PAGE 12
(g) Waiver. Except as otherwise provided in this
Agreement, no failure or delay on the part of either party in
exercising any power or right under this Agreement operates as a
waiver, nor does any single or partial exercise of any power or
right preclude any other or further exercise, or the exercise of
any other power or right. No waiver by a party of any provision
of this Agreement, or waiver of any breach or default, is
effective unless in writing and signed by the party against whom
the waiver is to be enforced.
(h) Notices. All notices under this Agreement shall be
effective when actually received. Any notices or other
communications which may be required under this Agreement are to
be sent to the parties at the following addresses or such other
addresses as may subsequently be given to the other party in
writing:
Bank: The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
Chase MetroTech Center
Brooklyn, NY 11245
Attention: Global Investor Services
Telephone: (718) 242-3455
Facsimile: (718) 242-1374
Copy to: The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
Woolgate House
Coleman Street
London EC2P 2HD England
Attention: Global Investor Services
Telephone: 44-71-962-5000
Facsimile: 44-71-962-5377
Telex: 8954681CMBG
Customer: Name of Customer from Schedule A
c/o T. Rowe Price
100 East Pratt Street
Baltimore, MD 21202
Attention: Treasurer
Telephone: (410) 625-6658
Facsimile: (410) 547-0180
(i) Termination. This Agreement may be terminated by the
Customer or the Bank by giving ninety (90) days written notice to
the other, provided that such notice to the Bank shall specify
the names of the persons to whom the Bank shall deliver the
Assets in the Accounts. If notice of termination is given by the
Bank, the Customer shall, within ninety (90) days following
receipt of the notice, deliver to the Bank Instructions
specifying the names of the persons to whom the Bank shall
deliver the Assets. In either case the Bank will deliver the
Assets to the persons so specified, after deducting any amounts
which the Bank determines in good faith to be owed to it under
PAGE 13
Section 13. If within ninety (90) days following receipt of a
notice of termination by the Bank, the Bank does not receive
Instructions from the Customer specifying the names of the
persons to whom the Bank shall deliver the Assets, the Bank, at
its election, may deliver the Assets to a bank or trust company
doing business in the State of New York to be held and disposed
of pursuant to the provisions of this Agreement, or to Authorized
Persons, or may continue to hold the Assets until Instructions
are provided to the Bank.
(j) Entire Agreement. This Agreement, including the
Schedules and Riders hereto, embodies the entire agreement and
understanding of the parties in respect of the subject matter
contained in this Agreement. This Agreement supersedes all other
custody or other agreements between the parties with respect to
such subject matter, which prior agreements are hereby terminated
effective as of the date hereof and shall have no further force
or effect.
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS, INDIVIDUALLY
AND SEPARATELY LISTED ON SECTION I OF
SCHEDULE A HERETO
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
By:________________________________
Carmen F. Deyesu
Treasurer & Vice President
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS, INDIVIDUALLY
AND SEPARATELY LISTED ON SECTION II OF
SCHEDULE A HERETO
/s/Alvin M. Younger
By:____________________________________
Alvin M. Younger
Treasurer
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS, INDIVIDUALLY
AND SEPARATELY LISTED ON SECTION III OF
SCHEDULE A HERETO
/s/Alvin M. Younger
By:___________________________________
Alvin M. Younger
Treasurer
PAGE 14
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
/s/Alan Naughton
By:_________________________________
Alan Naughton
Vice President
STATE OF )
: ss.
COUNTY OF )
On this day of , 19 , before me
personally came , to me known, who
being by me duly sworn, did depose and say that he/she resides in
at ;
that he/she is of
, the entity
described in and which executed the foregoing instrument; that
he/she knows the seal of said entity, that the seal affixed to
said instrument is such seal, that it was so affixed by order of
said entity, and that he/she signed his/her name thereto by like
order.
__________________________________
Sworn to before me this
day of , 19 .
________________________________
Notary
PAGE 15
STATE OF )
: ss.
COUNTY OF )
On this day of
,19 , before me personally came , to
me known, who being by me duly sworn, did depose and say that
he/she resides in
at ; that
he/she is a Vice President of THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, (National
Association), the corporation described in and which executed the
foregoing instrument; that he/she knows the seal of said
corporation, that the seal affixed to said instrument is such
corporate seal, that it was so affixed by order of the Board of
Directors of said corporation, and that he/she signed his/her
name thereto by like order.
___________________________________
Sworn to before me this
day of , 19 .
___________________________________
Notary
PAGE 16
Schedule A
Page 1 of 2
LIST OF CUSTOMERS, EACH INDIVIDUALLY PARTIES TO
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT WITH
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
DATED JANUARY 3, 1994
APPLICABLE RIDERS TO
CUSTOMER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
I. INVESTMENT COMPANIES/PORTFOLIOS The Mutual Fund Rider is
REGISTERED UNDER THE INVESTMENT applicable to all
COMPANY ACT OF 1940 Customers listed under
Section I of this
Schedule A.
Equity Funds
T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund
T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc.
Institutional International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
Foreign Equity Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. Rowe Price Science & Technology Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Small Cap Value Fund, Inc.
CUNA Mutual Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
CUNA Mutual Cornerstone Fund
PAGE 17
Schedule A
Page 2 of 2
APPLICABLE RIDERS TO
CUSTOMER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
Income Funds
T. Rowe Price Adjustable Rate U.S. Government Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Global Government Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
II. ACCOUNTS SUBJECT TO ERISA The ERISA Rider is
applicable to all
T. Rowe Price Trust Company, as Customers under Section
Trustee for the Johnson Matthey II of this Schedule A.
Salaried Employee Savings Plan
Common Trust Funds
T. Rowe Price Trust Company, as Trustee
for the International Common Trust Fund
on behalf of the Underlying Trusts:
Foreign Discovery Trust
Foreign Discovery Trust-Augment
Pacific Discovery Trust
European Discovery Trust
Japan Discovery Trust
Latin American Discovery Trust
New York City International Common Trust Fund
III. OTHER No Riders are applicable
to the Customer listed
RPFI International Partners, L.P. under Section III of
this Schedule A.
PAGE 18
ERISA Rider to Global Custody Agreement
Between The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. and
Each of the Entities Listed on Schedule A Hereto
effective January 3, 1994
Customer represents that the Assets being placed in the
Bank's custody are subject to ERISA. It is understood that in
connection therewith the Bank is a service provider and not a
fiduciary of the plan and trust to which the assets are related.
The Bank shall not be considered a party to the underlying plan
and trust and the Customer hereby assumes all responsibility to
assure that Instructions issued under this Agreement are in
compliance with such plan and trust and ERISA.
This Agreement will be interpreted as being in compliance
with the Department of Labor Regulations Section 2550.404b-1
concerning the maintenance of indicia of ownership of plan assets
outside of the jurisdiction of the district courts of the United
States.
The following modifications are made to the Agreement:
Section 3. Subcustodians and Securities Depositories.
Add the following language to the end of Section 3:
As used in this Agreement, the term Subcustodian and the
term securities depositories include a branch of the Bank,
a branch of a qualified U.S. bank, an eligible foreign
custodian, or an eligible foreign securities depository,
where such terms shall mean:
(a) "qualified U.S. bank" shall mean a U.S. bank as
described in paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(A)(1) of the
Department of Labor Regulations Section 2550.404b-1;
(b) "eligible foreign custodian" shall mean a banking
institution incorporated or organized under the laws
of a country other than the United States which is
supervised or regulated by that country's government
or an agency thereof or other regulatory authority in
the foreign jurisdiction having authority over banks;
and
(c) "eligible foreign securities depository" shall mean a
securities depository or clearing agency,
incorporated or organized under the laws of a country
other than the United States, which is supervised or
regulated by that country's government or an agency
thereof or other regulatory authority in the foreign
jurisdiction having authority over such depositories
or clearing agencies and which is described in
paragraph (c)(2) of the Department of Labor
Regulations Section 2550.404b-1.
Section 4. Use of Subcustodian.
PAGE 19
Subsection (d) of this section is modified by deleting the
last sentence.
Section 5. Deposit Account Payments.
Subsection (b) is amended to read as follows:
(b) In the event that any payment made under this Section
5 exceeds the funds available in the Deposit Account, such
discretionary advance shall be deemed a service provided
by the Bank under this Agreement for which it is entitled
to recover its costs as may be determined by the Bank in
good faith.
Section 10. Authorized Persons.
Add the following paragraph at the end of Section 10:
Customer represents that: a) Instructions will only be issued
by or for a fiduciary pursuant to Department of Labor
Regulation Section 404b-1 (a)(2)(i) and b) if Instructions
are to be issued by an investment manager, such entity will
meet the requirements of Section 3(38) of ERISA and will have
been designated by the Customer to manage assets held in the
Customer Accounts ("Investment Manager"). An Investment
Manager may designate certain of its employees to act as
Authorized Persons under this Agreement.
Section 14(a). Foreign Exchange Transactions.
Add the following paragraph at the end of Subsection 14(a):
Instructions to execute foreign exchange transactions with
the Bank, its subsidiaries, affiliates or Subcustodians will
include (1) the time period in which the transaction must be
completed; (2) the location i.e., Chase New York, Chase
London, etc. or the Subcustodian with whom the contract is to
be executed and (3) such additional information and
guidelines as may be deemed necessary; and, if the
Instruction is a standing Instruction, a provision allowing
such Instruction to be overridden by specific contrary
Instructions.
PAGE 20
Mutual Fund Rider to Global Custody Agreement
Between The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. and
Each of the Entities Listed on Schedule A Hereto
effective January 3, 1994
Customer represents that the Assets being placed in the
Bank's custody are subject to the Investment Company Act of 1940
(the Act), as the same may be amended from time to time.
Except to the extent that the Bank has specifically agreed to
comply with a condition of a rule, regulation, interpretation
promulgated by or under the authority of the SEC or the Exemptive
Order applicable to accounts of this nature issued to the Bank
(Investment Company Act of 1940, Release No. 12053, November 20,
1981), as amended, or unless the Bank has otherwise specifically
agreed, the Customer shall be solely responsible to assure that
the maintenance of Assets under this Agreement complies with such
rules, regulations, interpretations or exemptive order
promulgated by or under the authority of the Securities Exchange
Commission.
The following modifications are made to the Agreement:
Section 3. Subcustodians and Securities Depositories.
Add the following language to the end of Section 3:
The terms Subcustodian and securities depositories as used in
this Agreement shall mean a branch of a qualified U.S. bank,
an eligible foreign custodian or an eligible foreign
securities depository, which are further defined as follows:
(a) "qualified U.S. Bank" shall mean a qualified U.S. bank
as defined in Rule 17f-5 under the Investment Company Act of
1940;
(b) "eligible foreign custodian" shall mean (i) a banking
institution or trust company incorporated or organized under
the laws of a country other than the United States that is
regulated as such by that country's government or an agency
thereof and that has shareholders' equity in excess of $200
million in U.S. currency (or a foreign currency equivalent
thereof), (ii) a majority owned direct or indirect subsidiary
of a qualified U.S. bank or bank holding company that is
incorporated or organized under the laws of a country other
than the United States and that has shareholders' equity in
excess of $100 million in U.S. currency (or a foreign
currency equivalent thereof)(iii) a banking institution or
trust company incorporated or organized under the laws of a
country other than the United States or a majority owned
direct or indirect subsidiary of a qualified U.S. bank or
bank holding company that is incorporated or organized under
the laws of a country other than the United States which has
such other qualifications as shall be specified in
Instructions and approved by the Bank; or (iv) any other
PAGE 21
entity that shall have been so qualified by exemptive order,
rule or other appropriate action of the SEC; and
(c) "eligible foreign securities depository" shall mean a
securities depository or clearing agency, incorporated or
organized under the laws of a country other than the United
States, which operates (i) the central system for handling
securities or equivalent book-entries in that country, or
(ii) a transnational system for the central handling of
securities or equivalent book-entries.
The Customer represents that its Board of Directors has
approved each of the Subcustodians listed in Schedule B to this
Agreement and the terms of the subcustody agreements between the
Bank and each Subcustodian, which are attached as Exhibits I
through of Schedule B, and further represents that its
Board has determined that the use of each Subcustodian and the
terms of each subcustody agreement are consistent with the best
interests of the Fund(s) and its (their) shareholders. The Bank
will supply the Customer with any amendment to Schedule B for
approval. As requested by the Bank, the Customer will supply the
Bank with certified copies of its Board of Directors
resolution(s) with respect to the foregoing prior to placing
Assets with any Subcustodian so approved.
Section 11. Instructions.
Add the following language to the end of Section 11:
Deposit Account Payments and Custody Account Transactions
made pursuant to Section 5 and 6 of this Agreement may be
made only for the purposes listed below. Instructions must
specify the purpose for which any transaction is to be made
and Customer shall be solely responsible to assure that
Instructions are in accord with any limitations or
restrictions applicable to the Customer by law or as may be
set forth in its prospectus.
(a) In connection with the purchase or sale of Securities at
prices as confirmed by Instructions;
(b) When Securities are called, redeemed or retired, or
otherwise become payable;
(c) In exchange for or upon conversion into other securities
alone or other securities and cash pursuant to any plan or
merger, consolidation, reorganization, recapitalization or
readjustment;
(d) Upon conversion of Securities pursuant to their terms
into other securities;
(e) Upon exercise of subscription, purchase or other similar
rights represented by Securities;
(f) For the payment of interest, taxes, management or
supervisory fees, distributions or operating expenses;
PAGE 22
(g) In connection with any borrowings by the Customer
requiring a pledge of Securities, but only against receipt of
amounts borrowed;
(h) In connection with any loans, but only against receipt
of adequate collateral as specified in Instructions which
shall reflect any restrictions applicable to the Customer;
(i) For the purpose of redeeming shares of the capital stock
of the Customer and the delivery to, or the crediting to the
account of, the Bank, its Subcustodian or the Customer's
transfer agent, such shares to be purchased or redeemed;
(j) For the purpose of redeeming in kind shares of the
Customer against delivery to the Bank, its Subcustodian or
the Customer's transfer agent of such shares to be so
redeemed;
(k) For delivery in accordance with the provisions of any
agreement among the Customer, the Bank and a broker-dealer
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
"Exchange Act") and a member of The National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), relating to compliance
with the rules of The Options Clearing Corporation and of any
registered national securities exchange, or of any similar
organization or organizations, regarding escrow or other
arrangements in connection with transactions by the Customer;
(l) For release of Securities to designated brokers under
covered call options, provided, however, that such Securities
shall be released only upon payment to the Bank of monies for
the premium due and a receipt for the Securities which are to
be held in escrow. Upon exercise of the option, or at
expiration, the Bank will receive from brokers the Securities
previously deposited. The Bank will act strictly in
accordance with Instructions in the delivery of Securities to
be held in escrow and will have no responsibility or
liability for any such Securities which are not returned
promptly when due other than to make proper request for such
return;
(m) For spot or forward foreign exchange transactions to
facilitate security trading, receipt of income from
Securities or related transactions;
(n) For other proper purposes as may be specified in
Instructions issued by an officer of the Customer which shall
include a statement of the purpose for which the delivery or
payment is to be made, the amount of the payment or specific
Securities to be delivered, the name of the person or persons
to whom delivery or payment is to be made, and a
certification that the purpose is a proper purpose under the
instruments governing the Customer; and
(o) Upon the termination of this Agreement as set forth in
Section 14(i).
PAGE 23
Section 12. Standard of Care; Liabilities.
Add the following subsection (c) to Section 12:
(c) The Bank hereby warrants to the Customer that in its
opinion, after due inquiry, the established procedures to be
followed by each of its branches, each branch of a qualified
U.S. bank, each eligible foreign custodian and each eligible
foreign securities depository holding the Customer's
Securities pursuant to this Agreement afford protection for
such Securities at least equal to that afforded by the Bank's
established procedures with respect to similar securities
held by the Bank and its securities depositories in New York.
Section 14. Access to Records.
Add the following language to the end of Section 14(c):
Upon reasonable request from the Customer, the Bank shall
furnish the Customer such reports (or portions thereof) of
the Bank's system of internal accounting controls applicable
to the Bank's duties under this Agreement. The Bank shall
endeavor to obtain and furnish the Customer with such similar
reports as it may reasonably request with respect to each
Subcustodian and securities depository holding the Customer's
assets.
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
WITH
DATE
SPECIAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS RIDER
PAGE 24
January, 1994 Schedule B
SUB-CUSTODIANS EMPLOYED BY
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A. LONDON, GLOBAL CUSTODY
COUNTRY SUB-CUSTODIAN CORRESPONDENT BANK
ARGENTINA The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
Main Branch N.A. Buenos Aires
25 De Mayo 130/140
Buenos Aires
ARGENTINA
AUSTRALIA The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
Australia Limited Manhattan Bank
36th Floor Australia Limited
World Trade Centre Sydney
Jamison Street
Sydney
New South Wales 2000
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRIA Creditanstalt - Bankvereln Credit Lyonnais
Schottengasse 6 Vienna
A - 1011, Vienna
AUSTRIA
BANGLADESH Standard Chartered Bank Standard Chartered
18-20 Motijheel C.A. Bank Dhaka
Box 536,
Dhaka-1000
BANGLADESH
BELGIUM Generale Bank Credit Lyonnais
3 Montagne Du Parc Bank Brussels
1000 Bruxelles
BELGIUM
BOTSWANA Standard Chartered Bank Standard Chartered
Botswana Ltd. Bank Botswana Ltd.
4th Floor Commerce House Gaborone
The Mall
Gaborone
BOTSWANA
BRAZIL Banco Chase Manhattan, S.A. Banco Chase
Chase Manhattan Center Manhattan S.A.
Rua Verbo Divino, 1400 Sao Paulo
Sao Paulo, SP 04719-002
BRAZIL
PAGE 25
CANADA The Royal Bank of Canada Toronto Dominion
Royal Bank Plaza Bank
Toronto Toronto
Ontario M5J 2J5
CANADA
Canada Trust Toronto Dominion
Canada Trust Tower Bank
BCE Place Toronto
161 Bay at Front
Toronto
Ontario M5J 2T2
CANADA
CHILE The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
Agustinas 1235 N.A.
Casilla 9192 Santiago
Santiago
CHILE
COLOMBIA Cititrust Colombia S.A. Cititrust Colombia
Sociedad Fiduciaria S.A. Sociedad
Av. Jimenez No 8-89 Fiduciaria
Santafe de Bogota, DC Santafe de Bogota
COLOMBIA
CZECH Ceskoslovenska Obchodni Ceskoslovenska
REPUBLC Banka, A.S. Obchodni Banka,
Na Prikoope 14 A.S.
115 20 Praha 1 Praha
CZECH REPUBLIC
DENMARK Den Danske Bank Den Danske Bak
2 Holmens Kanala DK 1091 Copenhagen
Copenhagen
DENMARK
EUROBONDS Cedel S.A. ECU:Lloyds Bank
67 Boulevard Grande Duchesse PLC
Charlotte International
LUXEMBOURG Banking Dividion
A/c The Chase Manhattan London
Bank, N.A. For all other
London currencies: see
A/c No. 17817 relevant country
EURO CDS First Chicago Clearing ECU:Lloyds Bank
Centre PLC
27 Leadenhall Street Banking Division
London EC3A 1AA London
UNITED KINGDOM For all other
currencies: see
relevant country
PAGE 26
FINLAND Kansallis-Osake-Pankki Kanasallis-Osake-
Aleksanterinkatu 42 Pankki
00100 Helsinki 10
FINLAND
FRANCE Banque Paribas Societe Generale
Ref 256 Paris
BP 141
3, Rue D'Antin
75078 Paris
Cedex 02
FRANCE
GERMANY Chase Bank A.G. Chase Bank A.G.
Alexanderstrasse 59 Frankfurt
Postfach 90 01 09
60441 Frankfurt/Main
GERMANY
GREECE National Bank of Greece S.A. National Bank of
38 Stadiou Street Greece S.A. Athens
Athens A/c Chase
GREECE Manhattan Bank,
N.A., London
A/c No.
040/7/921578-68
HONG KONG The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
40/F One Exchange Square N.A.
8, Connaught Place Hong Kong
Central, Hong Kong
HONG KONG
HUNGARY Citibank Budapest Rt. Citibank Budapest
Vaci Utca 19-21 Rt.
1052 Budapest V Budapest
HUNGARY
INDIA The Hongkong and Shanghai The Hongkong and
Banking Corporation Limited Shanghai
52/60 Mahatma Gandhi Road Banking
Bombay 400 001 Corporation
INDIA Limited
Bombay
INDONESIA The Hongkong and Shanghai The Chase
Banking Corporation Limited Manhattan Bank,
World Trade Center N.A.
J1. Jend Sudirman Kav. 29-31 Jakarta
Jakarta 10023
INDONESIA
PAGE 27
IRELAND Bank of Ireland Allied Irish Bank
International Financial Dublin
Services Centre
1 Hargourmaster Place
Dublin 1
IRELAND
ISRAEL Bank Leumi Le-Israel B.M. Bank Leumi Le-
19 Herzi Street Israel B.M.
65136 Tel Aviv Tel Aviv
ISRAEL
ITALY The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
Piazza Meda 1 N.A.
20121 Milan Milan
ITALY
JAPAN The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
1-3 Marunouchi 1-Chome N.A.
Chiyoda-Ku Tokyo
Tokyo 100
JAPAN
JORDAN Arab Bank Limited Arab Bank Limited
P.O. Box 950544-5 Amman
Amman
Shmeisani
JORDAN
LUXEMBOURG Banque Generale du Banque Generale du
Luxembourg S.A. Luxembourg S.A.
27 Avenue Monterey Luxembourg
LUXEMBOURG
MALAYSIA The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
Pernas International N.A.
Jalan Sultan Ismail Kuala Lumpur
50250, Kuala Lumpur
MALAYSIA
MEXICO The Chase Manhattan Bank, No correspondent
(Equities) N.A. Bank
Hamburgo 213, Piso 7
06660 Mexico D.F.
MEXICO
(Government Banco Nacional de Mexico, Banque Commerciale
Bonds) Avenida Juarez No. 104 - 11 du Maroc
Piso Casablanca
06040 Mexico D.F.
MEXICO
PAGE 28
NETHERLANDS ABN AMRO N.V. Credit Lyonnais
Securities Centre Bank Nederland
P.O. Box 3200 N.V.
4800 De Breda Rotterdam
NETHERLANDS
NEW ZEALAND National Nominees Limited National Bank of
Level 2 BNZ Tower New Zealand
125 Queen Street Wellington
Auckland
NEW ZEALAND
NORWAY Den Norske Bank Den Norske Bank
Kirkegaten 21 Oslo
Oslo 1
NORWAY
PAKISTAN Citibank N.A. Citibank N.A.
State Life Building No.1 Karachi
I.I. Chundrigar Road
Karachi
PAKISTAN
PERU Citibank, N.A. Citibank N.A.
Camino Real 457 Lima
CC Torre Real - 5th Floor
San Isidro, Lima 27
PERU
PHILIPPINES The Hongkong and Shanghai The Hongkong and
Banking Corporation Limited Shaghai Banking
Hong Kong Bank Centre 3/F Corporation
San Miguel Avenue Limited
Ortigas Commercial Centre Manila
Pasig Metro Manila
PHILIPPINES
POLAND Bank Polska Kasa Opieki S.A. Bank Potska Kasa
6/12 Nowy Swiat Str Opieki S.A.
00-920 Warsaw Warsaw
POLAND
PORTUGAL Banco Espirito Santo & Banco Pinto &
Comercial de Lisboa Sotto Mayor
Servico de Gestaode Titulos Avenida Fontes
R. Mouzinho da Silvelra, 36 Pereira de Melo
r/c 1000 Lisbon
1200 Lisbon
PORTUGAL
PAGE 29
SHANGHAI The Hongkong and Shanghai The Chase
(CHINA) Banking Corporation Limited Manhattan Bank,
Shanghai Branch N.A.
Corporate Banking Centre Hong Kong
Unit 504, 5/F Shanghai
Centre
1376 Hanjing Xi Lu
Shanghai
THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
CHINA
SCHENZHEN The Hongkong and Shanghai The Chase
(CHINA) Banking Corporation Limited Manhattan Bank,
1st Floor N.A.
Central Plaza Hotel Hong Kong
No. 1 Chun Feng Lu
Shenzhen
THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
CHINA
SINGAPORE The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
Shell Tower N.A.
50 Raffles Place Singapore
Singapore 0104
SINGAPORE
SOUTH KOREA The Hongkong & Shanghai The Hongkong &
Banking Corporation Limited Shanghai Banking
6/F Kyobo Building Corporation
#1 Chongro, 1-ka Chongro-Ku, Limited
Seoul Seoul
SOUGH KOREA
SPAIN The Chase Manhattan Bank, Banco Zaragozano,
N.A. S.A.
Calle Peonias 2 Madrid
7th Floor
La Piovera
28042 Madrid
SPAIN
URUGUAY The First National Bank of The First National
Boston Bank of Boston
Zabala 1463 Montevideo
Montevideo
URUGUAY
U.S.A The Chase Manhattan Bank, The Chase
N.A. Manhattan Bank,
1 Chase Manhattan Plaza N.A.
New York New York
NY 10081
U.S.A.
PAGE 30
VENEZUELA Citibank N.A. Citibank N.A.
Carmelitas a Altagracia Caracas
Edificio Citibank
Caracas 1010
VENEZUELA
PAGE 31
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT, dated as of April 18, 1994 (the
"Amendment Agreement") to the Global Custody Agreement, effective
January 3, 1994 (the "Custody Agreement") by and between each of
the Entities listed in Attachment A hereto, separately and
individually (each such entity referred to hereinafter as the
"Customer") and THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A. (the "Bank").
Terms defined in the Custody Agreement are used herein as therein
defined.
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, the Customer wishes to appoint the Bank as its
global custodian and the bank wishes to accept such appointment
pursuant to the terms of the Custody Agreement;
NOW, THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows:
1. Amendment. Section I of Schedule A of the Custody
Agreement ("Schedule A") shall be amended to add each
Customer listed in Attachment A hereto. The revised
Schedule A incorporating these changes in the form
attached hereto as Attachment B shall supersede the
existing Schedule A in its entirety.
2. Agreement. The Customer agrees to be bound in all
respects by all the terms and conditions of the Custody
Agreement and shall be fully liable thereunder as a
"Customer" as defined in the Custody Agreement.
3. Confirmation of Agreement. Except as amended hereby, the
Custody Agreement is in full force and effect and as so
amended is hereby ratified, approved and confirmed by the
Customer and the Bank in all respects.
4. Governing Law. This Amendment Agreement shall be
construed in accordance with and governed by the law of
the State of New York without regard to its conflict of
law principles.
PAGE 32
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Amendment
Agreement as of the day and year first above written.
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
/s/Alan P. Naughton
By:________________________________
Alan P. Naughton
Vice President
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS LISTED IN
ATTACHMENT A HERETO, SEPARATELY AND
INDIVIDUALLY
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
By: ______________________________
Carmen F. Deyesu
Treasurer
PAGE 33
Attachment A
LIST OF CUSTOMERS
T. Rowe Price International Series, Inc. on behalf of the
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. on behalf of the
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Income Series, Inc. on behalf of
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
PAGE 34
Attachment B
Schedule A
Page 1 of 2
LIST OF CUSTOMERS, EACH INDIVIDUALLY PARTIES TO
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT WITH
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
DATED JANUARY 3, 1993
APPLICABLE RIDERS TO
CUSTOMER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
I. INVESTMENT The Mutual Fund Rider is
COMPANIES/PORTFOLIOS applicable to all Customers
REGISTERED UNDER THE listed under Section I
INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 of this Schedule A.
PAGE 35
Equity Funds
T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund
T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc.
Institutional International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
Foreign Equity Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price International Series, Inc., on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. Rowe Price Science & Technology Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value Fund, Inc.
CUNA Mutual Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
CUNA Mutual Cornerstone Fund
T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, Inc.
Income Funds
T. Rowe Price Adjustable Rate U.S. Government Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Global Government Income Fund
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Income Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
II. ACCOUNTS SUBJECT TO ERISA The ERISA Rider is
applicable to all Customers
T. Rowe Price Trust Company, under Section II of this
as Trustee for the Johnson Schedule A.
Matthey Salaried Employee
Savings Plan
PAGE 36
Common Trust Funds
T. Rowe Price Trust company,
as Trustee for the International
Common Trust Fund on behalf of
the Underlying Trusts:
Foreign Discovery Trust
Foreign Discovery Trust-Augment
Pacific Discovery Trust
European Discovery Trust
Japan Discovery Trust
Latin American Discovery Trust
New York City International Common Trust Fund
III. OTHER No Riders are applicable to
the Customer listed under
RPFI International Section III of this
Partners, L.P. Schedule A.
PAGE 37
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT, dated as of August 15, 1994 (the
"Amendment Agreement") to the Global Custody Agreement, effective
January 3, 1994, as amended (the "Custody Agreement") by and
between each of the Entities listed in Attachment A hereto,
separately and individually (each such entity referred to
hereinafter as the "Customer") and THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
(the "Bank"). Terms defined in the Custody Agreement are used
herein as therein defined.
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, the Customer wishes to appoint the Bank as its
global custodian and the Bank wishes to accept such appointment
pursuant to the terms of the Custody Agreement;
NOW, THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows:
1. Amendment. Section I of Schedule A of the Custody
Agreement ("Schedule A") shall be amended to add each Customer
listed in Attachment A hereto. The revised Schedule A
incorporating these changes in the form attached hereto as
Attachment B shall supersede the existing Schedule A in its
entirety.
2. Agreement. The Customer agrees to be bound in all
respects by all the terms and conditions of the Custody Agreement
and shall be fully liable thereunder as a "Customer" as defined
in the Custody Agreement.
3. Confirmation of Agreement. Except as amended hereby,
the Custody Agreement is in full force and effect and as so
amended is hereby ratified, approved and confirmed by the
Customer and the Bank in all respects.
4. Governing Law. This Amendment Agreement shall be
construed in accordance with and governed by the law of the State
of New York without regard to its conflict of law principles.
PAGE 38
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Amendment
Agreement as of the day and year first above written.
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
/s/Alan P. Naughton
By:_________________________________
Alan P. Naughton
Vice President
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS LISTED IN
ATTACHMENT A HERETO, SEPARATELY AND
INDIVIDUALLY
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
By:_________________________________
Carmen F. Deyesu
Treasurer
PAGE 39
Attachment A
LIST OF CUSTOMERS
T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. on behalf of the
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc. on behalf of
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
PAGE 40
Attachment B
Schedule A
Page 1 of 2
LIST OF CUSTOMERS, EACH INDIVIDUALLY PARTIES TO
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT WITH
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
DATED JANUARY 3, 1993
APPLICABLE RIDERS TO
CUSTOMER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
I. INVESTMENT The Mutual Fund Rider is
COMPANIES/PORTFOLIOS applicable to all Customers
REGISTERED UNDER THE listed under Section I
INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 of this Schedule A.
Equity Funds
T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund
T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc.
Institutional International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
Foreign Equity Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price International Series, Inc., on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. Rowe Price Science & Technology Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value Fund, Inc.
CUNA Mutual Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
CUNA Mutual Cornerstone Fund
T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, Inc.
PAGE 41
Income Funds
T. Rowe Price Adjustable Rate U.S. Government Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Global Government Income Fund
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Income Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
II. ACCOUNTS SUBJECT TO ERISA The ERISA Rider is
applicable to all Customers
T. Rowe Price Trust Company, under Section II of this
as Trustee for the Johnson Schedule A.
Matthey Salaried Employee
Savings Plan
Common Trust Funds
T. Rowe Price Trust company,
as Trustee for the International
Common Trust Fund on behalf of
the Underlying Trusts:
Foreign Discovery Trust
Foreign Discovery Trust-Augment
Pacific Discovery Trust
European Discovery Trust
Japan Discovery Trust
Latin American Discovery Trust
New York City International Common Trust Fund
III. OTHER No Riders are applicable to
the Customer listed under
RPFI International Section III of this
Partners, L.P. Schedule A.
PAGE 42
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT
AMENDMENT AGREEMENT, dated as of November 28, 1994 (the
"Amendment Agreement") to the Global Custody Agreement, effective
January 3, 1994, as amended (the "Custody Agreement") by and
between each of the Entities listed in Attachment A hereto,
separately and individually (each such entity referred to
hereinafter as the "Customer") and THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
(the "Bank"). Terms defined in the Custody Agreement are used
herein as therein defined.
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, the Customer wishes to appoint the Bank as its
global custodian and the Bank wishes to accept such appointment
pursuant to the terms of the Custody Agreement;
NOW, THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows:
1. Amendment. Section I of Schedule A of the Custody
Agreement ("Schedule A") shall be amended to add each Customer
listed in Attachment A hereto. The revised Schedule A
incorporating these changes in the form attached hereto as
Attachment B shall supersede the existing Schedule A in its
entirety.
2. Agreement. The Customer agrees to be bound in all
respects by all the terms and conditions of the Custody Agreement
and shall be fully liable thereunder as a "Customer" as defined
in the Custody Agreement.
3. Confirmation of Agreement. Except as amended hereby,
the Custody Agreement is in full force and effect and as so
amended is hereby ratified, approved and confirmed by the
Customer and the Bank in all respects.
4. Governing Law. This Amendment Agreement shall be
construed in accordance with and governed by the law of the State
of New York without regard to its conflict of law principles.
PAGE 43
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Amendment
Agreement as of the day and year first above written.
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
/s/Alan P. Naughton
By:_________________________________
Alan P. Naughton
Vice President
EACH OF THE CUSTOMERS LISTED IN
ATTACHMENT A HERETO, SEPARATELY AND
INDIVIDUALLY
/s/Carmen F. Deyesu
By:_________________________________
Carmen F. Deyesu
Treasurer
PAGE 44
Attachment A
LIST OF CUSTOMERS
T. Rowe Price Value Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Capital Opportunity Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets Bond Fund
PAGE 45
Attachment B
Schedule A
Page 1 of 2
LIST OF CUSTOMERS, EACH INDIVIDUALLY PARTIES TO
GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT WITH
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, N.A.
DATED JANUARY 3, 1993
APPLICABLE RIDERS TO
CUSTOMER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
I. INVESTMENT The Mutual Fund Rider is
COMPANIES/PORTFOLIOS applicable to all Customers
REGISTERED UNDER THE listed under Section I
INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 of this Schedule A.
Equity Funds
T. Rowe Price Balanced Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund
T. Rowe Price Capital Opportunity Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Dividend Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Growth & Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, Inc.
Institutional International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
Foreign Equity Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price European Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price International Discovery Fund
T. Rowe Price International Stock Fund
T. Rowe Price Japan Fund
T. Rowe Price Latin America Fund
T. Rowe Price New Asia Fund
T. Rowe Price International Series, Inc., on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price International Stock Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price OTC Fund
T. Rowe Price Science & Technology Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Small-Cap Value Fund, Inc.
CUNA Mutual Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
CUNA Mutual Cornerstone Fund
T. Rowe Price Equity Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Portfolio
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Value Fund, Inc.
PAGE 46
Income Funds
T. Rowe Price Adjustable Rate U.S. Government Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price High Yield Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price New Income Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Bond Fund, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Global Government Income Fund
T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Short-Term Global Income Fund
T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets Bond Fund
T. Rowe Price Income Series, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Limited-Term Bond Portfolio
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Funds, Inc. on behalf of:
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Balanced Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Growth Fund
T. Rowe Price Personal Strategy Income Fund
II. ACCOUNTS SUBJECT TO ERISA The ERISA Rider is
applicable to all Customers
T. Rowe Price Trust Company, under Section II of this
as Trustee for the Johnson Schedule A.
Matthey Salaried Employee
Savings Plan
Common Trust Funds
T. Rowe Price Trust company,
as Trustee for the International
Common Trust Fund on behalf of
the Underlying Trusts:
Foreign Discovery Trust
Foreign Discovery Trust-Augment
Pacific Discovery Trust
European Discovery Trust
Japan Discovery Trust
Latin American Discovery Trust
New York City International Common Trust Fund
III. OTHER No Riders are applicable to
the Customer listed under
RPFI International Section III of this
Partners, L.P. Schedule A.
February 15, 1995
Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Re: T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. ("Registrant")
consisting of three separate series:
T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
File Nos.: 033-50319/811-7093
Dear Sirs:
We are counsel to the above-referenced registrant which
proposes to file, pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485 (the
"Rule"), Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 (the "Amendment") to its
Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended.
Pursuant to paragraph (e) of the Rule, we represent that the
Amendment does not contain disclosures which would render it
ineligible to become effective pursuant to paragraph (b) of the
Rule.
Sincerely,
/s/Shereff, Friedman, Hoffman & Goodman
Shereff, Friedman, Hoffman & Goodman
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
To the Board of Director of
T. Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. and the
Shareholders of the T. Rowe Price Summit Cash Reserves
Fund, T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond Fund
and T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund
We consent to the incorporation by reference in Post-
Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement of the T.
Rowe Price Summit Funds, Inc. (which include the T. Rowe Price
Summit Cash Reserves Fund, T. Rowe Price Summit Limited-Term Bond
Fund and T. Rowe Price Summit GNMA Fund) (the "Funds") on Form N-
1A (File No. 033-50319) of our report dated November 22, 1994,
relating to the financial statements and financial highlights
appearing in the Fund's October 31, 1994 Annual Report to
Shareholders, which is incorporated by reference in the
Registration Statement. We also consent to the reference to our
Firm under the captions "Financial Highlights" in the Prospectus
and "Independent Accountants" in the Statement of Additional
Information.
/s/Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.
COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
Baltimore, Maryland
February 15, 1995
<TABLE> <S> <C>
<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0000912028
<NAME> T ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS
<SERIES>
<NUMBER> 1
<NAME> T ROWE PRICE SUMMIT CASH RESERVES FUND
<S> <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE> YEAR
<FISCAL-YEAR-END> OCT-31-1994
<PERIOD-END> OCT-31-1994
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST> 183307
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE> 183224
<RECEIVABLES> 4184
<ASSETS-OTHER> 545
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS> 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS> 187953
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES> 0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT> 0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES> 1430
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES> 1430
<SENIOR-EQUITY> 0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON> 186605
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK> 186605
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS> 1
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS> 0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC> (83)
<NET-ASSETS> 186523
<DIVIDEND-INCOME> 0
<INTEREST-INCOME> 4058
<OTHER-INCOME> 0
<EXPENSES-NET> 411
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME> 3647
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT> 1
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT> (83)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS> 3565
<EQUALIZATION> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME> (3647)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER> 0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD> 340645
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED> 157398
<SHARES-REINVESTED> 3318
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS> 186483
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES> 411
<INTEREST-EXPENSE> 0
<GROSS-EXPENSE> 411
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS> 90500
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN> 1.00
<PER-SHARE-NII> .04
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC> 0
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND> 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS> .04
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL> 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END> 1.00
<EXPENSE-RATIO> .45
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING> 0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE> 0
<TABLE> <S> <C>
<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0000912028
<NAME> T. ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
<NUMBER> 3
<NAME> T ROWE PRICE SUMMIT LIMITED TERM BOND FUND
<S> <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE> YEAR
<FISCAL-YEAR-END> OCT-31-1994
<PERIOD-END> OCT-31-1994
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST> 21638
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE> 21333
<RECEIVABLES> 467
<ASSETS-OTHER> 54
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS> 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS> 21854
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES> 564
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT> 0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES> 174
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES> 738
<SENIOR-EQUITY> 0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON> 22552
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK> 4556
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT> 1
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS> 1132
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC> (305)
<NET-ASSETS> 21116
<DIVIDEND-INCOME> 0
<INTEREST-INCOME> 1141
<OTHER-INCOME> 0
<EXPENSES-NET> 84
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME> 1057
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT> (1132)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT> (305)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS> (380)
<EQUALIZATION> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME> (1056)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER> 0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD> 6654
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED> 2285
<SHARES-REINVESTED> 181
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS> 21086
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES> 84
<INTEREST-EXPENSE> 0
<GROSS-EXPENSE> 84
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS> 15148
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN> 5.00
<PER-SHARE-NII> .33
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC> (.36)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND> 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS> .33
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL> 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END> 4.64
<EXPENSE-RATIO> .55
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING> 0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE> 0
<TABLE> <S> <C>
<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0000912028
<NAME> T ROWE PRICE SUMMIT FUNDS
<SERIES>
<NUMBER> 2
<NAME> T ROWE PRICE SUMMIT GNMA
<S> <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE> YEAR
<FISCAL-YEAR-END> OCT-31-1994
<PERIOD-END> OCT-31-1994
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST> 19492
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE> 18226
<RECEIVABLES> 308
<ASSETS-OTHER> 95
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS> 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS> 18629
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES> 1365
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT> 0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES> 80
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES> 1445
<SENIOR-EQUITY> 0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON> 18560
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK> 1878
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS> 110
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC> (1266)
<NET-ASSETS> 17184
<DIVIDEND-INCOME> 0
<INTEREST-INCOME> 1084
<OTHER-INCOME> 0
<EXPENSES-NET> 83
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME> 1001
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT> (223)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT> (1266)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS> (488)
<EQUALIZATION> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME> 1001
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER> 0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD> 2285
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED> 491
<SHARES-REINVESTED> 81
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS> 17154
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES> 83
<INTEREST-EXPENSE> 0
<GROSS-EXPENSE> 83
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS> 13692
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN> 10.00
<PER-SHARE-NII> .69
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC> (.85)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND> 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS> .69
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL> 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END> 9.15
<EXPENSE-RATIO> .60
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING> 0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE> 0