INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS INC
485BPOS, 1998-02-26
Previous: INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS INC, 24F-2NT, 1998-02-26
Next: INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS INC, NSAR-B, 1998-02-26



                          As filed on February 25, 1998
                                File No. 33-70154
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM N-1A

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933                      [X]
         Pre-Effective Amendment No.                                         [ ]
                                     -----
         Post-Effective Amendment No.   9                                    [X]
                                      -----

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940              [X]
         Amendment No.  10                                                   [X]
                       -----


                     INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

                  7800 E. Union Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80237
                    (Address of Principal Executive Offices)
                  P.O. Box 173706, Denver, Colorado 80217-3706
                                (Mailing Address)

                                 (303) 930-6300
                         (Registrant's Telephone Number)

                               Glen A. Payne, Esq.
                              7800 E. Union Avenue
                             Denver, Colorado 80237
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                                   Copies to:
                           W. Randolph Thompson, Esq.
                        Of Counsel, Jones & Blouch L.L.P.
                 1025 Thomas Jefferson St., N.W., Suite 405 West
                             Washington, D.C. 20007

Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering:  As soon after the
effective date of this registration statement as is practicable.

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate
box)
_X_      immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) 
         on _________________, pursuant to paragraph  (b) 
         60 days after  filing  pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) 
         on _________________,pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) 
         75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) 
         on  _________________,  pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) 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.

Registrant has previously  elected to register an indefinite number of shares of
its common  stock  pursuant  to Rule 24f-2  under the  Investment  Company  Act.
Registrant's Rule 24f-2 Notice for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1997, will
be filed on or about February 26, 1998.

                                    Page 1 of 111
                        Exhibit index is located at page 101


<PAGE>



                                      NOTE


This  Post-Effective  Amendment  (Form  N-1A) is being  filed to comply  with an
undertaking  contained in  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 5 to the  Registration
Statement to file an amendment containing unaudited financial statements for two
new series,  VIF - Dynamics  Portfolio and VIF - Small Company Growth Portfolio,
within  four  to six  months  from  the  effective  date  of the  Post-Effective
Amendment (December 9, 1996). Because the VIF - Dynamics and VIF - Small Company
Growth Portfolios did not commence operations until August 25, 1997, the four to
six month  financials are not due until February 27, 1998.  This  Post-Effective
Amendment  (Form  N-1A)  is also  being  filed  to  comply  with an  undertaking
contained in  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 6 to the  Registration  Statement to
file an amendment  containing  unaudited financial  statements for a new series,
VIF - Growth Portfolio, within four to six months from the effective date of the
Post-Effective  Amendment (May 1, 1997).  Because the VIF - Growth Portfolio did
not commence  operations until August 25, 1997, the four to six month financials
are not due until  February  27,  1998.  Please note that the audited  Financial
Highlights  for the VIF - Dynamics,  VIF - Small Company Growth and VIF - Growth
Portfolios are being filed as a supplement to the  Portfolios'  Prospectus.  The
audited  financial  statements  for the  nine  Portfolios  of  INVESCO  Variable
Investment Funds,  Inc.,  including  VIF-Dynamics,  VIF-Small Company Growth and
VIF-Growth  Portfoliosare  incorporated  by  reference  into  the  Statement  of
Additional  Information from INVESCO Variable  Investment  Funds,  Inc.'s Annual
Report to Shareholders.




<PAGE>



                     INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.
                         ------------------------------

                              CROSS-REFERENCE SHEET


      Form N-1A
         Item                                         Caption
      ---------                                       -------

Part A                             Prospectus

      1..............................     Cover Page

      2..............................     Summary; Supplement to Prospectus

      3..............................     Performance Information;
                                          Supplement to Prospectus

      4..............................     Cover Page; Summary; Investment
                                          Objectives and Policies; Risk
                                          Factors; Investment Restrictions

      5..............................     Summary; Management; Risk Factors

      5A.............................     Not Applicable

      6..............................     Cover Page; Summary; Tax Status,
                                          Dividends and Distributions;
                                          Additional Information

      7..............................     Purchases and Redemptions

      8..............................     Purchases and Redemptions

      9..............................     Not Applicable

Part B                              Statement of Additional Information

      10..............................    Cover Page

      11..............................    Table of Contents

      12..............................    Not Applicable

      13..............................    Investment Policies; Investment
                                          Restrictions; Appendix A

      14..............................    Management

      15..............................    Additional Information



                                                            


<PAGE>



      Form N-1A
         Item                             Caption
      ---------                           -------

      16..............................    Management; Additional
                                          Information

      17..............................    Portfolio Brokerage

      18..............................    Additional Information

      19..............................    How Shares are Valued;
                                          Redemptions

      20..............................    (Prospectus:  Tax Status,
                                          Dividends and Distributions)

      21..............................    (Prospectus:  Purchases and
                                          Redemptions; Management)

      22..............................    Performance


Part C                             Other Information

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


<PAGE>



                     INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc.

                           INVESCO VIF - Dynamics Portfolio
                     INVESCO VIF - Small Company Growth Portfolio
                            INVESCO VIF - Growth Portfolio

                   Supplement to Prospectus Dated May 1, 1997

      The following  information,  which is included in the Fund's  registration
statement  filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission,  supplements  the
Funds' Prospectus dated May 1, 1997.

      The section of the Funds' Prospectus  entitled  "Financial  Highlights" is
amended to add the following information to the end of the section:

INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc.
Financial Highlights
 (For a Fund Share Outstanding Throughout the Period)

                                                                          Period
                                                                           Ended
                                                                     December 31
                                                                  --------------
                                                                           1997+
Dynamics Portfolio

PER SHARE DATA
Net Asset Value - Beginning of Period                                     $10.00
                                                                  --------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net Investment Income                                                       0.02
Net Gains on Securities (Both Realized
     and Unrealized)                                                        0.32
                                                                  --------------
Total from Investment Operations                                            0.34
                                                                  --------------
Net Asset Value - End of Period                                           $10.34
                                                                  ==============

TOTAL RETURN>>                                                            3.40%*

RATIOS
Net Assets - End of Period ($000 Omitted)                                   $257
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                  0.52%@~
Ratio of Net Investment Income to
     Average Net Assets                                                   0.63%~
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                     28%*
Average Commission Rate Paid^^                                          $0.0588*





<PAGE>



+ All of the expenses of the  Portfolio  were  voluntarily  absorbed by IFG from
August 25, 1997,  commencement of investment  operations,  through  December 31,
1997. If such expenses had not been voluntarily  absorbed,  ratio of expenses to
average net assets would have been 34.18% and ratio of net investment  income to
average net assets would have been (33.03%).

>> Total return does not reflect  expenses  that apply to the related  insurance
policies,  and inclusion of these charges would reduce the total return  figures
for the period shown.

*  Based  on  operations  for  the  period  shown  and,  accordingly,   are  not
representative of a full year.

@ Ratio is based on Total Expenses of the Portfolio,  less Expenses  Absorbed by
Investment Adviser, which is before any expense offset arrangements.

~ Annualized

^^ The average  commission rate paid is the total brokerage  commissions paid on
applicable purchases and sales of securities for the period divided by the total
number of related shares purchased or sold.




<PAGE>



INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc.
Financial Highlights (Continued)
 (For a Fund Share Outstanding Throughout the Period)

                                                                          Period
                                                                           Ended
                                                                     December 31
                                                                  --------------
                                                                           1997+

Small Company Growth Portfolio

PER SHARE DATA
Net Asset Value - Beginning of Period                                     $10.00
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net Investment Income                                                       0.02
Net Loss on Securities (Both Realized
     and Unrealized)                                                      (0.11)
                                                                  --------------
Total from Investment Operations                                          (0.09)
                                                                  --------------
Net Asset Value - End of Period                                            $9.91
                                                                  ==============

TOTAL RETURN>>                                                          (0.90)%*

RATIOS
Net Assets - End of Period ($000 Omitted)                                   $247
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                  0.61%@~
Ratio of Net Investment Income to
     Average Net Assets                                                   0.52%~
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                     25%*
Average Commission Rate Paid^^                                          $0.1066*

+ All of the expenses of the  Portfolio  were  voluntarily  absorbed by IFG from
August 25, 1997,  commencement of investment  operations,  through  December 31,
1997. If such expenses had not been voluntarily  absorbed,  ratio of expenses to
average net assets would have been 35.99% and ratio of net investment  income to
average net assets would have been (34.86%).

>> Total return does not reflect  expenses  that apply to the related  insurance
policies,  and inclusion of these charges would reduce the total return  figures
for the period shown.

*  Based  on  operations  for  the  period  shown  and,  accordingly,   are  not
representative of a full year.

@ Ratio is based on Total Expenses of the Portfolio,  less Expenses  Absorbed by
Investment Adviser, which is before any expense offset arrangements.

~ Annualized

^^ The average  commission rate paid is the total brokerage  commissions paid on
applicable purchases and sales of securities for the period divided by the total
number of related shares purchased or sold.



<PAGE>



INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc.
Financial Highlights (Continued)
 (For a Fund Share Outstanding Throughout the Period)

                                                                          Period
                                                                           Ended
                                                                     December 31
                                                                  --------------
                                                                           1997+

Growth Portfolio

PER SHARE DATA
Net Asset Value - Beginning of Period                                     $10.00
                                                                  --------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net Investment Income                                                       0.05
Net Gains on Securities (Both Realized
     and Unrealized)                                                        0.64
                                                                  --------------
Total from Investment Operations                                            0.69
                                                                  --------------
Net Asset Value - End of Period                                           $10.69
                                                                  ==============

TOTAL RETURN>>                                                            6.90%*

RATIOS
Net Assets - End of Period ($000 Omitted)                                   $266
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets                                  0.29%@~
Ratio of Net Investment Income to
     Average Net Assets                                                   1.45%~
Portfolio Turnover Rate                                                     12%*
Average Commission Rate Paid^^                                          $0.0596*

+ All of the expenses of the  Portfolio  were  voluntarily  absorbed by IFG from
August 25, 1997,  commencement of investment  operations,  through  December 31,
1997. If such expenses had not been voluntarily  absorbed,  ratio of expenses to
average net assets would have been 28.76% and ratio of net investment  income to
average net assets would have been (27.02%).

>> Total return does not reflect  expenses  that apply to the related  insurance
policies,  and  inclusion of these charges would reduce the total return for the
period shown.

*  Based  on  operations  for  the  period  shown  and,  accordingly,   are  not
representative of a full year.

@ Ratio is based on Total Expenses of the Portfolio,  less Expenses  Absorbed by
Investment Adviser, which is before any expenses offset arrangements.

~ Annualized

^^ The average  commission rate paid is the total brokerage  commissions paid on
applicable purchases and sales of securities for the period divided by the total
number of related shares purchased or sold.





<PAGE>



Prospectus
May 1, 1997

                     INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.

         INVESCO Variable  Investment  Funds,  Inc. (the "Company"),  a Maryland
corporation,  is an open-end management investment company that offers shares of
common  stock of nine  diversified  investment  portfolios  (the  "Funds"):  the
INVESCO VIF - Industrial  Income Portfolio (the "Industrial  Income Fund"),  the
INVESCO VIF - Total Return Portfolio (the "Total Return Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF
- -  Dynamics  Portfolio  (the  "Dynamics  Fund"),  the  INVESCO  VIF - High Yield
Portfolio  (the "High Yield  Fund"),  the INVESCO  VIF - Growth  Portfolio  (the
"Growth  Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF - Small Company  Growth  Portfolio (the "Small
Company Growth Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences Portfolio (the "Health
Sciences Fund"), the INVESCO VIF - Technology Portfolio (the "Technology Fund"),
the INVESCO VIF - Utilities  Portfolio  (the  "Utilities  Fund").  The Company's
shares are not offered directly to the public,  but are sold exclusively to life
insurance companies  ("Participating  Insurance  Companies") as a pooled funding
vehicle for variable  annuity and variable life  insurance  contracts  issued by
separate  accounts  of  Participating  Insurance  Companies.  The Funds have the
following investment objectives:

Industrial Income Fund: to seek the best possible current income while following
sound   investment   practices.   Capital  growth  potential  is  an  additional
consideration  in the  selection  of  portfolio  securities.  The Fund  normally
invests at least 65% of its total assets in dividend-paying common stocks. Up to
10% of the Fund's total assets may be invested in equity  securities that do not
pay   regular   dividends.   The   remaining   assets  are   invested  in  other
income-producing  securities,  such as  corporate  bonds.  The Fund also has the
flexibility to invest in other types of securities.

Total Return Fund:  to seek a high total return on  investment  through  capital
appreciation  and  current  income.  The Total  Return Fund seeks to achieve its
investment  objective  by  investing  in  a  combination  of  equity  securities
(consisting  of common stocks and, to a lesser  degree,  securities  convertible
into common stock) and fixed income securities.

Dynamics Fund: to seek appreciation of capital through aggressive
investment policies.  The Dynamics Fund invests primarily in common
stocks of U.S. companies traded on national securities exchanges and
over-the-counter.




<PAGE>



High  Yield  Fund:  to  seek  a  high  level  of  current  income  by  investing
substantially  all of its assets in lower-rated  bonds and other debt securities
and in  preferred  stock.  See "Risk  Factors"  for a  description  of the risks
involved in  investing in  lower-rated  bonds.  The Fund pursues its  investment
objective through investment in a variety of long-term,  intermediate-term,  and
short-term bonds. Potential capital appreciation is a factor in the selection of
investments, but is secondary to the Fund's primary objective.

Small Company Growth Fund: to seek long-term capital growth. The Small
Company Growth Fund invests primarily in equity securities of small-
capitalization U.S. companies traded "over-the-counter."

Health  Sciences Fund: to seek capital  appreciation.  The Health  Sciences Fund
normally  invests  at least 80% of its total  assets  in  equity  securities  of
companies that develop,  produce,  or distribute products or services related to
health care.

Technology  Fund: to seek capital  appreciation.  The  Technology  Fund normally
invests at least 80% of its total  assets in equity  securities  of companies in
technology-related   industries  such  as  computers,   communications,   video,
electronics, oceanography, office and factory automation, and robotics.

Utilities  Fund:  to seek  capital  appreciation  and income.  The assets of the
Utilities  Fund  are  invested  primarily  in  equity  securities  of  companies
principally engaged in business as public utilities.

Growth  Fund:  to seek  long-term  capital  growth.  The Fund also  seeks,  as a
secondary  objective,  to obtain  investment  income  through  the  purchase  of
securities of carefully selected companies representing major fields of business
and industrial activity. In pursuing its objectives,  the Fund invests primarily
in common stocks,  but may also invest in other kinds of  securities,  including
convertible and straight issues of debentures and preferred stock.

         This Prospectus  sets forth  concisely the information  about the Funds
that a prospective  purchaser should know before  purchasing a variable contract
from a Participating  Insurance Company or allocating  contract values to one or
more of the  Funds.  Please  read  this  Prospectus  and  retain  it for  future
reference.  Additional  information  about  the Funds  has been  filed  with the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission  and is  available  upon request by writing
INVESCO Funds Group, Inc., Post Office Box 173706, Denver,  Colorado 80217-3706,
by calling  1-800-525-8085,  or by contacting a Participating  Insurance Company
and  requesting the "Statement of Additional  Information  for INVESCO  Variable
Investment  Funds,  Inc."  (the  "Statement  of  Additional  Information").  The
Statement  of  Additional  Information  dated May 1, 1997,  is  incorporated  by
reference into this Prospectus.

The High Yield Fund invests  primarily in lower rated bonds,  commonly  known as
"junk bonds."  Investments of this type are subject to greater risks,  including
default risks,  than those found in higher rated  securities.  Purchasers should
carefully assess the risks associated with an investment in the High Yield Fund.
See "Investment Objectives and Policies" and "Risk Factors."

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


<PAGE>



PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS.  ANY  REPRESENTATION TO
THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.  THE SHARES OF THE FUNDS ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR
OBLIGATIONS  OF, OR  GUARANTEED  OR  ENDORSED  BY,  ANY BANK OR OTHER  FINANCIAL
INSTITUTION.  THE SHARES OF THE FUNDS ARE NOT  FEDERALLY  INSURED BY THE FEDERAL
DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY.


                                      TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                               
                                                                            Page


SUMMARY  .....................................................................14

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS..........................................................17

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES............................................23

RISK FACTORS..................................................................31

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS.......................................................40

MANAGEMENT....................................................................40

PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS.....................................................47

TAX STATUS, DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS.......................................48

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION.......................................................49

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION........................................................51

APPENDIX .....................................................................53




<PAGE>



SUMMARY

         The Company is a registered,  open-end  management  investment  company
that was  organized  as a  Maryland  corporation  on  August  19,  1993,  and is
currently comprised of nine diversified  investment  portfolios  ("Funds"),  the
INVESCO VIF -  Industrial  Income  Portfolio,  the  INVESCO  VIF - Total  Return
Portfolio,  the INVESCO VIF - Dynamics  Portfolio,  the INVESCO VIF - High Yield
Portfolio,  the INVESCO VIF - Small Company Growth Portfolio,  the INVESCO VIF -
Health Sciences Portfolio,  the INVESCO VIF - Technology Portfolio,  the INVESCO
VIF - Utilities  Portfolio  and the INVESCO VIF - Growth  Portfolio.  Additional
portfolios  may be created from time to time.  The overall  supervision  of each
Fund is the responsibility of the Company's board of directors.

         The Company is intended to be a funding  vehicle for  variable  annuity
contracts  and  variable  life  insurance  contracts  to be offered by  separate
accounts  of  certain  life  insurance   companies   ("Participating   Insurance
Companies").  Fund shares are not available for purchase  other than through the
purchase of such  contracts.  The variable  annuity and variable life  insurance
contracts are described in separate prospectuses of the Participating  Insurance
Companies  (the  "Separate  Account  Prospectuses").   The  Company  assumes  no
responsibility  for the Separate Account  Prospectuses.  A contract owner should
refer to the Separate Account Prospectuses for information on how to purchase or
surrender a contract,  make partial  withdrawals  of contract  values,  allocate
contract  values to one or more of the  Funds,  or change  existing  allocations
among investment alternatives, including the Funds.

         Each  Fund has its own  distinct  investment  objective.  There  is, of
course,  no guarantee that any Fund will achieve its investment  objective.  The
Industrial Income Fund seeks to attain its investment  objective by investing at
least 65% of its total assets in dividend-paying  common stocks,  with up to 10%
of its total  assets  invested  in  equity  securities  that do not pay  regular
dividends and the remainder invested in other income-producing  securities, such
as  corporate  bonds.  The Total  Return  Fund  seeks to attain  its  investment
objective by investing in a combination  of equity  securities  and fixed income
securities;  ordinarily,  its investment portfolio will be comprised of at least
30% equity  securities and at least 30% debt securities,  with the remaining 40%
allocated  according to business,  economic and market conditions.  The Dynamics
Fund seeks to attain its  investment  objective  by  investing  aggressively  in
common  stocks of U.S.  companies  traded on national  securities  exchanges and
over-the-counter.  The High Yield Fund seeks to attain its investment  objective
by investing substantially all of its assets in lower rated bonds and other debt
securities and in preferred  stock.  See "Risk Factors" for a description of the
risks involved in investing in lower rated bonds.  The Small Company Growth Fund
seeks  to  attain  its   investment   objective   by   investing   primarily  in
small-capitalization    equity    securities    of   U.S.    companies    traded
over-the-counter.  The  Health  Sciences  Fund  seeks to attain  its  investment
objective by investing at least 80% of its total assets in equity  securities of
companies which develop,  produce, or distribute products or services related to
health care.  The Technology  Fund seeks to attain its  investment  objective by
investing at least 80% of its total assets in equity  securities of companies in
technology-related   industries  such  as  computers,   communications,   video,
electronics,  oceanography,  office and factory  automation,  and robotics.  The
Utilities Fund seeks to attain its investment  objective by investing  primarily
in securities of companies  principally engaged in business as public utilities,
which may be either  established,  well-capitalized  companies or newly  formed,



<PAGE>



small capitalization  companies.  The Growth Fund seeks to attain its investment
objective by investing  primarily in common stocks, but may also invest in other
kinds of securities, including convertible and straight issues of debentures and
preferred stock. A discussion of each Fund's  investment  objective and policies
is provided below under the caption "Investment Objectives and Policies."

         Various types of risks are involved with each Fund.  Each Fund may lend
portfolio  securities and may enter into  repurchase  agreements with respect to
debt  instruments  eligible for investment by that Fund. Each Fund may invest up
to 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities. Each Fund also may invest up to
25% of its total assets  directly in foreign  securities,  which present certain
additional  risks not  associated  with  investments  in domestic  companies and
markets.  Securities of Canadian  issuers and  securities  purchased by means of
American  Depository  Receipts  ("ADRs") are not subject to this 25% limitation.
The High Yield Fund may invest  without limit,  the  Industrial  Income Fund may
invest up to 15% of its total  assets,  and the Small  Company  Growth  Fund may
invest up to 5% of its total assets, in lower-rated debt securities that present
a greater  risk of default  and have prices  that  fluctuate  more than those of
higher-rated  securities.  Many securities purchased by the Small Company Growth
Fund will not be listed on exchanges,  may trade less  frequently and in smaller
volume than exchange-listed securities and may have greater price volatility and
less  liquidity  than  exchange-listed  securities.  The  Technology  and Health
Sciences Funds will each be concentrated in a specific business sector. Compared
to the broad  market,  an  individual  sector may be more  strongly  affected by
changes in the  economic  climate,  broad market  shifts,  moves in a particular
dominant  stock, or regulatory  changes.  The Utilities Fund is subject to risks
related to the  uncertainties  to which the gas and  electric  public  utilities
industries are subject,  including difficulties in obtaining adequate financing,
government regulation of investment return, environmental issues, prices of fuel
for electric generation,  availability of natural gas, and risks associated with
nuclear  power  facilities.  Each of the Funds may invest in options and futures
contracts,  each of which  presents  special  risks.  These and other  risks are
discussed below under the caption "Risk Factors."

         INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.  ("INVESCO"),  the Funds' investment adviser,
is primarily  responsible for providing the Company with various  administrative
services  and  supervising  the  Company's  daily  business  affairs.  Portfolio
management  is  provided  to  each  Fund  by  its  sub-  adviser   (referred  to
collectively  with INVESCO as "Fund  Management").  INVESCO Capital  Management,
Inc.  ("ICM")  serves as  sub-adviser to the Total Return Fund and INVESCO Trust
Company ("INVESCO Trust") serves as sub-adviser to each of the other Funds. Each
Fund pays  INVESCO an advisory fee for the  management  of its  investments  and
business  affairs.  A discussion of these fees and additional  information about
INVESCO,   INVESCO   Trust  and  ICM  are  provided   below  under  the  caption
"Management."



<PAGE>



FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
(For a Fund Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period)

         The following  information  has been audited by Price  Waterhouse  LLP,
independent accountants. This information should be read in conjunction with the
audited financial  statements and the Report of Independent  Accountants thereon
appearing  in  the  Company's  1996  Annual  Report  to  Shareholders  which  is
incorporated by reference into the Statement of Additional Information. Both are
available without charge by contacting  INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. at the address
or telephone number shown on the cover page of this Prospectus, or by contacting
a Participating  Insurance Company.  Because the Health Sciences,  Small Company
Growth, Technology, Dynamics and Growth Funds had not commenced operations as of
May 1, 1997, no financial information is provided for those Funds.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                          High Yield Fund                                      Industrial Income Fund
                                ---------------------------------------                --------------------------------------------
                                                                 Period                                                      Period
                                                                  Ended                                                       Ended
                                Year Ended December 31      December 31                    Year Ended December 31       December 31
                                ----------------------      -----------                --------------------------       -----------
                                1996              1995            1994^                1996                1995               1994^
<S>                             <C>             <C>              <C>                   <C>                 <C>               <C>
PER SHARE DATA
Net Asset Value -
     Beginning of Period        $11.04          $10.01           $10.00                $12.58              $10.09            $10.00
                                ----------------------      -----------                --------------------------       -----------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
     OPERATIONS
Net Investment Income             0.72            0.55             0.05                  0.28                0.19              0.03
Net Gains on Securities (Both
     Realized and Unrealized)     1.11            1.43             0.01                  2.52                2.76              0.09
                                ----------------------      -----------                --------------------------       -----------
Total from Investment
     Operations                   1.83            1.98             0.06                  2.80                2.95              0.12
                                ----------------------      -----------                --------------------------       -----------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS
Dividends from Net
     Investment Income            0.71+           0.55             0.05                  0.28                0.20              0.03



<PAGE>



Distributions from
     Capital Gains                0.38            0.40             0.00                  0.77               0.26               0.00
                                ----------------------      -----------                -------------------------        -----------
Total Distributions               1.09            0.95             0.05                  1.05               0.46               0.03
                                ----------------------      -----------                --------------------------       -----------
Net Asset Value -
     End of Period              $11.78          $11.04           $10.01                $14.33             $12.58             $10.09
                                ======================      ===========                ==========================       ===========
TOTAL RETURN>>                  16.59%          19.76%           0.60%*                22.28%             29.25%             1.23%*

RATIOS
Net Assets - End of
     Period ($000 Omitted)      $14,033         $5,233             $624               $22,342             $8,362               $525
Ratio of Expenses to Average
     Net Assets#                 0.87%@         0.97%@           0.74%~                0.95%@             1.03%@             0.79%~
Ratio of Net Investment Income
     to Average Net Assets#       9.19%          8.79%           2.72%~                 2.87%              3.50%             1.69%~
Portfolio Turnover Rate            380%           310%             23%*                   93%                97%                0%*
Average Commission
     Rate Paid^^                $0.0867              -                -               $0.0867                  -                  -

</TABLE>


^ For the High Yield and Industrial  Income Funds,  from May 27, 1994 and August
10, 1994, respectively, commencement of operations, to December 31, 1994.

+ Distributions  in excess of net investment  income for the year ended December
31, 1996, aggregated less than $0.01 on a per share basis.

>> Total return does not reflect  expenses  that apply to the related  insurance
policies,  and  inclusion of these charges would reduce the total return for the
periods shown.

*  Based  on  operations  for  the  period  shown  and,  accordingly,   are  not
representative of a full year.

#  Various  expenses  of  the  High  Yield  and  Industrial  Income  Funds  were
voluntarily  absorbed by INVESCO for the years ended  December 31, 1996 and 1995
and the  period  ended  December  31,  1994.  If  such  expenses  had  not  been
voluntarily  absorbed,  ratio of expenses to average net assets  would have been
1.32%,  2.71% and 30.38% for the High Yield Fund and 1.19%, 2.31% and 32.55% for
the Industrial Income Fund, respectively,  and ratio of net investment income to
average net assets would have been 8.74%,  7.05% and (26.92%) for the High Yield
Fund and 2.63%, 2.22% and (30.07%) for the Industrial Income Fund, respectively.

@ Ratio is based on Total  Expenses  of the  Fund,  less  Expenses  Absorbed  by
Investment Adviser, which is before any expense offset arrangements.

~ Annualized


<PAGE>



^^ The average  commission rate paid is the total brokerage  commissions paid on
applicable purchases and sales of securities for the period divided by the total
number of related shares purchased or sold which is required to be disclosed for
fiscal years beginning September 1, 1995 and thereafter.


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Financial Highlights (continued)
(For a Fund Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period)

                                              Total Return Fund                            Utilities Fund
                                -----------------------------------------    ---------------------------------------
                                                                   Period                                     Period
                                                                    Ended                                      Ended
                                Year Ended December 31        December 31    Year Ended December 31       December 31
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
                                1996                1995            1994^    1996              1995             1994+
<S>                             <C>               <C>              <C>       <C>             <C>               <C>
PER SHARE DATA
Net Asset Value -
     Beginning of Period        $12.14            $10.09           $10.00    $10.84          $10.00            $10.00
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
     OPERATIONS
Net Investment Income             0.36              0.25             0.09      0.13            0.07              0.00
Net Gains on Securities (Both
     Realized and Unrealized)     1.12              2.05             0.09      1.26            0.84              0.00
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
Total from Investment
     Operations                   1.48              2.30             0.18      1.39            0.91              0.00
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS
Dividends from Net
     Investment Income            0.36              0.24             0.09      0.13            0.07              0.00
In Excess of Net
     Investment Income            0.05              0.00             0.00      0.01            0.00              0.00
Distributions from
     Capital Gains                0.00              0.01             0.00      0.14            0.00              0.00
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
Total Distributions               0.41              0.25             0.09      0.28            0.07              0.00
                                ------------------------      -----------    ----------------------       -----------
Net Asset Value -
     End of Period              $13.21            $12.14           $10.09    $11.95          $10.84            $10.00
                                ========================      ===========    ======================       ===========
TOTAL RETURN>                   12.18%            22.79%           1.75%*    12.76%           9.08%             0.00%

RATIOS
Net Assets - End of
     Period ($000 Omitted)     $13,513            $6,553           $1,055    $2,660           $290                $25
Ratio of Expenses to
     Average Net Assets#        0.94%@            1.01%@           0.86%~    1.16%@         1.80%@              0.00%
Ratio of Net Investment
    Income to Average
     Net Assets#                 3.44%             3.91%           3.86%~     2.92%          2.47%              0.00%


<PAGE>



Portfolio Turnover Rate            12%                5%              0%*       48%            24%                 0%
Average Commission
     Rate Paid^^               $0.0890                 -                -   $0.1055              -                  -

</TABLE>


^ From June 2, 1994, commencement of operations, to December 31, 1994.

+ All expenses for the Utilities Fund were  voluntarily  absorbed by INVESCO for
the period ended December 31, 1994, since investment operations did not commence
during 1994.

> Total  return does not reflect  expenses  that apply to the related  insurance
policies,  and  inclusion of these charges would reduce the total return for the
periods shown.

*  Based  on  operations  for  the  period  shown  and,  accordingly,   are  not
representative of a full year.

# Various  expenses of the Total  Return and  Utilities  Funds were  voluntarily
absorbed  by INVESCO  for the years  ended  December  31,  1996 and 1995 and the
period  ended  December  31, 1994.  If such  expenses  had not been  voluntarily
absorbed,  ratio of expenses to average net assets would have been 1.30%,  2.51%
and 16.44%  for the Total  Return  Fund and 5.36% and  57.13% for the  Utilities
Fund,  respectively,  and ratio of net  investment  income to average net assets
would have been 3.08%,  2.41% and (11.72%) for the Total Return Fund and (1.28%)
and (52.86%) for the Utilities Fund, respectively.

@ Ratio is based on Total  Expenses  of the  Fund,  less  Expenses  Absorbed  by
Investment Adviser, which is before any expense offset arrangements.

~ Annualized

^^ The average  commission rate paid is the total brokerage  commissions paid on
applicable purchases and sales of securities for the period divided by the total
number of related shares purchased or sold which is required to be disclosed for
fiscal years beginning September 1, 1995 and thereafter.



<PAGE>



INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

         The  investment   objective  of  each  Fund,  as  described  below,  is
fundamental  and may be changed  only by vote of a majority  of the  outstanding
shares  of that  Fund.  There is no  assurance  that any Fund will  achieve  its
investment  objective.  Any  investment  policy of a Fund may be  changed by the
Company's board of directors without  shareholder  approval unless the policy is
one required by the Fund's fundamental investment  restrictions set forth in the
Statement of Additional  Information.  When Fund  Management  believes market or
economic  conditions are  unfavorable,  each of the Funds may assume a defensive
position by temporarily investing up to 100% of its total assets in high quality
money  market  instruments,  such as  short-term  U.S.  government  obligations,
commercial  paper or  repurchase  agreements,  high quality  corporate  bonds or
notes, or by holding cash.

         Because  prices of stocks  fluctuate  from day to day,  the value of an
investment  in any of the  Funds  will  vary  based  upon  the  specific  Fund's
investment  performance.  Many of the Funds invest in  different  companies in a
variety of  industries  in order to attempt to reduce its  overall  exposure  to
investment and market risks. There is no assurance that any Fund will attain its
objectives.

Industrial Income Fund

         The investment  objective of the Industrial  Income Fund is to seek the
best possible current income while following sound investment practices. Capital
growth  potential is an additional  consideration  in the selection of portfolio
securities.

         The Industrial  Income Fund normally  invests at least 65% of its total
assets in  dividend-paying  common stocks.  Up to 10% of the Fund's total assets
may be invested in equity  securities  that do not pay  regular  dividends.  The
remaining  assets are  invested in other  income-producing  securities,  such as
corporate bonds and other straight debt securities ("debt securities"). The Fund
also has the  flexibility to invest in preferred  stock and  convertible  bonds.
There is no maximum  limit on the amount of equity or debt  securities  in which
the Fund may invest.

         The  Industrial  Income  Fund may  invest no more than 15% of its total
assets in debt  securities that are rated below BBB by Standard & Poor's Ratings
Services, a division of The McGraw-Hill  Companies,  Inc. ("Standard & Poor's"),
or Baa by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's"),  and in no event will the
Fund ever invest in a debt security  rated below CCC by Standard & Poor's or Caa
by Moody's.  Generally, bonds rated in one of the top four rating categories are
considered  "investment  grade."  However,  those in the fourth highest category
(Standard & Poor's BBB or Moody's Baa) may have speculative  characteristics and
a weaker  ability to pay  interest or repay  principal  under  adverse  economic
conditions or changing circumstances.  The risks of investing in debt securities
rated lower than BBB by Standard & Poor's or Baa by Moody's are discussed  below
under the caption  "Risk  Factors."  See the Appendix to this  Prospectus  for a
specific description of each corporate bond rating category.




<PAGE>


Dynamics Fund

         The  investment  objective  of  the  Dynamics  Fund  is  to  seek
appreciation of capital through aggressive  investment policies.  The Fund seeks
to achieve this  objective  through the investment of its assets in a variety of
securities that are believed to present opportunities for capital enhancement --
primarily common stocks of companies  traded on U.S.  securities  exchanges,  as
well as  over-the-counter.  The  Fund  also has the  flexibility  to  invest  in
preferred  stocks and convertible or straight  issues of debentures,  as well as
foreign securities.

         The  Dynamics  Fund  may  invest  in  illiquid  securities,   including
securities  that are subject to  restrictions  on resale and securities that are
not readily marketable.  The Fund may also invest in restricted  securities that
may be resold to institutional  investors,  known as "Rule 144A Securities." See
"Risk Factors --Illiquid and Rule 144A Securities" below.

Total Return Fund

         The  investment  objective  of the Total  Return Fund is to seek a high
total return on investment through capital  appreciation and current income. The
Fund seeks to accomplish  its objective by investing in a combination  of equity
securities and fixed income  securities.  Although there is no limitation on the
maturity of the Total Return Fund's investments in fixed income securities,  the
dollar-weighted  average maturity of such investments normally will be from 3 to
15 years.

         The equity  securities  to be acquired by the Total Return Fund consist
of common stocks and, to a lesser  extent,  securities  convertible  into common
stocks. Such securities generally will be issued by companies that are listed on
a national  securities  exchange (such as the New York Stock  Exchange) and that
usually pay regular dividends.  However,  the Fund also may invest in securities
traded on  regional  stock  exchanges  or in the  over-the-counter  market.  The
Company  has not  established  any  minimum  investment  standards  (such  as an
issuer's  asset level,  earnings  history,  type of industry,  dividend  payment
history,  etc.) with respect to the Fund's investments in common stocks. Because
smaller companies may be subject to more significant losses, as well as have the
potential for more substantial growth, than larger, more established  companies,
the Fund's  investments  may consist in part of securities that may be deemed to
be speculative.

         The income  securities  to be  acquired  by the Total  Return Fund will
include obligations of the U.S. government and government  agencies.  These U.S.
government  obligations  consist of direct  obligations of the U.S.  government,
such as U.S. Treasury bills, notes and bonds, obligations guaranteed by the U.S.
government,  such as Government National Mortgage Association  obligations,  and
obligations  of U.S.  government  authorities,  agencies and  instrumentalities,
which are  supported  only by the  assets  of the  issuer,  such as the  Federal
National Mortgage  Association,  Federal Home Loan Bank,  Federal Financing Bank
and Federal Farm Credit Bank. In the case of  securities  not backed by the full
faith and credit of the United  States,  the Fund must look  principally  to the
agency issuing or guaranteeing  the obligation for ultimate  repayment,  and may
not be able to assert a claim  against the United States itself in the event the
agency or instrumentality does not meet its commitments. The Fund will invest in
securities of such instrumentalities only when Fund Management is satisfied that
the credit risk with respect to any such instrumentality is minimal.


<PAGE>

         The Total  Return Fund also may invest in  corporate  debt  obligations
that are rated in one of the four highest  ratings of corporate  obliga tions by
Standard & Poor's (AAA,  AA, A and BBB) or by Moody's (Aaa,  Aa, A and Baa), or,
if not rated, that in Fund Management's opinion have investment  characteristics
similar to those described in such ratings.  The investment  characteristics  of
the  securities  rated Baa by Moody's or BBB by Standard & Poor's are  discussed
above in the  description  of the investment  policies of the Industrial  Income
Fund.  See the Appendix to this  Prospectus  for a specific  description of each
corporate bond rating category.

         Typically, at least 30% of the Total Return Fund's investment portfolio
will be  comprised  of  equities  and at least  30% fixed  and  variable  income
securities.  The remaining 40% of the  portfolio  will vary in asset  allocation
according to Fund  Management's  assessment  of business,  economic,  and market
conditions.  The analytical process associated with making allocation  decisions
is based upon a combination of demonstrated historic financial results,  current
prices for stocks, and the current yield to maturity available in the market for
bonds. The return  available from one category  relative to the other determines
the actual asset  deployment.  Fund  Management's  asset  allocation  process is
systematic and is based on current  information  rather than forecasted  change.
The Fund seeks reasonably consistent returns over a variety of market cycles.

Small Company Growth Fund

         The  investment  objective of the Small Company  Growth Fund is to seek
long-term  capital growth.  The Fund seeks to achieve this objective through the
investment of 65% or more of its total assets in equity  securities of companies
with  market  capitalizations  of $1  billion  or less at the  time of  purchase
("small-cap companies"). The balance of the Fund's assets may be invested in the
equity  securities  of  companies  with market  capitalizations  in excess of $1
billion, debt securities and short-term  investments.  With respect to small-cap
companies,  Fund  Management  primarily  looks for  companies in the  developing
stages of their life cycle,  which are believed to be currently  undervalued  in
the  marketplace,  have  earnings  which may be expected to grow faster than the
U.S.  economy in general,  and/or offer the potential for  accelerated  earnings
growth  due to rapid  growth of sales,  new  products,  management  changes,  or
structural changes in the economy.

         The majority of the Small  Company  Growth Fund's  holdings  consist of
common  stocks traded  over-the-counter.  The Fund also has the  flexibility  to
invest in other U.S. and foreign securities.

         The Small Company Growth Fund's  investments in debt securities include
U.S.  government and corporate debt securities.  Investments in U.S.  government
securities may consist of securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government
and any agency or instrumentality of the U.S.  government.  In some cases, these
securities are direct obligations of the U.S. government,  such as U.S. Treasury
bills,  notes and  bonds.  In other  cases,  these  securities  are  obligations
guaranteed by the U.S.  government,  consisting of Government  National Mortgage
Association obligations, or obligations of U.S. government authorities, agencies
or  instrumentalities,  consisting of the Federal National Mortgage Association,
Federal  Home Loan Bank,  Federal  Financing  Bank and Federal Farm Credit Bank,
which are  supported  only by the assets of the  issuer.  The Fund may invest in
both investment grade and lower-rated  corporate debt securities.  However,  the
Fund will not invest more than 5% of its total  assets  (measured at the time of
purchase) in corporate  debt  securities  that are rated below BBB by Standard &



<PAGE>



Poor's or Baa by Moody's or, if  unrated,  are judged by Fund  Management  to be
equivalent in quality to debt securities  having such ratings.  In no event will
the Fund invest in a debt  security  rated below CCC by Standard & Poor's or Caa
by Moody's. The risks of investing in below-investment grade debt securities are
discussed  below under "Risk  Factors." For a description of each corporate bond
rating category, please refer to the Appendix to this Prospectus.

         The short-term investments of the Small Company Growth Fund may consist
of U.S. government and agency securities,  domestic bank certificates of deposit
and bankers' acceptances,  and commercial paper rated A-1 by Standard and Poor's
or P-1 by Moody's,  as well as repurchase  agreements  with banks and registered
broker-dealers and registered  government securities dealers with respect to the
foregoing  securities.  The Fund's assets invested in U.S. government securities
and short-term investments will be used to meet current cash requirements,  such
as to satisfy  requests to redeem shares of the Fund and to preserve  investment
flexibility.

         The  Small  Company  Growth  Fund may  invest in  illiquid  securities,
including  securities  that are subject to restrictions on resale and securities
that  are not  readily  marketable.  The  Fund  may  also  invest  in Rule  144A
Securities.  For more information  concerning illiquid and Rule 144A Securities,
see "Investment Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.

High Yield Fund

         The investment objective of the High Yield Fund is to seek a high level
of current  income by investing  substantially  all of its assets in lower rated
bonds and other debt securities and in preferred  stock.  Accordingly,  the Fund
invests primarily in bonds and other debt securities,  including convertible and
non-convertible  issues,  and in  preferred  stocks  rated in  medium  and lower
categories  by Standard & Poor's or Moody's (BB or lower by Standard & Poor's or
Ba or lower by Moody's). The Fund does not invest in securities rated lower than
CCC by Standard & Poor's or Caa by Moody's;  these ratings are applied to issues
that are  predominantly  speculative  and may be in default or as to which there
may be present  elements of danger with respect to  principal  or interest.  The
Fund does not  invest  in issues  that are in  default.  The Fund may  invest in
unrated securities where Fund Management  believes that the financial  condition
of the  issuer  or the  protection  afforded  to a  level  similar  to  that  of
securities  eligible  for  purchase  by the  Fund  rated  in  medium  and  lower
categories  by  Standard  & Poor's or  Moody's  (between  BB and CCC  ratings by
Standard & Poor's and between Ba and Caa ratings by Moody's).  The Fund also may
invest in state and local municipal  obligations  when Fund Management  believes
that the potential total return on the investment is better than the return that
otherwise  would be  achieved  by  investing  in  securities  issued by  private
issuers.  See the Appendix to this Prospectus for a specific description of each
corporate bond rating category.

         The High  Yield  Fund also may hold cash or invest  all or a portion of
its assets in  securities  issued or  guaranteed  by the U.S.  government or its
agencies  (which  may or may not be backed by the full  faith and  credit of the
United States) and bank certificates of deposit,  if Fund Management  determines
it to be appropriate for purposes of preserving liquidity or capital in light of
prevailing market or economic conditions.  The Fund also may invest in corporate



<PAGE>



short-term notes rated at the time of purchase at least A-1 by Standard & Poor's
or Prime-1 by  Moody's,  and  municipal  short-term  notes  rated at the time of
purchase  at least SP-1 by  Standard & Poor's or MIG-1 by Moody's  (the  highest
rating category for such notes, indicating a very strong capacity to make timely
payments of principal and interest).

         Potential  capital  appreciation  is  a  factor  in  the  selection  of
investments,  but is secondary to the High Yield Fund's primary  objective.  The
securities in which the Fund invests offer a wide range of maturities (from less
than one year to thirty years) and yields.  These securities  include short-term
bonds or notes (maturing in less than three years),  intermediate-term  bonds or
notes  (maturing in three to ten years),  and long-term  bonds (maturing in more
than ten years). Fund Management will seek to adjust the portfolio of securities
held by the Fund to maximize current income  consistent with the preservation of
principal.

         There are no limitations  on the average  maturity of the securities in
the  High  Yield  Fund.  Securities  will  be  selected  on the  basis  of  Fund
Management's  assessment  of interest  rate trends and the  liquidity of various
instruments under prevailing market conditions. As a matter of policy, which may
be changed without a vote of shareholders,  under normal circumstances, at least
65% of the  value of the  total  assets  of the Fund  will be  invested  in debt
securities having maturities at the time of issuance of at least three years.

         Securities  in  which  the  High  Yield  Fund  invests  may at times be
purchased or sold on a delayed delivery or a when-issued basis (i.e., securities
may be purchased or sold by the Fund with settlement taking place in the future,
often a month or more  later).  The High  Yield Fund may invest up to 10% of its
net assets in when-issued  securities.  The payment  obligation and the interest
rate  that will be  received  on the  securities  are fixed at the time the Fund
enters  into a  purchase  commitment.  Between  the  date  of  purchase  and the
settlement date, the value of the securities is subject to market  fluctuations,
and no interest is payable to the Fund prior to the  settlement  date.  When the
Fund purchases  securities on a when-issued basis, its custodian bank will place
cash or liquid debt  securities  in a separate  account of the Fund in an amount
equal to the amount of the purchase obligation.

Health Sciences Fund

         The investment objective of the Health Sciences Fund is to seek capital
appreciation.  The  investment  strategy  used  in  attempting  to  attain  this
investment  objective is aggressive;  holdings are focused on equity  securities
whose price  appreciation  is expected  to outpace  that of the health  sciences
business sector.  These stocks may not pay regular dividends.  The Fund normally
invests at least 80% of its total  assets in the equity  securities  (common and
preferred stocks, and convertible bonds) of companies which develop, produce, or
distribute products or services related to health care.

         The health sciences business sector consists of numerous industries. In
deciding whether a company is principally  engaged in that business sector, Fund
Management  must determine  that the company  derives more than 50% of its gross
income or net sales from activities in that sector or that the company dedicates
more than 50% of its assets to the production of revenues from that sector.  If,
based on available  financial  information,  a question exists whether a company



<PAGE>



meets one of these standards,  Fund Management  determines whether the company's
primary business is within the health sciences business sector.

         The remainder of the Health  Sciences  Fund's assets may be invested in
any  securities or other  instruments  deemed  appropriate  by Fund  Management,
consistent  with  the  Fund's  investment   policies  and  restrictions.   These
investments  include debt securities issued by companies  principally engaged in
the  health  sciences  business  sector,  debt or  equity  securities  issued by
companies  outside that business sector,  short-term high grade debt obligations
maturing  no later  than one year  from  the date of  purchase  (including  U.S.
government  and  agency  securities,  domestic  bank  certificates  of  deposit,
commercial  paper  rated at least A-2 by  Standard  & Poor's  or P-2 by  Moody's
Investors Service, Inc., and repurchase agreements) and cash.

Technology Fund

         The  investment  objective  of the  Technology  Fund is to seek capital
appreciation.  The  investment  strategy  used  in  attempting  to  attain  this
investment  objective is aggressive.  Holdings are focused on equity  securities
whose price  appreciation is expected to outpace that of the overall  technology
business sector.  These stocks may not pay regular dividends.  The Fund normally
invests at least 80% of its total  assets in the equity  securities  (common and
preferred  stocks,  and  convertible  bonds) of companies in  technology-related
industries such as computers, communications, video, electronics,  oceanography,
office and factory automation, and robotics.

         The technology business sector consists of numerous industries.  In
deciding  whether a company is principally  engaged in the  technology  business
sector, Fund Management must determine that the company derives more than 50% of
its gross  income or net  sales  from  activities  in that  sector;  or that the
company dedicates more than 50% of its assets to the production of revenues from
that sector.  If, based on available  financial  information,  a question exists
whether  a company  meets one of these  standards,  Fund  Management  determines
whether the company's primary business is within that sector.

         The  remainder of the  Technology  Fund's assets may be invested in any
securities  or  other  instruments   deemed   appropriate  by  Fund  Management,
consistent  with  the  Fund's  investment   policies  and  restrictions.   These
investments  include debt securities issued by companies  principally engaged in
the technology  business sector,  debt or equity  securities issued by companies
outside that business sector, short-term high grade debt obligations maturing no
later than one year from the date of purchase  (including  U.S.  government  and
agency securities, domestic bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper rated
at least A-2 by Standard & Poor's or P-2 by Moody's Investors Service, Inc., and
repurchase agreements), and cash.

Utilities Fund

         The  investment  objective  of the  Utilities  Fund is to seek  capital
appreciation and income. The assets of the Utilities Fund are invested primarily
in securities of companies  principally engaged in business as public utilities,
which may be either  established,  well-capitalized  companies or  newly-formed,
small  capitalization  companies.  The public  utilities  business  includes the
following industries: companies which manufacture,  produce, generate, transmit,
or sell gas or electric  energy;  and  companies  engaged in various  aspects of



<PAGE>



communications,  such as telephone,  telegraph,  satellite,  microwave,  and the
provision of other communication facilities,  excluding broadcasting, for public
use and benefit.  Uncertainties  to which the gas and electric public  utilities
industries are subject include  difficulties in obtaining adequate financing and
investment return, environmental issues, prices of fuel for electric generation,
availability of natural gas, and risks associated with nuclear power facilities.

         Under normal conditions, the Utilities Fund will invest at least 80% of
its  total  assets  in the  equity  securities  (common  stocks  and  securities
convertible  into common stocks,  including  convertible  debt  obligations  and
convertible  preferred  stock) of  companies  that are  principally  engaged  in
business as public utilities,  and that are traded on regional or national stock
exchanges or in the  over-the-counter  market. A particular company is deemed to
be principally engaged in the public utilities business if, in the determination
of Fund  Management,  more than 50% of its gross  income or net sales is derived
from activities in that business or more than 50% of its assets are dedicated to
the production of revenues from that business.  In circumstances where, based on
available financial  information,  a question exists whether a company meets one
of these  standards,  the Utilities Fund may invest in equity  securities of the
company  only  if  Fund  Management  determines,  after  review  of  information
describing the company and its business  activities,  that the company's primary
business is within the public utilities business.

         The  balance  of the  Utilities  Fund's  assets  may be held as cash or
invested  in debt  securities  issued by  companies  principally  engaged in the
public utilities business, debt or equity securities issued by companies outside
the public utilities sector, or in short-term debt obligations maturing no later
than one year from the date of purchase, which are determined by Fund Management
to be of high grade,  including U.S. government and agency securities,  domestic
bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper rated A-2 or higher by Standard &
Poor's or P- 2 or higher by Moody's,  and repurchase  agreements  with banks and
securities  dealers.  The equity  securities  purchased  may be issued by either
established,  well-capitalized  companies or newly-formed,  small cap companies,
and  may  be  traded  on  national  or  regional  stock   exchanges  or  in  the
over-the-counter market.

Growth Fund

                  The  investment  objective  of  the  Growth  Fund  is to  seek
long-term  capital  growth.  The Fund also seeks, as a secondary  objective,  to
obtain  investment  income  through the  purchase  of  securities  of  carefully
selected  companies   representing  major  fields  of  business  and  industrial
activity.   The  Fund  normally  holds  common  stocks   (including   securities
convertible  into common stocks)  although it may invest in the following  other
types of securities:  commercial  paper and convertible  debentures and straight
debt  securities  having an investment  grade rating (Baa or above by Moody's or
BBB or above by Standard & Poor's) and preferred stocks.  In each instance,  the
Fund  endeavors  to invest in  securities  offering the  possibility  of capital
enhancement  and some current  income.  The  investment  characteristics  of the
securities  rated Baa by Moody's or BBB by Standard & Poor's are discussed above
in the description of the investment policies of the Industrial Income Fund. See
the Appendix to this  Prospectus  for a specific  description  of each corporate
bond rating category.



<PAGE>



         In selecting  securities for  investment,  Fund Management will seek to
identify companies that have a better than average earnings growth potential and
those  industries  that stand to enjoy the greatest  benefit from the  predicted
economic  environment.  The Growth  Fund seeks to  purchase  the  securities  of
companies  that are  thought to be best  situated in those  industry  groupings.
While  dividends are of secondary  consideration,  dividend  payment  records of
companies are also considered.

RISK FACTORS

         Contract owners should consider the special factors associated with the
policies  discussed  below in  determining  the  appropriateness  of  allocating
contract  values to one or more of the Funds.  See the  Statement of  Additional
Information for a discussion of additional risk factors.

Potential  Conflicts.  The  Company  has  received  an  exemptive  order  of the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  that  permits  the sale of Fund shares to
variable annuity separate accounts and variable life insurance separate accounts
of affiliated and unaffiliated  Participating  Insurance Companies.  The Company
currently does not foresee any  disadvantages  to the owners of variable annuity
or variable life insurance contracts arising from the fact that the interests of
those owners may differ.  Nevertheless,  the Company's  board of directors  will
monitor events in order to identify any material irreconcilable  conflicts which
may possibly arise due to  differences of tax treatment or other  considerations
and to  determine  what  action,  if any,  should be taken in response  thereto.
Credit and Market Risks. All securities, including those purchased by each Fund,
are subject to some degree of credit risk and market risk. Credit risk refers to
the ability of an issuer of a debt  security to pay its  principal and interest,
and to the earnings stability and overall financial soundness of an issuer of an
equity  security.  Market risk refers to the volatility of a security's price in
response  to changes  in  conditions  in  securities  markets  in  general  and,
particularly  in the case of debt  securities,  changes in the overall  level of
interest  rates.  An increase  in interest  rates will tend to reduce the market
values of debt  securities,  whereas a decline  in  interest  rates will tend to
increase their values.

         To  limit  exposure  to  credit  risks,  each  Fund,  as  a  matter  of
fundamental  policy,  will be  diversified.  With  respect to 75% of each Fund's
total  assets,  no more than 5% of the  purchasing  Fund's  total assets will be
invested in the securities of any one issuer. In addition, with the exception of
the Health  Sciences,  Technology  and  Utilities  Funds,  no more than 25% of a
Fund's  total  assets  will be invested in any one  industry.  These  percentage
limitations  apply  immediately  after a  purchase  or initial  investment.  Any
subsequent change in a percentage  resulting from fluctuations in value will not
require elimination of any security from a Fund. The credit risk exposure of the
Health Sciences, Technology and Utilities Funds may be increased by their policy
of concentrating  investments in specific business sectors. See "Risk Factors --
Concentration."

Portfolio  Lending.  Each Fund may make  loans of its  portfolio  securities  to
broker-dealers or other  institutional  investors under contracts requiring such
loans to be callable at any time and to be secured continuously by collateral in
cash,  cash  equivalents,  high  quality  short-term  government  securities  or



<PAGE>



irrevocable  letters  of credit  maintained  on a current  basis at an amount at
least equal to the market value of the securities loaned.  This practice permits
a Fund to earn income,  which, in turn, can be invested in additional securities
to pursue the Fund's  investment  objective.  The lending Fund will  continue to
collect the  equivalent  of the interest or dividends  paid by the issuer on the
securities loaned and will also receive either interest  (through  investment of
cash  collateral)  or a fee (if the  collateral  is  government  securities).  A
lending Fund may pay finder's and other fees in connection  with its  securities
loans.

         Lending  securities  involves  certain risks,  the most  significant of
which is the risk that a borrower may fail to return a portfolio security.  Fund
Management monitors the  creditworthiness of borrowers in order to minimize such
risks.  A Fund will not lend any  security  if, as a result  of that  loan,  the
aggregate  value of  securities  then on loan would exceed  331/3% of the Fund's
total assets (taken at market value).

Repurchase  Agreements.  Each Fund may enter  into  repurchase  agreements  with
respect  to  debt  instruments  eligible  for  investment  by that  Fund.  These
agreements  are entered  into with member banks of the Federal  Reserve  System,
registered  broker-dealers,  and registered  government securities dealers which
are deemed  creditworthy by Fund Management  (subject to review by the Company's
board of directors). A repurchase agreement is a means of investing monies for a
short period.  In a repurchase  agreement,  the Fund acquires a debt  instrument
(generally a security  issued by the U.S.  government  or an agency  thereof,  a
banker's acceptance or a certificate of deposit) subject to resale to the seller
at an agreed upon price and date  (normally the next business day). If the other
party defaults on its obligation to repurchase the security,  a Fund could incur
costs or delays in seeking to sell the security.

         To minimize risks associated with repurchase agreements, the securities
underlying  each  repurchase  agreement  will be  maintained  with the Company's
custodian  in an  amount  at  least  equal to the  repurchase  price  under  the
agreement  (including  accrued  interest),  and such agreements will be effected
only with parties that meet certain  creditworthiness  standards  established by
the Company's board of directors. No Fund will enter into a repurchase agreement
maturing in more than seven days if as a result more than 15% of that Fund's net
assets  would be  invested  in such  repurchase  agreements  and other  illiquid
securities.

Portfolio Turnover.  There are no fixed limitations regarding portfolio turnover
for any of the Funds.  Although the Funds do not trade for  short-term  profits,
securities  may be sold without regard to the time they have been held in a Fund
when,  in the opinion of Fund  Management,  market  considerations  warrant such
action.  Therefore, the portfolio turnover rates of the Funds may be higher than
those of other  investment  companies  with  comparable  investment  objectives.
Increased portfolio turnover would cause a Fund to incur greater brokerage costs
than would  otherwise be the case. The actual  portfolio  turnover rates for the
High Yield,  Industrial  Income,  Total Return and Utilities Funds are set forth
under "Financial  Highlights." Each of the other Funds is actively traded and is
expected to have a portfolio turnover rate that could exceed 200%. The Company's
brokerage  allocation   policies,   including  the  consideration  of  sales  of
Participating  Life  Insurance  Companies'  variable  annuity and variable  life
insurance  contracts when selecting among qualified brokers offering  comparable
best price and execution on Fund transactions, are discussed in the Statement of
Additional Information.


<PAGE>



Illiquid  and Rule  144A  Securities.  The  Funds  are  authorized  to invest in
securities  that are illiquid  because they are subject to restrictions on their
resale  ("restricted  securities")  or because,  based upon their  nature or the
market for such securities,  they are not readily  marketable.  However,  a Fund
will not  purchase  any such  security if the  purchase  would cause the Fund to
invest  more  than 15% of its net  assets  in  illiquid  securities.  Repurchase
agreements  maturing  in more than seven days will be  considered  illiquid  for
purposes of this restriction. Investments in illiquid securities involve certain
risks to the extent  that a Fund may be unable to dispose of such a security  at
the time desired or at a  reasonable  price.  In addition,  in order to resell a
restricted  security, a Fund might have to bear the expense and incur the delays
associated with effecting registration.

         Certain  restricted  securities that are not registered for sale to the
general public,  but that can be resold to  institutional  investors ("Rule 144A
Securities"), may be purchased without regard to the foregoing 15% limitation if
a  liquid  institutional  trading  market  exists.  The  liquidity  of a  Fund's
investments   in  Rule  144A   Securities   could  be  impaired  if  dealers  or
institutional investors become uninterested in purchasing these securities.  The
Company's  board of directors has delegated to Fund  Management the authority to
determine the liquidity of Rule 144A Securities  pursuant to guidelines approved
by the board.  For more  information  concerning Rule 144A  Securities,  see the
Statement of Additional Information.

Foreign Securities. Each Fund may invest up to 25% of its total assets, measured
at the  time  of  purchase,  directly  in  foreign  securities.  Investments  in
securities of foreign companies  (including Canadian  securities,  which are not
subject to the 25% limitation) and in foreign markets involve certain additional
risks not associated  with  investments in domestic  companies and markets.  For
U.S. investors, the returns on foreign securities are influenced not only by the
returns  on  the   foreign   investments   themselves,   but  also  by  currency
fluctuations.  That is, when the U.S.  dollar  generally  rises against  foreign
currencies,  returns on foreign securities for a U.S. investor may decrease.  By
contrast, in a period when the U.S. dollar generally declines, those returns may
increase.

         Other risks of international investing to consider include:

         -less publicly available information than is generally available
about U.S. issuers;

         -differences in accounting, auditing and financial reporting
standards;

         -generally higher commission rates on foreign portfolio
transactions and longer settlement periods;

         -smaller trading volumes and generally lower liquidity of foreign stock
markets, which may cause greater price volatility;

         -less government regulation of stock exchanges, brokers and listed
companies abroad than in the United States; and

         -investments in certain countries may be subject to foreign withholding
taxes,   which  may  reduce   dividend   income  or  capital  gains  payable  to
shareholders.



<PAGE>



         There  is  also  the  possibility  of   expropriation  or  confiscatory
taxation;  adverse  changes  in  investment  or  exchange  control  regulations;
political  instability;  potential  restrictions  on the  flow of  international
capital;  and the  possibility of a Fund  experiencing  difficulties in pursuing
legal remedies and collecting judgments.

         Securities  purchased  by means of ADRs also are not subject to the 25%
limitation. ADRs are receipts, typically issued by a U.S. bank or trust company,
evidencing ownership of the underlying foreign securities.  ADRs are denominated
in U.S. dollars and trade in the U.S. securities markets.  ADRs may be issued in
sponsored  or  unsponsored  programs.  In sponsored  programs,  the issuer makes
arrangements  to have its securities  traded in the form of ADRs; in unsponsored
programs,  the  issuer  may not be  directly  involved  in the  creation  of the
program.  Although the  regulatory  requirements  with respect to sponsored  and
unsponsored  programs are generally similar, the issuers of unsponsored ADRs are
not  obligated  to  disclose  material  information  in the United  States  and,
therefore,  such  information  may not be  reflected  in the market value of the
ADRs.  ADRs are  subject to certain of the same risks as direct  investments  in
foreign securities, including the risk that changes in the value of the currency
in which the  security  underlying  an ADR is  denominated  relative to the U.S.
dollar may adversely affect the value of the ADR.

Forward Foreign Currency  Contracts.  Each of the Funds may enter into contracts
to purchase or sell foreign currencies at a future date ("forward contracts") as
a hedge against fluctuations in foreign exchange rates pending the settlement of
transactions  in foreign  securities  or during the time the Funds hold  foreign
securities.  A forward contract is an agreement between  contracting  parties to
exchange  an amount of  currency  at some  future  time at an agreed  upon rate.
Although  the Funds have not adopted  any  limitations  on their  ability to use
forward contracts as a hedge against fluctuations in foreign exchange rates, the
Funds do not attempt to hedge all of their foreign investment positions and will
enter into forward contracts only to the extent,  if any, deemed  appropriate by
Fund Management.  The Funds will not enter into forward  contracts for a term of
more than one year or for purposes of speculation.  Hedging against a decline in
the value of a currency in the foregoing manner does not eliminate  fluctuations
in the prices of portfolio  securities  or prevent  losses if the prices of such
securities  decline.   Furthermore,   such  hedging  transactions  preclude  the
opportunity  for gain if the  value  of the  hedged  currency  should  rise.  No
predictions  can be made with respect to whether the total of such  transactions
will result in a better or worse position than had the Fund not entered into any
forward  contracts.  Forward  contracts  may,  from time to time,  be considered
illiquid,  in which  case they would be  subject  to the  Funds'  limitation  on
investing in illiquid  securities,  discussed above. For additional  information
regarding  forward  contracts,  see  "Investment  Policies" in the  Statement of
Additional Information.

Zero Coupon and  Pay-In-Kind  Bonds (High Yield Fund Only).  The High Yield Fund
may  invest in zero  coupon  bonds and  pay-in-kind  bonds,  provided  that Fund
Management  determines  that the risk of a default on the security,  which could
result in adverse  tax  consequences  is not  significant.  A zero  coupon  bond
("zero")  does not make  cash  interest  payments  during  the life of the bond.
Instead,  it is sold at a discount to face value,  and the interest  consists of
the gradual appreciation in price as the bond approaches maturity.  Zeros can be
an attractive  financing  method for issuers with  near-term cash flow problems.
Pay-in- kind ("PIK") bonds pay interest in cash or additional securities, at the
issuer's option, for a specified period. Like zeros, they may help a corporation

<PAGE>

economize on cash. PIK prices  reflect the market value of the  underlying  debt
plus any accrued  interest.  Zeros and PIKs can be higher or lower quality debt,
and may be more  speculative and subject to greater  fluctuation in value due to
changes in interest  rates than coupon bonds.  To maintain the High Yield Fund's
qualification  as  a  regulated  investment  company,  it  may  be  required  to
distribute  income recognized on these bonds, even though no cash may be paid to
the Fund  until the  maturity  or call date of the bond,  and such  distribution
could reduce the amount of cash available for investment by the Fund.

High-Risk,  High-Yield  Securities  (High  Yield,  Industrial  Income  and Small
Company  Growth Funds Only).  Although  Fund  Management  limits the High Yield,
Industrial  Income and Small Company Growth Funds' debt security  investments to
securities it believes are not highly speculative,  both credit and market risks
are increased by those Funds' investments in debt securities rated below the top
four grades by Standard & Poor's or Moody's  (high-risk,  high-yield  securities
commonly known as "junk bonds") and comparable  unrated debt  securities.  Lower
rated  bonds by Moody's  (categories  Ba, B, Caa) are of poorer  quality and may
have speculative characteristics. Bonds rated Caa may be in default or there may
be present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest. Lower rated
bonds by  Standard & Poor's  (categories  BB, B, CCC)  include  those  which are
regarded, on balance, as predominantly  speculative with respect to the issuer's
capacity to pay interest and repay  principal in accordance with their terms; BB
indicates the lowest degree of speculation and CCC a high 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.

         Because  investment in medium and lower rated securities  involves both
greater credit risk and market risk,  achievement of the High Yield Fund's (and,
to a lesser extent, the Industrial Income Fund's)  investment  objectives may be
more dependent on Fund  Management's  credit analysis than is the case for funds
investing in higher quality securities.  In addition,  the share price and yield
of the High Yield Fund may be  expected  to  fluctuate  more than in the case of
funds  investing  in  higher  quality,  shorter  term  securities.  Moreover,  a
significant  economic downturn or major increase in interest rates may result in
issuers of lower rated securities experiencing increased financial stress, which
would adversely  affect their ability to service their  principal,  dividend and
interest  obligations,  meet projected  business  goals,  and obtain  additional
financing.  In this  regard,  it should be noted  that while the market for high
yield corporate bonds has been in existence for many years and from time to time
has experienced  economic  downturns in recent years, this market has involved a
significant  increase in the use of high yield corporate debt securities to fund
highly leveraged corporate acquisitions and restructurings.  Past experience may
not, therefore, provide an accurate indication of future performance of the high
yield  bond  market,   particularly   during  periods  of  economic   recession.
Furthermore, expenses incurred to recover an investment by a Fund in a defaulted
security may adversely  affect the Fund's net asset value.  Finally,  while Fund
Management  attempts to limit purchases of medium and lower rated  securities to
securities having an established secondary market, the secondary market for such
securities may be less liquid than the market for higher quality securities. The
reduced  liquidity of the  secondary  market for such  securities  may adversely
affect the market price of, and ability


<PAGE>



of, the High Yield,  Industrial  Income or Small Company  Growth Funds to value,
particular  securities  at certain  times,  thereby  making it difficult to make
specific valuation determinations.

         While Fund Management  continuously monitors all of the debt securities
held by the  Funds for the  issuers'  ability  to make  required  principal  and
interest payments and other quality factors,  a Fund may retain in the portfolio
a debt security whose rating is changed to one below the minimum rating required
for purchase.  More information on debt securities is contained in the Statement
of Additional Information.

         The following  table shows the  composition  of the  Industrial  Income
Fund's and the High Yield Fund's  investments in corporate (and municipal) bonds
by rating  category for the fiscal year ended  December  31, 1996.  All of these
percentages were determined on a dollar-weighted basis,  calculated by averaging
the Funds' month-end portfolio holdings during the fiscal year. These figures do
not represent  actual holdings of the Funds as of December 31, 1996, nor do they
imply that the overall quality of portfolio holdings is fixed.

                                              Percentage of Total Assets
                                    --------------------------------------------
Rating Category                     Industrial Income Fund       High Yield Fund
- ---------------                     ----------------------       ---------------
AAA                                         11.69%                     0.00%
AA                                           0.00%                     0.00%
A                                            0.69%                     0.00%
BBB                                          2.59%                     0.53%
BB                                           3.92%                    15.62%
B                                            2.18%                    62.16%
CCC                                          0.21%                     6.98%
Unrated                                      0.00%                     3.40%

Concentration (Health Sciences, Technology and Utilities Funds Only). While each
of the Health Sciences,  Technology and Utilities  Funds,  like the other Funds,
diversifies  its  investments by investing,  with respect to at least 75% of its
total assets,  not more than 5% of its total assets in the securities of any one
issuer, its assets normally will be invested primarily in companies engaged in a
single business sector. As a result of this investment  policy, an investment in
those Funds may be subject to greater fluctuations in value than generally would
be the case if an investment  were made in an  investment  company which did not
concentrate its investments in a similar manner.  For example,  certain economic
factors or specific events may exert a  disproportionate  impact upon the prices
of equity securities of companies within a particular industry relative to their
impact on the prices of  securities  of companies  engaged in other  industries.
Additionally,  changes  in the  market  price  of  the  equity  securities  of a
particular company which occupies a dominant position in an industry may tend to
influence the market prices of other  companies  within the same industry.  As a
result of the  foregoing  factors,  the net asset value of the Health  Sciences,
Technology and Utilities  Funds may be more  susceptible to change than those of
investment companies which spread their investments over many different business
sectors.

         The Technology Fund may not invest more than 25% of its total assets in
a single  industry  (e.g.,  computer  software)  within the technology  business
sector.  The Health  Sciences  and  Utilities  Funds do not  operate  under this
restriction.



<PAGE>



Options  and  Futures  Contracts.  Each of the Funds,  other than the  Dynamics,
Health  Sciences and  Technology  Funds,  may enter into futures  contracts  for
hedging  or other  non-speculative  purposes  within the  meaning  and intent of
applicable  rules of the Commodity  Futures  Trading  Commission  ("CFTC").  For
example,  futures contracts may be purchased or sold to attempt to hedge against
the effects of interest or exchange rate changes on a Fund's current or intended
investments.  If an  anticipated  decrease in the value of portfolio  securities
occurs  as a result  of a  general  increase  in  interest  rates or a change in
exchange rates,  the adverse effects of such changes may be offset,  in whole or
part, by gains on the sale of futures contracts.  Conversely, an increase in the
cost of  portfolio  securities  to be  acquired  caused by a general  decline in
interest rates or a change in exchange rates may be offset, in whole or part, by
gains on futures contracts purchased by a Fund. A Fund will incur brokerage fees
when it  purchases  and sells  futures  contracts,  and it will be  required  to
maintain margin deposits.

         Each  of the  Funds  other  than  the  Dynamics,  Health  Sciences  and
Technology  Funds also may use options to buy or sell futures  contracts or debt
securities.  Such  investment  strategies  will be  used as a hedge  and not for
speculation.

         Put and call options on futures  contracts or securities  may be traded
by a Fund in order to  protect  against  declines  in the  values  of  portfolio
securities  or  against  increases  in the cost of  securities  to be  acquired.
Purchases  of options on futures  contracts  may  present  less  dollar  risk in
hedging  the  Fund's  portfolio  than the  purchase  and sale of the  underlying
futures  contracts,  since the  potential  loss is  limited to the amount of the
premium plus related  transaction costs. The premium paid for such a put or call
option plus any transaction  costs will reduce the benefit,  if any, realized by
the Fund upon exercise or  liquidation of the option,  and,  unless the price of
the underlying  futures  contract  changes  sufficiently,  the option may expire
without value to the Fund.  The writing of covered  options,  however,  does not
present  less risk than the trading of futures  contracts,  and will  constitute
only a partial  hedge,  up to the amount of the  premium  received,  and,  if an
option is exercised, the Fund may suffer a loss on the transaction.

         A Fund may purchase put or call options in  anticipation  of changes in
interest  rates or other  factors  which may  adversely  affect the value of its
portfolio or the prices of securities which the Fund anticipates purchasing at a
later  date.  The  Fund  may be able  to  offset  such  adverse  effects  on its
portfolio, in whole or in part, through the options purchased.  The premium paid
for a put or call option plus any transaction costs will reduce the benefit,  if
any,  realized by the Fund upon  exercise  or  liquidation  of the option,  and,
unless the price of the underlying security changes sufficiently, the option may
expire without value to the Fund.

         For hedging or other non-speculative purposes, a Fund may, from time to
time, also sell ("write")  covered call options or cash secured puts in order to
attempt to increase the yield on its portfolio or to protect against declines in
the value of its  portfolio  securities.  By writing a covered call option,  the
Fund,  in return for the premium  income  realized  from the sale of the option,
gives up the  opportunity  to profit  from a price  increase  in the  underlying
security above the option exercise price,  where the price increase occurs while
the option is in effect. In addition,  the Fund's ability to sell the underlying
security  will  be  limited  while  the  option  is in effect. By writing a cash


<PAGE>



secured put, the Fund, which receives the premium, has the obligation during the
option  period,  upon  assignment of an exercise  notice,  to buy the underlying
security at a specified price. A put is secured by cash if the Fund maintains at
all times cash, Treasury bills or other high grade short-term obligations with a
value  equal to the  option  exercise  price in a  segregated  account  with its
custodian.

         Although those Funds that may enter into options and futures  contracts
will do so solely for  hedging  or other  non-speculative  purposes,  within the
meaning  and  intent of  applicable  rules of the CFTC,  their use does  involve
certain  risks.  For  example,  a lack of  correlation  between  the value of an
instrument underlying an option or futures contract and the assets being hedged,
or unexpected  adverse price  movements,  could render a Fund's hedging strategy
unsuccessful and could result in losses. In addition,  there can be no assurance
that a liquid  secondary  market will exist for any contract  purchased or sold,
and  the  Fund  may be  required  to  maintain  a  position  until  exercise  or
expiration,  which could result in losses. Transactions in futures contracts and
options are subject to other risks as well.

         The risks related to  transactions in options and futures to be entered
into by the Funds are set forth in greater detail in the Statement of Additional
Information,  which  should  be  reviewed  in  conjunction  with  the  foregoing
discussion.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

         Each Fund is subject to certain fundamental  restrictions regarding its
investments  which  may  not be  altered  without  the  approval  of the  Fund's
shareholders. Those restrictions include, among others, limitations with respect
to the percentages of the value of the Fund's total assets which may be invested
in any one company or, with the  exception of the Health  Sciences and Utilities
Funds,  in  one  industry.   A  list  of  each  Fund's  fundamental   investment
restrictions and a list of additional,  non-fundamental  investment restrictions
of each Fund (which can be changed by the Company's  board of directors  without
shareholder approval) are contained in the Statement of Additional Information.

MANAGEMENT

         Pursuant  to an  agreement  with the  Company,  INVESCO,  7800 E. Union
Avenue, Denver,  Colorado,  serves as the Funds' investment adviser.  INVESCO is
primarily  responsible  for  providing  the Funds  with  various  administrative
services and supervising the Funds' daily business  affairs.  These services are
subject to review by the Company's board of directors.

         INVESCO  is an  indirect  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  AMVESCO  PLC, a
publicly-traded  holding company that, through its subsidiaries,  engages in the
business of investment management on an international basis. INVESCO PLC changed
its name to AMVESCO PLC on March 3, 1997 as a part of a merger  between  INVESCO
PLC  and  A I M  Management  Group  Inc.,  thus  creating  one  of  the  largest
independent  investment management businesses in the world. Subject to obtaining
shareholder  approval at its regular Annual  Shareholder  Meeting,  the board of
directors of AMVESCO PLC has concluded that the corporate name should be changed
to AMVESCAP  PLC  effective  May 8, 1997.  INVESCO,  INVESCO  Trust and ICM will
continue to operate under their existing  names.  AMVESCO PLC has  approximately
$165 billion in assets under management. INVESCO was established in 1932 and, as



<PAGE>



of  December  31,  1996,  managed 14 mutual  funds,  consisting  of 44  separate
portfolios,  with combined  assets of  approximately  $13.8 billion on behalf of
over 826,000 shareholders.

         Pursuant  to  agreements  with  INVESCO,  INVESCO  Trust  serves as the
sub-adviser of the Industrial Income,  High Yield,  Utilities,  Dynamics,  Small
Company Growth,  Health Sciences,  Technology and Growth Funds and ICM serves as
the sub-adviser of the Total Return Fund. Although the Company is not a party to
any  sub-advisory  agreement,  the  agreements  have been approved for each Fund
affected by that  agreement by the Company's  board of  directors.  In addition,
each agreement has been approved as to each affected Fund by the shareholders of
that  Fund.  The  address  of INVESCO  Trust is 7800 E.  Union  Avenue,  Denver,
Colorado  and  the  address  of ICM is 1315  Peachtree  Street,  N.E.,  Atlanta,
Georgia. Subject to the supervision of INVESCO and review by the Company's board
of directors,  INVESCO Trust is primarily responsible for selecting and managing
the investments of the Industrial  Income,  Dynamics,  High Yield, Small Company
Growth,  Health  Sciences,  Technology,  Utilities  and Growth  Funds and ICM is
primarily  responsible  for selecting and managing the  investments of the Total
Return Fund.

         INVESCO  Trust,  a trust  company  founded in 1969,  is a  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of INVESCO that served as adviser or  sub-adviser  to 55  investment
portfolios  as of December 31,  1996,  including  31  portfolios  in the INVESCO
group.  These 55 portfolios had aggregate assets of approximately  $12.7 billion
as of  December  31,  1996.  In  addition,  INVESCO  Trust  provides  investment
management  services to private clients,  including  employee benefit plans that
may be invested in a collective trust sponsored by INVESCO Trust.

         ICM  is an  indirect,  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  AMVESCO  PLC  that
currently  manages in excess of $39  billion  of assets on behalf of  tax-exempt
accounts (such as pension and  profit-sharing  funds for  corporations and state
and local governments) and investment companies.

         The  following  persons serve as portfolio  managers of the  respective
Funds:

Industrial Income Fund

         Charles P. Mayer -  Co-portfolio  manager of the Fund since  1994;  co-
portfolio  manager  of the  INVESCO  Industrial  Income  Fund  since  1993;  co-
portfolio  manager of the  INVESCO  Balanced  Fund since 1996;  director  (since
1997),  portfolio  manager (since 1993),  senior vice president (since 1994) and
vice president (1993 to 1994) of INVESCO Trust;  director of INVESCO since 1997;
formerly (1984 to 1993),  portfolio  manager with  Westinghouse  Pension;  began
investment  career in 1969;  B.A.,  St.  Peter's  College;  M.B.A.,  St.  John's
University.

         Donovan J. (Jerry) Paul - Co-portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1994;
co-portfolio  manager of the INVESCO  Industrial Income Fund since 1994, INVESCO
Balanced Fund since 1996 and INVESCO Short-Term Bond Fund since 1996;  portfolio
manager of the INVESCO VIF - High Yield Portfolio since 1994, INVESCO High Yield
Fund since 1994 and INVESCO Select Income Fund since 1994; portfolio manager and
senior  vice  president  of INVESCO  Trust  since  1994;  formerly,  senior vice
president  and director of fixed income  research  (1989 to 1992) and  portfolio
manager (1987 to 1992) with Stein,  Roe & Farnham Inc.;  and president  (1993 to
1994) of Quixote Investment  Management,  Inc.; began investment career in 1976;
B.B.A.  University  of Iowa;  M.B.A.  University  of  Northern  Iowa;  Chartered
Financial Analyst; Certified Public Accountant.


<PAGE>



Dynamics Fund

         Timothy J. Miller - Portfolio manager of the Fund since 1996; portfolio
manager for the INVESCO  Dynamics Fund since 1993;  co-portfolio  manager of the
INVESCO Growth Fund since 1996;  co-portfolio manager of the INVESCO Growth Fund
since 1996 and the INVESCO  Small  Company  Growth Fund since 1997;  senior vice
president  (since 1995),  vice  president  (1993 to 1995) and portfolio  manager
(1992 to  present)  of  INVESCO  Trust.  Formerly  (1979 to 1992),  analyst  and
portfolio  manager  with  Mississippi  Valley  Advisors.   B.S.B.A.,  St.  Louis
University; M.B.A., University of Missouri; Chartered Financial Analyst.

High Yield Fund

         Donovan J.  (Jerry)  Paul -  Portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1994;
portfolio  manager of the INVESCO High Yield Fund and the INVESCO  Select Income
Fund since 1994;  co-portfolio  manager of INVESCO  Industrial Income Fund since
1994,  INVESCO VIF - Industrial  Income Fund since 1994,  INVESCO  Balanced Fund
since 1994 and INVESCO  Short-Term Bond Fund since 1996;  portfolio  manager and
senior  vice  president  of INVESCO  Trust  since  1994;  formerly,  senior vice
president  and director of fixed income  research  (1989 to 1992) and  portfolio
manager (1987 to 1992) with Stein,  Roe & Farnham Inc.;  and president  (1993 to
1994) of Quixote Investment  Management,  Inc.; began investment career in 1976;
B.B.A.  University  of  Northern  Iowa;  M.B.A.  University  of  Northern  Iowa;
Chartered Financial Analyst; Certified Public Accountant.

Small Company Growth Fund

         Timothy  J.  Miller -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1997;
co-portfolio  manager of the INVESCO Small Company  Growth Fund since 1997;  the
INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc. since 1996 and the INVESCO VIF Growth Fund since 1997;
portfolio  manager of INVESCO  Dynamics  Fund,  Inc.  since  1993;  senior  vice
president  (since 1995),  vice  president  (1993 to 1995) and portfolio  manager
(since 1992) of INVESCO  Trust  Company.  Formerly  (1979 to 1992),  analyst and
portfolio  manager  with  Mississippi  Valley  Advisors.   B.S.B.A.,  St.  Louis
University; M.B.A., University of Missouri. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst.

         Trent  E.  May -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1997;  co-
portfolio manager of the INVESCO Small Company Growth Fund since 1997 and of the
INVESCO Growth Fund,  Inc. since 1996;  portfolio  manager (since 1996) and vice
president  (since 1997) of INVESCO Trust Company.  Formerly,  senior equity fund
manager/equity   analyst  at  Munder  Capital   Management  in  Detroit.   B.S.,
Engineering,  Florida Institute of Technology,  M.B.A., Rollins College. He is a
Chartered Financial Analyst.

         Stacie  Cowell -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1997;  co-
portfolio manager of the INVESCO Small Company Growth Fund since 1997; portfolio
manager (since 1996) of INVESCO Trust Company.  Formerly,  senior equity analyst
with Founders Asset  Management;  capital markets and trading analyst with Chase
Manhattan  Bank in New  York.  B.A.,  Economics,  Colgate  University.  She is a
Chartered Financial Analyst.

Health Sciences Fund

         John Schroer - Co-portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1996;  portfolio
manager  of the  INVESCO  Strategic  Health  Sciences  Portfolio  since 1996 and



<PAGE>



co-portfolio  manager of that  Portfolio  from 1994 to 1996;  vice president and
portfolio manager of The Global Health Sciences Fund since 1996;  assistant vice
president with Trust Company of the West from 1990 to 1992; M.B.A. and B.S. from
the University of Wisconsin-Madison; Chartered Financial Analyst.

         Carol  A.  Werther  -  Co-portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1996 and
co-portfolio  manager of the INVESCO  Strategic Health Sciences  Portfolio since
1996.   Previously,   Ms.  Werther  was  a  portfolio  manager  specializing  in
biotechnology stock with Rothschild Asset Management Ltd. (1995 to 1996); a vice
president and biotechnology  analyst with Cowen & Company (1992 to 1994); and an
analyst with Lehman Brothers (1990 to 1992).  Ms. Werther earned an M.B.A.  from
New York University,  an M.S. from the University of Alabama in Birmingham and a
B.S. from Cornell University.

Technology Fund

         Daniel B.  Leonard  -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1996;
co-portfolio manager (since 1996) and formerly portfolio manager (1985- 1996) of
the INVESCO Strategic Technology Portfolio;  co-portfolio manager of the INVESCO
Strategic  Financial Services Portfolio since 1997 and portfolio manager of that
Fund  from  1996 to  1997;  portfolio  manager  of the  INVESCO  Strategic  Gold
Portfolio  since 1989;  joined INVESCO in 1975,  and was appointed  successively
portfolio manager (1977-1983;  1985- 1991) and senior vice president (1975-1983;
1985-1991) of INVESCO Funds Group,  Inc., as well as vice president  (1977-1983)
and senior vice president (1991 to present) of INVESCO Trust Company;  B.A. from
Washington & Lee University; began his investment career in 1960.

         Gerard F. Hallaren,  Jr. - Co-portfolio manager of the Fund since 1996;
co-portfolio  manager of the INVESCO Strategic  Technology Portfolio since 1996;
portfolio manager of the INVESCO Strategic  Environmental  Portfolio since 1996;
joined INVESCO Trust Company in 1994,  served as a research analyst from 1994 to
1995 and became a vice president in 1995; formerly,  vice president and research
analyst with Hanifen  Imhoff (1992 to 1994);  retail  broker with Merrill  Lynch
(1991); director of business planning for MiniScribe Corporation (1989 to 1990);
and research  analyst  with  various  firms  beginning  in 1978;  B.A.  from the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Chartered Financial Analyst.

Utilities Fund

         Jeffrey G. Morris - Portfolio manager of the Fund since 1996; portfolio
manager of the  INVESCO  Strategic  Utilities  Portfolio  since 1996 and INVESCO
Strategic  Environmental Services Portfolio since 1996;  co-portfolio manager of
the INVESCO Strategic Financial Services Portfolio since 1997; portfolio manager
of INVESCO  Trust  Company  since 1995;  joined  INVESCO in 1991 and served as a
research  analyst  from  1994 to 1995;  formerly,  loan  processor  for  Norwest
Mortgage (1991); B.S. Colorado State University; Chartered Financial Analyst.

Total Return Fund

         Edward C.  Mitchell,  Jr. -  Portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1993;
portfolio manager of INVESCO Value Trust Total Return Fund since 1987 and of the
INVESCO Advisors Funds Flex Fund since 1988;  president (1992 to present),  vice
president (1979 to 1991) and director (1979 to present) of ICM; began investment
career in 1969; B.A.,  University of Virginia;  M.B.A.,  University of Colorado;
Chartered Financial Analyst;  Chartered  Investment  Counselor;  past president,
Atlanta Society of Financial Analysts.


<PAGE>





         David S.  Griffin -  Co-portfolio  manager of the Fund since 1993;  co-
portfolio  manager of the  INVESCO  Value  Trust  Total  Return  Fund and of the
INVESCO Advisor Funds Flex Fund since 1993; portfolio manager of ICM since 1991;
mutual fund sales  representative  with INVESCO  Services,  Inc. (1986 to 1991);
began investment career in 1982; B.A., Ohio Wesleyan University; M.B.A., William
and Mary; Chartered Financial Analyst.

Growth Fund

         Timothy  J.  Miller -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1997;
co-portfolio  manager of the INVESCO  Growth Fund,  Inc.  since October 1996 and
portfolio  manager of that Fund from June to October 1996; co- portfolio manager
of the  INVESCO  Small  Company  Growth Fund since 1997 and of the INVESCO VIF -
Small Company Growth Fund since 1997;  portfolio manager of the INVESCO Dynamics
Fund, Inc. since 1993;  senior vice president (since 1995), vice president (1993
to 1995) and portfolio  manager (since 1992) of INVESCO Trust Company.  Formerly
(1979 to 1992),  analyst and portfolio manager with Mississippi Valley Advisors.
B.S.B.A.,  St.  Louis  University;  M.B.A.,  University  of  Missouri.  He  is a
Chartered Financial Analyst.

         Trent  E.  May -  Co-portfolio  manager  of the Fund  since  1997;  co-
portfolio manager of the INVESCO VIF - Growth Fund since 1996, the INVESCO Small
Company  Growth Fund since 1997 and the INVESCO VIF - Small Company  Growth Fund
since 1997;  portfolio manager (since 1996) of INVESCO Trust company.  Formerly,
senior  equity  fund  manager/equity  analyst at Munder  Capital  Management  in
Detroit. B.S. in Engineering,  Florida Institute of Technology;  M.B.A., Rollins
College. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst.

         Each Fund pays  INVESCO a monthly  advisory  fee which is based  upon a
percentage  of  the  Fund's  average  net  assets,  determined  daily.  For  the
Industrial Income and Total Return Funds, the advisory fees are each computed at
the annual  rates of 0.75% on the first $500  million of the Fund's  average net
assets;  0.65% on the next $500  million of the Fund's  average net assets;  and
0.55% on the Fund's  average net assets in excess of $1  billion.  For the Small
Company Growth, Health Sciences and Technology Funds, the advisory fees are each
computed  at the annual  rates of 0.75% on the first $350  million of the Fund's
average net  assets;  0.65% on the next $350  million of the Fund's  average net
assets;  and 0.55% on the Fund's  average net assets in excess of $700  million.
For the High Yield and Utilities  Funds,  the advisory fees are each computed at
the annual  rates of 0.60% on the first $500  million of the Fund's  average net
assets;  0.55% on the next $500  million  of the Fund's  average  net assets and
0.45% on the Fund's average net assets in excess of $1 billion. For the Dynamics
Fund,  the advisory  fees are computed at the annual rates of 0.60% on the first
$350 million of the Fund's  average net assets;  0.55% on the next $350 million;
and 0.50% on the Fund's  average net assets in excess of $700  million.  For the
Growth Fund,  the  advisory  fees are computed at the annual rate of .85% of the
Fund's  average net assets.  For the fiscal period ended  December 31, 1996, the
investment  advisory fees paid by the Industrial Income Fund, Total Return Fund,
High Yield  Fund,  and  Utilities  Fund were  0.75%,  0.75%,  0.60%,  and 0.60%,
respectively,  of each Fund's average net assets.  No advisory fees are provided
for the Health Sciences, Small Company Growth,  Technology,  Dynamics and Growth
Funds as they had not commenced operations as of the date of this prospectus.


<PAGE>




         Out of the  advisory  fee  received  from each Fund,  INVESCO pays that
Fund's sub-adviser a monthly  subadvisory fee. No fee is paid by any Fund to its
sub-adviser.  The sub-advisory  fees for the Industrial  Income and Total Return
Funds are each  computed at the annual rates of 0.375% on the first $500 million
of the Fund's average net assets;  0.325% on the next $500 million of the Fund's
average net assets;  and 0.275% on the Fund's average net assets in excess of $1
billion.  The sub-advisory fees for the Dynamics,  Small Company Growth,  Health
Sciences and Technology Funds are each computed at the annual rates of 0.25% for
the first $200 million of the Fund's  average net assets and 0.20% on the Fund's
average net assets in excess of $200 million. The sub-advisory fees for the High
Yield and  Utilities  Funds are each computed at the annual rate of 0.30% on the
first $500  million of the Fund's  average net  assets;  0.275% on the next $500
million of the Fund's  average net assets;  and 0.225% on the Fund's average net
assets in excess of $1  billion.  The  sub-advisory  fee for the Growth  Fund is
0.25% of the Fund's average net assets.

         The Company also has entered into an Administrative  Services Agreement
with INVESCO dated February 28, 1997 (the "Administrative Agreement").  Pursuant
to  the  Administrative  Agreement,  INVESCO  performs  certain  administrative,
recordkeeping and internal  accounting  services,  including without limitation,
maintaining  general ledger and capital stock accounts,  preparing a daily trial
balance,  calculating net asset value daily,  providing  selected general ledger
reports and providing  certain  sub-accounting  and  recordkeeping  services for
shareholder  accounts.  For  such  services,  the  Company  pays  INVESCO  a fee
consisting  of a base fee of $10,000 per year for each Fund,  plus an additional
incremental  fee  computed  at the annual rate of 0.015% per year of the average
net assets of each Fund. INVESCO also is paid a fee by the Company for providing
transfer agent services. See "Additional Information."

         Each Fund's expenses,  which are accrued daily, are generally  deducted
from  its  total  income  before  dividends  are  paid.  Total  expenses  of the
Industrial  Income Fund,  Total Return Fund, High Yield Fund, and Utilities Fund
(prior to  expense  offsets)  for the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  1996,
including investment advisory fees (but excluding brokerage  commissions,  which
are a cost of acquiring securities),  amounted to 0.95%, 0.94%, 0.87% and 1.16%,
respectively,  of each Fund's  average net assets.  Certain  Fund  expenses  are
absorbed  voluntarily by INVESCO  pursuant to a commitment to the Company.  This
commitment may be changed  following  consultation  with the Company's  board of
directors.  If such  voluntary  expense  limits  were not in  effect,  the total
operating  expenses,  as a percentage of each Fund's average net assets,  of the
Industrial Income,  Total Return,  High Yield and Utilities Funds for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 1996,  would have been 1.19%,  1.30%,  1.32%, and 5.36%,
respectively. Total Operating Expenses are not provided for the Health Sciences,
Small  Company  Growth,  Technology,  Dynamics  and Growth Funds as they had not
commenced operations as of the date of this prospectus.

         Fund Management  permits investment and other personnel to purchase and
sell securities for their own accounts, subject to a compliance policy governing
personal investing.  This policy requires Fund Management's personnel to conduct
their personal  investment  activities in a manner that Fund Management believes
is not detrimental to the Funds or Fund Management's other advisory clients. See
"Management"  in the  Statement  of  Additional  Information  for more  detailed
information.


<PAGE>



PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS

         Investors may not purchase or redeem shares of the Funds directly,  but
only through  variable  annuity and variable life  insurance  contracts  offered
through the separate accounts of Participating  Insurance Companies.  A contract
owner should refer to the applicable Separate Account Prospectus for information
on how to purchase or surrender a contract, make partial withdrawals of contract
values, allocate contract values to one or more of the Funds, or change existing
allocations among investment  alternatives,  including the Funds.  Shares of the
Funds are sold on a  continuous  basis to  separate  accounts  of  Participating
Insurance Companies by INVESCO,  as the Funds'  Distributor.  No sales charge is
imposed  upon the sale of shares of the Funds.  Sales  charges for the  variable
annuity or variable  life  insurance  contracts  are  described  in the Separate
Account  Prospectuses.  INVESCO  may from  time to time make  payments  from its
revenues  to  Participating  Insurance  Companies,   broker  dealers  and  other
financial institutions that provide administrative services for the Funds.

         The Participating  Insurance  Companies place orders for their separate
accounts  to  purchase  and  redeem  shares of each Fund based on,  among  other
things, the amount of premium payments to be invested and transfer and surrender
requests to be effected on that day  pursuant to variable  annuity and  variable
life insurance contracts. Fund shares are purchased or redeemed at the net asset
value per share next computed after receipt of a purchase or redemption order in
good form.  Payment  for  redemptions  ordinarily  will be made on behalf of the
Company and the relevant Fund by the Company's  transfer agent (INVESCO)  within
seven days after the  redemption  request is received.  However,  payment may be
postponed under unusual circumstances, such as when normal trading is not taking
place  on the  New  York  Stock  Exchange  or an  emergency  as  defined  by the
Securities and Exchange Commission exists.

         Net asset value per share is computed  for each Fund once each day that
the New York Stock Exchange is open, as of the close of regular  trading on that
Exchange  (usually 4:00 p.m., New York time),  and also may be computed on other
days under  certain  circumstances.  Net asset  value per share for each Fund is
calculated by dividing the market value of the Fund's  securities plus the value
of  its  other  assets  (including   dividends  and  interest  accrued  but  not
collected),  less all liabilities (including accrued expenses), by the number of
outstanding  shares of the Fund. If market quotations are not readily available,
a security will be valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the board
of directors.  Debt securities  with remaining  maturities of 60 days or less at
the  time  of  purchase  will  be  valued  at  amortized  cost,  absent  unusual
circumstances,  so long as the Company's  board of directors  believes that such
value represents fair value.

TAX STATUS, DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

Taxes. The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), provides that
each  investment  portfolio  of a series  fund is to be  treated  as a  separate
taxpayer.  Accordingly,  each Fund of the Company intends to continue to qualify
as a separate regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Code.

         Each Fund intends to comply with the  diversification  requirements  of
Code Section 817(h). By meeting this and other  requirements,  the Participating
Insurance Companies, rather than the owners of variable annuity or variable life



<PAGE>



insurance  contracts,  should be subject to tax on  distributions  received with
respect to Fund shares.  For further  information  concerning federal income tax
consequences  for the owners of  variable  annuity or  variable  life  insurance
contracts,  a  contract  owner  should  consult  his  or  her  Separate  Account
Prospectus.

         As a regulated  investment  company,  each Fund  generally  will not be
subject to tax on its  ordinary  income and net  realized  capital  gains to the
extent such  income and gains are  distributed  in  conformity  with  applicable
distribution  requirements  under  the  Code  to the  separate  accounts  of the
Participating Insurance Companies which hold its shares. Distributions of income
and the excess of net  short-term  capital gain over net long-term  capital loss
will be treated  as  ordinary  income,  and  distributions  of the excess of net
long-term  capital  gain over net  short-term  capital  loss will be  treated as
long-term capital gain by the Participating  Insurance Companies.  Participating
Insurance  Companies  should consult their own tax advisers  concerning  whether
such  distribu  tions are subject to federal  income tax if they are retained as
part of contract reserves.

Dividends. In addition to any increase in the value of a Fund's shares which may
occur from increases in the value of the Fund's  investments,  the Fund may earn
income in the form of dividends and interest on its investments.  Dividends paid
by each  Fund will be based  solely  on the  income  earned  by that  Fund.  The
Company's policy with respect to each Fund is to distribute substantially all of
this income,  less expenses,  to shareholders of that Fund. At the discretion of
the  board  of  directors,   distributions  are  customarily  made  annually  to
shareholders of the Funds. Dividends are automatically  reinvested in additional
shares of the Fund making the  dividend  distribution  at its net asset value on
the ex-dividend date, unless an election is made on behalf of a separate account
to receive distributions in cash.

Capital  Gains.  Capital  gains or losses are the result of a Fund  selling  its
portfolio  securities at prices that are higher or lower than the prices paid by
it to purchase  such  securities.  Total gains from such sales,  less any losses
from such sales  (including  losses carried forward from prior years)  represent
net realized  capital  gains.  Each Fund  distributes  its net realized  capital
gains,  if any, to its  shareholders  at least  annually,  usually in  December.
Capital gains distributions are automatically reinvested in additional shares of
the Fund  making  the  distribution  at its net  asset  value  per  share on the
ex-dividend  date, unless an election is made on behalf of a separate account to
receive distributions in cash.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

         From time to time, a Fund's  total return  and/or yield may be included
in  advertisements,  sales literature,  shareholder  reports or Separate Account
Prospectuses.  A Fund's total  return and yield  include the effect of deducting
that Fund's expenses,  but do not include charges and expenses attributable to a
particular variable annuity or variable life insurance contract.  Because shares
of the Funds can be purchased  only through a variable  annuity or variable life
insurance  contract,  the Funds'  total return and yield data should be reviewed
along with the  description  of contract  charges and expenses  contained in the
applicable  Separate Account  Prospectus.  Total return or yield for a Fund must
always be accompanied  by, and reviewed with,  comparable  total return or yield
data for an associated  variable  annuity separate  account,  or data that would
permit  evaluation  of the  magnitude  of variable  life  insurance  charges and



<PAGE>



expenses not  reflected  in the Fund's total return or yield.  Fund total return
and yield  figures are based upon  historical  results  and are not  intended to
indicate future performance.

         The  "total  return" of a Fund  refers to the  average  annual  rate of
return of an investment in the Fund.  This figure is computed by calculating the
percentage change in value of an investment of $1,000,  assuming reinvestment of
all income dividends and capital gain  distributions,  to the end of a specified
period.  "Total  return"  quotations  reflect  the  performance  of the Fund and
include the effect of capital changes.

         The total return  performance  for the  Industrial  Income Fund,  Total
Return  Fund,  High Yield Fund and  Utilities  Fund for the fiscal  period ended
December 31, 1996, was 22.28%, 12.18%, 16.59% and 12.76%, respectively.

         The yield of the Fund is calculated by utilizing the Fund's  calculated
income,  expenses and average  outstanding  shares for the most recent 30-day or
one-month  period,  dividing it by the month end net asset value and annualizing
the resulting number.

         In conjunction with performance  reports and/or analyses of shareholder
service for the Fund,  comparisons of the Fund's  performance for a given period
to the  performance  of recognized  indices and for the same period may be made.
Such indices  include ones  provided by Dow Jones & Company,  Standard & Poor's,
Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.,  Lehman Brothers,  National  Association of
Securities Dealers,  Inc., Frank Russell Company,  Value Line Investment Survey,
the American Stock  Exchange,  Morgan Stanley  Capital  International,  Wilshire
Associates, the Financial Times-Stock Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange, the
Nikkei Stock  Average and the Deutcher  Aktienindex,  all of which are unmanaged
market  indicators.  Such  comparisons can be a useful measure of the quality of
the Funds' investment performance.  However,  because Fund performance data does
not reflect separate account and contract charges,  Fund performance data is not
an appropriate  measure of the performance of a contract  owner's  investment in
the variable annuity and variable life insurance contracts.

         In  addition,   rankings,   ratings,   and  comparisons  of  investment
performance and/or  assessments of the quality of shareholder  service appearing
in publications such as Money, Forbes,  Kiplinger's Personal Finance,  Financial
World,  Morningstar,  and similar sources which utilize information compiled (i)
internally;  (ii) by  Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.;  or  (iii)  by  other
recognized  analytical  services,  may be used in sales  literature.  The Lipper
Analytical  Services,  Inc.  rankings and comparisons,  which may be used by the
Funds in  performance  reports,  will be drawn from the  "Equity  Income  Funds"
variable  insurance  product  grouping  for  the  Industrial  Income  Fund,  the
"Flexible  Portfolio  Funds"  grouping for the Total  Return  Fund,  the "Growth
Funds" grouping for the Growth Fund, the "High Current Yield Funds" grouping for
the High Yield Fund and the "Utility  Funds"  grouping for the Utility Fund, the
"Capital  Appreciation Funds" grouping for the Dynamics Fund, the "Small Company
Growth   Funds"    grouping   for   the   Small   Company   Growth   Fund,   the
"Health/Biotechnology  Funds"  grouping  for the  Health  Sciences  Fund and the
"Science and Technology  Funds"  grouping for the Technology  Fund. In addition,
the broad-based  Lipper  variable  insurance  product  groupings may be used for
comparison to any of the Funds. A more complete list of publications that may be
quoted in sales  literature is contained under the caption  "Performance" in the
Statement of Additional Information.



<PAGE>



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Voting  Rights.  The  Participating   Insurance  Companies  and  their  separate
accounts,  rather than individual  contract owners,  are the shareholders of the
Funds.  However,  each Participating  Insurance Company will vote shares held by
its separate accounts as required by law and interpretations thereof, as amended
or changed from time to time. In accordance with current law and interpretations
thereof,  a  Participating  Insurance  Company is  required  to  request  voting
instructions  from its contract owners and must vote Fund shares held by each of
its  separate  accounts  in  proportion  to the  voting  instructions  received.
Additional  information about voting procedures  (including a discussion,  where
applicable,  of circumstances under which some Participating Insurance Companies
may vote Fund shares held by variable life  insurance  separate  accounts  other
than in  accordance  with  contract  owner  instructions)  is  contained  in the
applicable Separate Account Prospectuses.

         All shares of the Funds have equal voting rights. When shareholders are
entitled  to vote upon a matter,  each  shareholder  is entitled to one vote for
each share owned and a corresponding  fractional vote for each fractional  share
owned.  Voting  with  respect  to  certain  matters,  such  as  ratification  of
independent  accountants and the election of directors,  will be by all Funds of
the Company voting together.  In other cases,  such as voting upon an investment
advisory contract, voting is on a Fund-by-Fund basis. To the extent permitted by
law,  when not all  Funds  are  affected  by a matter  to be  voted  upon,  only
shareholders  of the Fund or Funds  affected  by the matter  will be entitled to
vote thereon.  The Company is not generally required and does not expect to hold
regular annual meetings of  shareholders.  However,  the board of directors will
call special meetings of shareholders for the purpose,  among other reasons,  of
voting upon the question of removal of a director or directors when requested to
do so in writing by the holders of 10% or more of the outstanding  shares of the
Company or as may be required by  applicable  law or the  Company's  Articles of
Incorporation.  The Company will assist shareholders in communicating with other
shareholders as required by the Investment Company Act of 1940. Directors may be
removed by action of the holders of a majority or more of the outstanding shares
of the Company.

Shareholder  Inquiries.  Inquiries  regarding  the Funds may be  directed to the
Company at the telephone  number or mailing  address set forth on the cover page
of this Prospectus or to a Participating Insurance Company.

Transfer and Disbursing  Agent.  INVESCO acts as registrar,  transfer agent, and
dividend  disbursing  agent  for  the  Company  pursuant  to a  Transfer  Agency
Agreement that provides for an annual fee of $5,000 per Fund.

Master/Feeder  Option.  The Company may in the future seek to achieve any Fund's
investment  objective  by  investing  all  of  that  Fund's  assets  in  another
investment  company having the same investment  objective and  substantially the
same investment  policies and  restrictions as those applicable to that Fund. It
is  expected  that any such  investment  company  would be managed by INVESCO in
substantially  the same manner as the existing  Fund. If permitted by applicable
laws and policies then in effect,  any such  investment  may be made in the sole
discretion of the Company's board of directors  without further  approval of the
Funds' shareholders.  However,  Fund shareholders will be given at least 30 days
prior notice of any such  investment.  Such investment would be made only if the



<PAGE>



Company's board of directors determines it to be in the best interests of a Fund
and its  shareholders.  In making that  determination,  the board will consider,
among other  things,  the benefits to  shareholders  and/or the  opportunity  to
reduce costs and achieve  operational  efficiencies.  No assurance is given that
costs will be materially reduced if this option is implemented.

NO  PERSON  HAS  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO  GIVE  ANY  INFORMATION  OR  TO  MAKE  ANY
REPRESENTATIONS  NOT  CONTAINED  IN  THIS  PROSPECTUS,  OR IN THE  STATEMENT  OF
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION  INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION WITH THE
OFFERING MADE BY THIS  PROSPECTUS  AND, IF GIVEN OR MADE,  SUCH  INFORMATION  OR
PRESENTATIONS  MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE COMPANY.
THIS  PROSPECTUS  DOES  NOT  CONSTITUTE  AN  OFFERING  BY  THE  COMPANY  IN  ANY
JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH AN OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.


<PAGE>



                                                                        APPENDIX
BOND RATINGS

         The  following is a  description  of Standard & Poor's and Moody's bond
rating categories:

Standard & Poor's Corporate Bond Ratings

         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,  and in the majority of
instances they differ from AAA issues only in small degree.

         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 than bonds in higher rated categories.

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

         BB - Bonds rated BB have less near-term  vulnerability  to default than
other  speculative  issues.  However,  they face major ongoing  uncertainties or
exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead
to inadequate capacity to meet timely interest and principal payments.

         B - Bonds rated B have a greater vulnerability to default but currently
have the capacity to meet interest  payments and principal  repayments.  Adverse
business,  financial,  or economic  conditions  will likely  impair  capacity or
willingness to pay interest and repay principal.

         CCC - Bonds rated CCC have a currently  identifiable  vulnerability  to
default and are  dependent  upon  favorable  business,  financial,  and economic
conditions to meet timely payment of interest and repayment of principal. In the
event of adverse  business,  financial,  or  economic  conditions,  they are not
likely to have the capacity to pay interest and repay principal.




<PAGE>



Moody's Corporate Bond Ratings

         Aaa - Bonds rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality.  They carry
the  smallest  degree  of  investment  risk  and are  generally  referred  to as
"gilt-edged."  Interest payments are protected by a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin, and principal is secure.  While the various  protective  elements
are likely to change,  such changes as can be  visualized  are most  unlikely to
impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.

         Aa - Bonds rated Aa are judged to be of high quality by all  standards.
Together with the Aaa group,  they  comprise  what are  generally  known as high
grade  bonds.  They are rated  lower  than the best  bonds  because  margins  of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements  may be of greater  amplitude  or there may be other  elements  present
which make the long term risk appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.

         A - Bonds rated A possess many favorable investment attributes, and are
to be considered as upper medium grade  obligations.  Factors giving security to
principal and interest are considered adequate but elements may be present which
suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.

         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
characterizes bonds in this class.

         B - Bonds  rated B  generally  lack  characteristics  of the  desirable
investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or maintenance of other
terms of the contract over any longer 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.


<PAGE>



                                   Prospectus
                                   May 1, 1997


                     INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.

                      INVESCO VIF - Industrial Income Fund
                       INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences Fund
                     INVESCO VIF - Small Company Growth Fund
                         INVESCO VIF - Total Return Fund
                          INVESCO VIF - Technology Fund
                          INVESCO VIF - High Yield Fund
                          INVESCO VIF - Utilities Fund
                           INVESCO VIF - Dynamics Fund
                            INVESCO VIF - Growth Fund


To receive additional  information and prospectuses on any of INVESCO's funds or
retirement  plans,  or to obtain  current  account  or price  information,  call
toll-free: 1-800-525-8085.

To reach PAL(R), your 24-hour Personal Account Line, call:
1-800-424-8085.

You can find us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.invesco.com

Or write to:
INVESCO Funds Group. Inc.(SM), Distributor
Post Office Box 173706
Denver, Colorado  80217-3706

If you're in Denver, please visit one of our convenient Investor
Centers:
Cherry Creek, 155-B Fillmore Street
Denver Tech Center,
7800 East Union Avenue, Lobby Level

In addition, all documents filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange
Commission  can  be  located  on a web  site  maintained  by the  Commission  at
http://www.sec.gov.



<PAGE>



STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
February 9, 1998

INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.

Address:                            Mailing Address:
7800 E. Union Avenue                Post Office Box 173706
Denver, Colorado  80237             Denver, Colorado  80217-3706

                                   Telephone:
                       In continental U.S., 1-800-525-8085


         INVESCO   Variable   Investment   Funds,   Inc.  (the   "Company")  was
incorporated  under the laws of Maryland on August 19,  1993.  The Company is an
open-end  management  investment  company which offers shares of ten diversified
investment  portfolios  (the  "Funds"):  the  INVESCO  VIF  Dynamics  Fund  (the
"Dynamics Fund"), the INVESCO VIF - INVESCO Growth Fund (the "Growth Fund"), the
INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences Fund (the "Health Sciences Fund"), the INVESCO VIF
- - High Yield Fund (the "High Yield Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF - Industrial  Income
Fund (the "Industrial  Income Fund"), the INVESCO VIF - Realty Fund (the "Realty
Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF - Small Company  Growth Fund (the "Small Company Growth
Fund"),  the INVESCO VIF - Technology Fund (the "Technology  Fund"), the INVESCO
VIF - Total  Return  Fund  (the  "Total  Return  Fund")  and the  INVESCO  VIF -
Utilities Fund (the "Utilities  Fund").  Additional  Funds may be offered in the
future.  The Company's  shares are not offered  directly to the public,  but are
sold  exclusively  to  life  insurance   companies   ("Participating   Insurance
Companies") as a pooled funding  vehicle for variable  annuity and variable life
insurance  contracts  issued by  separate  accounts of  Participating  Insurance
Companies. The Funds have the following investment objectives:

Industrial Income Fund:
         to  seek  the  best  possible  current  income  while  following  sound
         investment  practices.  Capital growth potential is an additional,  but
         secondary,  consideration in the selection of portfolio securities. The
         Fund   normally   invests   at  least  65%  of  its  total   assets  in
         dividend-paying common stocks. Up to 10% of the Fund's total assets may
         be invested in other  income-producing  securities,  such as  corporate
         bonds.  The Fund also has the  flexibility  to invest in other types of
         securities.




<PAGE>



Total Return Fund:
         to seek a high total return on investment through capital  appreciation
         and  current  income.  The  Total  Return  Fund  seeks to  achieve  its
         investment objective by investing in a combination of equity securities
         (consisting  of  common  stocks  and,  to a lesser  degree,  securities
         convertible into common stock) and fixed income securities.

Dynamics Fund:
         to seek appreciation of capital through aggressive investment
         policies.  The Dynamics Fund invests primarily in common stocks of
         U.S. companies traded on national securities exchanges and over-
         the-counter.

High Yield Fund:
         to seek a high level of current income by investing  substantially  all
         of its assets in lower  rated  bonds and other debt  securities  and in
         preferred  stock.  The Fund pursues its  investment  objective  through
         investment in a variety of long-term, intermediate-term, and short-term
         bonds.  Potential capital  appreciation is a factor in the selection of
         investments, but is secondary to the Fund's primary objective.

Small Company Growth Fund:
         to seek long-term capital growth. The Small Company Growth Fund
         invests primarily in equity securities of small-capitalization U.S.
         companies traded "over-the-counter."

Health Sciences Fund:
         to seek capital appreciation. The Health Sciences Fund normally invests
         at least 80% of its total  assets in  equity  securities  of  companies
         which develop,  produce,  or distribute products or services related to
         health-care.

Technology Fund:
         to seek capital  appreciation.  The Technology Fund normally invests at
         least 80% of its total  assets in equity  securities  of  companies  in
         technology-related industries such as computers, communications, video,
         electronics, oceanography, office and factory automation, and robotics.

Utilities Fund:
         to seek capital  appreciation and income through investments  primarily
         in equity  securities  of companies  principally  engaged in the public
         utilities business.

Growth Fund:
         to seek long-term  capital growth.  The Fund also seeks, as a secondary
         objective,   to  obtain  investment  income  through  the  purchase  of
         securities of carefully selected companies representing major fields of
         business and industrial activity. In pursuing its objectives,  the Fund
         invests primarily in common stocks,  but may also invest in other kinds
         of securities,  including convertible and straight issues of debentures
         and preferred stock.

Realty Fund:
         to seek to  provide  long-term  capital  growth.  Current  income is an
         additional   consideration  in  selecting  securities  for  the  Fund's
         investment portfolio.  The Realty Fund normally invests at least 65% of
         


<PAGE>



         its total assets in  publicly-traded  stocks of companies  principally
         engaged in the real estate industry. The remaining assets are invested
         in other income-producing securities such as corporate bonds.

         A prospectus for the Company dated May 1, 1997 and a prospectus for the
Realty Fund dated February 9, 1998 (the "Prospectuses"), which provide the basic
information a variable annuity or variable life insurance  contract owner should
know about the  Company  and the Funds  before  allocating  variable  annuity or
variable  life  insurance  contract  values to one or more of the Funds,  may be
obtained without charge from INVESCO Distributors, Inc., Post Office Box 173706,
Denver,  Colorado 80217-3706 or by contacting a Participating Insurance Company.
This  Statement of  Additional  Information  is not a  prospectus,  but contains
information  in  addition  to and  more  detailed  than  that  set  forth in the
Prospectuses.  It is intended to provide  additional  information  regarding the
activities and  operations of the Funds and should be read in  conjunction  with
the  appropriate  Prospectus and with the prospectus and statement of additional
information  for the  applicable  variable  annuity or variable  life  insurance
contract.

Investment Adviser: INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.
Investment Distributor: INVESCO Distributors, Inc.




<PAGE>



                                                     TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            Page


INVESTMENT POLICIES...........................................................60

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS.......................................................66

FUND MANAGEMENT...............................................................71

HOW SHARES ARE VALUED.........................................................87

PERFORMANCE...................................................................88

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER............................................................91

PORTFOLIO BROKERAGE...........................................................91

REDEMPTIONS...................................................................93

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION........................................................94

APPENDIX A...................................................................100





<PAGE>



INVESTMENT POLICIES

         Reference  is  made  to  the  Prospectuses  for  a  discussion  of  the
investment objectives and policies of the Funds. In addition, set forth below is
further information  relating to the Funds.  Portfolio management is provided to
each Fund by its sub-adviser (referred to collectively with INVESCO Funds Group,
Inc. as "Fund Management").

Loans of Portfolio Securities

         As  described  in the  Prospectuses,  each Fund may lend its  portfolio
securities to brokers, dealers, and other financial institutions,  provided that
such loans are callable at any time by the Funds and are at all times secured by
collateral  consisting  of  cash,  cash  equivalents,   high-quality  short-term
government  securities  or  irrevocable  letters of credit,  or any  combination
thereof,  equal to at least the market value,  determined  daily,  of the loaned
securities.  The  advantage  of such  loans is that the Funds  continue  to earn
income on the loaned securities,  while at the same time receiving interest from
the borrower of the securities.  Loans will be made only to firms deemed by Fund
Management (under procedures established by the Company's board of directors) to
be  creditworthy,  and when the amount of interest to be received  justifies the
inherent  risks.  A loan may be terminated by the borrower on one business day's
notice,  or by the  Fund at any  time.  If at any  time  the  borrower  fails to
maintain the required amount of collateral, the Fund will require the deposit of
additional collateral not later than the business day following the day on which
a collateral  deficiency  occurs or the collateral  appears  inadequate.  If the
deficiency  is not  remedied  by the end of that  period,  the Fund will use the
collateral to replace the securities  while holding the borrower  liable for any
excess of replacement  cost over  collateral.  Upon termination of the loan, the
borrower  is  required to return the  securities  to the Fund.  Any gain or loss
during the loan period would inure to the Fund.

         While voting rights may pass with the loaned securities,  if a material
event  (e.g.,  proposed  merger,  sale of assets,  or  liquidation)  is to occur
affecting  an  investment  on loan,  the loan must be called and the  securities
voted.  Loans  of  securities  made by the  Fund  will  comply  with  all  other
applicable  regulatory  requirements,  including the rules of the New York Stock
Exchange and the requirements of the Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended
(the "1940 Act"), and rules thereunder.

Futures, Options on Futures and Options on Securities

         As  discussed  in the  Prospectuses,  the Funds may enter into  futures
contracts,  and  purchase  and sell  ("write")  options  to buy or sell  futures
contracts and other securities.  These instruments are sometimes  referred to as
"derivatives."  The Funds will comply with and adhere to all  limitations in the
manner and extent to which they  effect  transactions  in futures and options on
such  futures  currently  imposed  by the rules  and  policy  guidelines  of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC") as conditions for exemption of
a mutual fund, or investment advisers thereto,  from registration as a commodity
pool operator.  A Fund will not, as to any positions,  whether long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of the
Fund's total assets after taking into account  unrealized  profits and losses on
options it has entered into. In the case of an option that is "in-the-money" (as
defined in the Commodities  Exchange Act (the "CEA")),  the in-the-money  amount



<PAGE>



may be excluded in  computing  such 5%. (In general a call option on a future is
"in-the-money" if the value of the future exceeds the exercise  ("strike") price
of the call;  a put  option on a future  is  "in-the-money"  if the value of the
future  which is the subject of the put is  exceeded by the strike  price of the
put.) The Funds may use futures and options thereon solely for bona fide hedging
or for other  non-speculative  purposes  within  the  meaning  and intent of the
applicable provisions of the CEA.

         Unlike when a Fund  purchases or sells a security,  no price is paid or
received by a Fund upon the purchase or sale of a futures contract. Instead, the
Fund will be required to deposit in a segregated  asset  account with the broker
an amount of cash or qualifying  securities  (currently  U.S.  Treasury  bills),
currently in a minimum amount of $15,000.  This is called "initial margin." Such
initial  margin is in the nature of a performance  bond or good faith deposit on
the  contract.  However,  since  losses on open  contracts  are  required  to be
reflected  in cash in the form of  variation  margin  payments,  the Fund may be
required to make  additional  payments  during the term of the  contracts to its
broker. Such payments would be required, for example,  where, during the term of
an interest  rate futures  contract  purchased by the Fund,  there was a general
increase in interest rates,  thereby making the Fund's portfolio securities less
valuable. In all instances involving the purchase of financial futures contracts
by a Fund, an amount of cash together with such other securities as permitted by
applicable  regulatory  authorities  to be utilized for such  purpose,  at least
equal to the market  value of the  futures  contracts,  will be  deposited  in a
segregated  account with the Funds' custodian to collateralize the position.  At
any time prior to the  expiration of a futures  contract,  the Fund may elect to
close  its  position  by taking an  opposite  position  which  will  operate  to
terminate  the Fund's  position in the  futures  contract.  For a more  complete
discussion  of the risks  involved  in  interest  rate  futures  and  options on
interest  rate  futures  and  other  debt   securities,   refer  to  Appendix  A
("Description of Futures and Options Contracts").

         Where futures are purchased to hedge against a possible increase in the
price of a security before a Fund is able in an orderly fashion to invest in the
security,  it is possible that the market may decline instead. If the Fund, as a
result,  concluded  not to make the planned  investment  at that time because of
concern as to possible  further market  decline or for other  reasons,  the Fund
would  realize a loss on the futures  contract that is not offset by a reduction
in the price of securities purchased.

         In  addition  to  the  possibility  that  there  may  be  an  imperfect
correlation or no  correlation  at all between  movements in the futures and the
portion of the portfolio  being  hedged,  the price of futures may not correlate
perfectly  with  movements  in interest  rates or exchange  rates due to certain
market distortions. All participants in the futures market are subject to margin
deposit and  maintenance  requirements.  Rather than meeting  additional  margin
deposit  requirements,  investors may close futures contracts through offsetting
transactions which could distort the normal relationship  between interest rates
or exchange rates and the value of a future.  Moreover, the deposit requirements
in  the  futures  market  are  less  onerous  than  margin  requirements  in the
securities market and may therefore cause increased participation by speculators
in the futures  market.  Such increased  participation  also may cause temporary
price  distortions.  Due to the  possibility of price  distortion in the futures
market and because of the imperfect  correlation  between  movements in interest



<PAGE>



rates or exchange  rates and movements in the prices of futures  contracts,  the
value of futures contracts as a hedging device may be reduced.

         In addition, if a Fund has insufficient available cash, it may at times
have to sell securities to meet variation  margin  requirements.  Such sales may
have to be effected at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.

Options on Futures Contracts

         The Funds may buy and write  options on futures  contracts  for hedging
purposes. The purchase of a call option on a futures contract is similar in some
respects to the purchase of a call option on an individual  security.  Depending
on the  pricing  of the  option  compared  to either  the  price of the  futures
contract  upon  which  it is based or the  price of the  underlying  instrument,
ownership  of the  option may or may not be less  risky  than  ownership  of the
futures contract or the underlying  instrument.  As with the purchase of futures
contracts,  when a Fund is not  fully  invested  it may buy a call  option  on a
futures contract to hedge against a market advance.

         The  writing  of a call  option on a  futures  contract  constitutes  a
partial hedge against declining prices of the security or foreign currency which
is deliverable  under, or the index  comprising,  the futures  contract.  If the
futures  price at the  expiration of the option is below the exercise  price,  a
Fund will retain the full amount of the option premium, which provides a partial
hedge  against  any  decline  that may have  occurred  in the  Fund's  portfolio
holdings.  The  writing  of a put  option on a futures  contract  constitutes  a
partial  hedge  against  increasing  prices of the security or foreign  currency
which is deliverable under, or of the index comprising, the futures contract. If
the futures price at expiration of the option is higher than the exercise price,
the Fund will  retain the full  amount of the option  premium  which  provides a
partial hedge against any increase in the price of securities  which the Fund is
considering  buying.  If a call or put option the Fund has written is exercised,
the Fund will incur a loss which will be reduced by the amount of the premium it
received.  Depending on the degree of correlation between change in the value of
its portfolio securities and changes in the value of the futures positions,  the
Fund's losses from existing  options on futures may to some extent be reduced or
increased by changes in the value of portfolio securities.

         The  purchase of a put option on a futures  contract is similar in some
respects to the purchase of protective put options on portfolio securities.  For
example,  a Fund may buy a put option on a futures  contract to hedge the Fund's
portfolio against the risk of falling prices.

         The amount of risk a Fund  assumes  when it buys an option on a futures
contract is the premium paid for the option plus related  transaction  costs. In
addition to the  correlation  risks discussed  above,  the purchase of an option
also  entails  the risk  that  changes  in the value of the  underlying  futures
contract will not be fully reflected in the value of the options bought.




<PAGE>

Forward Foreign Currency Contracts

         The  Funds  may  enter  into  forward currency contracts to purchase or
sell foreign currencies (i.e., non-U.S.  currencies) as a hedge against possible
variations in foreign exchange rates.  These instruments are sometimes  referred
to  as  "derivatives."  A  forward  foreign  currency  exchange  contract  is an
agreement  between the contracting  parties to exchange an amount of currency at
some future  time at an agreed  upon rate.  The rate can be higher or lower than
the spot rate between the  currencies  that are the subject of the  contract.  A
forward contract generally has no deposit requirement,  and such transactions do
not involve commissions. By entering into a forward contract for the purchase or
sale  of  the  amount  of  foreign  currency  invested  in  a  foreign  security
transaction,  a Fund can hedge against  possible  variations in the value of the
dollar versus the subject  currency either between the date the foreign security
is purchased or sold and the date on which payment is made or received or during
the time the Fund holds the foreign  security.  Hedging against a decline in the
value of a currency in the foregoing  manner does not eliminate  fluctuations in
the  prices of  portfolio  securities  or  prevent  losses if the prices of such
securities  decline.   Furthermore,   such  hedging  transactions  preclude  the
opportunity  for gain if the value of the hedged currency should rise. The Funds
will not speculate in forward  currency  contracts.  Although the Funds have not
adopted any  limitations  on their  ability to use forward  contracts as a hedge
against  fluctuations  in foreign  exchange  rates,  the Funds do not attempt to
hedge  all of their  non-U.S.  portfolio  positions  and will  enter  into  such
transactions only to the extent, if any, deemed  appropriate by Fund Management.
The Funds  will not enter  into  forward  contracts  for a term of more than one
year. Forward contracts may from time to time be considered  illiquid,  in which
case they would be subject to the Funds'  limitation  on  investing  in illiquid
securities, discussed in the Prospectuses.

Restricted/144A Securities

         In recent years, a large institutional market has developed for certain
securities that are not registered  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended
(the "1933 Act").  Institutional investors generally will not seek to sell these
instruments to the general public, but instead will often depend on an efficient
institutional market in which such unregistered securities can readily be resold
or on an issuer's ability to honor a demand for repayment.  Therefore,  the fact
that there are contractual or legal restrictions on resale to the general public
or certain institutions is not dispositive of the liquidity of such investments.

         Rule  144A  under the 1933 Act  establishes  a "safe  harbor"  from the
registration  requirements of the 1933 Act for resales of certain  securities to
qualified institutional buyers.  Institutional markets for restricted securities
that  might  develop  as a  result  of Rule  144A  could  provide  both  readily
ascertainable  values for restricted  securities and the ability to liquidate an
investment in order to satisfy share redemption  orders. An insufficient  number
of qualified  institutional  buyers interested in purchasing Rule  144A-eligible
securities held by a Fund, however,  could affect adversely the marketability of
such  portfolio  securities  and the Fund  might be  unable to  dispose  of such
securities promptly or at reasonable prices.

When-Issued and Delayed Delivery Securities

         The Funds may purchase and sell  securities on a when-issued or delayed
delivery  basis.   When-issued  or  delayed  delivery  transactions  arise  when
securities (normally, debt obligations of issuers eligible for investment by the



<PAGE>


Funds) are purchased or sold by a Fund with payment and delivery taking place in
the future in order to secure what is considered to be an advantageous price and
yield. However, the yield on a comparable security available when delivery takes
place may vary from the yield on the  security at the time that the  when-issued
or  delayed  delivery  transaction  was  entered  into.  When a Fund  engages in
when-issued and delayed delivery transactions, it relies on the seller or buyer,
as the case may be, to consummate  the sale.  Failure to do so may result in the
Fund  missing the  opportunity  of obtaining a price or yield  considered  to be
advantageous.  When-issued and delayed  delivery  transactions  may generally be
expected to settle within one month from the date the  transactions  are entered
into,  but in no event  later than 90 days.  However,  no payment or delivery is
made by the Fund until it receives  delivery or payment  from the other party to
the transaction.

         To the extent that a Fund remains  substantially  fully invested at the
same time that it has purchased  when-issued  securities,  as it would  normally
expect to do,  there may be greater  fluctuations  in its net assets than if the
Fund set aside cash to satisfy its purchase commitments.

         When a Fund  purchases  securities  on a  when-issued  basis,  it  will
maintain in a segregated  account cash or liquid  securities having an aggregate
value equal to the amount of such purchase  commitments,  until payment is made.
If necessary,  additional assets will be placed in the account daily so that the
value of the  account  will equal or exceed  the  amount of the Fund's  purchase
commitments.

U.S. Government Obligations

         Each Fund may, from time to time, purchase U.S. government obligations.
These securities consist of treasury bills,  treasury notes, and treasury bonds,
which differ only in their interest  rates,  maturities,  and dates of issuance.
Treasury  bills have a maturity of one year or less.  Treasury  notes  generally
have a  maturity  of one  to  ten  years,  and  treasury  bonds  generally  have
maturities  of more than ten years.  U.S.  government  obligations  also include
securities  issued or  guaranteed by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S.
government.

         Some  obligations  of  United  States  government  agencies,  which are
established  under  the  authority  of an act of  Congress,  such as  Government
National Mortgage Association (GNMA) participation  certificates,  are supported
by the full faith and credit of the United States  Treasury.  GNMA  certificates
are mortgage-backed securities representing part ownership of a pool of mortgage
loans.  These loans -- issued by lenders  such as mortgage  bankers,  commercial
banks and savings  and loan  associations  -- are either  insured by the Federal
Housing Administration or guaranteed by the Veterans Administration. A "pool" or
group of such  mortgages  is assembled  and,  after being  approved by GNMA,  is
offered to investors  through  securities  dealers.  Once approved by GNMA,  the
timely  payment of interest and principal on each mortgage is guaranteed by GNMA
and backed by the full faith and credit of the  United  States  government.  The
market value of GNMA certificates is not guaranteed.  GNMA  certificates  differ
from bonds in that  principal is paid back monthly by the borrower over the term
of the loan rather than  returned in a lump sum at maturity.  GNMA  certificates
are  called  "pass-through"  securities  because  both  interest  and  principal
payments  (including  prepayments)  are  passed  through  to the  holder  of the
certificate.  Upon  receipt,  principal  payments  will be used by each  Fund to
purchase  additional  securities  under its investment  objective and investment
policies.


<PAGE>



         Other United States government  obligations,  such as securities of the
Federal Home Loan Banks, are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from
the Treasury to repay its obligations. Still others, such as bonds issued by the
Federal  National   Mortgage   Association,   a  federally   chartered   private
corporation, are supported only by the credit of the instrumentality.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

         As described  in the  Prospectuses,  the Funds  operate  under  certain
investment restrictions.  The following restrictions are fundamental and may not
be changed with respect to a particular  Fund without the prior  approval of the
holders of a majority of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of that Fund,  as
defined in the 1940 Act. For purposes of the following investment  restrictions,
all  percentage  limitations  apply  immediately  after a  purchase  or  initial
investment.  Any  subsequent  change in a particular  percentage  resulting from
fluctuations in value does not require elimination of any security from a Fund.

         Each Fund may not:

          1.   With respect to  seventy-five  percent (75%) of its total assets,
               purchase the  securities of any one issuer (except cash items and
               "government  securities"  as defined  under the 1940 Act), if the
               purchase  would  cause the Fund to have more than 5% of the value
               of its total assets  invested in the securities of such issuer or
               to own more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such
               issuer;

          2.   Borrow money, except that the Fund may borrow money for temporary
               or emergency  purposes (not for leveraging or investment) and may
               enter into reverse  repurchase  agreements in an aggregate amount
               not exceeding 33 1/3% of the value of its total assets (including
               the amount  borrowed) less liabilities  (other than  borrowings).
               Any  borrowings  that  come to exceed 33 1/3% of the value of the
               Fund's  total assets by reason of a decline in net assets will be
               reduced  within three  business  days to the extent  necessary to
               comply with the 33 1/3% limitation.  This  restriction  shall not
               prohibit  deposits of assets to margin or guarantee  positions in
               futures,  options, swaps or forward contracts, or the segregation
               of assets in connection with such contracts.

          3.   Invest  more  than 25% of the  value of its  total  assets in any
               particular  industry (other than government  securities),  except
               that:  (i) the  Utilities  Fund may  invest  more than 25% of the
               value of its total assets in public  utilities  industries;  (ii)
               the Health Sciences Fund may invest more than 25% of the value of
               its total  assets in one or more  industries  relating  to health
               care;  and (iii) the Realty  Fund may invest more than 25% of the
               value of its total assets in the real estate industry.

          4.   Invest  directly  in real  estate or  interests  in real  estate;
               however,  the Fund may own debt or  equity  securities  issued by
               companies engaged in those businesses. This restriction shall not
               prohibit  the Realty Fund from  directly  holding  real estate if
               such  real  estate  is  acquired  by that  Fund as a result  of a
               default on debt securities held by that Fund.



<PAGE>



          5.   Purchase  or  sell  physical   commodities   other  than  foreign
               currencies unless acquired as a result of ownership of securities
               (but this shall not prevent the Fund from  purchasing  or selling
               options,  futures,  swaps and forward contracts or from investing
               in   securities   or  other   instruments   backed  by   physical
               commodities).

          6.   Lend any  security  or make any other loan if, as a result,  more
               than 33 1/3% of its total assets  would be lent to other  parties
               (but this  limitation  does not apply to purchases of  commercial
               paper, debt securities or to repurchase agreements.)

          7.   Act as an underwriter of securities  issued by others,  except to
               the extent  that it may be deemed an  underwriter  in  connection
               with the disposition of portfolio securities of the Fund.

         Each  Fund  may,   notwithstanding   any  other  investment  policy  or
limitation  (whether  or not  fundamental),  invest  all of  its  assets  in the
securities of a single open-end management investment company with substantially
the same  fundamental  investment  objectives,  policies and  limitations as the
Fund.

         Furthermore,  the board of directors has adopted additional  investment
restrictions  for each Fund. These  restrictions are operating  policies of each
Fund and may be changed by the board of directors without shareholder  approval.
The additional investment restrictions adopted by the board of directors to date
include the following:

          (a)  The Fund's  investments in warrants,  valued at the lower of cost
               or  market,  may not  exceed 5% of the  value of its net  assets.
               Included within that amount, but not to exceed 2% of the value of
               the Fund's net assets, may be warrants that are not listed on the
               New York or American Stock  Exchanges.  Warrants  acquired by the
               Fund in units or  attached  to  securities  shall be deemed to be
               without value.

          (b)  The Fund will not (i) enter into any futures contracts or options
               on futures  contracts if  immediately  thereafter  the  aggregate
               margin deposits on all outstanding  futures  contracts  positions
               held by the Fund and  premiums  paid on  outstanding  options  on
               futures  contracts,  after taking into account unrealized profits
               and  losses,  would  exceed 5% of the  market  value of the total
               assets of the Fund,  or (ii) enter into any futures  contracts if
               the  aggregate  net  amount  of  the  Fund's   commitments  under
               outstanding  futures contracts positions of the Fund would exceed
               the market value of the total assets of the Fund.

          (c)  The Fund  does not  currently  intend to sell  securities  short,
               unless it owns or has the right to obtain  securities  equivalent
               in kind and  amount to the  securities  sold  short  without  the
               payment of any additional  consideration  therefor,  and provided
               that transactions in options, swaps and forward futures contracts
               are not deemed to constitute selling securities short.

          (d)  The Fund does not  currently  intend to  purchase  securities  on
               margin,  except  that   the  Fund   may  obtain  such  short-term


<PAGE>



               credits as are necessary for the clearance of  transactions,  and
               provided  that margin  payments and other  deposits in connection
               with  transactions  in  options,   futures,   swaps  and  forward
               contracts shall not be deemed to constitute purchasing securities
               on margin.

          (e)  The Fund does not currently intend to (i) purchase  securities of
               closed end investment companies,  except in the open market where
               no commission except the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or
               (ii)  purchase  or retain  securities  issued  by other  open-end
               investment  companies.  Limitations  (i) and (ii) do not apply to
               money  market  funds  or to  securities  received  as  dividends,
               through offers of exchange,  or as a result of a  reorganization,
               consolidation,  or merger.  If the Fund invests in a money market
               fund, the Fund's investment  adviser will reduce its advisory fee
               by the  amount  of any  investment  advisory  and  administrative
               services fees paid to the investment  manager of the money market
               fund.

          (f)  The Fund may not mortgage or pledge any securities  owned or held
               by the Fund in amounts that exceed, in the aggregate,  15% of the
               Fund's net asset value,  provided that this  limitation  does not
               apply to reverse  repurchase  agreements or in the case of assets
               deposited to margin or guarantee  positions in futures,  options,
               swaps or forward  contracts or placed in a segregated  account in
               connection with such contracts.

          (g)  The Fund does not currently intend to purchase  securities of any
               issuer (other than U.S. government agencies and instrumentalities
               or instruments guaranteed by an entity with a record of more than
               three   years'   continuous   operation,    including   that   of
               predecessors)  with a record of less than three years' continuous
               operation (including that of predecessors) if such purchase would
               cause the Fund's  investments in all such issuers to exceed 5% of
               the Fund's total assets taken at market value at the time of such
               purchase.

          (h)  The Fund does not  currently  intend to invest  directly  in oil,
               gas, or other  mineral  development  or  exploration  programs or
               leases;  however,  the Fund may own debt or equity  securities of
               companies engaged in those businesses.

          (i)  The Fund does not  currently  intend to purchase  any security or
               enter into a repurchase  agreement if, as a result, more than 15%
               of its net assets would be invested in repurchase  agreements not
               entitling the holder to payment of principal and interest  within
               seven days and in securities that are illiquid by virtue of legal
               or contractual restrictions on resale or the absence of a readily
               available  market.   The  board  of  directors,   or  the  Fund's
               investment adviser acting pursuant to authority  delegated by the
               board of directors, may determine that a readily available market
               exists for securities  eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A
               under the  Securities Act of 1933, or any successor to such rule,
               and  therefore  that  such  securities  are  not  subject  to the
               foregoing limitation.

          (j)  The  Fund  may  not  invest  in  companies  for  the  purpose  of
               exercising  control  or  management,  except  to  the extent that


<PAGE>



               exercise by the Fund of its rights  under  agreements  related to
               portfolio securities would be deemed to constitute such control.

         In applying the industry  concentration  investment restriction (no. 3,
above) the Funds use an industry  classification  system based on a modified S&P
industry code classification schema which uses various sources to classify.

         With  respect  to  investment  restriction  (i)  above,  the  board  of
directors has delegated to Fund Management the authority to determine  whether a
liquid market exists for  securities  eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A
under the 1933 Act, or any successor to such rule and that such  securities  are
not subject to this  restriction.  Under guidelines  established by the board of
directors, Fund Management will consider the following factors, among others, in
making this determination:  (1) the unregistered nature of a Rule 144A security,
(2) the  frequency  of trades  and quotes  for the  security;  (3) the number of
dealers  willing  to  purchase  or sell the  security  and the  number  of other
potential purchasers;  (4) dealer undertakings to make a market in the security;
and (5) the nature of the security and the nature of  marketplace  trades (e.g.,
the time needed to dispose of the security,  the method of soliciting offers and
the mechanics of transfer).

         In order to enable California investors to allocate variable annuity or
variable life insurance contract values to one or more of the Funds, the Company
has committed to comply with the following guidelines:  (i) the borrowing limits
for any Fund are (a) 10% of net  asset  value  when  borrowing  for any  general
purpose and (b) 25% of net asset value when borrowing as a temporary  measure to
facilitate  redemptions  (for purposes of this clause,  the net asset value of a
Fund is the market value of all  investments  or assets  owned less  outstanding
liabilities  of the Fund at the time  that any new or  additional  borrowing  is
undertaken);  and (ii) if a Fund  invests  in  foreign  companies,  the  foreign
country diversification guidelines to be followed by the Fund are as follows:

          (a)  The Fund will be invested in a minimum of five different  foreign
               countries at all times.  However, this minimum is reduced to four
               when foreign  country  investments  comprise less than 80% of the
               Fund's  net  asset  value,  to three  when  less than 60% of such
               value, to two when less than 40% and to one when less than 20%.

          (b)  Except  as set forth in items  (c) and (d)  below,  the Fund will
               have  no  more  than  20% of its  net  asset  value  invested  in
               securities of issuers located in any one country.

          (c)  The  Fund  may  have an  additional  15% of its net  asset  value
               invested  in  securities  of  issuers  located  in any one of the
               following countries: Australia, Canada, France, Japan, the United
               Kingdom, or Germany.

          (d)  The Fund's  investments  in United States issuers are not subject
               to the foreign country diversification guidelines.

         State insurance laws and regulations may impose additional  limitations
on lending  securities  and the use of  options,  futures  and other  derivative
instruments.



<PAGE>



FUND MANAGEMENT

Investment Adviser

         INVESCO Funds Group, Inc., a Delaware  corporation ("IFG"), is employed
as the Company's investment adviser. IFG was established in 1932 and also serves
as an investment adviser to INVESCO Capital  Appreciation Funds, Inc. (formerly,
INVESCO Dynamics Fund, Inc.),  INVESCO Diversified Funds, Inc., INVESCO Emerging
Opportunity  Funds, Inc., INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc., INVESCO Income Funds, Inc.,
INVESCO Industrial Income Fund, Inc., INVESCO International Funds, Inc., INVESCO
Money Market Funds,  Inc., INVESCO Multiple Asset Funds, Inc., INVESCO Specialty
Funds, Inc., INVESCO Strategic Portfolios,  Inc., INVESCO Tax-Free Income Funds,
Inc., and INVESCO Value Trust.

Investment Sub-Advisers

         Pursuant to  agreements  with IFG,  INVESCO  Capital  Management,  Inc.
("ICM") serves as sub-adviser to the Total Return Fund, INVESCO Realty Advisors,
Inc.  ("IRAI")  serves as the  sub-adviser  to the Realty Fund and INVESCO Trust
Company ("INVESCO Trust") serves as the sub-adviser to the other Funds.  INVESCO
Trust,  a trust  company  founded in 1969, is a  wholly-owned  subsidiary of IFG
that, as of December 31, 1996, managed 55 other investment portfolios, including
31 portfolios in the INVESCO group.

         ICM and IRAI manage  institutional  investment  portfolios,  consisting
primarily of discretionary employee benefit plans for corporations and state and
local  governments,  and endowment funds. In addition,  ICM serves as investment
adviser or  sub-adviser  to 19 investment  portfolios of 4 investment  companies
(including the Company) and IRAI serves as investment  adviser or sub-adviser to
60 investment portfolios of 2 investment companies (including the Company).  ICM
is the sole shareholder of INVESCO Services, Inc., a registered broker dealer.

Distributor

         Effective September 30, 1997, INVESCO Distributors, Inc. ("IDI") became
the Funds' distributor.  IDI, established in 1997, is a registered broker-dealer
that acts as  distributor  for all retail mutual funds advised by IFG.  Prior to
September 30, 1997, IFG served as the Funds' distributor.

         IFG,  INVESCO  Trust,  ICM,  IRAI  and  IDI are  indirect  wholly-owned
subsidiaries of AMVESCO PLC, a publicly traded holding company that, through its
subsidiaries,   engages  in  the  business  of   investment   management  on  an
international  basis.  INVESCO  PLC  changed its name to AMVESCO PLC on March 3,
1997,  and to AMVESCAP  PLC on May 8, 1997 as part of a merger  between a direct
subsidiary of INVESCO PLC and A I M Management  Group Inc.,  that created one of
the  largest  independent  investment  management  businesses  in the world with
approximately $177.5 billion in assets under management. INVESCO, INVESCO Trust,
ICM  and  IRAI  continued  to  operate  under  their  existing  names.  IFG  was
established  in 1932 and,  as of December  31,  1996,  managed 14 mutual  funds,
consisting  of 44 separate  portfolios,  with combined  assets of  approximately
$13.8 billion on behalf of over 826,000 shareholders.

         



<PAGE>


         AMVESCAP PLC's other North American subsidiaries include the following:

         --INVESCO Management & Research, Inc. of Boston, Massachusetts,
primarily manages pension and endowment accounts.

         --PRIMCO Capital Management, Inc. of Louisville, Kentucky,
specializes in managing stable return investments, principally on behalf
of Section 401(k) retirement plans.

         --A I M Advisors, Inc. of Houston, Texas provides investment
advisory and administrative services for retail and institutional mutual
funds.

         --A I M Capital Management,  Inc. of Houston, Texas provides investment
advisory services to individuals,  corporations, pension plans and other private
investment advisory accounts and also serves as a sub- advisor to certain retail
and institutional mutual funds, one Canadian mutual fund and one portfolio of an
open-end  registered  investment company that is offered to separate accounts of
variable insurance companies.

         --A I M Distributors, Inc. and Fund Management Company of Houston,
Texas are registered broker-dealers that act as the principal
underwriters for retail and institutional mutual funds.

         The corporate  headquarters of AMVESCO PLC are located at 11 Devonshire
Square, London, EC2M 4YR, England.

         As  indicated in the  Prospectuses,  IFG permits  investment  and other
personnel to purchase and sell  securities  for their own accounts in accordance
with a compliance policy governing personal investing by directors, officers and
employees  of IFG  and  its  North  American  affiliates.  The  policy  requires
officers, inside directors,  investment and other personnel of IFG and its North
American  affiliates to pre- clear all  transactions in securities not otherwise
exempt  under the policy.  Requests for trading  authority  will be denied when,
among other reasons,  the proposed personal transaction would be contrary to the
provisions of the policy or would be deemed to adversely  affect any transaction
then known to be under  consideration  for or to have been effected on behalf of
any client account, including the Funds.

         In addition  to the  pre-clearance  requirement  described  above,  the
policy subjects  officers,  inside directors,  investment and other personnel of
IFG and its North  American  affiliates  to  various  trading  restrictions  and
reporting obligations.  All reportable  transactions are reviewed for compliance
with the policy.  The provisions of this policy are  administered by and subject
to exceptions authorized by IFG, INVESCO Trust, IRAI and ICM.

Advisory Agreement

         IFG serves as investment  adviser  pursuant to an  investment  advisory
agreement (the  "Agreement") with the Company which was approved by the board of
directors  on  November  6,  1996,  in each  case by a vote  cast in person by a
majority of the directors of the Company,  including a majority of the directors
who are not "interested persons" of the Company,  INVESCO, INVESCO Trust, ICM or
IRAI  (the  "Independent  Directors")  at a  meeting  called  for such  purpose.
Shareholders of the Industrial  Income,  Total Return,  High Yield and Utilities
Funds  approved the  Agreement on January 31, 1997 for an initial term  expiring
February  28, 1999.  The initial  shareholder  of the  Dynamics,  Small  Company



<PAGE>



Growth,  Health Sciences and Technology  Funds approved the Agreement on January
31, 1997 for an initial term expiring February 28, 1999; the initial shareholder
of the Growth Fund  approved the  Agreement on May 1, 1997,  for an initial term
expiring May 1, 1999;  and the initial  shareholder  of the Realty Fund approved
the  Agreement  on February 6, 1998,  for an initial term  expiring  February 6,
2000.  Thereafter,  the Agreement may be continued  from year to year as to each
Fund as long as each such continuance is specifically approved at least annually
by the board of  directors  of the  Company,  or by a vote of the  holders  of a
majority, as defined in the 1940 Act, of the outstanding shares of the Fund. Any
such  continuance also must be approved by vote of a majority of the Independent
Directors,  cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such
continuance.  The Agreement  may be  terminated  at any time without  penalty by
either party upon sixty (60) days' written notice and  terminates  automatically
in the event of an  assignment  to the extent  required  by the 1940 Act and the
rules thereunder.  Shareholder approval of any continuance of the Agreement,  or
of the sub-advisory  agreements discussed below, shall be effective with respect
to any Fund if a majority of the outstanding  voting securities of the series of
shares of that Fund vote to approve the  continuance,  notwithstanding  that the
continuance may not have been approved by a majority of the  outstanding  voting
securities  of (i) any other Fund  affected by the  Agreement or (ii) all of the
Funds.

         The Agreement provides that IFG shall manage the investment portfo lios
of the Funds in conformity  with the Funds'  investment  objectives and policies
(either  directly  or by  delegation  to a  sub-adviser,  which  may be a  party
affiliated with IFG). Further,  IFG shall perform all  administrative,  internal
accounting (including  computation of net asset value),  clerical,  statistical,
secretarial and all other services necessary or incidental to the administration
of the affairs of the Funds  excluding,  however,  those  services  that are the
subject of separate  agreement  between  the  Company  and IFG or any  affiliate
thereof,  including  the  distribution  and sale of Fund shares and provision of
transfer  agency,  dividend  disbursing  agency,  and  registrar  services,  and
services furnished under an Administrative Services Agreement with IFG discussed
below.  Services provided under the Agreement  include,  but are not limited to:
supplying the Company with officers, clerical staff and other employees, if any,
who are necessary in connection with the Funds'  operations;  furnishing  office
space, facilities,  equipment, and supplies;  providing personnel and facilities
required to respond to inquiries  related to  shareholder  accounts;  conducting
periodic compliance reviews of the Funds' operations;  preparation and review of
required  documents,  reports and filings by IFG's in-house legal and accounting
staff (including the Prospectuses,  Statement of Additional  Information,  proxy
statements,  shareholder  reports,  tax  returns,  reports to the SEC, and other
corporate  documents  of  the  Funds),  except  insofar  as  the  assistance  of
independent accountants or attorneys is necessary or desirable;  supplying basic
telephone service and other utilities;  and preparing and maintaining certain of
the books and records  required to be prepared and maintained by the Funds under
the 1940 Act. Expenses not assumed by IFG are borne by the Funds.

         As full  compensation  for its advisory  services to the  Company,  IFG
receives  a monthly  fee.  The fee is based  upon a  percentage  of each  Fund's
average net assets  determined daily. For the Industrial Income and Total Return
Funds,  the advisory  fees are each computed at the annual rates of 0.75% of the
first $500  million of the Fund's  average  net  assets;  0.65% of the next $500
million of the Fund's  average net assets;  and 0.55% of the Fund's  average net
assets in excess of $1  billion.  For the High Yield and  Utilities  Funds,  the



<PAGE>



advisory  fees are each  computed at the annual rates of 0.60% of the first $500
million of the Fund's average net assets,  0.55% of the next $500 million of the
Fund's  average net assets and 0.45% of the Fund's  average net assets in excess
of $1 billion.  For the Small Company  Growth,  Health  Sciences and  Technology
Funds,  the advisory  fees are each  computed at the rates of 0.75% on the first
$350 million of the Fund's average net assets; 0.65% on the next $350 million of
the Fund's  average  net assets;  and 0.55% on the Fund's  average net assets in
excess of $700 million. For the Dynamics Fund, the advisory fees are computed at
the annual  rates of 0.60% on the first $350  million of the Fund's  average net
assets;  0.55% on the next $350  million;  and 0.50% on the Fund's  average  net
assets in excess of $700  million.  For the Growth Fund,  the advisory  fees are
computed at the annual rate of 0.85% of the Fund's  average net assets.  For the
Realty Fund,  the advisory fees are 1.10% of the Fund's average net assets up to
$500 million, 0.90% on the next $500 million, and 0.75% of the Fund's net assets
in excess of $1 billion.

         Any amendment of the Agreement  requires  approval of a majority of the
Company's board of directors, including a majority of the Independent Directors,
by votes cast in person at a meeting  called for such  purpose  and (other  than
amendments  that  can  become  effective  without  shareholder   approval  under
applicable law) also requires  approval of a majority of the outstanding  voting
securities of any Fund affected by such amendment.

Sub-Advisory Agreements

         Pursuant to sub-advisory  agreements  with IFG (the  "Sub-Agreements"),
ICM serves as sub-adviser to the Total Return Fund, IRAI serves as sub- advisory
to the Realty Fund and INVESCO Trust serves as  sub-adviser  to the other Funds.
The  Sub-Agreements  initially  with ICM and INVESCO  Trust were approved by the
board of  directors  on November 6, 1996,  and the  Sub-Agreement  with IRAI was
initially  approved by the board of directors on February 6, 1998,  in each case
by a vote cast in person by a majority of the Independent Directors at a meeting
called for such purpose.  Shareholders of the Industrial  Income,  Total Return,
High Yield and Utilities  Funds approved the applicable  INVESCO Trust Agreement
on January 31, 1997.  The initial  shareholder  of the Dynamics,  Small Company,
Growth,  Health  Sciences  and  Technology  Funds  approved  the  INVESCO  Trust
Agreement,  on December 9, 1996, for an initial term expiring  December 9, 1999,
and the initial  shareholder  of the Growth  Fund  approved  the  INVESCO  Trust
Agreement on May 1, 1997,  for an initial term expiring May 1, 1999. The initial
shareholder of the Realty Fund approved the Sub-Agreement  with IRAI on February
6,  1998 for an  initial  term  expiring  February  6,  2000.  Thereafter,  each
Sub-Agreement may be continued from year to year as to a particular Fund as long
as each such continuance is specifically approved at least annually by the board
of  directors  of the  Company,  or by a vote of the holders of a  majority,  as
defined  in the 1940 Act,  of the  outstanding  shares of that  Fund.  Each such
continuance  also must be approved by a majority of the  Independent  Directors,
cast  in  person  at a  meeting  called  for  the  purpose  of  voting  on  such
continuance. Each Sub-Agreement may be terminated at any time without penalty by
either party or the Company upon sixty (60) days' written notice, and terminates
automatically  in the event of an assignment to the extent  required by the 1940
Act and the rules thereunder.

         The Sub-Agreements provide that, subject to the supervision of INVESCO,
ICM shall manage the investment  portfolio of the Total Return Fund,  IRAI shall



<PAGE>



manage the  investment  portfolio  of the Realty  Fund and  INVESCO  Trust shall
manage the  investment  portfolio of the other  Funds,  in  conformity  with the
respective  Funds'  investment  objectives  and  policies.  In each case,  these
management services would include:  (a) managing the investment and reinvestment
of all the assets,  now or hereafter  acquired,  of the Fund,  and executing all
purchases  and sales of  portfolio  securities;  (b)  maintaining  a  continuous
investment  program  for the Fund,  consistent  with (i) the  Fund's  investment
objective and policies as set forth in the Company's  Articles of Incorporation,
Bylaws, and Registration Statement, as from time to time amended, under the 1940
Act, and in any  prospectus  and/or  statement of additional  information of the
Company,  as from time to time  amended and in use under the 1933 Act,  and (ii)
the  Company's  status as a  regulated  investment  company  under the  Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended;  (c)  determining  what  securities  are to be
purchased or sold for the Fund,  unless  otherwise  directed by the directors of
the Company or IFG, and executing  transactions  accordingly;  (d) providing the
Fund the benefit of all of the investment analysis and research,  the reviews of
current  economic  conditions and trends,  and the  consideration  of long-range
investment policy now or hereafter  generally  available to investment  advisory
customers of the Fund's  sub-adviser;  (e) determining  what portion of the Fund
should be invested in the various types of securities authorized for purchase by
that Fund;  and (f)  making  recommendations  as to the  manner in which  voting
rights,  rights to consent to Company action and any other rights  pertaining to
the portfolio securities of the Fund shall be exercised.

         Any amendment of a Sub-Agreement,  in order to be applicable to a Fund,
requires approval of a majority of the Company's board of directors, including a
majority  of the  Independent  Directors,  by votes  cast in person at a meeting
called for such  purpose and (other than  amendments  that can become  effective
without  shareholder  approval under applicable law) also requires approval of a
majority of the outstanding voting securities of that Fund.

         The INVESCO Trust  Sub-Agreement  provides that as compensation for its
services,  INVESCO Trust shall receive from IFG, at the end of each month, a fee
based upon the average daily value of the net assets of each Fund  managed.  The
sub-advisory fee for the Industrial  Income Fund is computed at the annual rates
of 0.375% on the first $500 million of the Fund's average net assets;  0.325% on
the next $500 million of the Fund's average net assets; and 0.275% on the Fund's
average net assets in excess of $1 billion.  The sub-advisory  fees for the High
Yield and Utilities  Funds are each computed at the annual rates of 0.30% on the
first $500  million of the Fund's  average net  assets;  0.275% on the next $500
million of the Fund's  average  net assets and 0.225% on the Fund's  average net
assets in excess of $1 billion.  The sub-advisory  fees for the Dynamics,  Small
Company Growth,  Health  Sciences and Technology  Funds are each computed at the
annual  rates of 0.25% for the first  $200  million of the  Fund's  average  net
assets and 0.20% on the Fund's average net assets in excess of $200 million. The
sub-advisory  fee for the Growth Fund is computed at the annual rate of 0.25% of
the Fund's average net assets.

         The ICM  Sub-Agreement  provides that as compensation for its services,
ICM shall  receive  from IFG,  at the end of each  month,  a fee based  upon the
average  daily  value of the Total  Return  Fund's net  assets at the  following
annual rates: 0.375% on the Fund's average net assets up to $500 million; 0.325%
on the Fund's  average net assets in excess of $500 million but not more than $1
billion; and 0.275% on the Fund's average net assets in excess of $1 billion.


<PAGE>



         The IRAI Sub-Agreement  provides that as compensation for its servicing
IRAI shall  receive  from IFG,  at the end of each  month,  a fee based upon the
average  daily  value of the Realty  Fund's net assets at the  following  annual
rates:  0.30% on the first $500 million of the Fund's average net assets,  0.25%
on the next $500  million of the Fund's  average  net assets and  0.2167% on the
Fund's average net assets in excess of $1 billion.

         Each sub-advisory fee is paid by IFG, NOT the Funds.

Administrative Services Agreement

         IFG, either directly or through affiliated companies,  provides certain
administrative,  sub-accounting,  and record  keeping  services  to the  Company
pursuant to an  Administrative  Services  Agreement dated February 28, 1997 (the
"Administrative  Agreement").  The  Administrative  Agreement  was  approved  on
November 6, 1996, by all of the  directors of the Company,  including all of the
Independent  Directors,  by votes cast at a meeting called for such purpose. The
Administrative  Agreement was for an initial term expiring February 28, 1998 and
has been  extended by action of the board of directors of the Company  until May
15,  1998.  The  Administrative  Agreement  may be  continued  from year to year
thereafter  as long as each such  continuance  is  specifically  approved by the
board of directors of the Company,  including a majority of the directors,  cast
in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such continuance. The
Administrative Agreement may be terminated at any time without penalty by IFG on
sixty (60) days'  written  notice,  or by the  Company  upon  thirty  (30) days'
written  notice,  and  terminates  automatically  in the event of an  assignment
unless the Company's board of directors approves such assignment.

         The  Administrative  Agreement  provides  that IFG  shall  provide  the
following services to the Funds: (a) such accounting and record keeping services
and functions as are  reasonably  necessary for the operation of the Funds;  and
(b) such accounting,  record keeping, and administrative services and functions,
which may be provided by affiliates of IFG, as are reasonably  necessary for the
operation  of Fund  shareholder  accounts.  As full  compensation  for  services
provided under the Administrative Agreement, each Fund pays a monthly fee to IFG
consisting of a base fee of $10,000 per year, plus an additional incremental fee
computed  daily and paid  monthly  at an annual  rate of 0.015%  per year of the
average net assets of the Fund.



<PAGE>



         For the fiscal  years ended  December  31, 1996 and 1995 and the fiscal
period ended  December 31, 1994,  prior to the  voluntary  absorption of certain
Fund  expenses  by IFG,  the Funds  paid IFG  advisory  fees and  administrative
services fees in the following amounts:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                           Year Ended                        Year Ended                       Period  Ended
                                    December 31, 1996                  December 31, 1995                  December 31, 1994
                              -----------------------            -----------------------            -----------------------
                                             Adminis-                           Adminis-                           Adminis-
                                              trative                            trative                            trative
                                Advisory     Services              Advisory     Services              Advisory     Services
                                    Fees         Fees                  Fees         Fees                  Fees         Fees
                              ----------   ----------            ----------   ----------            ----------   ----------

<S>                             <C>           <C>                   <C>          <C>                    <C>         <C>  
Industrial Income Fund          $105,932      $12,119               $27,073      $10,541                  $848      $10,017

Total Return Fund                $77,890      $11,558               $24,649      $10,493                $1,753      $10,035

High Yield Fund                  $50,693      $11,267               $16,298      $10,407                  $735      $10,018

Utilities Fund                    $5,716      $10,143                  $467      $10,011                 $0(1)        $0(1)

Dynamics Fund(3)                      $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

Health Sciences Fund(2)               $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

Small Company Growth Fund(3)          $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

Technology Fund(2)                    $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

Growth Fund(3)                        $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

Realty Fund (4)                       $0           $0                    $0           $0                    $0           $0

</TABLE>





<PAGE>



(1) The Utilities Fund did not commence operations until January 1, 1995.

(2) The Health Sciences and Technology  Funds did not commence  operations until
May 1997.

(3) The  Dynamics,  Small  Company  Growth  and  Growth  Funds did not  commence
operations until August 27, 1997.

(4)  The  Realty  Fund  had  not  commenced  operations  as of the  date of this
Statement of Additional Information.




<PAGE>



Transfer Agency Agreement

         IFG also  performs  transfer  agent,  dividend  disbursing  agent,  and
registrar services for the Company pursuant to a Transfer Agency Agreement which
was approved by the board of  directors of the Company,  including a majority of
the  Independent  Directors,  on November 6, 1996,  for an initial term expiring
February  28,  1998 and has been  extended  by action of the board of  directors
until May 15, 1998. The Transfer  Agency  Agreement may be continued  thereafter
from year to year as to each Fund as long as such  continuance  is  specifically
approved at least  annually by the board of directors  of the  Company,  or by a
vote of the holders of a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund.  Any
such  continuance  also  must  be  approved  by a  majority  of the  Independent
Directors by votes cast in person at a meeting  called for the purpose of voting
on such continuance. The Transfer Agency Agreement may be terminated at any time
without  penalty  by either  party upon  sixty  (60)  days'  written  notice and
terminates automatically in the event of assignment.

         The Transfer  Agency  Agreement  provides that the Company shall pay to
INVESCO an annual fee of $5,000  per Fund.  This fee is paid  monthly at 1/12 of
the annual fee.

Officers and Directors of the Company

         The  overall   direction  and   supervision   of  the  Company  is  the
responsibility  of the board of directors,  which has the primary duty of seeing
that the Company's general investment  policies and programs are carried out and
that the Funds are properly adminis tered.  The officers of the Company,  all of
whom are officers and  employees of, and are paid by, IFG, are  responsible  for
the day-to-day  administration  of the Company and each of the Funds. IFG (along
with ICM in the case of the Total  Return  Fund,  IRAI in the case of the Realty
Fund  and  INVESCO  Trust  in the  case of the  other  Funds)  has  the  primary
responsibility  for making  investment  decisions on behalf of the Funds.  These
investment decisions are reviewed by the investment committee of IFG.

         All of the  officers  and  directors  of the  Company  hold  comparable
positions with INVESCO  Capital  Appreciation  Funds,  Inc.  (formerly,  INVESCO
Dynamics Fund),  INVESCO  Diversified Funds, Inc., INVESCO Emerging  Opportunity
Funds,  Inc.,  INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc.,  INVESCO Income Funds,  Inc.,  INVESCO
Industrial Income Fund, Inc., INVESCO  International  Funds, Inc., INVESCO Money
Market Funds, Inc., INVESCO Multiple Asset Funds, Inc., INVESCO Specialty Funds,
Inc.,  INVESCO  Strategic  Portfolios,  Inc., and INVESCO Tax-Free Income Funds,
Inc. All of the directors of the Company also serve as trustees of INVESCO Value
Trust. In addition,  all of the directors of the Company,  with the exception of
Mr. Hesser,  also are trustees of INVESCO  Treasurer's  Series Trust. All of the
officers of the Fund also hold  comparable  positions  with INVESCO Value Trust.
Set forth below is  information  with respect to each of the Company's  officers
and  directors.  Unless  otherwise  indicated,  the address of the directors and
officers  is  Post  Office  Box  173706,  Denver,  Colorado  80217-3706.   Their
affiliations represent their principal occupations during the past five years.

         


<PAGE>


         CHARLES W. BRADY,*+ Chairman of the Board.  Chief Executive

Officer  and  Director  of  AMVESCAP  PLC,  London,   England,  and  of  various
subsidiaries thereof; Chairman of the Board of INVESCO Treasurer's Series Trust.
Address: 1315 Peachtree Street, NE, Atlanta, Georgia. Born: May 11, 1935.

         FRED A. DEERING,+# Vice Chairman of the Board.  Vice Chairman
of INVESCO Treasurer's Series Trust.  Trustee of INVESCO Global
Health Sciences Fund.  Formerly, Chairman of the Executive
Committee and Chairman of the Board of Security Life of Denver
Insurance Company, Denver, Colorado; Director of ING America Life
Insurance Company, Urbaine Life Insurance Company and Midwestern
United Life Insurance Company.  Address:  Security Life Center,
1290 Broadway, Denver, Colorado. Born: January 12, 1928.

         DAN J. HESSER,+* President, CEO and Director.  Chairman of the
Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer of INVESCO Funds
Group, Inc. and INVESCO Distributors, Inc.; President and Director
of INVESCO Trust Company.  President and Chief Operating Officer of
INVESCO Global Health Sciences Fund.  Born: December 27, 1939.

         VICTOR L. ANDREWS,**  Director.  Professor Emeritus, Chairman
Emeritus and Chairman of the CFO Roundtable of the Department of
Finance at Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia; President,
Andrews Financial Associates, Inc. (consulting firm); since October
1984, Director of the Center for the Study of Regulated Industry of
Georgia State University; formerly, member of the faculties of the
Harvard Business School and the Sloan School of Management of MIT.
Dr. Andrews is also a director of the Southeastern Thrift and Bank
Fund, Inc. and The Sheffield Funds, Inc.  Address:  4625 Jettridge
Drive, Atlanta, Georgia. Born: June 23, 1930.

         BOB R. BAKER,+** Director.  President and Chief Executive
Officer of AMC Cancer Research Center, Denver, Colorado, since
January 1989; until mid-December 1988, Vice Chairman of the Board
of First Columbia Financial Corporation (a financial institution),
Englewood, Colorado.  Formerly, Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of First Columbia Financial Corporation.
Address: 1775 Sherman Street, #1000, Denver, Colorado. Born: August
7, 1936.

         LAWRENCE H. BUDNER,#  Director.  Trust Consultant; prior to
June 30, 1987, Senior Vice President and Senior Trust Officer of
InterFirst Bank, Dallas, Texas.  Address:  7608 Glen Albens Circle,
Dallas, Texas. Born: July 25, 1930.

         DANIEL D. CHABRIS,+#  Director.  Financial Consultant;
Assistant Treasurer of Colt Industries Inc., New York, New York,
from 1966 to 1988. Address:  19 Kingsbridge Way, Madison,
Connecticut. Born: August 1, 1923.

         WENDY L. GRAMM, Ph.D.,** Director. Self-employed (since 1993);
Professor of Economics and Public Administration, University of
Texas at Arlington. Formerly, Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading
Commission from 1988 to 1993, administrator for Information and
Regulatory Affairs at the Office of Management and Budget from 1985
to 1988, Executive Director of the Presidential Task Force on
Regulatory Relief and Director of the Federal Trade Commission's
Bureau of Economics. Dr. Gramm is also a director of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange, Enron Corporation, IBP, Inc., State Farm
Insurance Company, State Farm Life Insurance Company, Independant
Women's Forum, International Republic Institute, and the Republican


<PAGE>



Women's Federal Forum. Dr. Gramm is also a member of the Board of
Visitors, College of Business Administration, University of Iowa,
and a member of the Board of Visitors, Center for Study of Public
Choice, George Mason University. Address: 4201 Yuma Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. Born: January 10, 1945.

         HUBERT L. HARRIS, JR.,* Director. Chairman (since 1996) and
President (January 1990 to May 1996) of INVESCO Services, Inc.;
Chief Executive Officer of INVESCO Individual Services Group.
Member of the Executive Committee of the Alumni Board of Trustees
of Georgia Institute of Technology. Address: 1315 Peachtree Street,
NE, Atlanta, Georgia. Born: July 15, 1943.

         KENNETH T. KING,# Director.  Formerly, Chairman of the Board
of The Capitol Life Insurance Company, Providence Washington
Insurance Company, and Director of numerous subsidiaries thereof in
the U.S.  Formerly, Chairman of the Board of The Providence Capitol
Companies in the United Kingdom and Guernsey.  Chairman of the
Board of the Symbion Corporation (a high technology company) until
1987.  Address:  4080 North Circulo Manzanillo, Tucson, Arizona.
Born:  November 16, 1925.

         JOHN W. MCINTYRE,# Director.  Retired.  Formerly, Vice
Chairman of the Board of Directors of The Citizens and Southern
Corporation and Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
of The Citizens and Southern Georgia Corp. and Citizens and
Southern National Bank.  Director of Golden Poultry Co., Inc.
Trustee of INVESCO Global Health Sciences Fund and Gables
Residential Trust.  Address: 7 Piedmont Center, Suite 100, Atlanta,
GA.  Born: September 14, 1930.

         LARRY SOLL, Ph.D.,** Director.  Retired.  Formerly, Chairman
of the Board (1987 to 1994), Chief Executive Officer (1982 to 1989
and 1993 to 1994) and President (1982 to 1989) of Synergen Corp.
Director of Synergen since its incorporation in 1982.  Director of
ISI Pharmaceuticals, Inc.  Trustee of INVESCO Global Health
Sciences Fund.  Address: 345 Poorman Road, Boulder, Colorado.
Born: April 26, 1942.

         GLEN A. PAYNE, Secretary.  Senior Vice President (since 1995),
General Counsel and Secretary of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. and
INVESCO Trust Company (since 1989) and INVESCO Distributors, Inc.
(since 1997); Vice President (May 1989 to April 1995), Secretary
and General Counsel of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.; formerly,
employee of a U.S. regulatory agency, Washington, D.C. (June 1973
through May 1989).  Born: September 25, 1947.

         RONALD L. GROOMS, Treasurer.  Senior Vice President and
Treasurer of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. and INVESCO Trust Company
(since 1988). Senior Vice President and Treasurer of INVESCO
Distributors, Inc. (since 1997).  Born: October 1, 1946.

         WILLIAM J. GALVIN, JR., Assistant Secretary.  Senior Vice
President of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. (since 1995) and of INVESCO
Distributors, Inc. (since 1997) and Trust Officer of INVESCO Trust
Company since July 1995 and formerly (August 1992 to July 1995)
Vice President of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. and trust officer of
INVESCO Trust Company.  Formerly, Vice President of 440 Financial
Group from June 1990 to August 1992 and Assistant Vice President of
Putnam Companies from November 1986 to June 1990.  Born:  August
21, 1956.

<PAGE>





         ALAN I. WATSON, Assistant Secretary.  Vice President of
INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. (since 1984) and Trust Officer of INVESCO
Trust Company. Born: September 14, 1941.

         JUDY P. WIESE, Assistant Treasurer.  Vice President of INVESCO
Funds Group, Inc. (since 1984) and of INVESCO Distributors, Inc.
(since 1997) and Trust Officer of INVESCO Trust Company.  Born:
February 3, 1948.

         #Member of the audit committee of the Company's board of
directors.

         +Member of the executive committee of the Company's board of directors.
On occasion, the executive committee acts upon the current and ordinary business
of the Company  between  meetings of the board of directors.  Except for certain
powers which,  under  applicable law, may only be exercised by the full board of
directors,  the executive committee may exercise all powers and authority of the
board of  directors  in the  management  of the  business  of the  Company.  All
decisions are subsequently submitted for ratification by the board of Directors.

         *These directors are "interested  persons" of the Company as defined in
the Investment Company Act of 1940.

         **Member of the management liaison committee of the Company's
board of directors.

         As of November 17, 1997,  officers and  directors of the Company,  as a
group, beneficially owned 0% of each Fund's outstand ing shares.

Director Compensation

         The following  table sets forth,  for the fiscal period ended  December
31,  1996:  the  compensation  paid  by the  Company  to its  eight  independent
directors for services rendered in their capacities as directors of the Company;
the benefits  accrued as Company  expenses  with respect to the Defined  Benefit
Deferred Compensation Plan discussed below; and the estimated annual benefits to
be received by these  directors upon  retirement as a result of their service to
the Company.  In addition,  the table sets forth the total  compensation paid by
all of the mutual funds distributed by INVESCO Distributors, Inc. (including the
Company),  INVESCO Advisor Funds, Inc., INVESCO Treasurer's Series Trust and The
Global  Health  Sciences  Fund  (collectively,  the "INVESCO  Complex") to these
directors  for services  rendered in their  capacities  as directors or trustees
during the year ended December 31, 1996. As of December 31, 1996,  there were 49
funds in the INVESCO  Complex.  Dr. Soll became an  independent  director of the
Company  effective May 15, 1997 and is not included in the following  chart. Dr.
Gramm became an independent  director of the Company effective July 29, 1997 and
is not included in the following  chart.  Mr. Frazier  resigned as a director of
the Company effective February 28, 1997.

                                                                               
                              


<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                               Total                                           Compensa-
                                                               Benefits             Estimated             tion From
                                        Aggregate            Accrued As                Annual               INVESCO
                                        Compensa-               Part of              Benefits               Complex
Name of Person,                         tion From               Company                  Upon               Paid To
Position                                Company(1)           Expenses(2)         Retirement(3)          Directors(1)
- --------                              ------------           -----------         -------------          ------------
<S>                                       <C>                      <C>                  <C>                <C> 

Fred A.Deering,                           $ 4,096                  $ 83                  $ 81              $ 98,850
Vice Chairman of
  the Board

Victor L. Andrews                           4,089                    78                    93                84,350

Bob R. Baker                                4,091                    70                   125                84,850

Lawrence H. Budner                          4,080                    78                    93                80,350

Daniel D. Chabris                           4,091                    89                    66                84,850

A. D. Frazier, Jr.(4)                       4,057                     0                     0                81,500

Kenneth T. King                             4,051                    86                    73                71,350

John W. McIntyre                            4,078                     0                     0                90,350
                                           ------                   ---                   ---               -------

Total                                     $32,633                  $484                  $531              $676,450

% of Net Assets                        0.0621%(5)            0.0009%(5)                                  0.0044%(6)

</TABLE>


         (1)The vice chairman of the board, the chairmen of the audit, 
management liaison and  compensation  committees,  and the members of the  
executive  and valuation committees each receive  compensation for serving in 
such capacities in addition to the compensation paid to all independent 
directors.

         (2)Represents benefits accrued  with  respect  to the  Defined  Benefit
Deferred Compensation Plan discussed below, and not compensation deferred at the
election of the directors.

         (3)These figures represent the Company's share of the estimated  annual
benefits  payable by the INVESCO  Complex  (excluding the Global Health Sciences
Fund which  does not  participate  in any  retirement  plan) upon the  directors
retirement,   calculated  using  the  current  method  of  allocating   director
compensation  among the funds in the INVESCO Complex.  These estimated  benefits
assume retirement at age 72 and that the basic retainer payable to the directors
will be adjusted  periodically  for  inflation,  for  increases in the number of
funds in the INVESCO  Complex,  and for other reasons during the period in which
retirement  benefits  are accrued on behalf of the  respective  directors.  This
results in lower  estimated  benefits for directors who are closer to retirement
and higher  estimated  benefits for directors  who are further from  retirement.
With the exception of Messrs. Frazier and McIntyre,  each of these directors has
served as a director/trustee  of one or more of the funds in the INVESCO Complex
for the minimum  five-year  period required to be eligible to participate in the
Defined Benefit Deferred Compensation Plan.

         


<PAGE>


         (4)Effective February 28, 1997, Mr. Frazier  resigned  as a director of
the Company.  Effective November 1, 1996 Mr. Frazier was employed by INVESCO PLC
(the  predecessor  to AMVESCAP PLC), a company  affiliated  with IFG.and did not
receive  any  director's  fees or other  compensation  from the Company or other
funds in the INVESCO Complex for his services as a director.

         (5)Totals as a percentage of the Company's net assets  as  of  December
31, 1996.

         (6)Total as a percentage of the net assets of the INVESCO Complex as of
December 31, 1996.

         Messrs.  Brady and Hesser,  as "interested  persons" of the Company and
the other  funds in the INVESCO  Complex,  receive  compensation  as officers or
employees of IFG or its affiliated companies,  and do not receive any director's
fees or other  compensation  from the  Company or the other funds in the INVESCO
Complex for their service as directors.

         The boards of directors/trustees of the mutual funds managed by IFG and
INVESCO  Treasurer's  Series  Trust  have  adopted  a Defined  Benefit  Deferred
Compensation  Plan for the  non-interested  directors and trustees of the funds.
Under this plan, each director or trustee who is not an interested person of the
funds (as defined in the 1940 Act) and who has served for at least five years (a
"qualified  director") is entitled to receive,  upon retiring from the boards at
the mandatory  retirement  age of 72 (or the  retirement age of 73 to 74, if the
retirement  date is  extended  by the  boards for one or two years but less than
three years),  continuation of payments for one year (the "first year retirement
benefit") of the annual  basic  retainer  payable by the funds to the  qualified
director at the time of his retirement (the "basic  retainer").  Commencing with
any such  director's  second year of retirement,  and commencing  with the first
year of retirement of a director whose retirement has been extended by the board
for three years,  a qualified  director shall receive  quarterly  payments at an
annual rate equal to 40% of the basic retainer. These payments will continue for
the remainder of the qualified director's life or ten years, whichever is longer
(the  "reduced  retainer  payments").  If a qualified  director  dies or becomes
disabled after age 72 and before age 74 while still a director of the funds, the
first year retirement  benefit and the reduced retainer payments will be made to
him or to his beneficiary or estate. If a qualified director becomes disabled or
dies  either  prior to age 72 or during his 74th year while  still a director of
the  funds,  the  director  will not be  entitled  to  receive  the  first  year
retirement benefit;  however,  the reduced retainer payments will be made to his
beneficiary  or  estate.  The  plan is  administered  by a  committee  of  three
directors  who are also  participants  in the plan and one director who is not a
plan  participant.  The cost of the plan  will be  allocated  among  the IFG and
Treasurers Series Trust funds in a manner determined to be fair and equitable by
the  committee.  The Company is not making any payments to  directors  under the
plan as of the date of this Statement of Additional Information. The Company has
no stock options or other pension or  retirement  plans for  management or other
personnel and pays no salary or compensation to any of its officers.

         The Company has an audit  committee  which is  comprised of five of the
directors who are not  interested  persons of the Company.  The committee  meets
periodically with the Company's  independent accoun tants and officers to review
accounting  principles used by the Company,  the adequacy of internal  controls,
the responsibilities and fees of the independent accountants, and other matters.

<PAGE>

         The  Company  also  has a  management  liaison  committee  which  meets
quarterly  with various  management  personnel of IFG in order (a) to facilitate
better  understanding  of management and  operations of the Company,  and (b) to
review legal and  operational  matters which have been assigned to the committee
by the board of direc tors, in  furtherance  of the board of directors'  overall
duty of supervision.

HOW SHARES ARE VALUED

         As described in the section of the Prospectuses entitled "Purchases and
Redemptions,"  the net asset  value of shares  of each  Fund of the  Company  is
computed once each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open, as of the close
of  regular  trading on that  Exchange  (usually  4:00 p.m.,  New York time) and
applies to purchase and redemption orders received prior to that time. Net asset
value per share is also computed on any other day on which there is a sufficient
degree of trading in the  securities  held by a Fund that the  current net asset
value per share  might be  materially  affected  by  changes in the value of the
securities  held,  but only if on that day the  Company  receives  a request  to
purchase  or  redeem  shares  of that  Fund.  Net  asset  value per share is not
calculated  on days the New York  Stock  Exchange  is  closed,  such as  federal
holidays including New Year's Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Presidents' Day,
Good  Friday,  Memorial  Day,  Independence  Day,  Labor Day,  Thanksgiving  and
Christmas.

         The net asset  value per share of each Fund is  calculated  by dividing
the value of all  securities  held by the Fund and its other  assets  (including
dividends and interest accrued but not collect ed), less the Fund's  liabilities
(including accrued expenses),  by the number of outstanding shares of that Fund.
Securities traded on national securities  exchanges,  the NASDAQ National Market
System, the NASDAQ Small Cap Market and foreign markets are valued at their last
sale prices on the  exchanges or markets  where such  securities  are  primarily
traded.  Securities  traded in the  over-the-counter  market for which last sale
prices are not available,  and listed securities for which no sales are reported
on a particular  date,  are valued at their highest  closing bid prices (or, for
debt securities,  yield  equivalents  thereof) obtained from one or more dealers
making  markets  for such  securities.  If  market  quotations  are not  readily
available,  securities will be valued at fair values as determined in good faith
by the  Company's  board of directors or pursuant to  procedures  adopted by the
board of  directors.  The above  procedures  may include  the use of  valuations
furnished by a pricing  service which  employs a matrix to determine  valuations
for  normal  institutional-size  trading  units  of debt  securities.  Prior  to
utilizing a pricing  service,  the board of directors of the Company reviews the
methods used by such service to assure itself that  securities will be valued at
their fair values.  The Company's board of directors also periodically  monitors
the methods  used by such  pricing  services.  Debt  securi ties with  remaining
maturities  of 60 days or less at the time of purchase  are  normally  valued at
amortized cost.



<PAGE>



         The values of  securities  held by the Funds,  and other assets used in
computing  net asset  value,  generally  are  determined  as of the time regular
trading in such  securities  or assets is completed  each day.  Because  regular
trading in most foreign securities markets is completed  simultaneously with, or
prior to, the close of regular trading on the New York Stock  Exchange,  closing
prices for foreign  securities  usually are  available for purposes of computing
the Funds' net asset values.  However,  in the event that the closing price of a
foreign  security is not available in time to calculate a Fund's net asset value
on a particular  day, the Company's board of directors has authorized the use of
the market price for the security  obtained from an approved  pricing service at
an  established  time  during the day which may be prior to the close of regular
trading  in the  security.  The value of all assets  and  liabilities  initially
expressed in foreign  currencies will be converted into U.S. dollars at the spot
rate of such currencies  against U.S.  dollars  provided by an approved  pricing
service.

PERFORMANCE

         As discussed in the section of the Prospectuses  entitled  "Performance
Information,"  average  annual  total  return  and/or yield data for each of the
Funds may from time to time be included in  advertisements,  sales literature or
shareholder  reports. All presentations of Fund total return and yield data will
conform to applicable requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission and
the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

Total Return Calculations

         Average annual total return performance for the indicated periods ended
December 31, 1996, for each Fund that had commenced operations by that date were
as follows:

Portfolio                                       1 Year              Life of Fund
- ---------                                       ------              ------------

Industrial Income Portfolio                     22.28%                    21.46%
Total Return Portfolio                          12.18%                    13.96%
High Yield Portfolio                            16.59%                    13.59%
Utilities Portfolio                             12.76%                    10.90%

(1) The dates on which the Industrial Income Fund, Total Return Fund, High Yield
Fund and Utilities Fund commenced operations were August 10, 1994, June 2, 1994,
May 27, 1994 and January 1, 1995, respectively.

         Average  annual  total  return  performance  for  each  of the  periods
indicated was computed by finding the average annual  compounded rates of return
that would equate the initial amount  invested to the ending  redeemable  value,
according to the following formula:

                  P(1 + T) exponent n = ERV 
where:
                  P = initial payment of $1000 
                  T = average annual total return 
                  n = number of years
                  ERV = ending redeemable value of initial payment



<PAGE>



         The average  annual total return  performance  figures shown above were
determined  by solving  the above  formula for "T" for each time period and Fund
indicated.

Yield Calculations

         The yields of the Industrial Income Fund, Total Return Fund, High Yield
Fund and Utilities Fund for the month ended December 31, 1996 were 2.38%, 3.20%,
9.70% and 2.87%,  respectively.  In  calculating  yield  quotations  for a Fund,
interest  earned is deter mined by computing  the yield to maturity (or yield to
call, if applicable) of each obligation held by the Fund,  based upon the market
value of each  obligation  (including  actual accrued  interest) at the close of
business on the last business day of the month or, with respect to an obligation
purchased  during the month,  the  purchase  price plus  accrued  interest.  The
resultant yield to maturity is divided by 360 and multiplied by the market value
of the  obligation  (including  actual  accrued  interest),  and the  result  is
multiplied by the number of days in the subsequent  month that the obligation is
in the Fund  (assuming that each month has 30 days).  Dividends  received on the
stocks held by the Funds are recognized, for purposes of yield calculations,  on
a daily accrual basis.

Comparison of Fund Performance

         In conjunction  with  performance  reports,  comparative data between a
Fund's performance for a given period and other types of investment vehicles may
be provided to prospective  investors and shareholders.  A Fund's performance is
based upon amounts  available for investment  under variable annuity or variable
life insurance  contracts of Participating  Insurance Companies rather than upon
premiums paid for variable annuity or variable life insurance  contracts.  Thus,
the Fund's total return data does not reflect the impact of sales loads (whether
front-end or deferred) or contract  charges  deducted  from premiums or from the
assets of the Partici pating Insurance  Companies' separate accounts that invest
in the Fund.  Such sales loads and contract  charges may be substantial  and may
vary widely among  Participating  Insurance  Companies.  Accord ingly, the total
return data for the Funds is most useful for comparison with comparable data for
other  investment  options  under the same  variable  annuity or  variable  life
insurance contract.

         Comparisons  of the Funds' total  returns to those of other  investment
vehicles  are  useful  in  evaluating   the  historical   portfolio   management
performance of the Funds'  investment  adviser and sub-advisers.  However,  such
comparisons  should not be mistaken for comparisons of the returns on a purchase
of a variable  annuity or variable life  insurance  contract of a  Participating
Insurance  Company  and a purchase  of  another  investment  vehicle.  Owners or
prospective  owners of variable  annuity  contracts of  Participating  Insurance
Companies  should  review  performance  data for the Funds in  conjunction  with
comparable  total  return  data for the  associated  variable  annuity  separate
account to be  provided  with the Fund  data.  Owners or  prospective  owners of
variable life insurance  contracts of Participating  Insurance  Companies should
review the performance  data for the Funds in conjunction with data (such as the
data  contained in  personalized,  hypothetical  illustrations  of variable life
insurance  contracts)  that permits an  evaluation  of the magnitude of variable



<PAGE>



life  insurance  charges  and  expenses  and the  life  insurance  benefits  not
reflected in the Funds' total return data.

         From  time to time,  evaluations  of  performance  made by  independent
sources may also be used in  advertisements,  sales  literature  or  shareholder
reports, including reprints of, or selections from, editorials or articles about
the Funds. Sources for Fund performance information and articles about the Funds
include, but are not limited to the following:

         American Association of Individual Investors' Journal
         Banxquote
         Barron's
         Business Week
         CDA Investment Technologies
         CNBC
         CNN
         Consumer Digest
         Financial Times
         Financial World
         Forbes
         Fortune
         Ibbotson Associates, Inc.
         Institutional Investor
         Investment Company Data, Inc.
         Investor's Business Daily
         Kiplinger's Personal Finance
         Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.'s Mutual Fund Performance
           Analysis
         Money
         Morningstar
         Mutual Fund Forecaster
         The New York Times
         No-Load Analyst
         The No-Load Fund Investor
         No-Load Fund*X
         Personal Investor
         Smart Money
         United Mutual Fund Selector
         USA Today
         U.S. News and World Report
         Wall Street Journal
         Wiesenberger Investment Companies Services
         Working Woman
         Worth

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

         There are no fixed limitations  regarding portfolio turnover for any of
the  Funds.  Brokerage  costs to the  Funds are  commensu  rate with the rate of
portfolio activity. Portfolio turnover rates for the fiscal years ended December
31, 1996 and 1995 and the fiscal period ended December 31, 1994 were as follows:

         Fund                            1996             1995              1994
         ----                            ----             ----              ----

         Industrial Income Fund           93%              97%                0%
         Total Return Fund                12%               5%                0%
         High Yield Fund                 380%             310%               23%
         Utilities Fund                   48%              24%                0%


<PAGE>




         In computing these  portfolio  turnover  rates,  all  investments  with
maturities or expiration  dates at the time of  acquisition  of one year or less
were  excluded.  Subject to this  exclusion,  the turnover rate is calculated by
dividing (a) the lesser of purchases  or sales of portfolio  securities  for the
fiscal  year by (b) the  monthly  average of the value of  portfolio  securities
owned by the Fund during the fiscal year. The primary reason for the increase in
the High Yield Fund's  portfolio  turnover  rate in 1996 was  primarily due to a
doubling  in size of the Fund and an  effort  to take  advantage  of  attractive
opportunities in the bond market.  The primary reason for the increase in all of
the  Funds'  portfolio  turnover  rates in 1995 was the fact  that  1995 was the
Funds' first full year of operations.

PORTFOLIO BROKERAGE

         Fund  Management  places orders for the purchase and sale of securities
with  brokers  and  dealers  based upon its  evaluation  of the  broker-dealers'
financial  responsibility  subject  to the  broker-dealers'  ability  to  effect
transactions at the best available prices. Fund Management evaluates the overall
reason  ableness  of  brokerage  commissions  paid by  reviewing  the quality of
executions  obtained on each Fund's portfolio  transactions,  viewed in terms of
the size of transactions, prevailing market conditions in the security purchased
or sold, and general economic and market  conditions.  In seeking to ensure that
the commissions  charged the Funds are consistent with prevailing and reasonable
commissions,  Fund  Management  also  endeavors  to monitor  brokerage  industry
practices  with  regard to the  commissions  charged by brokers  and  dealers on
transactions effected for other comparable institutional  investors.  While Fund
Management seeks reasonably  competitive rates, the Funds do not necessarily pay
the lowest commissions or spread available.

         Consistent with the standard of seeking to obtain the best execution on
portfolio transactions, Fund Management may select brokers that provide research
services to effect such  transactions.  Research services consist of statistical
and analytical reports relating to issuers, industries,  securities and economic
factors and trends,  which may be of assistance  or value to Fund  Management in
making informed investment  decisions.  Research services prepared and furnished
by brokers through which the Funds effect securities transactions may be used by
Fund Management in servicing all of their  respective  accounts and not all such
services may be used by Fund Management in connection with the Funds.

         In  recognition  of the  value  of the  above-described  brokerage  and
research services provided by certain brokers, Fund Management,  consistent with
the standard of seeking to obtain the best execution on portfolio  transactions,
may place orders with such brokers for the  execution  of Fund  transactions  on
which the  commissions  are in excess of those  which other  brokers  might have
charged for effecting the same transactions.

         Fund transactions may be effected through qualified  broker-dealers who
recommend  the  variable  annuity  or  variable  life  insurance   contracts  of
Participating  Insurance  Companies to their clients, or who act as agent in the
purchase  of such  contracts  for their  clients.  When a number of brokers  and



<PAGE>



dealers  can  provide  comparable  best  price  and  execution  on a  particular
transaction, Fund Management may consider the sale of such contracts by a broker
or dealer in selecting among qualified broker-dealers.

         The  aggregate  dollar  amounts of  brokerage  commissions  paid by the
Company  for the fiscal  years ended  December  31, 1996 and 1995 and the fiscal
period ended December 31, 1994 were $283,949, $94,602 and $2,388,  respectively.
This increase was primarily  due to the increased  size of the Funds.  On a Fund
basis, the aggregate amount of brokerage commissions paid in 1996 breaks down as
follows: Industrial Income Fund, $151,867; Total Return Fund, $7,686; High Yield
Fund,  $114,443;  and Utilities  Fund,  $9,953.  for the year ended December 31,
1996, brokers providing  research services received $16,378,  $0, $0, and $3,274
in commissions  on portfolio  transactions  effected for the  Industrial  Income
Fund,  Total Return Fund, High Yield Fund and Utilities Fund,  respectively,  on
aggregate  portfolio  transactions  of  $11,104,765,  $0,  $0,  and  $1,811,519,
respectively.  The Company  paid $7 in  compensation  to brokers for the sale of
Participating  Life  Insurance  Company's  variable  annuity and  variable  life
insurance  contracts  utilizing the Funds during the fiscal year ended  December
31, 1996.

         At December 31, 1996,  the Funds then in operation  held  securities of
their regular brokers or dealers, or their parents, as follows:

                                                             Value of Securities
Fund                      Broker or Dealer                       at 12/31/96
- ----                      ----------------                   -------------------

Industrial Income Fund    None

Total Return Fund         Morgan Stanley Group,
                            Incorporated                              108,537.50
                          State Street Boston
                            Corporation                               135,450.00

High Yield Fund           None

Utilities Fund            None

         None  of  IFG,  INVESCO  Trust,  ICM or  IRAI  receives  any  brokerage
commissions  on portfolio  transactions  effected on behalf of any of the Funds,
and there is no affiliation  between INVESCO,  INVESCO Trust,  ICM, IRAI, or any
person  affiliated  with IFG,  INVESCO Trust,  ICM, IRAI, or the Company and any
broker or dealer that executes transactions for the Funds.

REDEMPTIONS

         It is possible that in the future  conditions may exist which would, in
the opinion of IFG, make it undesirable  for one or more of the Funds to pay for
redeemed shares in cash. In such cases, IFG may authorize  payment to be made in
portfolio  securities  or other  property of the Fund.  However,  the Company is
obligated under the Investment Company Act of 1940 to redeem for cash all shares
of a Fund presented for redemption by any one  shareholder  having a value up to
$250,000  (or 1% of the  applicable  Fund's  net  assets if that is less) in any
90-day  period.  Securities  delivered  in payment of  redemptions  are selected



<PAGE>



entirely  by Fund  Management  based  on what is in the  best  interests  of the
Company and its  shareholders,  and are valued at the value  assigned to them in
computing  the Fund's net asset  value per share.  Shareholders  receiving  such
securities are likely to incur brokerage costs on their  subsequent sales of the
securities.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Common Stock

         The Company was incorporated under the laws of the state of Maryland on
August 19,  1993.  The  authorized  capital  stock of the  Company  consists  of
1,000,000,000  shares of common stock,  par value of $0.01 per share. The shares
of common stock are currently divided into ten classes (or series),  INVESCO VIF
- - Dynamics Portfolio common stock,  INVESCO VIF - Growth Portfolio common stock,
INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences  Portfolio common stock,  INVESCO VIF - High Yield
Portfolio  common stock,  INVESCO VIF Industrial  Income Portfolio common stock,
INVESCO VIF - Realty Portfolio common stock,  INVESCO VIF - Small Company Growth
Portfolio  common  stock,  INVESCO VIF - Total Return  Portfolio  common  stock,
INVESCO  VIF -  Technology  Portfolio  common  stock and INVESCO VIF - Utilities
Portfolio  common  stock.  As of  October  31,  1997,  2,021,012  shares  of the
Industrial  Income Fund,  1,284,823  shares of the Total Return Fund,  1,780,127
shares of the High Yield Fund,  292,288  shares of the  Utilities  Fund,  33,579
shares of the Technology  Fund,  25,100 shares of the Small Company Growth Fund,
43,667 shares of the Health  Sciences Fund,  25,100 shares of the Dynamics Fund,
25,100  shares  of the  Growth  Fund and -0-  shares  of the  Realty  Fund  were
outstanding. Each class consists of 100 million shares. The Company reserves the
right to issue additional classes of shares without the consent of shareholders.
All shares  issued and  outstanding  are, and all shares  offered  hereby,  when
issued, will be, fully paid and nonassessable.

         Shares of each class  represent  the  interests of the sharehold ers of
that class in a particular  portfolio of investments of the Company.  Each class
of the Company's  shares is preferred over all other classes with respect to the
assets specifically allocated to that class, and all income,  earnings,  profits
and proceeds  from those assets,  subject only to the rights of  creditors,  are
allocated to shares of that class.  The assets of each class are  segregated  on
the books of account and are charged with the liabilities of that class and with
a share of the Company's general liabilities.  The board of directors determines

<PAGE>

those assets and  liabilities  deemed to be general assets or liabilities of the
Company and those items are  allocated  among  classes in a manner deemed by the
board to be fair and equitable.  Generally,  such  allocation will be made based
upon the relative  total net assets of each class.  In the unlikely event that a
liability  allocable to one class exceeds the assets belonging to the class, all
or a portion of such  liability may have to be borne by the holders of shares of
the Company's other classes.

         All dividends on shares of a particular class shall be paid only out of
the income  belonging to that class,  pro rata to the holders of that class.  In
the event of the  liquidation  or  dissolution of the Company or of a particular
class,  the  sharehold  ers of each  class  that is  being  liquidated  shall be
entitled  to  receive,  as a class,  when and as  declared by the board of direc
tors,  the excess of the  assets  belonging  to that class over the  liabilities
belonging  to that  class.  The  holders  of shares  of any  class  shall not be
entitled to any distribution  upon liquidation of any other class. The assets so
distributable  to the  shareholders of any particular class shall be distributed
among those  sharehold  ers in  proportion to the number of shares of that class
held by them and recorded on the books of the Company.

         All Fund shares,  regardless of class, have equal voting rights. Voting
with  respect  to  certain  matters,   such  as  ratifica  tion  of  independent
accountants  or election of  directors,  will be by all classes of the  Company.
When not all classes are affected by a matter to be voted upon, such as approval
of an investment  advisory contract or changes in a Fund's investment  policies,
only  shareholders of the class affected by the matter will be entitled to vote.
Company shares have noncumulative voting rights, which means that the holders of
a majority of the shares voting for the election of directors of the Company can
elect 100% of the directors if they choose to do so. In such event,  the holders
of the remaining shares voting for the election of directors will not be able to
elect any  person or  persons  to the board of  directors.  After they have been
elected by  shareholders,  the  directors  will  continue  to serve  until their
successors  are elected and have  qualified or they are removed from office,  in
either case by a shareholder vote, or until death,  resignation,  or retirement.
Directors  may appoint  their own  successors,  provided  that always at least a
majority of the directors have been elected by the Company's shareholders. It is
the intention of the Company not to hold annual  meetings of  shareholders.  The
directors  may call  annual or special  meetings of  shareholders  for action by
sharehold er vote as may be required by the 1940 Act or the  Company's  Articles
of Incorporation, or at their discretion.

Principal Shareholders

         As of November 1, 1997, the following  persons held more than 5% of the
Funds' outstanding equity securities.




<PAGE>



                            Amount and Nature
Name and Address                 of Ownership                   Percent of Class
- ----------------            -----------------                   ----------------

Industrial Income Fund
- ----------------------

Great West Life & Annuity        851,386.0150                            42.127%
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                    405,312.8410                             20.055
Separate Account A1                    Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                    290,444.7710                            14.371%
Separate Account L1                    Record
Attn: Debra Bechtel
Unit Valuations 272
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Separate Account VA-5 of         267,254.5860                            13.224%
Transamerica Occidental                Record
Life Insurance Company
Variable Annuity Dept B-100
1150 S. Olive
Los Angeles, CA  90015

Total Return Fund
- -----------------

Great West Life & Annuity        656,666.3350                            51.109%
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO 80111

Security Life                    303,352.5260                            23.610%
Separate Account A1                    Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                    162,461.0920                            12.645%
Separate Account L1                    Record
Attn: Debra Bachtel
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Rd.
Englewood, CO  80111




<PAGE>



Separate Account VA-5 of          122,126.1830                            9.505%
Transamerica Occidental
Life Insurance Company
Variable Annuity Dept. D-100
1150 S. Olive
Los Angeles, CA 90015

High Yield Fund
- ---------------

Great-West Life & Annuity         820,305.5670                           46.081%
Unit Valuations 2T2                     Record
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                     382,991.4240                           21.515%
Separate Account A1                     Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                     339,120.4550                           19.050%
Separate Account L1                     Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Separate Account VA-5 of          176,145.3950                            9.895%
Transamerica Occidental                 Record
Life Insurance Company
Variable Annuity Dept B-100
1150 S. Olive
Los Angeles, CA  90015

Utilities Fund
- --------------

Security Life                     222,889.7100                           76.257%
Separate Account A1                     Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Security Life                      65,076.4970                           22.264%
Separate Account L1                     Record
Unit Valuations 2T2
8515 E. Orchard Road
Englewood, CO  80111

Independent Accountants

         Price Waterhouse LLP, 950 Seventeenth  Street,  Denver,  Colorado,  has
been selected as the  independent  accountants of the Company.  The  independent
accountants  are  responsible  for  auditing  the  financial  statements  of the
Company.

Custodian

         State  Street  Bank  and  Trust   Company,   P.O.   Box  351,   Boston,
Massachusetts,  has been  designated  as  custodian  of the cash and  investment
securities of the Funds. The custodian bank is also responsible for, among other



<PAGE>



things,  receipt and delivery of the Funds' investment  securities in accordance
with procedures and conditions specified in the custody agreement.

Transfer Agent

         INVESCO,  7800  E.  Union  Avenue,  Denver,  Colorado  80237,  acts  as
registrar,  dividend  disbursing  agent,  and  transfer  agent  for the  Company
pursuant to the Transfer  Agency  Agreement  described  above under the caption,
"Fund Management." Such services include the issuance, cancellation and transfer
of shares of the Company and the maintenance of records  regarding the ownership
of such shares.

Reports to Shareholders

         The Company's fiscal year ends on December 31 of each year. The Company
distributes  reports  at  least  semiannually  to  its  shareholders.  Financial
statements regarding the Company,  audited by the independent  accountants,  are
sent to shareholders annually.

Legal Counsel

         The firm of  Kirkpatrick  & Lockhart  LLP,  Washington,  D.C., is legal
counsel for the Company. The firm of Moye, Giles,  O'Keefe,  Vermeire & Gorrell,
Denver, Colorado, acts as special counsel to the Company.

Financial Statements

         The Company's  audited  financial  statements and the notes thereto for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1996, and the report of Price  Waterhouse LLP
with respect to such financial statements,  are incorporated herein by reference
from the  Company's  Annual  Report to  Shareholders  for the fiscal  year ended
December 31, 1996.

Prospectus

         The Company will furnish,  without  charge,  a copy of the  appropriate
Prospectus  upon  request.  Such  requests  should be made to the Company at the
mailing  address  or  telephone  number  set  forth  on the  first  page of this
Statement of Additional Information.




<PAGE>



Registration Statement

         This Statement of Additional  Information  and the  Prospectuses do not
contain  all of the  information  set forth in the  Registration  Statement  the
Company has filed with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.  The complete
Registration  Statement  may  be  obtained  from  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  upon payment of the fee  prescribed by the rules and  regulations of
the Commission.




<PAGE>



                                                                               
                        APPENDIX A

                  DESCRIPTION OF FUTURES AND OPTIONS CONTRACTS

Options on Securities

         An option on a security  provides the purchaser,  or "holder," with the
right, but not the obligation,  to purchase,  in the case of a "call" option, or
sell, in the case of a "put" option,  the security or securities  underlying the
option,  for a fixed exercise price up to a stated  expiration  date. The holder
pays a non-refundable purchase price for the option, known as the "premium." The
maximum  amount of risk the  purchaser  of the  option  assumes  is equal to the
premium plus related transaction costs,  although the entire amount may be lost.
The risk of the seller, or "writer," however, is potentially  unlimited,  unless
the option is "covered,"  which is generally  accomplished  through the writer's
ownership  of the  underlying  security,  in the case of a call  option,  or the
writer's  segregation  of an amount of cash or securities  equal to the exercise
price,  in the  case  of a put  option.  If the  writer's  obligation  is not so
covered, it is subject to the risk of the full change in value of the underlying
security from the time the option is written until exercise.

         Upon exercise of the option, the holder is required to pay the purchase
price of the underlying  security,  in the case of a call option,  or to deliver
the  security  in return for the  purchase  price,  in the case of a put option.
Conversely,  the writer is required to deliver  the  security,  in the case of a
call option, or to purchase the security,  in the case of a put option.  Options
on  securities  which have been  purchased or written may be closed out prior to
exercise  or  expiration  by  entering  into an  offsetting  transaction  on the
exchange  on  which  the  initial  position  was  established,  subject  to  the
availability of a liquid secondary market.

         Options on securities are traded on national securities exchanges, such
as the Chicago Board of Options Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange,  which
are regulated by the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  The Options  Clearing
Corporation   ("OCC")   guarantees   the   performance   of  each  party  to  an
exchange-traded  option,  by in effect  taking  the  opposite  side of each such
option. A holder or writer may engage in transactions in exchange-traded options
on  securities  and options on indices of  securities  only through a registered
broker/dealer which is a member of the exchange on which the option is traded.

         An option position in an exchange-traded  option may be closed out only
on an  exchange  which  provides  a  secondary  market for an option of the same
series.  Although the Funds  generally will purchase or write only those options
for which there appears to be an active secondary market,  there is no assurance
that a liquid  secondary  market on an  exchange  will exist for any  particular
option at any particular  time. In such event it might not be possible to effect
closing  transactions  in a particular  option with the result that a Fund would
have to exercise the option in order to realize any profit. This would result in
the Fund  incurring  brokerage  commissions  upon the  disposition of underlying
securities  acquired  through the exercise of a call option or upon the purchase



<PAGE>



of underlying  securities  upon the exercise of a put option.  If the Fund, as a
covered call option writer,  is unable to effect a closing purchase  transaction
in a secondary  market,  unless the Fund is  required to deliver the  securities
pursuant to the  assignment of an exercise  notice,  it will not be able to sell
the underlying security until the option expires.

         Reasons for the potential  absence of a liquid  secondary  market on an
exchange include the following:  (i) there may be insuffi cient trading interest
in certain options;  (ii)  restrictions may be imposed by an exchange on opening
transactions or closing transac tions or both; (iii) trading halts,  suspensions
or other  restric  tions may be imposed  with respect to  particular  classes or
series  of  options  or  underlying  securities;   (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 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 that exchange  which 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 a  particular  time,  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.  However,  the OCC, based on forecasts  provided by the U.S.
exchanges,  believes  that its  facilities  are adequate to handle the volume of
reasonably  anticipated  options  transactions,  and such exchanges have advised
such  clearing  corporation  that they  believe  their  facilities  will also be
adequate to handle reasonably anticipated volume.

         In  addition,  options  on  securities  may be traded  over-the-counter
("OTC") through  financial  institutions  dealing in such options as well as the
underlying  instruments.  OTC options are  purchased  from or sold  (written) to
dealers or financial institutions which have entered into direct agreements with
the Company on behalf of a Fund. With OTC options,  such variables as expiration
date,  exercise  price and premium  will be agreed upon between the Fund and the
transacting  dealer,  without the  intermedi  ation of a third party such as the
OCC. If the transacting  dealer fails to make or take delivery of the securities
underlying an option it has written, in accordance with the terms of that option
as written,  the Fund would lose the premium  paid for the option as well as any
anticipated  benefit  of the  transaction.  The Fund will  engage in OTC  option
transactions only with primary U.S. government  securities dealers recognized by
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Futures Contracts

         A futures contract is a bilateral  agreement providing for the purchase
and sale of a  specified  type and amount of a financial  instrument  or foreign
currency,  or for the making and  acceptance of a cash  settlement,  at a stated
time in the future, for a fixed price. By its terms, a futures contract provides



<PAGE>



for a  specified  settlement  date on  which,  in the  case of the  majority  of
interest  rate  and  foreign  currency  futures  contracts,   the  fixed  income
securities or currency  underlying  the contract are delivered by the seller and
paid for by the  purchaser,  or on  which,  in the case of stock  index  futures
contracts and certain interest rate and foreign currency futures contracts,  the
difference  between the price at which the  contract  was  entered  into and the
contract's  closing  value is settled  between the purchaser and seller in cash.
Futures  Contracts  differ from options in that they are bilateral  agree ments,
with both the  purchaser  and the  seller  equally  obligated  to  complete  the
transaction.  In addition,  futures  contracts call for  settlement  only on the
expiration date, and cannot be "exercised" at any other time during their term.

         The  purchase  or sale of a  futures  contract  also  differs  from the
purchase or sale of a security or the  purchase of an option in that no purchase
price is paid or received. Instead, an amount of cash or cash equivalents, which
varies  but may be as low as 5% or less of the  value of the  contract,  must be
deposited with the broker as "initial margin."  Subsequent  payments to and from
the broker,  referred to as "variation margin," are made on a daily basis as the
value of the index or instrument  underlying  the futures  contract  fluctuates,
making positions in the futures contract more or less valuable,  a process known
as "marking to market."

         A futures contract may be purchased or sold only on an exchange,  known
as a "contract  market,"  designated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
for the  trading  of such  contract,  and  only  through  a  registered  futures
commission merchant which is a member of such contract market. A commission must
be paid on each completed  purchase and sale  transaction.  The contract  market
clearing house  guarantees the performance of each party to a futures  contract,
by in effect taking the opposite side of such contract. At any time prior to the
expiration of a futures  contract,  a trader may elect to close out its position
by taking an opposite  position on the contract market on which the position was
entered into,  subject to the  availability  of a secondary  market,  which will
operate to terminate the initial position.  At that time, a final  determination
of variation  margin is made and any loss  experienced by the trader is required
to be paid to the  contract  market  clearing  house while any profit due to the
trader must be delivered to it.

         Interest  rate futures  contracts  currently are traded on a variety of
fixed income  securities,  including  long-term U.S.  Treasury  bonds,  Treasury
notes,   Government   National  Mortgage   Association   modified   pass-through
mortgage-backed  securities,  U.S.  Treasury bills, bank certificates of deposit
and  commercial  paper.  In addition,  interest rate futures  contracts  include
contracts on indices of municipal securities. Foreign currency futures contracts
currently are traded on the British pound, Canadian dollar,  Japanese yen, Swiss
franc, West German mark and on Eurodollar deposits.

Options on Futures Contracts

         An option on a futures  contract  provides the holder with the right to
enter into a "long" position in the underlying futures contract,  in the case of



<PAGE>



a call option, or a "short" position in the underlying futures contract,  in the
case of a put option,  at a fixed  exercise price to a stated  expiration  date.
Upon exercise of the option by the holder,  the contract  market  clearing house
establishes a corresponding  short position for the writer of the option, in the
case of a call option,  or a corresponding  long position,  in the case of a put
option. In the event that an option is exercised, the parties will be subject to
all the risks associated with the trading of futures contracts,  such as payment
of variation margin deposits. In addition,  the writer of an option on a futures
contract,  unlike  the  holder,  is  subject to  initial  and  variation  margin
requirements on the option position.

         A position in an option on a futures contract may be terminat ed by the
purchaser or seller prior to expiration by effecting a closing  purchase or sale
transaction,  subject to the availability of a liquid secondary market, which is
the purchase or sale of an option of the same series  (i.e.,  the same  exercise
price and  expiration  date) as the option  previously  purchased  or sold.  The
difference between the premiums paid and received represents the trader's profit
or loss on the transaction.

         An option,  whether  based on a futures  contract,  a stock  index or a
security,  becomes worthless to the holder when it expires.  Upon exercise of an
option,  the exchange or contract market clearing house assigns exercise notices
on a random basis to those of its members which have written options of the same
series and with the same  expiration  date.  A  brokerage  firm  receiving  such
notices then assigns them on a random basis to those of its customers which have
written options of the same series and expiration  date. A writer  therefore has
no control  over  whether an option will be  exercised  against it, nor over the
time of such exercise.



<PAGE>



                                                      PART C
                                                 OTHER INFORMATION


Item 24.          Financial Statements and Exhibits

         (a)      Financial Statements:
                                                                               
                                                                         Page in
                                                                      Prospectus
                                                                      ----------
                  (1)      Financial statements and schedules
                           included in Prospectus (Part A):

                           Financial  Highlights  for the period           14
                           ended  December 31,  1994  and each 
                           of the two  years  in the  period
                           ended  December  31,  1996 for the 
                           INVESCO VIF - High Yield, INVESCO VIF
                           - Industrial Income, INVESCO VIF -    
                           Total Return Portfolio.

                           Financial  Highlights  for each                 18
                           of the two  years  in the  period
                           ended  December  31,  1996 for the 
                           INVESCO VIF - Utilities Portfolio.

                           Financial Highlights for the INVESCO
                           VIF-Health Sciences Portfolio for the
                           period May 22, 1997 through September
                           30, 1997 filed as a supplement dated
                           November 10, 1997 to the Prospectus.

                           Financial Highlights for the INVESCO
                           VIF-Technology Portfolio for the
                           period May 21, 1997 through September
                           30, 1997 filed as a supplement dated
                           November 10, 1997 to the Prospectus.
     
                           Financial   Highlights   for  the
                           INVESCO  VIF-Dynamics Portfolio for 
                           the period August 25, 1997 
                           (commencement of operations) 
                           through December 31, 1997 filed as a 
                           supplement dated February 25, 1998.

                           Financial   Highlights   for  the  
                           INVESCO  VIF-Small Company Growth 
                           Portfolio for the period August 25, 
                           1997 (commencement of operations) 
                           through December 31, 1997 filed as
                           a supplement dated February 25, 1998.

                           Financial   Highlights   for  the  
                           INVESCO  VIF-Growth Portfolio for 
                           the period August 25, 1997
                          (commencement of operations) 
                           through December 31, 1997 filed as a 
                           supplement dated February 25, 1998.

                           




<PAGE>



                                                                         Page in
                                                                       Statement
                                                                        of Addi-
                                                                      tional In-
                                                                       formation
                                                                      ----------

                  (2)      Financial   statements  and  schedules
                           included  in Statement of Additional 
                           Information (Part B):

                           The  following  audited   financial   
                           statements  for  INVESCO VIF - Dynamics, 
                           INVESCO VIF - Growth, INVESCO VIF - 
                           Health Sciences, INVESCO  VIF - High 
                           Yield,  INVESCO VIF -  Industrial
                           Income,  INVESCO VIF - Small Company
                           Growth, INVESCO VIF - Technology, 
                           INVESCO VIF - Total Return and
                           INVESCO VIF - Utilities Funds and 
                           the notes thereto for the fiscal year
                           ended  December 31, 1997 and the report 
                           of Price Waterhouse   LLP  with  
                           respect  to  such   financial
                           statements  are  incorporated  in  
                           the  Statement  of Additional   
                           Information   by   reference   from  the
                           Company's  Annual  Report  to  
                           Shareholders  for  the fiscal year ended  
                           December  31,  1997:  

                           (a)  (i) With respect to INVESCO VIF -
                                High Yield, INVESCO VIF - Industrial
                                Income, INVESCO VIF - Total Return
                                and INVESCO VIF - Utilities Funds,
                                Statements of Investment  
                                Securities  and Statement  of Assets 
                                and Liabilities  each dated December
                                31, 1997, Statements of Operations 
                                for the fiscal year ended December 
                                31, 1997,  Statement of Changes in 
                                Net Assets for each of the 
                                two years in the period  ended 
                                December 31,  1997, Financial  
                                Highlights  for the period ended  
                                December 31, 1994 and each of the 
                                three years in the period ended 
                                December 31, 1997 for INVESCO VIF -
                                High Yield, INVESCO VIF - Industrial
                                Income and INVESCO VIF - Total
                                Return Funds; Financial Highlights
                                for each of the three years in the
                                period ended December 31, 1997 for
                                INVESCO VIF - Utilities Fund.

<PAGE>


                                (ii)  With respect to INVESCO VIF -
                                Health Sciences Fund, Statement of 
                                Investment Securities and a 
                                Statement of Assets and Liabilities, 
                                each dated December 31, 1997, 
                                Statement of Operations, Statement 
                                of Changes in Net Assets
                                and Financial Highlights, each for
                                the period May 22, 1997
                                (commencement of investment
                                operations) through December 31,
                                1997. 
        
                                (iii)  With respect to INVESCO VIF -
                                Technology Fund, Statement of 
                                Investment Securities and a 
                                Statement of Assets and Liabilities, 
                                each dated December 31, 1997, 
                                Statement of Operations, Statement 
                                of Changes in Net Assets
                                and Financial Highlights, each for
                                the period May 21, 1997
                                (commencement of investment
                                operations) through December 31,
                                1997. 

                                (iv)  With   respect   to  
                                INVESCO   VIF  -  Dynamics,  
                                INVESCO VIF - Small Company  
                                Growth and  INVESCO VIF - Growth 
                                Funds,  Statements  of  
                                Investment   Securities  and
                                Statements    of   Assets   
                                and   Liabilities,  each 
                                dated  December 31, 1997,  
                                Statements of Operations, 
                                Statements  of Changes in 
                                Net  Assets and Financial
                                Highlights, each for the period  
                                August 25, 1997  (commencement
                                of investment operations)
                                through   December  31,  1997. 

<PAGE>

                                
                  (3)      Financial statements and schedules
                           included in Part C:

                  None:  Schedules have been omitted as all
                  information has been presented in the
                  financial statements.

         (b)      Exhibits:

                  (1)      (a)      Articles of Incorporation.(2)

                           (b)      Articles of Amendment to
                           Articles of Incorporation dated
                           October 21, 1993.(2)

                           (c)      Articles Supplementary to
                           Articles of Incorporation dated
                           October 22, 1993.(2)

                           (d)      Articles Supplementary to
                           Articles of Incorporation dated
                           February 11, 1997.(2)

                           (e)      Articles Supplementary to
                           Articles of Incorporation dated
                           November 17, 1997.(4)

                  (2)      Bylaws.(3)

                  (3)      Not applicable.

                  (4)      Not required to be filed on
                           EDGAR.
                  (5)      (a)      Investment Advisory
                           Agreement, dated February 28,
                           1997, between Registrant and
                           INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.(2)

                           (b)      Sub-Advisory Agreement,
                           dated February 28, 1997, between
                           INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. and
                           INVESCO Capital Management,
                           Inc.(2)

                           
                  (6)      (a)      Distribution Agreement,
                           dated February 28, 1997, between
                           Registrant and INVESCO Funds
                           Group, Inc.(2)

                           (b)      Distribution Agreement,
                           dated September 30, 1997,
                           between Registrant and INVESCO
                           Distributors, Inc.(3)

                  (7)      Defined Benefit Deferred
                           Compensation Plan for Non-
                           Interested Directors and
                           Trustees.(2)

<PAGE>


                  (8)      Custodian Contract, dated
                           October 20, 1993, between
                           Registrant and State Street Bank
                           and Trust Company.(3)

                           (a)      Amendment to Custody
                           Agreement dated October 25,
                           1995.(3)

                           (b)      Data Access Services
                           Addendum dated May 19,
                           1997.(3)

                  (9)      (a)      Transfer Agency Agreement,
                           dated February 28, 1997, between
                           Registrant and INVESCO Funds
                           Group, Inc.(2)

                           (b)      Administrative Service
                           Agreement, dated February 28,
                           1997, between Registrant and
                           INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.(2)

                           (c)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated March 22, 1994, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc., Transamerica Occidental
                           Life Insurance Company and
                           Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.(4)

                           (d)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated August 26, 1994, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc. and Security Life of Denver
                           Insurance Company.(3)

                           (e)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated September 19, 1994, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc. and First ING Life
                           Insurance Company of New York.(4)

                           (f)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated December 1, 1994, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc., First Transamerica Life
                           Insurance Company and Charles
                           Schwab & Co., Inc.(4)

                           (g)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated September 14, 1995, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc. and Southland Life
                           Insurance Company.(1)

                           (h)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated October 31, 1995, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc. and American Partners Life
                           Insurance Company.(1)

<PAGE>


                           (i)      Participation Agreement,
                           dated April 15, 1996, among
                           Registrant, INVESCO Funds Group,
                           Inc. and Allmerica Financial
                           Life Insurance and Annuity
                           Company.(2)

                           (j)      Participation
                           Agreement, dated December
                           4, 1996, among Registrant,
                           INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.
                           and American Centurion Life
                           Assurance Company.(3)

                           (k)      Participation
                           Agreement, dated April 15,
                           1997, among Registrant,
                           INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.
                           and Prudential Insurance
                           Company of America.(3)

                  (10)     Opinion and consent of counsel as to
                           the  legality of the securities being 
                           registered,  indicating  whether they 
                           will, when sold, be legally  issued,  
                           fully paid and non-assessable.(3)

                  (11)     Consent of Independent Accountants.

                  (12)     Not applicable.

                  (13)     Not applicable.

                  (14)     Not applicable.

                  (15)     Not applicable.

                  (16)     (a) Schedule for computation of
                           performance data for Industrial
                           Income Fund.(1)

                           (b) Schedule for computation of
                           performance data for Total Return
                           Fund.(1)

                           (c) Schedule for computation of
                           performance data for High Yield
                           Fund.(1)

                           (d) Schedule for computation of
                           yield data.(1)

                  (17)     (a) Financial Data Schedule for
                           the year ended December 31, 1997
                           for INVESCO VIF-Industrial Income
                           Portfolio.

                           (b)  Financial  Data  Schedule  for  
                           the  year  ended December 31, 1997 
                           for INVESCO VIF-Total Return
                           Portfolio.

<PAGE>


                           (c)  Financial  Data  Schedule  for  
                           the  year  ended December 31, 1997 
                           for INVESCO VIF-High Yield
                           Portfolio.

                           (d)  Financial  Data  Schedule  for  
                           the  year  ended December   31,   1997
                           for   INVESCO   VIF-Utilities
                           Portfolio.

                           (e)  Financial  Data Schedule for 
                           period from May 22, 1997  
                           (inception)  through  December 31,  
                           1997 for INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences 
                           Portfolio.

                           (f)  Financial  Data Schedule for 
                           period from May 21, 1997  
                           (inception)  through  December 31,  
                           1997  for  INVESCO VIF - Technology 
                           Portfolio.

                           (g)  Financial  Data  Schedule for 
                           period from August 25, 1997  
                           (inception)  through  December 31, 
                           1997 for INVESCO VIF - Dynamics 
                           Portfolio.

                           (h)  Finanical  Data  Schedule for 
                           period from August 25, 1997  
                           (inception)  through  December 31, 
                           1997 for INVESCO VIF - Small 
                           Company Growth Portfolio.

                           (i)  Financial  Data  Schedule for
                           period from August 25, 1997  
                           (inception)  through  December 31,
                           1997 for INVESCO VIF - Growth 
                           Portfolio.

                  (18)     Not Applicable.
- ------------------

(1)Previously  filed  on  EDGAR  with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  4 to  the
Registrant's  Registration  Statement on April 11, 1996, and herein incorporated
by reference.

(2)Previously  filed  on  EDGAR  with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  6 to  the
Registrant's   Registration   Statement  on  February   14,  1997,   and  herein
incorporated by reference.

(3)Previously  filed with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 7 to the  Registrant's
Registration  Statement  on  November  12,  1997,  and  herein  incorporated  by
reference.

(4)Previously  filed with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 8 to the  Registrant's
Registration  Statement  on  November  24,  1997,  and  herein  incorporated  by
reference.

<PAGE>

Item 25.          Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with
                  Registrant
                  
                  No person is presently  controlled by or under common  control
with the Company.

Item 26.          Number of Holders of Securities
                 
                                                                Number of Record
                                                                Holders as of
         Title of Class                                         January 31, 1998
         --------------                                         ----------------
         INVESCO VIF - Industrial Income Portfolio                      16
         INVESCO VIF - Total Return Portfolio                           10
         INVESCO VIF - High Yield Portfolio                              9
         INVESCO VIF - Utilities Portfolio                               6
         INVESCO VIF - Health Sciences Portfolio                         3
         INVESCO VIF - Technology Portfolio                              3
         INVESCO VIF - Dynamics Portfolio                                1
         INVESCO VIF - Small Company Growth Portfolio                    1
         INVESCO VIF - Growth Portfolio                                  1

Item 27.          Indemnification

         Indemnification  provisions  for  officers,  directors and employees of
Registrant  are  set  forth  in  Article  VII,  Section  2 of  the  Articles  of
Incorporation,  and are hereby incorporated by reference.  See Item 24(b)(1) and
(2) above.  Under these Articles,  officers and directors will be indemnified to
the fullest extent  permitted by law, subject only to such limitations as may be
required  by the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940,  as  amended,  and the rules
thereunder. Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the directors and officers
of the  Company  cannot be  protected  against  liability  to the Company or its
shareholders to which they would be subject because of willful misfeasance,  bad
faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties of their office. The
Company also maintains  liability  insurance policies covering its directors and
officers.

Item 28.          Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser

         See   "Management"  in  the  Prospectus  and  Statement  of  Additional
Information for information regarding the business of the investment adviser and
sub-advisers.  For  information  as to the  business,  profession,  vocation  or
employment  of a  substantial  nature of each of the officers  and  directors of
INVESCO Funds Group, Inc., INVESCO Trust Company and INVESCO Capital Management,
Inc.,  reference  is made to the  Schedule  Ds to the Form ADVs filed  under the
Investment  Advisers Act of 1940 by these companies,  which schedules are herein
incorporated by reference.

Item 29.          Principal Underwriters

                  (a)      INVESCO Capital Appreciation Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Diversified Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Emerging Opportunity Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc.
                           INVESCO Income Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Industrial Income Fund, Inc.
                           INVESCO International Funds, Inc.

<PAGE>

                           INVESCO Money Market Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Multiple Asset Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Specialty Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Strategic Portfolios, Inc.
                           INVESCO Tax-Free Income Funds, Inc.
                           INVESCO Value Trust




                 (b)
                              Positions and                        Positions and
Name and Principal            Offices with                         Offices with
Business Address              Underwriter                          Registrant
- ------------------            -------------                        -------------

William J. Galvin, Jr.        Senior Vice                          Assistant
7800 E. Union Avenue          President                            Secretary
Denver, CO  80237

Ronald L. Grooms              Senior Vice                          Treasurer,
7800 E. Union Avenue          President &                          Chief Fin'l
Denver, CO  80237             Treasurer                            Officer, and
                                                                   Chief Acctg.
                                                                   Off.

Dan J. Hesser                 Chairman of                          President,
7800 E. Union Avenue          the Board,                           CEO & Dir.
Denver, CO  80237             President ,
                              Chief Executive
                              Officer, &
                              Director

Gregory E. Hyde               Vice President
7800 E. Union Avenue
Denver, CO 80237

Charles P. Mayer              Director
7800 E. Union Avenue
Denver, CO 80237

Glen A. Payne                 Senior Vice                          Secretary
7800 E. Union Avenue          President,
Denver, CO  80237             Secretary &
                              General Counsel

Judy P. Wiese                 Vice President                       Asst. Treas.
7800 E. Union Avenue
enver, CO  80237




<PAGE>



                  (c)      Not applicable.

Item 30.          Location of Accounts and Records

                  Dan J. Hesser
                  7800 E. Union Avenue
                  Denver, CO  80237

Item 31.          Management Services

                  Not applicable.

Item 32.          Undertakings

                  (a)      The Registrant hereby undertakes that its board of
                           directors will call such meetings of shareholders
                           of the Funds, for action by shareholder vote,
                           including acting on the question of removal of a
                           director or directors, as may be requested in
                           writing by the holders of at least 10% of the
                           outstanding shares of a Fund or as may be required
                           by applicable law or the Company's Articles of
                           Incorporation, and to assist shareholders in commu
                           nicating with other shareholders as required by the
                           Investment Company Act of 1940.

                  (b)      The  Registrant  hereby  undertakes  to furnish  each
                           person to whom a prospectus is delivered  with a copy
                           of   Registrant's   latest  annual  report  to  share
                           holders, upon request and without charge.




<PAGE>



         Pursuant to the requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933 and  the
Investment  Company Act of 1940, the  registrant  certifies that it meets all of
the requirements for  effectiveness of this Registration  Statement  pursuant to
Rule  485(b)  under  the  Securities  Act of  1933  and  has  duly  caused  this
post-effective  amendment  to be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Denver, County of Denver, and State of
Colorado, on the 25th day of February, 1998.

Attest:                                  INVESCO Variable Investment
                                         Funds, Inc.

/s/ Glen A. Payne                        /s/ Dan J. Hesser
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Glen A. Payne, Secretary                 Dan J. Hesser, President

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  this
post-effective amendment to Registrant's  Registration Statement has been signed
by the  following  persons  in the  capacities  indicated  on this  25th  day of
February, 1998.

/s/ Dan J. Hesser                        /s/ Lawrence H. Budner
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Dan J. Hesser, President &               Lawrence H. Budner, Director
Director, (Chief Executive Officer)

/s/ Ronald L. Grooms                     /s/ Daniel D. Chabris
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Ronald L. Grooms, Treasurer              Daniel D. Chabris, Director
(Chief Financial and Accounting
Officer)

/s/ Victor L. Andrews                    /s/ Fred A. Deering
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Victor L. Andrews, Director              Fred A. Deering, Director

/s/ Bob R. Baker                         /s/ Larry Soll
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Bob R. Baker, Director                   Larry Soll, Director

/s/ Hubert L. Harris, Jr.                /s/ Kenneth T. King, Director
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Hubert L. Harris, Jr., Director          Kenneth T. King, Director

/s/ Charles W. Brady                     /s/ John W. McIntyre
- -----------------------------            ---------------------------------------
Charles W. Brady, Director               John W. McIntyre, Director

/s/ Wendy L. Gramm
- -----------------------------
Wendy L. Gramm, Director

By*                                      By* /s/ Glen A. Payne  
   --------------------------                -----------------------------------
     Edward F. O'Keefe                           Glen A. Payne
     Attorney in Fact                            Attorney in Fact

* Original Powers of Attorney  authorizing  Edward F. O'Keefe and Glen A. Payne,
and each of them, to execute this  post-effective  amendment to the Registration
Statement of the Registrant on behalf of the above-named  directors and officers
(with the  exception  of Larry Soll and Wendy L. Gramm) of the  Registrant  have
been filed  with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  on October 8, 1993,
December  22,  1993,  March 22,  1994,  January 30, 1995 and  February 28, 1995,
October 7, 1996 and November 24, 1997.


<PAGE>


                                  Exhibit Index

                                                                 Page in
Exhibit Number                                            Registration Statement
- --------------                                            ----------------------
       
     11                                                            102
     17(a)                                                         103
     17(b)                                                         104
     17(c)                                                         105
     17(d)                                                         106
     17(e)                                                         107
     17(f)                                                         108
     17(g)                                                         109
     17(h)                                                         110
     17(i)                                                         111






                      Consent of Independent Accountants

We hereby  consent to the  incorporation  by reference in the  Prospectuses  and
Statement of Additional  Information  constituting parts of this  Post-Effective
Amendment No. 9 to the  registration  statement on Form N-1A (the  "registraiton
Statement")  of our report  dated  February 6, 1998,  relating  to the financial
statements  and financial  highlights  appearing in the December 31, 1997 Annual
Report to Shareholders of INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc., which is also
incorporated by reference into the  Registration  Statement.  We also consent to
the  references  to  us  under  the  heading   "Financial   Highlights"  in  the
Prospectuses  and under the headings  "Independent  Accountants"  and "Financial
Statements" in the Statement of Additional Information.



/s/ Price Waterhouse LLP
- ------------------------
Price Waterhouse LLP

Denver, Colorado
February 24, 1998









[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 1
   [NAME] VIF--HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   YEAR
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                         28919563
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                        29308962
[RECEIVABLES]                                  1508578
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                     740
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                            337638
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                31155918
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                        230500
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                        44504
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                             275004
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                      30364634
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                          2478386
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                          1191508
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                        24007
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                         102874
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                        389399
[NET-ASSETS]                                  30880914
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                11212
[INTEREST-INCOME]                              1789476
[OTHER-INCOME]                                   58536
[EXPENSES-NET]                                  156599
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                        1702625
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                       1351668
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                        69593
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                          1421261
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                      1687001
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                       1250049
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                        2645545
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                    1594764
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                             236097
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                        16842563
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                           8383
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                         4588
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                           117624
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                 184468
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                          19615358
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            11.78
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.78
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           1.26
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                              0.78
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                         0.58
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                              0.00
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              12.46
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 2
   [NAME] VIF--INDUSTRIAL INCOME PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   YEAR
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                         36224200
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                        41984248
[RECEIVABLES]                                   160147
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                    1364
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                              5887
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                42151646
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                       1911831
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                       146346
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                            2058177
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                      33741127
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                          2353217
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                          1559051
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                        28673
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                         563621
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                       5760048
[NET-ASSETS]                                  40093469
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                               445918
[INTEREST-INCOME]                               477209
[OTHER-INCOME]                                  (3950)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                  268893
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                         650284
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                       2766021
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                      3726765
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                          6492786
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                       621902
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                       2199803
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                        1689472
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                    1064382
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                             169076
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                        17751202
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                            330
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                           223880
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                 289996
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                          29776477
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            14.33
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.30
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           3.71
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                              0.29
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                         1.01
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                              0.00
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              17.04
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 3
   [NAME] VIF--TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   YEAR
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                         18980418
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                        22954618
[RECEIVABLES]                                   291504
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                     230
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                             50439
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                23296791
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                             0
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                        29200
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                              29200
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                      19208272
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                          1472825
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                          1023019
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                         5271
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                          79848
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                       3974200
[NET-ASSETS]                                  23267591
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                               280001
[INTEREST-INCOME]                               393621
[OTHER-INCOME]                                  (8180)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                  150921
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                         514521
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                        208618
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                      2541805
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                          2750423
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                       465401
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                        109339
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                        1194193
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                     782443
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                              37056
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                         9754488
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                      (46744)
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                         (1502)
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                           126159
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                 184560
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                          16902376
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            13.21
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.36
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           2.66
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                              0.34
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                         0.08
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                              0.00
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              15.81
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 4
   [NAME] VIF--UTILITIES PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   YEAR
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                          3839342
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                         4584032
[RECEIVABLES]                                     9495
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                     274
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                              4573
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                 4598374
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                             0
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                        10525
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                              10525
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                       3827152
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                           318697
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                           222570
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                         2424
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                          13583
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                        744690
[NET-ASSETS]                                   4587849
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                               106319
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                18784
[OTHER-INCOME]                                   (491)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                   29375
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                          95237
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                         27459
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                       643128
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                           670587
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                        91300
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                         13881
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                         203031
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                     114385
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                               7481
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                         1927601
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                         (1508)
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                            19549
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  67438
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                           3358633
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            11.95
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.30
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           2.48
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                              0.29
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                         0.04
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                              0.00
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              14.40
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 5
   [NAME] VIF--DYNAMICS PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   OTHER
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-START]                             AUG-25-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                           242022
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                          246138
[RECEIVABLES]                                      172
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                       0
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                             11107
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                  257417
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                             0
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                            0
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                                  0
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                        249000
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                            24896
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                                0
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                          586
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                           3715
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                          4116
[NET-ASSETS]                                    257417
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                  478
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                  115
[OTHER-INCOME]                                     (7)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                       0
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                            586
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                          3715
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                         4116
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                             7831
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                            0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                             0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                          25100
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                        204
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                                  0
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                          256417
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                              554
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  31911
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                             99514
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            10.00
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.02
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           0.32
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                            0
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              10.34
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 6
   [NAME] VIF--SMALL COMPANY GROWTH PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   OTHER
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-START]                             AUG-25-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                           244972
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                          242606
[RECEIVABLES]                                       58
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                       0
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                             27667
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                  270331
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                         23769
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                            0
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                              23769
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                        248999
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                            24884
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                                0
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                          580
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                          (651)
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                        (2366)
[NET-ASSETS]                                    246562
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                  256
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                  224
[OTHER-INCOME]                                       0
[EXPENSES-NET]                                       0
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                            480
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                         (551)
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                       (2366)
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                           (2917)
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                            0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                             0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                          25100
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                        216
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                                  0
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                          246562
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                              684
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  33184
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                            254303
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            10.00
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.02
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                         (0.11)
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                            0
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                               9.91
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 7
   [NAME] VIF--HEALTH SCIENCES PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   OTHER
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-START]                             MAY-22-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                           309027
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                          342790
[RECEIVABLES]                                      194
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                       0
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                             85066
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                  428050
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                          5092
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                            0
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                               5092
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                        401492
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                            38318
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                                0
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                         3759
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                        (16056)
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                         33763
[NET-ASSETS]                                    422958
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                  758
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                 3012
[OTHER-INCOME]                                    (11)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                       0
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                           3759
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                       (16056)
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                        33763
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                            17707
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                            0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                             0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                          85855
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                      47537
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                                  0
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                          422958
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                             1191
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  34453
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                            276821
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            10.00
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.10
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           0.94
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                            0
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              11.04
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      1
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 8
   [NAME] VIF--TECHNOLOGY PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   OTHER
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-START]                             MAY-21-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                           405497
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                          388306
[RECEIVABLES]                                      207
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                       0
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                             31294
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                  419807
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                             0
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                         5381
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                               5381
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                        424294
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                            36077
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                                0
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                         1686
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                           5637
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                       (17191)
[NET-ASSETS]                                    414426
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                  294
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                 1392
[OTHER-INCOME]                                       0
[EXPENSES-NET]                                       0
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                           1686
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                          5637
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                      (17191)
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                          (11554)
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                            0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                             0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                         122865
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                      86788
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                                  0
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                          414426
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                             1318
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  34205
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                            276521
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            10.00
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.05
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           1.44
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                            0
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              11.49
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      0
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>

[ARTICLE] 6
[SERIES]
   [NUMBER] 9
   [NAME] VIF--GROWTH PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>
[PERIOD-TYPE]                   OTHER
[FISCAL-YEAR-END]                          DEC-31-1997
[PERIOD-START]                             AUG-25-1997
[PERIOD-END]                               DEC-31-1997
[INVESTMENTS-AT-COST]                           246908
[INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE]                          264438
[RECEIVABLES]                                      319
[ASSETS-OTHER]                                       0
[OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS]                              6886
[TOTAL-ASSETS]                                  271643
[PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES]                          5416
[SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT]                              0
[OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES]                            0
[TOTAL-LIABILITIES]                               5416
[SENIOR-EQUITY]                                      0
[PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON]                        249000
[SHARES-COMMON-STOCK]                            24905
[SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR]                                0
[ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT]                         1333
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII]                               0
[ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS]                         (1636)
[OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS]                             0
[ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC]                         17530
[NET-ASSETS]                                    266227
[DIVIDEND-INCOME]                                 1237
[INTEREST-INCOME]                                  115
[OTHER-INCOME]                                    (19)
[EXPENSES-NET]                                       0
[NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME]                           1333
[REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT]                        (1636)
[APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT]                        17530
[NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS]                            15894
[EQUALIZATION]                                       0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME]                            0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS]                             0
[DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER]                                0
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD]                          25100
[NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED]                        195
[SHARES-REINVESTED]                                  0
[NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS]                          265227
[ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR]                            0
[OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR]                              0
[OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR]                           0
[GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES]                              781
[INTEREST-EXPENSE]                                   0
[GROSS-EXPENSE]                                  26433
[AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS]                            183757
[PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN]                            10.00
[PER-SHARE-NII]                                   0.05
[PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC]                           0.64
[PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS]                            0
[RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL]                                 0
[PER-SHARE-NAV-END]                              10.69
[EXPENSE-RATIO]                                      0
[AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING]                               0
[AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE]                                 0
</TABLE>


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission