Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

Form N-CSR

 

 

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act File Number: 811-21563

 

 

Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

 

 

Two International Place, Boston, Massachusetts 02110

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

 

Maureen A. Gemma

Two International Place, Boston, Massachusetts 02110

(Name and Address of Agent for Services)

 

 

(617) 482-8260

(Registrant’s Telephone Number)

October 31

Date of Fiscal Year End

October 31, 2017

Date of Reporting Period

 

 

 


Item 1. Reports to Stockholders


LOGO

 

 

Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund (EVG)

Annual Report

October 31, 2017

 

 

 

 

LOGO


 

 

Commodity Futures Trading Commission Registration. Effective December 31, 2012, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) adopted certain regulatory changes that subject registered investment companies and advisers to regulation by the CFTC if a fund invests more than a prescribed level of its assets in certain CFTC-regulated instruments (including futures, certain options and swap agreements) or markets itself as providing investment exposure to such instruments. The Fund has claimed an exclusion from the definition of the term “commodity pool operator” under the Commodity Exchange Act. Accordingly, neither the Fund nor the adviser with respect to the operation of the Fund is subject to CFTC regulation. Because of its management of other strategies, the Fund’s adviser is registered with the CFTC as a commodity pool operator and a commodity trading advisor.

Fund shares are not insured by the FDIC and are not deposits or other obligations of, or guaranteed by, any depository institution. Shares are subject to investment risks, including possible loss of principal invested.


Annual Report October 31, 2017

Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

Table of Contents

 

Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance

     2  

Performance

     3  

Fund Profile

     3  

Endnotes and Additional Disclosures

     4  

Financial Statements

     5  

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

     44  

Federal Tax Information

     45  

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

     46  

Management and Organization

     48  

Important Notices

     51  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance1

 

 

Economic and Market Conditions

The world’s financial markets generated broad gains during the 12 months ended October 31, 2017, a period characterized by synchronized global growth, subdued inflation and abundant liquidity. Higher-yielding fixed-income sectors posted healthy increases during the period. Credit spreads narrowed globally, while interest rates generally rose in developed markets and declined in emerging markets. The U.S. dollar weakened against most foreign currencies. Equity returns were strong across developed and emerging markets.

The period began with the unexpected outcome of the U.S. presidential election, which came less than five months after the U.K.’s stunning vote to leave the European Union (EU). Optimism about the new administration’s pro-growth agenda sparked a rally in domestic equities and corporate credit that continued throughout much of the period. While investors awaited fiscal stimulus, the U.S. economy continued to grow at a modest pace, and corporate earnings strengthened. The Federal Reserve (the Fed) raised interest rates three times during the period, despite softening inflation, and began reducing the size of its balance sheet in October 2017.

Overseas, election outcomes in France and the Netherlands dampened concerns about the stability of the EU, and acceleration in the eurozone economy further lifted investor sentiment. The European Central Bank tapered its monthly bond purchases, but extended the length of its bond-buying program and held interest rates at record lows. The Bank of Japan maintained its ultra-easy policies, and Prime Minister Abe won a strong mandate in Japan’s national election, allowing his economic reforms to continue. Government spending bolstered China’s economy, and the rising price of oil and other commodities benefited Russia and Brazil.

Fund Performance

For the fiscal year ended October 31, 2017, Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund (the Fund) had a total return of 9.16% at net asset value (NAV).

Investments in Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) had a positive contribution to the Fund’s performance. The agency MBS market digested the implementation of the Fed’s balance sheet normalization plan better than anticipated and mortgage spreads ground tighter throughout the year. The Fund

maintained its focus on high-coupon seasoned agency MBS, due to the prepay protection of loans originated more than a decade ago. U.S. interest rates increased during the period, and higher rates typically translate into lower refinancing activity. The Fund benefited from its position in Floating-Rate Agency MBS, which outperformed Fixed-Rate Agency MBS and U.S. Treasurys over the course of the year. As the short end of the yield curve rose on the back of Fed Rate hikes, the coupons in Floating-Rate Agency MBS reset higher, providing more yield to buyers going forward.

Investments in senior secured loans also contributed to Fund performance. Security selection overall was beneficial to Fund performance versus the S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index (the Index),2 with loan picks in the Fund outpacing those within the Index at large. Providing a slight offset was the Fund’s relative underweight to lower rated credit8 segments of the market, namely the CCC and D (defaulted) ratings tiers within the Index. For the period, the Fund held overweight positions in the BB- and B-rated segments of the loan Index — which returned 3.97% and 5.13%, respectively — while maintaining underweights to CCC- and D-rated segments of the Index — which returned 15.22% and 9.94%, respectively.

The Fund’s exposure to non-U.S. instruments contributed to Fund performance during the 12-month period. Select long investments in emerging and frontier sovereign credit performed well, as did a long position in the Icelandic krona versus the euro. Certain of these exposures were gained via the use of credit-default swaps and those instruments, themselves, were positive contributors to performance. During the period, sovereign credit markets in developing countries, in aggregate, performed well as the combination of attractive yields and a relatively benign macro backdrop lured investor interest. Meanwhile, driven by thriving tourism, Iceland’s economy continued to grow at a solid pace, and the government removed the remaining capital controls it had implemented in the wake of the global financial crisis. The Fund’s stake in the Colombian peso detracted from relative performance.

 

See Endnotes and Additional Disclosures in this report.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Returns are historical and are calculated by determining the percentage change in net asset value (NAV) or market price (as applicable) with all distributions reinvested and include management fees and other expenses. Fund performance at market price will differ from its results at NAV due to factors such as changing perceptions about the Fund, market conditions, fluctuations in supply and demand for Fund shares, or changes in Fund distributions. Investment return and principal value will fluctuate so that shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Performance less than or equal to one year is cumulative. Performance is for the stated time period only; due to market volatility, current Fund performance may be lower or higher than the quoted return. For performance as of the most recent month-end, please refer to eatonvance.com.

 

  2  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Performance3

 

Portfolio Managers Scott H. Page, CFA, Payson F. Swaffield, CFA, Catherine C. McDermott, Andrew Szczurowski, CFA, Eric Stein, CFA and Sarah C. Orvin, CFA

 

% Average Annual Total Returns    Inception Date      One Year      Five Years      Ten Years  

Fund at NAV

     02/28/2005        9.16      4.29      5.56

Fund at Market Price

            13.86        3.33        5.96  
           
% Premium/Discount to NAV4                                
              –7.41
           
Distributions5                                

Total Distributions per share for the period

            $ 0.986  

Distribution Rate at NAV

              5.99

Distribution Rate at Market Price

              6.47
           
% Total Leverage6                                

Derivatives

              17.32

Borrowings

              19.23  

Fund Profile

 

 

Asset Allocation (% of total leveraged assets)7

 

 

LOGO

    

 

 

See Endnotes and Additional Disclosures in this report.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Returns are historical and are calculated by determining the percentage change in net asset value (NAV) or market price (as applicable) with all distributions reinvested and include management fees and other expenses. Fund performance at market price will differ from its results at NAV due to factors such as changing perceptions about the Fund, market conditions, fluctuations in supply and demand for Fund shares, or changes in Fund distributions. Investment return and principal value will fluctuate so that shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Performance less than or equal to one year is cumulative. Performance is for the stated time period only; due to market volatility, current Fund performance may be lower or higher than the quoted return. For performance as of the most recent month-end, please refer to eatonvance.com.

 

  3  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Endnotes and Additional Disclosures

 

 

1 

The views expressed in this report are those of the portfolio manager(s) and are current only through the date stated at the top of this page. These views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions, and Eaton Vance and the Fund(s) disclaim any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied upon as investment advice and, because investment decisions are based on many factors, may not be relied upon as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Eaton Vance fund. This commentary may contain statements that are not historical facts, referred to as “forward looking statements”. The Fund’s actual future results may differ significantly from those stated in any forward looking statement, depending on factors such as changes in securities or financial markets or general economic conditions, the volume of sales and purchases of Fund shares, the continuation of investment advisory, administrative and service contracts, and other risks discussed from time to time in the Fund’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

2

S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index is an unmanaged index of the institutional leveraged loan market. Unless otherwise stated, index returns do not reflect the effect of any applicable sales charges, commissions, expenses, taxes or leverage, as applicable. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.

 

3 

Performance results reflect the effects of leverage. Absent an expense waiver by the investment adviser, the returns would be lower.

 

4 

The shares of the Fund often trade at a discount or premium from their net asset value. The discount or premium of the Fund may vary over time and may be higher or lower than what is quoted in this report. For up-to-date premium/discount information, please refer to http://eatonvance.com/closedend.

 

5 

The Distribution Rate is based on the Fund’s last regular distribution per share in the period (annualized) divided by the Fund’s NAV or market price at the end of the period. The Fund’s distributions may be comprised of amounts characterized for federal income tax purposes as qualified and non-qualified ordinary dividends, capital gains and nondividend distributions, also known as return of capital. For additional information about nondividend distributions, please refer to Eaton Vance Closed-End Fund Distribution Notices (19a) posted on our website, eatonvance.com. The Fund will determine the federal income tax character of distributions paid to a shareholder after the end of the calendar year. This is reported on the IRS form 1099-DIV and provided to the shareholder shortly after each year-end. For information about the tax character of distributions made in prior calendar years, please refer to Performance-Tax Character of Distributions on the Fund’s webpage available at eatonvance.com.

   The Fund’s distributions are determined by the investment adviser based on its current assessment of the Fund’s long-term return potential. Fund distributions may be affected by numerous factors including changes in Fund performance, the cost of financing for leverage, portfolio holdings, realized and projected returns, and other factors. As portfolio and market conditions change, the rate of distributions paid by the Fund could change.

 

6 

The Fund employs leverage through derivatives and borrowings. Total leverage is shown as a percentage of the Fund’s aggregate net assets plus the absolute notional value of long and short derivatives and borrowings outstanding. Use of leverage creates an opportunity for income, but creates risks including greater price volatility. The cost of borrowings rises and falls with changes in short-term interest rates. The Fund may be required to maintain prescribed asset coverage for its leverage and may be required to reduce its leverage at an inopportune time.

 

7 

Total leveraged assets include all assets of the Fund (including those acquired with financial leverage) and derivatives held by the Fund. Asset Allocation as a percentage of the Fund’s net assets amounted to 157.6%. Please refer to the definition of total leveraged assets within the Notes to Financial Statements included herein.

 

8 

Credit ratings are categorized using S&P. If S&P does not publish a rating, then the Moody’s rating is applied. Ratings, which are subject to change, apply to the creditworthiness of the issuers of the underlying securities and not to the Fund or its shares. Credit ratings measure the quality of a bond based on the issuer’s creditworthiness, with ratings ranging from AAA, being the highest, to D, being the lowest based on S&P’s measures. Ratings of BBB or higher by S&P or Baa or higher by Moody’s are considered to be investment-grade quality. Credit ratings are based largely on the ratings agency’s analysis at the time of rating. The rating assigned to any particular security is not necessarily a reflection of the issuer’s current financial condition and does not necessarily reflect its assessment of the volatility of a security’s market value or of the liquidity of an investment in the security. Holdings designated as “Not Rated” are not rated by the national ratings agencies stated above.

 

   Fund profile subject to change due to active management.
 

 

  4  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments

 

 

Senior Floating-Rate Loans — 34.5%(1)  
     
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Aerospace and Defense — 0.5%

 

TransDigm, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.33%, (USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing June 4, 2021(2)

      314     $ 316,206  

Term Loan, 4.27%, (USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing June 9, 2023(2)

      663       666,163  

Term Loan, 4.26%, (USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing August 22, 2024(2)

      495       498,471  
                         
      $ 1,480,840  
                         

Automotive — 1.0%

 

Allison Transmission, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing September 23, 2022

      234     $ 235,273  

CS Intermediate Holdco 2, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing November 2, 2023

      284       285,600  

Dayco Products, LLC

     

Term Loan, 6.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing May 19, 2023

      175       176,308  

FCA US, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing December 31, 2018

      216       217,035  

Federal-Mogul Holdings Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing April 15, 2021

      517       520,857  

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (The)

     

Term Loan - Second Lien, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing April 30, 2019

      383       385,330  

Horizon Global Corporation

     

Term Loan, 5.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing June 30, 2021

      75       75,993  

Sage Automotive Interiors, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing October 27, 2022

      124       124,528  

Tower Automotive Holdings USA, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.00%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing March 7, 2024

      518       521,594  

Visteon Corporation

     

Term Loan, 3.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing March 24, 2024

      102       102,742  
                         
      $ 2,645,260  
                         
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Beverage and Tobacco — 0.1%

 

Flavors Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 7.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.75%), Maturing April 3, 2020

      345     $ 324,722  

Refresco Group B.V.

     

Term Loan, Maturing September 26, 2024(3)

      50       50,375  
                         
      $ 375,097  
                         

Brokerage / Securities Dealers / Investment Houses — 0.2%

 

Aretec Group, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing November 23, 2020

      103     $ 103,402  

Term Loan - Second Lien, 6.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50% (2.00% Cash, 4.74% PIK)), Maturing May 23, 2021

      225       224,289  

Salient Partners L.P.

     

Term Loan, 9.85%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.50%), Maturing May 19, 2021

      133       128,949  
                         
      $ 456,640  
                         

Building and Development — 0.9%

 

Core & Main L.P.

     

Term Loan, 4.46%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing August 1, 2024

      125     $ 126,224  

CPG International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing May 3, 2024

      392       395,324  

DTZ U.S. Borrower, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.59%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing November 4, 2021

      514       517,098  

Hanjin International Corp.

     

Term Loan, 3.85%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing September 20, 2020

      75       75,375  

Ply Gem Industries, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing February 1, 2021

      297       299,518  

Quikrete Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing November 15, 2023

      447       447,742  

RE/MAX International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing December 15, 2023

      399       400,395  

Summit Materials Companies I, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 17, 2022

      122       123,308  

VICI Properties 1, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 14, 2022

      132       132,751  
                         
      $ 2,517,735  
                         
 

 

  5   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Business Equipment and Services — 3.8%

 

Acosta Holdco, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing September 26, 2021

      532     $ 468,770  

Altisource Solutions S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 4.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 9, 2020

      122       117,407  

Avatar Purchaser, Inc.

     

Term Loan, Maturing September 6, 2024(3)

      200       200,500  

Belron S.A.

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 26, 2024(3)

      75       75,656  

Change Healthcare Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing March 1, 2024

      1,169       1,176,757  

Charah, LLC

     

Term Loan, 7.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.25%), Maturing October 25, 2024

      100       100,500  

Corporate Capital Trust, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.63%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing May 20, 2019

      1,048       1,051,157  

CPM Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing April 11, 2022

      246       249,680  

Cypress Intermediate Holdings III, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing April 27, 2024

      224       225,400  

DigiCert, Inc.

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 31, 2024(3)

      150       152,100  

Education Management, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.85%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing July 2, 2020(4)

      67       31,992  

Term Loan, 8.85%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.50%), Maturing July 2, 2020(4)

      152       0  

EIG Investors Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing February 9, 2023

      566       572,405  

Extreme Reach, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 7.59%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.25%), Maturing February 7, 2020

      107       106,662  

First Data Corporation

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing July 8, 2022

      481       482,986  

Garda World Security Corporation

     

Term Loan, 5.31%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing May 24, 2024

      320       322,764  

GreenSky Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing August 26, 2024

      250       251,250  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Business Equipment and Services (continued)

 

IG Investment Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing October 31, 2021

      434     $ 440,249  

Information Resources, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.62%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing January 18, 2024

      174       175,997  

J.D. Power and Associates

     

Term Loan, 5.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing September 7, 2023

      174       175,577  

KAR Auction Services, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.63%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing March 11, 2021

      351       353,535  

Kronos Incorporated

     

Term Loan, 4.81%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing November 1, 2023

      1,042       1,050,408  

Monitronics International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing September 30, 2022

      393       390,595  

PGX Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.25%), Maturing September 29, 2020

      337       337,022  

Prime Security Services Borrower, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing May 2, 2022

      298       300,985  

Red Ventures, LLC

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 11, 2022(3)

      200       198,875  

Spin Holdco, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing November 14, 2022

      616       619,947  

Techem GmbH

     

Term Loan, 3.00%, (3 mo. EURIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing July 31, 2024

    EUR       200       234,911  

Tempo Acquisition, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing May 1, 2024

      150       150,295  

Vantiv, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing October 14, 2023

      81       82,061  

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing August 7, 2024

      150       150,969  

Term Loan, Maturing September 18, 2024(3)

      50       50,167  

West Corporation

     

Term Loan, 5.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing October 10, 2024

      175       175,175  
                         
      $ 10,472,754  
                         
 

 

  6   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Cable and Satellite Television — 1.4%

 

Atlantic Broadband Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing November 30, 2019

      127     $ 127,390  

Charter Communications Operating, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing January 15, 2024

      369       372,402  

CSC Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing July 17, 2025

      457       456,503  

MCC Iowa, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.71%, (1 week USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing January 29, 2021

      168       168,452  

Numericable Group S.A.

     

Term Loan, 4.13%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 31, 2025

      323       323,527  

Telenet Financing USD, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 30, 2025

      100       100,514  

UPC Financing Partnership

     

Term Loan, 3.73%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing January 15, 2026

      450       452,025  

Virgin Media Bristol, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing January 31, 2025

      1,275       1,281,275  

Ziggo Secured Finance Partnership

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing April 15, 2025

      625       627,083  
                         
      $ 3,909,171  
                         

Chemicals and Plastics — 1.5%

 

Ashland, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.29%, (USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing May 17, 2024(2)

      100     $ 100,457  

Avantor, Inc.

     

Term Loan, Maturing September 7, 2024(3)

      200       200,719  

Axalta Coating Systems US Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing June 1, 2024

      374       376,556  

Emerald Performance Materials, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing August 1, 2021

      336       338,686  

Term Loan - Second Lien, 8.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.75%), Maturing August 1, 2022

      100       100,156  

Gemini HDPE, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.38%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing August 7, 2021

      363       365,319  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Chemicals and Plastics (continued)

 

H.B. Fuller Company

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing October 12, 2024

      325     $ 327,263  

Ineos US Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.94%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing March 31, 2022

      122       122,355  

Term Loan, Maturing March 31, 2024(3)

      525       525,000  

Kraton Polymers, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing January 6, 2022

      98       99,380  

MacDermid, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing June 7, 2023

      278       279,757  

PolyOne Corporation

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing November 11, 2022

      98       98,988  

PQ Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.63%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing November 4, 2022

      222       224,990  

Solenis International L.P.

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (3 mo. EURIBOR + 3.50%, Floor 1.00%), Maturing July 31, 2021

    EUR       170       200,428  

Tata Chemicals North America, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.13%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing August 7, 2020

      161       161,427  

Tronox Blocked Borrower, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing September 22, 2024

      159       159,787  

Tronox Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing September 22, 2024

      366       368,740  
                         
      $ 4,050,008  
                         

Conglomerates — 0.1%

 

Spectrum Brands, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.29%, (USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing June 23, 2022(2)

      324     $ 326,925  
                         
      $ 326,925  
                         

Containers and Glass Products — 0.3%

 

Consolidated Container Company, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing May 22, 2024

      50     $ 50,414  

Horizon Holdings III SAS

     

Term Loan, 2.75%, (6 mo. EURIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing October 29, 2022

    EUR       300       349,848  
 

 

  7   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Containers and Glass Products (continued)

 

Pelican Products, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing April 11, 2020

      418     $ 420,329  
                         
      $ 820,591  
                         

Cosmetics / Toiletries — 0.2%

 

Galleria Co.

     

Term Loan, 4.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing September 29, 2023

      325     $ 325,407  

KIK Custom Products, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing August 26, 2022

      246       248,602  
                         
      $ 574,009  
                         

Drugs — 1.5%

 

Alkermes, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.07%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing September 25, 2021

      71     $ 71,897  

Amneal Pharmaceuticals, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing November 1, 2019

      630       635,694  

Arbor Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing July 5, 2023

      268       268,795  

Endo Luxembourg Finance Company I S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 5.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing April 29, 2024

      773       784,079  

Horizon Pharma, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.00%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing March 29, 2024

      565       568,530  

Mallinckrodt International Finance S.A.

     

Term Loan, 4.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing September 24, 2024

      734       736,134  

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.75%), Maturing April 1, 2022

      988       1,008,568  
                         
      $ 4,073,697  
                         

Ecological Services and Equipment — 0.2%

 

EnergySolutions, LLC

     

Term Loan, 6.09%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.75%), Maturing May 29, 2020

      459     $ 467,261  

GFL Environmental, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing September 29, 2023

      149       149,335  
                         
      $ 616,596  
                         
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Electronics / Electrical — 3.7%

 

Almonde, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing June 13, 2024

      425     $ 424,362  

Answers Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan - Second Lien, 9.00%, (3 mo. USD Prime + 7.90%, Cap 1.10%), Maturing September 15, 2021

      30       29,000  

Applied Systems, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.57%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing September 19, 2024

      350       354,764  

Avast Software B.V.

     

Term Loan, 4.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing September 29, 2023

      337       339,391  

Campaign Monitor Finance Pty. Limited

     

Term Loan, 6.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.25%), Maturing March 18, 2021

      118       115,112  

CommScope, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.37%, (USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing December 29, 2022(2)

      136       136,591  

Cypress Semiconductor Corporation

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 5, 2021

      188       189,082  

Electrical Components International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.09%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.75%), Maturing May 28, 2021

      606       610,791  

Electro Rent Corporation

     

Term Loan, 6.27%, (2 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing January 19, 2024

      223       226,662  

Exact Merger Sub, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing September 27, 2024

      100       101,000  

Excelitas Technologies Corp.

     

Term Loan, 6.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing October 31, 2020

      142       142,873  

Go Daddy Operating Company, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing February 15, 2024

      822       826,625  

GTCR Valor Companies, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing June 16, 2023

      125       126,982  

Hyland Software, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing July 1, 2022

      100       100,809  

Infoblox, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing November 7, 2023

      149       149,685  
 

 

  8   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Electronics / Electrical (continued)

 

Informatica Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing August 5, 2022

      416     $ 417,899  

Lattice Semiconductor Corporation

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing March 10, 2021

      88       88,784  

MA FinanceCo., LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing November 19, 2021

      875       875,686  

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 21, 2024

      26       25,849  

MTS Systems Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing July 5, 2023

      248       249,666  

Renaissance Learning, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing April 9, 2021

      121       122,099  

Rocket Software, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing October 14, 2023

      198       200,619  

Seattle Spinco, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 21, 2024

      174       174,562  

SkillSoft Corporation

     

Term Loan, 5.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.75%), Maturing April 28, 2021

      680       652,841  

Southwire Company

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing February 10, 2021

      393       395,492  

SS&C Technologies, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing July 8, 2022

      14       13,987  

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing July 8, 2022

      288       290,432  

SurveyMonkey, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.84%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing April 13, 2024

      299       302,617  

Synchronoss Technologies, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing January 19, 2024

      149       149,320  

Syncsort Incorporated

     

Term Loan, 6.31%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing August 9, 2024

      225       222,131  

Tibco Software, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 4, 2020

      150       150,625  

Uber Technologies

     

Term Loan, 5.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing July 13, 2023

      322       324,364  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Electronics / Electrical (continued)

 

VeriFone, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.00%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 8, 2021

      484     $ 486,169  

Veritas Bermuda Ltd.

     

Term Loan, 5.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing January 27, 2023

      419       421,872  

Wall Street Systems Delaware, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing August 26, 2023

      279       280,404  

Western Digital Corporation

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing April 29, 2023

      415       417,747  
                         
      $ 10,136,894  
                         

Equipment Leasing — 0.6%

 

Avolon TLB Borrower 1 (Luxembourg) S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing April 3, 2022

      748     $ 754,244  

Delos Finance S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 3.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing October 6, 2023

      425       428,719  

Flying Fortress, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing October 30, 2022

      500       503,437  
                         
      $ 1,686,400  
                         

Financial Intermediaries — 1.4%

 

Armor Holding II, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.84%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing June 26, 2020

      409     $ 413,920  

Citco Funding, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing March 31, 2022

      660       666,221  

Clipper Acquisitions Corp.

     

Term Loan, 3.57%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing February 6, 2020

      95       95,913  

Donnelley Financial Solutions, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing September 29, 2023

      57       57,500  

FinCo I, LLC

     

Term Loan, 2.75%, (USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 14, 2022

      200       202,896  

Focus Financial Partners, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.57%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing July 3, 2024

      175       176,794  
 

 

  9   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Financial Intermediaries (continued)

 

Freedom Mortgage Corporation

     

Term Loan, 6.96%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing February 23, 2022

      173     $ 176,902  

Greenhill & Co., Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.05%, (USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing October 12, 2022(2)

      150       150,844  

Guggenheim Partners, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 21, 2023

      211       212,443  

LPL Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.65%, (USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing September 23, 2024(2)

      249       250,349  

NXT Capital, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing November 22, 2022

      397       402,955  

Quality Care Properties, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.25%), Maturing October 31, 2022

      471       472,223  

Walker & Dunlop, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing December 11, 2020

      119       120,340  

Walter Investment Management Corp.

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing December 18, 2020

      607       574,604  
                         
      $ 3,973,904  
                         

Food Products — 1.0%

 

Alphabet Holding Company, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing September 26, 2024

      375     $ 367,441  

Blue Buffalo Company Ltd.

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing May 27, 2024

      150       151,028  

Del Monte Foods, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.57%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing February 18, 2021

      120       103,469  

High Liner Foods Incorporated

     

Term Loan, 4.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing April 24, 2021

      134       134,633  

HLF Financing S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 6.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing February 15, 2023

      217       219,371  

Jacobs Douwe Egberts International B.V.

     

Term Loan, 3.56%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing July 2, 2022

      320       322,510  

JBS USA, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing October 30, 2022

      1,095       1,078,767  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Food Products (continued)

 

Nomad Foods Europe Midco Limited

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing May 15, 2024

      100     $ 100,812  

Post Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing May 24, 2024

      274       275,838  
                         
      $ 2,753,869  
                         

Food Service — 0.3%

 

Pizza Hut Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing June 16, 2023

      173     $ 174,430  

Weight Watchers International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.55%, (USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing April 2, 2020(2)

      599       594,794  
                         
      $ 769,224  
                         

Food / Drug Retailers — 0.4%

 

Albertsons, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing August 25, 2021

      228     $ 221,791  

Term Loan, 4.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing June 22, 2023

      493       478,919  

General Nutrition Centers, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing March 4, 2019

      216       206,291  

Rite Aid Corporation

     

Term Loan - Second Lien, 6.00%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.75%), Maturing August 21, 2020

      100       101,250  
                         
      $ 1,008,251  
                         

Forest Products — 0.1%

 

Expera Specialty Solutions, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing November 3, 2023

      173     $ 174,549  
                         
      $ 174,549  
                         

Health Care — 3.9%

 

ADMI Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.11%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing April 30, 2022

      246     $ 248,227  

Akorn, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing April 16, 2021

      159       160,713  
 

 

  10   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Health Care (continued)

 

Alliance Healthcare Services, Inc.

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 24, 2023(3)

      125     $ 125,469  

Beaver-Visitec International, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing August 21, 2023

      149       148,500  

CareCore National, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing March 5, 2021

      568       569,349  

CHG Healthcare Services, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.63%, (USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing June 7, 2023(2)

      369       373,556  

Community Health Systems, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.07%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing December 31, 2019

      369       363,578  

Term Loan, 4.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing January 27, 2021

      684       663,469  

DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 24, 2021

      532       537,302  

DJO Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.54%, (USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing June 8, 2020(2)

      391       391,831  

Envision Healthcare Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing December 1, 2023

      1,315       1,323,171  

Genoa, a QoL Healthcare Company, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing October 28, 2023

      99       99,884  

Greatbatch Ltd.

     

Term Loan, 4.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 27, 2022

      149       149,508  

INC Research, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing August 1, 2024

      74       74,297  

Indivior Finance S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 7.39%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.00%), Maturing December 19, 2019

      153       154,461  

Kindred Healthcare, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.88%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing April 9, 2021

      729       732,785  

Kinetic Concepts, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing February 2, 2024

      499       498,854  

KUEHG Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing August 13, 2022

      295       296,722  

Term Loan - Second Lien, 9.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.25%), Maturing August 18, 2025

      50       50,125  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Health Care (continued)

 

Medical Depot Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing January 3, 2023

      147     $ 134,765  

MMM Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 10.25%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.75%), Maturing June 30, 2019

      84       82,324  

MPH Acquisition Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing June 7, 2023

      409       412,781  

MSO of Puerto Rico, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 10.25%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.75%), Maturing June 30, 2019

      61       59,849  

Navicure, Inc.

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 3, 2024(3)

      100       100,250  

New Millennium Holdco, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 7.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.50%), Maturing December 21, 2020

      87       43,570  

Opal Acquisition, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing November 27, 2020

      289       279,536  

Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics S.A.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing June 30, 2021

      532       534,841  

Parexel International Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing September 27, 2024

      400       404,400  

PharMerica Corporation

     

Term Loan, Maturing September 26, 2024(3)

      125       125,859  

Quintiles IMS Incorporated

     

Term Loan, 3.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing March 7, 2024

      575       579,468  

Term Loan, 3.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing January 31, 2025

      225       226,641  

Select Medical Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.85%, (USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing March 1, 2021(2)

      249       251,741  

Surgery Center Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing September 2, 2024

      150       149,212  

Tecomet, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.06%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing May 2, 2024

      125       125,155  

U.S. Anesthesia Partners, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing June 23, 2024

      150       150,186  
                         
      $ 10,622,379  
                         
 

 

  11   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Home Furnishings — 0.3%

 

Serta Simmons Bedding, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing November 8, 2023

      794     $ 785,399  
                         
      $ 785,399  
                         

Industrial Equipment — 1.3%

 

Apex Tool Group, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing January 31, 2020

      523     $ 519,377  

Clark Equipment Company

     

Term Loan, 4.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing May 18, 2024

      348       351,225  

Dragon Merger Sub, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.36%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing July 24, 2024

      125       126,484  

EWT Holdings III Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing January 15, 2021

      778       786,081  

Gardner Denver, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing July 30, 2024

      200       200,959  

Gates Global, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing April 1, 2024

      372       374,644  

Generac Power Systems, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.59%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing May 31, 2023

      252       252,810  

Paladin Brands Holding, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing August 15, 2022

      150       151,125  

Paternoster Holding IV GmbH

     

Term Loan, 6.00%, (3 mo. EURIBOR + 5.00%, Floor 1.00%), Maturing March 31, 2022

    EUR       175       207,066  

STS Operating, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing February 12, 2021

      328       330,583  

Tank Holding Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.54%, (USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing March 16, 2022(2)

      131       131,342  
                         
      $ 3,431,696  
                         

Insurance — 0.8%

 

Asurion, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing August 4, 2022

      952     $ 959,963  

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing November 3, 2023

      433       436,870  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Insurance (continued)

 

Cunningham Lindsey U.S., Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing December 10, 2019

      163     $ 161,128  

Hub International Limited

     

Term Loan, 4.31%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing October 2, 2020

      100       100,913  

USI, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.31%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing May 16, 2024

      400       400,950  
                         
      $ 2,059,824  
                         

Leisure Goods / Activities / Movies — 1.1%

 

AMC Entertainment, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing December 15, 2022

      392     $ 392,770  

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing December 15, 2023

      99       99,136  

Bombardier Recreational Products, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing June 30, 2023

      817       821,855  

CDS U.S. Intermediate Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.08%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing July 8, 2022

      193       194,743  

ClubCorp Club Operations, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.59%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing August 15, 2024

      275       275,902  

Delta 2 (LUX) S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing February 1, 2024

      125       125,990  

Emerald Expositions Holding, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing May 22, 2024

      175       176,144  

Lindblad Expeditions, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.95%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing May 8, 2021

      45       45,021  

Term Loan, 5.95%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing May 8, 2021

      346       348,912  

SRAM, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.53%, (2 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing March 15, 2024

      275       276,298  

Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.13%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing September 19, 2019

      372       363,681  
                         
      $ 3,120,452  
                         
 

 

  12   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Lodging and Casinos — 1.0%

 

Amaya Holdings B.V.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing August 1, 2021

      632     $ 636,420  

Term Loan - Second Lien, 8.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.00%), Maturing August 1, 2022

      244       246,443  

CityCenter Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing April 18, 2024

      349       351,007  

Golden Nugget, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.53%, (USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing October 4, 2023(2)

      125       126,068  

Hilton Worldwide Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing October 25, 2023

      844       850,223  

MGM Growth Properties Operating Partnership L.P.

     

Term Loan, 3.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing April 25, 2023

      369       371,684  

Playa Resorts Holding B.V.

     

Term Loan, 4.37%, (USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing April 5, 2024(2)

      175       175,072  
                         
      $ 2,756,917  
                         

Nonferrous Metals / Minerals — 0.5%

 

Fairmount Santrol, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.75%, (3 mo. USD Prime + 2.50%), Maturing September 5, 2019

      338     $ 338,171  

Term Loan, Maturing October 12, 2024(3)

      275       275,773  

Global Brass & Copper, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing July 18, 2023

      149       150,542  

Murray Energy Corporation

     

Term Loan, 8.58%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.25%), Maturing April 16, 2020

      355       318,780  

New Day Aluminum, LLC

     

Term Loan, 10.00%, (4.00% Cash, 6.00% PIK), Maturing October 28, 2020(4)(5)

      5       3,044  

Noranda Aluminum Acquisition Corporation

     

Term Loan, 0.00%, Maturing February 28, 2019(4)(6)

      84       13,434  

Oxbow Carbon, LLC

     

Term Loan - Second Lien, 8.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.00%), Maturing January 17, 2020

      150       150,656  
                         
      $ 1,250,400  
                         

Oil and Gas — 1.3%

 

Ameriforge Group, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 14.33%, (9.33% (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.00%) Cash, 5.00% PIK), Maturing June 8, 2022

      77     $ 81,742  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Oil and Gas (continued)

 

Aquilex Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing October 3, 2024

      125     $ 126,094  

BCP Raptor, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.52%, (2 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing June 24, 2024

      125       126,285  

Bronco Midstream Funding, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.32%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing August 15, 2020

      235       237,001  

CITGO Holding, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 9.84%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.50%), Maturing May 12, 2018

      128       130,179  

Crestwood Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 9.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 8.00%), Maturing June 19, 2019

      159       159,618  

Fieldwood Energy, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.21%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.875%), Maturing September 28, 2018

      196       188,044  

Green Plains Renewable Energy, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 6.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing August 18, 2023

      150       151,125  

MEG Energy Corp.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 31, 2023

      1,059       1,063,895  

Paragon Offshore Finance Company

     

Term Loan, 0.00%, Maturing July 18, 2021(4)(6)

      1       0  

Term Loan, 7.35%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.00% (1.00% Cash, 6.35% PIK)), Maturing July 18, 2022

      9       7,682  

Seadrill Partners Finco, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing February 21, 2021

      298       228,203  

Sheridan Investment Partners II L.P.

     

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 16, 2020

      27       23,254  

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 16, 2020

      73       62,352  

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing December 16, 2020

      527       448,231  

Sheridan Production Partners I, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 1, 2019

      17       14,421  

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 1, 2019

      28       23,609  

Term Loan, 4.82%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 1, 2019

      210       178,174  
 

 

  13   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Oil and Gas (continued)

 

Ultra Resources, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.31%, (2 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing April 12, 2024

      250     $ 250,729  
                         
      $ 3,500,638  
                         

Publishing — 0.6%

 

Ascend Learning, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.49%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing July 12, 2024

      175     $ 176,331  

Getty Images, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 18, 2019

      706       619,899  

LSC Communications, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 7.20%, (1 week USD LIBOR + 6.00%), Maturing September 30, 2022

      188       189,375  

Merrill Communications, LLC

     

Term Loan, 6.63%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.25%), Maturing June 1, 2022

      117       117,468  

ProQuest, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing October 24, 2021

      318       321,921  

Tweddle Group, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 7.38%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.00%), Maturing October 24, 2022

      144       145,458  
                         
      $ 1,570,452  
                         

Radio and Television — 0.6%

 

AP NMT Acquisition B.V.

     

Term Loan, 7.09%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.75%), Maturing August 13, 2021

      97     $ 93,796  

CBS Radio, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing October 17, 2023

      225       226,575  

Cumulus Media Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing December 23, 2020

      696       607,936  

Entercom Radio, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.73%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing November 1, 2023

      167       167,710  

Hubbard Radio, LLC

     

Term Loan, 4.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.25%), Maturing May 27, 2022

      92       91,896  

iHeartCommunications, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 8.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.50%), Maturing July 30, 2019

      450       340,031  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Radio and Television (continued)

 

Raycom TV Broadcasting, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing August 23, 2024

      175     $ 176,312  
                         
      $ 1,704,256  
                         

Retailers (Except Food and Drug) — 1.1%

 

Ascena Retail Group, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing August 21, 2022

      273     $ 238,342  

Bass Pro Group, LLC

     

Term Loan, 6.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing September 25, 2024

      250       243,594  

BJ’s Wholesale Club, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing February 3, 2024

      174       170,168  

CDW, LLC

     

Term Loan, 3.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.00%), Maturing August 17, 2023

      358       360,988  

David’s Bridal, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing October 11, 2019

      368       304,446  

Evergreen Acqco 1 L.P.

     

Term Loan, 5.11%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing July 9, 2019

      364       334,817  

Global Appliance, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing September 29, 2024

      150       150,328  

J. Crew Group, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.29%, (USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing March 5, 2021(2)(4)

      530       281,826  

LSF9 Atlantis Holdings, LLC

     

Term Loan, 7.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.00%), Maturing May 1, 2023

      174       175,174  

Men’s Wearhouse, Inc. (The)

     

Term Loan, 4.77%, (USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing June 18, 2021(2)

      145       143,986  

Michaels Stores, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.99%, (USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing January 30, 2023(2)

      356       356,274  

Pier 1 Imports (U.S.), Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.50%), Maturing April 30, 2021

      97       93,364  

Staples, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.31%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing September 12, 2024

      100       94,579  
 

 

  14   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Retailers (Except Food and Drug) (continued)

 

Vivid Seats Ltd.

     

Term Loan, 5.24%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing June 30, 2024

      175     $ 175,217  
                         
      $ 3,123,103  
                         

Steel — 0.1%

 

Neenah Foundry Company

     

Term Loan, 7.79%, (2 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.50%), Maturing April 26, 2019

      71     $ 70,083  

Zekelman Industries, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.07%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 14, 2021

      152       152,600  
                         
      $ 222,683  
                         

Surface Transport — 0.1%

 

Stena International S.a.r.l.

     

Term Loan, 4.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing March 3, 2021

      265     $ 247,020  
                         
      $ 247,020  
                         

Telecommunications — 1.8%

 

CenturyLink, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 2.75%, Maturing January 31, 2025(5)

      825     $ 815,117  

Consolidated Communications, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.25%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing October 4, 2023

      125       123,052  

Digicel International Finance Limited

     

Term Loan, 5.07%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing May 28, 2024

      125       126,016  

Frontier Communications Corp.

     

Term Loan, 4.99%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.75%), Maturing June 15, 2024

      249       237,880  

Global Eagle Entertainment, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 8.71%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.50%), Maturing January 6, 2023

      222       218,114  

Intelsat Jackson Holdings S.A.

     

Term Loan, 4.07%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing June 30, 2019

      650       649,255  

IPC Corp.

     

Term Loan, 5.89%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing August 6, 2021

      341       333,572  

Mitel Networks Corporation

     

Term Loan, Maturing July 27, 2023(3)

      75       75,820  

Onvoy, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing February 10, 2024

      124       124,336  
Borrower/Tranche Description         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Telecommunications (continued)

 

Sprint Communications, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 3.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing February 2, 2024

      622     $ 624,429  

Syniverse Holdings, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 4.24%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing April 23, 2019

      328       320,406  

Term Loan, 4.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing April 23, 2019

      237       231,173  

Telesat Canada

     

Term Loan, 4.32%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), Maturing November 17, 2023

      891       899,768  

Unitymedia Finance, LLC

     

Term Loan, Maturing October 16, 2024(3)

      150       149,797  
                         
      $ 4,928,735  
                         

Utilities — 0.8%

 

Calpine Construction Finance Company L.P.

     

Term Loan, 3.50%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.25%), Maturing May 3, 2020

      192     $ 192,128  

Term Loan, 3.75%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.50%), Maturing January 31, 2022

      72       71,944  

Calpine Corporation

     

Term Loan, 4.09%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 2.75%), Maturing January 15, 2024

      881       885,448  

Granite Acquisition, Inc.

     

Term Loan, 5.33%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing December 19, 2021

      21       21,336  

Term Loan, 5.34%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.00%), Maturing December 19, 2021

      466       471,970  

Invenergy Thermal Operating I, LLC

     

Term Loan, 6.83%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.50%), Maturing October 19, 2022

      207       196,034  

Lightstone Generation, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing January 30, 2024

      17       17,496  

Term Loan, 5.74%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.50%), Maturing January 30, 2024

      279       280,788  

Lonestar Generation, LLC

     

Term Loan, 5.57%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.25%), Maturing February 22, 2021

      97       95,958  
                         
      $ 2,233,102  
                         

Total Senior Floating-Rate Loans
(identified cost $95,078,973)

 

  $ 94,379,470  
                         
 

 

  15   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Corporate Bonds & Notes — 18.8%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Aerospace and Defense — 0.2%

 

CBC Ammo, LLC/CBC FinCo, Inc.

     

7.25%, 11/15/21(7)

      500     $ 508,750  
                         
      $ 508,750  
                         

Automotive — 0.9%

 

American Axle & Manufacturing, Inc.

     

6.25%, 4/1/25(7)

      375     $ 385,313  

Deck Chassis Acquisition, Inc.

     

10.00%, 6/15/23(7)

      1,000       1,125,000  

Navistar International Corp.

     

8.25%, 11/1/21

      1,000       1,004,150  
                         
      $ 2,514,463  
                         

Building and Development — 0.3%

 

Reliance Intermediate Holdings, L.P.

     

6.50%, 4/1/23(7)

      675     $ 720,562  

VICI Properties 1, LLC/VICI FC, Inc.

     

8.00%, 10/15/23

      10       11,325  
                         
      $ 731,887  
                         

Business Equipment and Services — 1.2%

 

EIG Investors Corp.

     

10.875%, 2/1/24

      960     $ 1,065,600  

First Data Corp.

     

7.00%, 12/1/23(7)

      1,000       1,072,520  

ServiceMaster Co., LLC (The)

     

7.45%, 8/15/27

      1,000       1,092,500  
                         
      $ 3,230,620  
                         

Cable and Satellite Television — 1.5%

 

Cablevision Systems Corp.

     

8.00%, 4/15/20

      1,000     $ 1,110,000  

CCO Holdings, LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp.

     

5.50%, 5/1/26(7)

      1,000       1,027,500  

Cequel Communications Holdings I, LLC/Cequel Capital Corp.

     

5.125%, 12/15/21(7)

      1,000       1,023,750  

SFR Group S.A.

     

6.00%, 5/15/22(7)

      1,000       1,043,750  
                         
      $ 4,205,000  
                         
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Containers and Glass Products — 1.2%

 

Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc.

     

7.25%, 5/15/24(7)

      1,010     $ 1,113,525  

BWAY Holding Co.

     

5.50%, 4/15/24(7)

      1,000       1,043,750  

Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc./Reynolds Group Issuer, LLC

     

7.00%, 7/15/24(7)

      985       1,053,334  
                         
      $ 3,210,609  
                         

Distribution & Wholesale — 0.3%

 

American Tire Distributors, Inc.

     

10.25%, 3/1/22(7)

      750     $ 785,625  
                         
      $ 785,625  
                         

Drugs — 0.3%

 

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc.

     

5.875%, 5/15/23(7)

      910     $ 770,088  
                         
      $ 770,088  
                         

Ecological Services and Equipment — 0.4%

 

Covanta Holding Corp.

     

5.875%, 7/1/25

      1,000     $ 992,500  
                         
      $ 992,500  
                         

Electric Utilities — 0.3%

 

NRG Yield Operating, LLC

     

5.00%, 9/15/26

      810     $ 838,350  
                         
      $ 838,350  
                         

Electronics / Electrical — 0.8%

 

Infor (US), Inc.

     

6.50%, 5/15/22

      1,000     $ 1,049,800  

Western Digital Corp.

     

10.50%, 4/1/24

      1,000       1,176,000  
                         
      $ 2,225,800  
                         

Financial Intermediaries — 0.2%

 

Icahn Enterprises, L.P./Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp.

     

6.00%, 8/1/20

      645     $ 665,559  
                         
      $ 665,559  
                         
 

 

  16   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Financial Services — 0.4%

 

Solera, LLC/Solera Finance, Inc.

     

10.50%, 3/1/24(7)

      1,000     $ 1,145,000  
                         
      $ 1,145,000  
                         

Food Products — 0.7%

 

Dean Foods Co.

     

6.50%, 3/15/23(7)

      635     $ 638,175  

Iceland Bondco PLC

     

4.629%, (3 mo. GBP LIBOR + 4.25%), 7/15/20(7)(8)

    GBP       62       82,371  

TreeHouse Foods, Inc.

     

6.00%, 2/15/24(7)

      1,000       1,075,000  
                         
      $ 1,795,546  
                         

Health Care — 2.1%

 

HCA Healthcare, Inc.

     

6.25%, 2/15/21

      1,000     $ 1,077,500  

HCA, Inc.

     

4.50%, 2/15/27

      10       10,125  

inVentiv Group Holdings, Inc./inVentiv Health, Inc./inVentiv Health Clinical, Inc.

     

7.50%, 10/1/24(7)

      600       664,500  

Kinetic Concepts, Inc./KCI USA, Inc.

     

7.875%, 2/15/21(7)

      1,500       1,567,500  

12.50%, 11/1/21(7)

      525       586,687  

MPH Acquisition Holdings, LLC

     

7.125%, 6/1/24(7)

      1,000       1,078,750  

WellCare Health Plans, Inc.

     

5.25%, 4/1/25

      750       791,250  
                         
      $ 5,776,312  
                         

Insurance — 0.5%

 

Alliant Holdings Intermediate, LLC

     

8.25%, 8/1/23(7)

      1,000     $ 1,067,500  

Ardonagh Midco 3 PLC

     

8.625%, 7/15/23(7)

      225       238,466  
                         
      $ 1,305,966  
                         

Internet Software & Services — 0.3%

 

Riverbed Technology, Inc.

     

8.875%, 3/1/23(7)

      1,010     $ 907,738  
                         
      $ 907,738  
                         
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Leisure Goods / Activities / Movies — 0.7%

 

AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc.

     

6.125%, 5/15/27

      2,000     $ 1,990,000  
                         
      $ 1,990,000  
                         

Lodging and Casinos — 0.4%

 

Hilton Domestic Operating Co., Inc.

     

4.25%, 9/1/24

      55     $ 56,306  

Hilton Worldwide Finance, LLC / Hilton Worldwide Finance Corp.

     

4.625%, 4/1/25

      1,000       1,033,750  
                         
      $ 1,090,056  
                         

Metals /  Mining — 0.4%

 

Teck Resources, Ltd.

     

8.50%, 6/1/24(7)

      1,000     $ 1,147,500  
                         
      $ 1,147,500  
                         

Nonferrous Metals / Minerals — 0.9%

 

Eldorado Gold Corp.

     

6.125%, 12/15/20(7)

      1,000     $ 995,000  

First Quantum Minerals, Ltd.

     

7.25%, 4/1/23(7)

      1,000       1,062,500  

New Gold, Inc.

     

6.25%, 11/15/22(7)

      500       517,500  
                         
      $ 2,575,000  
                         

Oil and Gas — 2.3%

 

Extraction Oil & Gas, Inc./Extraction Finance Corp.

     

7.875%, 7/15/21(7)

      1,000     $ 1,065,000  

Great Western Petroleum, LLC/Great Western Finance Corp.

     

9.00%, 9/30/21(7)

      1,000       1,030,000  

Matador Resources Co.

     

6.875%, 4/15/23

      1,000       1,062,500  

Parsley Energy, LLC/Parsley Finance Corp.

     

6.25%, 6/1/24(7)

      1,000       1,065,000  

Seven Generations Energy, Ltd.

     

6.75%, 5/1/23(7)

      1,000       1,067,500  

WildHorse Resource Development Corp.

     

6.875%, 2/1/25(7)

      1,000       995,000  
                         
      $ 6,285,000  
                         
 

 

  17   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Pharmaceuticals — 0.4%

 

PRA Holdings, Inc.

     

9.50%, 10/1/23(7)

      1,000     $ 1,082,500  
                         
      $ 1,082,500  
                         

Publishing — 0.4%

 

Laureate Education, Inc.

     

8.25%, 5/1/25(7)

      975     $ 1,051,781  
                         
      $ 1,051,781  
                         

Surface Transport — 0.2%

 

Debt and Asset Trading Corp.

     

1.00%, 10/10/25(9)

      800     $ 552,000  
                         
      $ 552,000  
                         

Technology — 0.4%

 

Dell International, LLC/EMC Corp.

     

7.125%, 6/15/24(7)

      1,000     $ 1,104,159  
                         
      $ 1,104,159  
                         

Telecommunications — 1.1%

 

CenturyLink, Inc.

     

7.50%, 4/1/24

      1,000     $ 1,065,000  

Hughes Satellite Systems Corp.

     

6.625%, 8/1/26

      1,000       1,057,500  

Intelsat Jackson Holdings S.A.

     

7.25%, 10/15/20

      500       483,600  

Sprint Communications, Inc.

     

9.00%, 11/15/18(7)

      371       393,724  
                         
      $ 2,999,824  
                         

Total Corporate Bonds & Notes
(identified cost $50,643,274)

 

  $ 51,487,633  
                         
Foreign Government Securities — 8.3%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Albania — 0.7%

 

Republic of Albania

     

5.75%, 11/12/20(9)

    EUR       1,540     $ 2,022,838  
                         

Total Albania

      $ 2,022,838  
                         
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Armenia — 0.4%

 

Republic of Armenia

     

7.15%, 3/26/25(9)

      1,050     $ 1,175,186  
                         

Total Armenia

      $ 1,175,186  
                         

Bahamas — 0.7%

 

Commonwealth of Bahamas

     

5.75%, 1/16/24(9)

      1,800     $ 1,878,750  
                         

Total Bahamas

      $ 1,878,750  
                         

Barbados — 0.4%

 

Barbados Government International Bond

     

6.625%, 12/5/35(9)

      855     $ 692,550  

7.25%, 12/15/21(9)

      300       282,900  
                         

Total Barbados

      $ 975,450  
                         

Belarus — 0.7%

 

Republic of Belarus

     

6.875%, 2/28/23(9)

      840     $ 895,474  

7.625%, 6/29/27(9)

      890       984,117  
                         

Total Belarus

      $ 1,879,591  
                         

Cyprus — 0.2%

 

Republic of Cyprus

     

4.25%, 11/4/25(9)

    EUR       450     $ 627,892  
                         

Total Cyprus

      $ 627,892  
                         

Ecuador — 0.6%

 

Republic of Ecuador

     

7.95%, 6/20/24(9)

      1,600     $ 1,622,000  
                         

Total Ecuador

      $ 1,622,000  
                         

El Salvador — 0.6%

 

Republic of El Salvador

     

6.375%, 1/18/27(9)

      1,508     $ 1,506,115  

8.625%, 2/28/29(9)

      200       227,000  
                         

Total El Salvador

      $ 1,733,115  
                         

Fiji — 0.4%

 

Republic of Fiji

     

6.625%, 10/2/20(9)

      929     $ 930,209  
                         

Total Fiji

      $ 930,209  
                         
 

 

  18   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Honduras — 0.5%

 

Honduras Government International Bond

     

6.25%, 1/19/27(9)

      150     $ 162,506  

8.75%, 12/16/20(9)

      927       1,057,364  
                         

Total Honduras

      $ 1,219,870  
                         

Macedonia — 0.7%

 

Republic of Macedonia

     

3.975%, 7/24/21(9)

    EUR       1,164     $ 1,446,966  

4.875%, 12/1/20(9)

    EUR       425       540,208  
                         

Total Macedonia

      $ 1,987,174  
                         

Poland — 0.1%

 

Republic of Poland

     

4.00%, 1/22/24

      350     $ 375,589  
                         

Total Poland

      $ 375,589  
                         

Rwanda — 0.4%

 

Republic of Rwanda

     

6.625%, 5/2/23(9)

      1,100     $ 1,144,505  
                         

Total Rwanda

      $ 1,144,505  
                         

Serbia — 0.4%

 

Republic of Serbia

     

4.875%, 2/25/20(9)

      1,150     $ 1,199,811  
                         

Total Serbia

      $ 1,199,811  
                         

Seychelles — 0.5%

 

Republic of Seychelles

     

7.00% to 1/1/18, 1/1/26(9)(10)

      1,181     $ 1,235,787  
                         

Total Seychelles

      $ 1,235,787  
                         

Sri Lanka — 0.7%

 

Republic of Sri Lanka

     

6.125%, 6/3/25(9)

      800     $ 855,678  

6.85%, 11/3/25(9)

      1,000       1,112,485  
                         

Total Sri Lanka

      $ 1,968,163  
                         
Security         

Principal

Amount*

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Suriname — 0.3%

 

Republic of Suriname

     

9.25%, 10/26/26(9)

      718     $ 781,722  
                         

Total Suriname

      $ 781,722  
                         

Total Foreign Government Securities
(identified cost $21,534,685)

 

  $ 22,757,652  
                         
Sovereign Loans — 1.1%  
     
Borrower         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Barbados — 0.4%

 

Government of Barbados

     

Term Loan, 11.44%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR +10.00%), Maturing December 20, 2019(8)(11)

    $ 1,000     $ 1,004,352  
                         

Total Barbados

      $ 1,004,352  
                         

Kenya — 0.0%(12)

 

Government of Kenya

     

Term Loan, 6.53%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.00%), Maturing April 18, 2019(8)

    $ 100     $ 100,000  
                         

Total Kenya

      $ 100,000  
                         

Tanzania — 0.7%

 

Government of the United Republic of Tanzania

     

Term Loan, 6.65%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.20%), Maturing June 23, 2022(8)

    $ 1,900     $ 1,938,015  
                         

Total Tanzania

      $ 1,938,015  
                         

Total Sovereign Loans
(identified cost $2,988,462)

 

  $ 3,042,367  
                         
Mortgage Pass-Throughs — 10.9%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.:

     

2.858%, (COF + 1.25%), with maturity at 2035(13)

    $ 1,766     $ 1,826,513  

6.00%, with various maturities to 2029

      1,466       1,636,285  

6.15%, with maturity at 2027

      428       479,280  

6.50%, with maturity at 2032

      1,332       1,512,433  

7.00%, with various maturities to 2036

      2,450       2,848,574  

7.50%, with maturity at 2024

      678       743,260  
 

 

  19   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.: (continued)

 

8.00%, with maturity at 2034

    $ 1,031     $ 1,198,935  

8.50%, with maturity at 2031

      807       934,107  

9.00%, with maturity at 2031

      113       132,101  

9.50%, with maturity at 2022

      18       19,294  
                         
      $ 11,330,782  
                         

Federal National Mortgage Association:

     

2.942%, (6 mo. USD LIBOR + 1.54%), with maturity at 2037(13)

    $ 521     $ 538,913  

5.00%, with various maturities to 2040

      2,287       2,498,299  

5.50%, with various maturities to 2033

      1,601       1,781,642  

6.00%, with maturity at 2023

      892       963,823  

6.32%, (COF + 2.00%, Floor 6.32%), with maturity at 2032(13)

      689       753,382  

6.50%, with various maturities to 2036

      3,285       3,706,333  

7.00%, with various maturities to 2037

      1,621       1,846,048  

7.50%, with maturity at 2035

      2,524       2,905,944  

8.00%, with various maturities to 2034

      585       667,370  

10.00%, with various maturities to 2031

      77       83,625  
                         
      $ 15,745,379  
                         

Government National Mortgage Association:

     

7.50%, with maturity at 2025

    $ 1,021     $ 1,121,264  

8.00%, with maturity at 2034

      1,406       1,634,142  

9.50%, with maturity at 2025

      53       57,336  

11.00%, with maturity at 2018

      1       1,450  
                         
      $ 2,814,192  
                         

Total Mortgage Pass-Throughs
(identified cost $28,856,857)

 

  $ 29,890,353  
                         
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 23.5%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.:

 

Series 2113, Class QG, 6.00%, 1/15/29

    $ 690     $ 766,433  

Series 2167, Class BZ, 7.00%, 6/15/29

      555       627,321  

Series 2182, Class ZB, 8.00%, 9/15/29

      1,003       1,164,849  

Series 2631, (Interest Only), Class DS, 5.861%, (7.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 6/15/33(14)(15)

      1,262       199,102  

Series 2770, (Interest Only), Class SH, 5.861%, (7.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 3/15/34(14)(15)

      1,635       323,148  

Series 2981, (Interest Only), Class CS, 5.481%, (6.72% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 5/15/35(14)(15)

      953       147,195  

Series 3114, (Interest Only), Class TS, 5.411%, (6.65% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 9/15/30(14)(15)

      2,499       332,328  

Series 3309, (Principal Only), Class DO, 0.00%, 4/15/37(16)

      1,525       1,354,993  
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.: (continued)

 

Series 3339, (Interest Only), Class JI, 5.351%, (6.59% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 7/15/37(14)(15)

    $ 2,714     $ 488,480  

Series 4109, (Interest Only), Class ES, 4.911%, (6.15% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 12/15/41(14)(15)

      35       6,421  

Series 4121, (Interest Only), Class IM, 4.00%, 10/15/39(15)

      3,823       375,666  

Series 4163, (Interest Only), Class GS, 4.961%, (6.20% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 11/15/32(14)(15)

      4,518       871,382  

Series 4169, (Interest Only), Class AS, 5.011%, (6.25% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 2/15/33(14)(15)

      2,601       424,578  

Series 4180, (Interest Only), Class GI, 3.50%, 8/15/26(15)

      2,382       202,939  

Series 4203, (Interest Only), Class QS, 5.011%, (6.25% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 5/15/43(14)(15)

      2,754       418,828  

Series 4212, (Interest Only), Class SA, 4.961%, (6.20% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 7/15/38(14)(15)

      4,590       482,684  

Series 4273, Class PU, 4.00%, 11/15/43

      428       444,067  

Series 4332, (Interest Only), Class KI, 4.00%, 9/15/43(15)

      1,278       158,463  

Series 4337, Class YT, 3.50%, 4/15/49

      2,141       2,163,897  

Series 4370, (Interest Only), Class IO, 3.50%, 9/15/41(15)

      1,679       207,366  

Series 4416, Class SU, 6.13%, (8.60% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR x 2.00), 12/15/44(14)

      1,510       1,495,068  

Series 4452, Class ZJ, 3.00%, 11/15/44

      1,062       976,902  

Series 4478, (Principal Only), Class PO, 0.00%, 5/15/45(16)

      1,013       874,868  

Series 4497, (Interest Only), Class CS, 4.961%, (6.20% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 9/15/44(14)(15)

      3,974       812,947  

Series 4507, (Interest Only), Class EI, 4.00%, 8/15/44(15)

      4,018       714,968  

Series 4535, (Interest Only), Class JS, 4.861%, (6.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 11/15/43(14)(15)

      4,701       652,040  

Series 4548, (Interest Only), Class JS, 4.861%, (6.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 9/15/43(14)(15)

      4,961       736,030  

Series 4584, Class PM, 3.00%, 5/15/46

      1,551       1,583,288  

Series 4608, Class TV, 3.50%, 1/15/55

      2,277       2,303,694  

Series 4629, (Interest Only), Class QI, 3.50%, 11/15/46(15)

      4,051       672,773  

Series 4630, Class CZ, 3.00%, 12/15/43

      1,263       1,241,709  

Series 4644, (Interest Only), Class TI, 3.50%, 1/15/45(15)

      3,345       494,344  

Series 4653, (Interest Only), Class PI, 3.50%, 7/15/44(15)

      3,828       511,690  

Series 4667, (Interest Only), Class PI, 3.50%, 5/15/42(15)

      4,847       718,503  

Series 4677, Class SB, 11.06%, (16.00% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR x 4.00), 4/15/47(14)

      974       1,040,029  

Series 4695, Class CA, 3.00%, 10/15/41

      1,519       1,487,383  
                         
      $ 27,476,376  
                         
 

 

  20   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. Structured Agency
Credit Risk Debt Notes:

 

   

Series 2017-DNA2, Class M2, 4.688%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.45%), 10/25/29(8)

    $ 2,000     $ 2,125,281  
                         
      $ 2,125,281  
                         

Federal National Mortgage Association:

 

Series G-33, Class PT, 7.00%, 10/25/21

    $ 64     $ 67,575  

Series 1989-89, Class H, 9.00%, 11/25/19

      9       9,014  

Series 1991-122, Class N, 7.50%, 9/25/21

      69       73,607  

Series 1994-42, Class K, 6.50%, 4/25/24

      249       270,742  

Series 1997-38, Class N, 8.00%, 5/20/27

      325       374,827  

Series 2004-46, (Interest Only), Class SI, 4.762%, (6.00% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 5/25/34(14)(15)

      1,659       223,785  

Series 2005-17, (Interest Only), Class SA, 5.462%, (6.70% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 3/25/35(14)(15)

      1,328       265,177  

Series 2006-8, (Principal Only), Class WQ, 0.00%, 3/25/36(16)

      1,157       1,021,418  

Series 2006-42, (Interest Only), Class PI, 5.352%, (6.59% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 6/25/36(14)(15)

      2,254       405,392  

Series 2006-44, (Interest Only), Class IS, 5.362%, (6.60% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 6/25/36(14)(15)

      1,783       318,511  

Series 2007-50, (Interest Only), Class LS, 5.212%, (6.45% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 6/25/37(14)(15)

      1,388       250,732  

Series 2007-74, Class AC, 5.00%, 8/25/37

      1,638       1,773,122  

Series 2008-26, (Interest Only), Class SA, 4.962%, (6.20% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 4/25/38(14)(15)

      2,085       345,319  

Series 2008-29, (Interest Only), Class CI, 5.00%, 9/25/35(15)

      10       13  

Series 2008-61, (Interest Only), Class S, 4.862%, (6.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 7/25/38(14)(15)

      3,040       514,116  

Series 2010-99, (Interest Only), Class NS, 5.362%, (6.60% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 3/25/39(14)(15)

      1,403       70,611  

Series 2010-109, (Interest Only), Class PS, 5.362%, (6.60% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 10/25/40(14)(15)

      3,373       604,013  

Series 2010-119, (Interest Only), Class SK, 4.762%, (6.00% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 4/25/40(14)(15)

      64       398  

Series 2010-124, (Interest Only), Class SJ, 4.812%, (6.05% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 11/25/38(14)(15)

      1,796       138,395  

Series 2010-147, (Interest Only), Class KS, 4.712%, (5.95% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 1/25/41(14)(15)

      4,511       606,927  

Series 2010-150, (Interest Only), Class GS, 5.512%, (6.75% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 1/25/21(14)(15)

      1,736       103,459  

Series 2011-49, Class NT, 6.00%, (66.00% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR x 10.00, 6.00% Cap), 6/25/41(14)

      518       566,921  

Series 2012-52, (Interest Only), Class AI, 3.50%, 8/25/26(15)

      3,494       248,244  
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal National Mortgage Association: (continued)

 

Series 2012-56, (Interest Only), Class SU, 5.512%, (6.75% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 8/25/26(14)(15)

    $ 833     $ 43,422  

Series 2012-63, (Interest Only), Class EI, 3.50%, 8/25/40(15)

      3,600       325,498  

Series 2012-103, (Interest Only), Class GS, 4.862%, (6.10% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 2/25/40(14)(15)

      3,958       366,502  

Series 2012-112, (Interest Only), Class SB, 4.912%, (6.15% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 9/25/40(14)(15)

      4,911       702,496  

Series 2012-118, (Interest Only), Class IN, 3.50%, 11/25/42(15)

      4,715       882,478  

Series 2012-134, Class ZT, 2.00%, 12/25/42

      1,541       1,313,754  

Series 2012-150, (Interest Only), Class PS, 4.912%, (6.15% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 1/25/43(14)(15)

      5,525       926,803  

Series 2012-150, (Interest Only), Class SK, 4.912%, (6.15% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 1/25/43(14)(15)

      3,084       496,653  

Series 2013-6, Class TA, 1.50%, 1/25/43

      1,573       1,534,341  

Series 2013-23, (Interest Only), Class CS, 5.012%, (6.25% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 3/25/33(14)(15)

      2,610       435,986  

Series 2013-52, Class MD, 1.25%, 6/25/43

      1,754       1,649,607  

Series 2013-54, (Interest Only), Class HS, 5.062%, (6.30% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 10/25/41(14)(15)

      2,261       248,690  

Series 2014-32, (Interest Only), Class EI, 4.00%, 6/25/44(15)

      1,058       178,176  

Series 2014-55, (Interest Only), Class IN, 3.50%, 7/25/44(15)

      3,077       445,887  

Series 2014-80, (Interest Only), Class BI, 3.00%, 12/25/44(15)

      5,171       750,516  

Series 2014-89, (Interest Only), Class IO, 3.50%, 1/25/45(15)

      2,473       442,511  

Series 2015-14, (Interest Only), Class KI, 3.00%, 3/25/45(15)

      5,650       811,829  

Series 2015-17, (Interest Only), Class SA, 4.962%, (6.20% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 11/25/43(14)(15)

      4,173       607,990  

Series 2015-52, (Interest Only), Class MI, 3.50%, 7/25/45(15)

      2,953       457,987  

Series 2015-57, (Interest Only), Class IO, 3.00%, 8/25/45(15)

      13,789       1,958,007  

Series 2015-74, Class SL, 1.622%, (2.35% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR x 0.587), 10/25/45(14)

      867       572,940  

Series 2015-89, Class ZB, 3.00%, 5/25/54

      399       398,814  

Series 2015-93, (Interest Only), Class BS, 4.912%, (6.15% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 8/25/45(14)(15)

      4,447       854,974  

Series 2015-95, (Interest Only), Class SB, 4.762%, (6.00% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 1/25/46(14)(15)

      3,808       701,836  

Series 2017-15, Class LE, 3.00%, 6/25/46

      1,938       1,953,595  
 

 

  21   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal National Mortgage Association: (continued)

 

Series 2017-46, (Interest Only), Class NI, 3.00%, 8/25/42(15)

    $ 3,389     $ 449,238  

Series 2017-66, Class ZJ, 3.00%, 9/25/57

      1,404       1,339,661  
                         
      $ 29,102,509  
                         

Federal National Mortgage Association Connecticut Avenue Securities:

 

   

Series 2017-C01, Class 1B1, 6.988%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.75%), 7/25/29(8)

    $ 730     $ 823,869  

Series 2017-C03, Class 1B1, 6.088%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.85%), 10/25/29(8)

      500       528,327  

Series 2017-C03, Class 1M2, 4.238%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.00%), 10/25/29(8)

      2,000       2,071,567  
                         
      $ 3,423,763  
                         

Government National Mortgage Association:

 

Series 2011-156, Class GA, 2.00%, 12/16/41

    $ 396     $ 348,688  

Series 2013-131, Class GS, 2.265%, (3.50% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 6/20/43(14)

      989       760,043  

Series 2017-82, Class TZ, 2.50%, 2/16/43

      425       418,673  

Series 2017-121, (Interest Only), Class DS, 3.261%, (4.50% - 1 mo. USD LIBOR), 8/20/47(14)(15)

      6,857       530,653  
                         
      $ 2,058,057  
                         

Total Collateralized Mortgage Obligations
(identified cost $66,581,729)

 

  $ 64,185,986  
                         
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 7.2%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust

 

Series 2015-P1, Class D, 3.225%, 9/15/48(7)

    $ 4,000     $ 3,301,856  

JPMBB Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust

 

Series 2014-C19, Class D, 4.665%, 4/15/47(7)(17)

      1,425       1,281,230  

Series 2014-C21, Class D, 4.66%, 8/15/47(7)(17)

      1,425       1,226,974  

Series 2014-C22, Class D, 4.559%, 9/15/47(7)(17)

      1,850       1,591,783  

Series 2014-C23, Class D, 3.958%, 9/15/47(7)(17)

      850       735,445  

JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust

 

Series 2011-C5, Class D, 5.408%, 8/15/46(7)(17)

      1,850       1,872,091  

Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust

 

Series 2015-C23, Class D, 4.134%, 7/15/50(7)(17)

      1,500       1,312,006  

UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust

 

Series 2012-C1, Class D, 5.546%, 5/10/45(7)(17)

      2,000       2,021,111  

UBS-Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust

 

Series 2011-C1, Class D, 6.049%, 1/10/45(7)(17)

      2,000       2,169,268  
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Wells Fargo Commercial Mortgage Trust

 

Series 2013-LC12, Class D, 4.294%, 7/15/46(7)(17)

    $ 2,000     $ 1,841,199  

Series 2015-SG1, Class C, 4.47%, 9/15/48(17)

      1,399       1,373,588  

WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust

 

Series 2014-LC14, Class D, 4.586%, 3/15/47(7)(17)

      1,150       977,829  
                         

Total Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities
(identified cost $19,681,708)

 

  $ 19,704,380  
                         
Asset-Backed Securities — 14.4%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

ALM Loan Funding, Ltd.

 

Series 2013-7R2A, Class CR, 5.459%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 4.10%), 10/15/27(7)(8)

    $ 2,000     $ 2,047,636  

Series 2013-7R2A, Class DR, 8.809%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.45%), 10/15/27(7)(8)

      3,000       3,089,522  

Barings CLO, Ltd.

 

Series 2017-1A, Class E, 7.281%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.00%), 7/18/29(7)(8)

      2,000       2,006,934  

Cole Park CLO, Ltd.

 

Series 2015-1A, Class E, 7.407%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.10%), 10/20/28(7)(8)

      3,000       3,011,670  

Colony American Homes

 

Series 2014-1A, Class C, 3.087%, (1 mo. USD LIBOR + 1.85%), 5/17/31(7)(8)

      760       764,275  

Dryden XL Senior Loan Fund

 

Series 2015-40A, Class E, 7.265%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.95%), 8/15/28(7)(8)

      1,150       1,155,247  

Ford Credit Auto Owner Trust

 

Series 2014-1, Class B, 2.41%, 11/15/25(7)

      100       100,051  

Highbridge Loan Management, Ltd.

 

Series 5A-2015, Class E, 6.728%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.35%), 1/29/26(7)(8)

      1,963       1,959,533  

Series 7A-2015, Class E, 7.065%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.75%), 11/15/26(7)(8)

      1,250       1,252,161  

Madison Park Funding XXV, Ltd.

 

Series 2017-25A, Class D, 7.353%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.10%), 4/25/29(7)(8)

      3,000       3,008,727  

Neuberger Berman CLO XIV, Ltd.

 

Series 2013-14A, Class DR, 5.028%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 3.65%), 1/28/30(7)(8)

      2,563       2,616,795  

Neuberger Berman CLO XVIII, Ltd.

 

Series 2014-18A, Class DR, 9.059%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.75%), 11/14/27(7)(8)

      3,000       3,079,137  

Oak Hill Credit Partners VII, Ltd.

 

Series 2012-7A, Class ER, 8.816%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 7.50%), 11/20/27(7)(8)

      4,000       4,117,746  
 

 

  22   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Palmer Square CLO, Ltd.

 

Series 2013-2A, Class DR, 7.453%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.10%), 10/17/27(7)(8)

    $ 2,000     $ 2,020,310  

Series 2014-1A, Class DR, 8.253%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.90%), 1/17/27(7)(8)

      3,000       3,012,841  

Series 2015-1A, Class DR, 7.516%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.20%), 5/21/29(7)(8)

      2,000       1,997,568  

Sierra Receivables Funding Co., LLC

 

Series 2014-1A, Class B, 2.42%, 3/20/30(7)

      90       90,147  

Series 2015-1A, Class B, 3.05%, 3/22/32(7)

      122       121,923  

Voya CLO, Ltd.

 

Series 2015-3A, Class D2, 6.813%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 5.45%), 10/20/27(7)(8)

      3,000       3,048,390  

Wind River CLO, Ltd.

 

Series 2017-1A, Class E, 7.774%, (3 mo. USD LIBOR + 6.42%), 4/18/29(7)(8)

      1,050       1,068,964  
                         

Total Asset-Backed Securities
(identified cost $37,941,768)

 

  $ 39,569,577  
                         
U.S. Government Agency Obligations — 0.6%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Federal Farm Credit Bank

 

3.25%, 7/1/30

    $ 1,500     $ 1,538,399  
                         

Total U.S. Government Agency Obligations
(identified cost $1,472,528)

 

  $ 1,538,399  
                         
Common Stocks — 0.6%  
     
Security          Shares     Value  

Automotive — 0.1%

 

Dayco Products, LLC(18)(19)

      8,898     $ 278,062  
                         
      $ 278,062  
                         

Business Equipment and Services — 0.0%(12)

 

Education Management Corp.(4)(18)(19)

      955,755     $ 0  

RCS Capital Corp.(18)(19)

      2,777       81,922  
                         
      $ 81,922  
                         

Electronics / Electrical — 0.1%

 

Answers Corp.(18)(19)

      5,814     $ 92,055  
                         
      $ 92,055  
                         
Security          Shares     Value  

Health Care — 0.0%(12)

 

New Millennium Holdco, Inc.(18)(19)

      8,641     $ 2,808  
                         
      $ 2,808  
                         

Lodging and Casinos — 0.0%(12)

 

Caesars Entertainment Corp.(18)(19)

      2,693     $ 34,874  
                         
      $ 34,874  
                         

Oil and Gas — 0.1%

 

AFG Holdings, Inc.(18)(19)

      6,123     $ 208,182  

Paragon Offshore Finance Company, Class A(18)(19)

      270       301  

Paragon Offshore Finance Company, Class B(18)(19)

      135       2,616  

Paragon Offshore, Ltd.(18)(19)

      270       4,624  

Samson Resources II, LLC, Class A(18)(19)

      4,171       101,494  
                         
      $ 317,217  
                         

Publishing — 0.3%

 

ION Media Networks, Inc.(4)(19)

      1,357     $ 708,707  

MediaNews Group, Inc.(18)(19)

      3,023       48,368  
                         
      $ 757,075  
                         

Total Common Stocks
(identified cost $683,632)

 

  $ 1,564,013  
                         
Convertible Preferred Stocks — 0.0%  
     
Security          Shares     Value  

Business Equipment and Services — 0.0%

 

Education Management Corp., Series A-1(4)(18)(19)

      1,063     $ 0  
                         

Total Convertible Preferred Stocks
(identified cost $75,023)

 

  $ 0  
                         
Short-Term Investments — 7.3%  
Foreign Government Securities — 0.1%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

Greece — 0.1%

 

Hellenic Republic Treasury Bill, 0.00%, 2/2/18

    EUR       170     $ 197,163  
                         

Total Greece

      $ 197,163  
                         

Total Foreign Government Securities
(identified cost $200,280)

 

  $ 197,163  
                         
 

 

  23   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

U.S. Treasury Obligations — 1.1%  
     
Security         

Principal

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    Value  

U.S. Treasury Bill, 0.00%, 12/21/17(20)

    $ 3,000     $ 2,995,979  
                         

Total U.S. Treasury Obligations
(identified cost $2,995,875)

 

  $ 2,995,979  
                         
Other — 6.1%  
     
Description          Units     Value  

Eaton Vance Cash Reserves Fund, LLC, 1.35%(21)

      16,876,031     $ 16,877,719  
                         

Total Other
(identified cost $16,878,498)

 

  $ 16,877,719  
                         

Total Short-Term Investments
(identified cost $20,074,653)

 

  $ 20,070,861  
                         

Total Investments — 127.2%
(identified cost $345,613,292)

 

  $ 348,190,691  
                         

Other Assets, Less Liabilities — (27.2)%

 

  $ (74,353,403
                         

Net Assets — 100.0%

 

  $ 273,837,288  
                         

The percentage shown for each investment category in the Portfolio of Investments is based on net assets.

 

  * In U.S. dollars unless otherwise indicated.

 

  (1) 

Senior floating-rate loans (Senior Loans) often require prepayments from excess cash flows or permit the borrowers to repay at their election. The degree to which borrowers repay, whether as a contractual requirement or at their election, cannot be predicted with accuracy. As a result, the actual remaining maturity may be substantially less than the stated maturities shown. However, Senior Loans will typically have an expected average life of approximately two to four years. Senior Loans typically have rates of interest which are redetermined periodically by reference to a base lending rate, plus a spread. These base lending rates are primarily the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) and secondarily, the prime rate offered by one or more major United States banks (the “Prime Rate”). Base lending rates may be subject to a floor, or minimum rate.

 

  (2) 

The stated interest rate represents the weighted average interest rate at October 31, 2017 of contracts within the senior loan facility. Interest rates on contracts are primarily redetermined either weekly, monthly or quarterly by reference to the indicated base lending rate and spread and the reset period.

 

  (3) 

This Senior Loan will settle after October 31, 2017, at which time the interest rate will be determined.

 

  (4) 

For fair value measurement disclosure purposes, security is categorized as Level 3 (see Note 9).

 

  (5) 

Fixed-rate loan.

 

  (6) 

Issuer is in default with respect to interest and/or principal payments. For a variable rate security, interest rate has been adjusted to reflect non-accrual status.

  (7) 

Security exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be sold in certain transactions in reliance on an exemption from registration (normally to qualified institutional buyers). At October 31, 2017, the aggregate value of these securities is $91,202,687 or 33.3% of the Fund’s net assets.

 

  (8) 

Variable rate security. The stated interest rate represents the rate in effect at October 31, 2017.

 

  (9) 

Security exempt from registration under Regulation S of the Securities Act of 1933, which exempts from registration securities offered and sold outside the United States. Security may not be offered or sold in the United States except pursuant to an exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. At October 31, 2017, the aggregate value of these securities is $22,934,063 or 8.4% of the Fund’s net assets.

 

(10) 

Multi-step coupon bond. Interest rate represents the rate in effect at October 31, 2017.

 

(11) 

Loan is subject to scheduled mandatory prepayments. Maturity date shown reflects the final maturity date.

 

(12) 

Amount is less than 0.05%.

 

(13) 

Adjustable rate mortgage security whose interest rate generally adjusts monthly based on a weighted average of interest rates on the underlying mortgages. The coupon rate may not reflect the applicable index value as interest rates on the underlying mortgages may adjust on various dates and at various intervals and may be subject to lifetime ceilings and lifetime floors and lookback periods. Rate shown is the coupon rate at October 31, 2017.

 

(14) 

Inverse floating-rate security whose coupon varies inversely with changes in the interest rate index. The stated interest rate represents the coupon rate in effect at October 31, 2017.

 

(15) 

Interest only security that entitles the holder to receive only interest payments on the underlying mortgages. Principal amount shown is the notional amount of the underlying mortgages on which coupon interest is calculated.

 

(16) 

Principal only security that entitles the holder to receive only principal payments on the underlying mortgages.

 

(17) 

Weighted average fixed-rate coupon that changes/updates monthly. Rate shown is the rate at October 31, 2017.

 

(18) 

Non-income producing security.

 

(19) 

Security was acquired in connection with a restructuring of a Senior Loan and may be subject to restrictions on resale.

 

(20) 

Security (or a portion thereof) has been pledged to cover collateral requirements on open derivative contracts.

 

(21) 

Affiliated investment company, available to Eaton Vance portfolios and funds, which invests in high quality, U.S. dollar denominated money market instruments. The rate shown is the annualized seven-day yield as of October 31, 2017.

 

 

  24   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

 

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts  
Currency Purchased     Currency Sold      Counterparty    Settlement
Date
     Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
 
USD     1,029,546     EUR     852,570      State Street Bank and Trust Company      11/30/17      $ 34,991      $  
USD     582,165     EUR     490,110      JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.      12/1/17        10,404         
USD     237,564     EUR     200,000      Goldman Sachs International      12/29/17        3,810         
USD     2,079,269     EUR     1,753,289      Deutsche Bank AG      1/26/18        26,641         
USD     80,882     GBP     61,511      State Street Bank and Trust Company      1/31/18               (1,050
USD     1,992,421     EUR     1,684,922      Goldman Sachs International      2/1/18        19,139         
USD     203,201     EUR     170,000      Goldman Sachs International      2/2/18        4,095         
                                       $ 99,080      $ (1,050

 

Futures Contracts  
Description  

Number of

Contracts

     Position     

Expiration

Month/Year

    

Notional

Amount

    

Value/Net
Unrealized

Appreciation

 

Interest Rate Futures

             
U.S. 5-Year Deliverable Interest Rate Swap     27        Short        Dec-17      $ (2,716,031    $ 22,208  
U.S. 10-Year Deliverable Interest Rate Swap     67        Short        Dec-17        (6,762,813      101,172  
                                        $ 123,380  

 

Centrally Cleared Interest Rate Swaps  
Counterparty  

Notional

Amount

(000’s omitted)

    

Fund

Pays/Receives

Floating Rate

    

Floating

Rate

  

Annual

Fixed Rate

   

Termination

Date

    

Net

Unrealized

Appreciation
(Depreciation)

 
LCH.Clearnet   EUR     2,339        Receives     

6-month Euro Interbank Offered Rate

(pays semi-annually)

    

0.25

(pays annually


)(1) 

    9/20/22      $ (17,702
LCH.Clearnet   EUR     370        Receives     

6-month Euro Interbank Offered Rate

(pays semi-annually)

    

1.00

(pays annually


)(1) 

    9/20/27        (5,809
LCH.Clearnet   USD     1,200        Receives     

3-month USD-LIBOR-BBA

(pays quarterly)

    

1.50

(pays  semi-annually


)(1) 

    3/20/20        3,576  
LCH.Clearnet   USD     645        Receives     

3-month USD-LIBOR-BBA

(pays quarterly)

    

1.87

(pays semi-annually


    9/18/22        5,838  
LCH.Clearnet   USD     320        Receives     

3-month USD-LIBOR-BBA

(pays quarterly)

    

2.11

(pays semi-annually


    9/5/27        6,052  
LCH.Clearnet   USD     1,371        Receives     

3-month USD-LIBOR-BBA

(pays quarterly)

    

2.18

(pays semi-annually


    9/19/27        18,756  
                                                $ 10,711  

 

(1) 

Upfront payment is exchanged with the counterparty as a result of the standardized trading coupon.

 

  25   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

 

Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps — Sell Protection  
Reference
Entity
  Counterparty     Notional
Amount*
(000’s omitted)
    Contract
Annual
Fixed Rate**
    Termination
Date
    Current
Market
Annual
Fixed Rate***
    Market
Value
    Unamortized
Upfront
Payments
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation
 
Indonesia     ICE Clear Credit     $ 5,200      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       0.94   $ 21,849     $ 13,284     $ 35,133  

Total

          $ 5,200                             $ 21,849     $ 13,284     $ 35,133  
               
Credit Default Swaps — Sell Protection  
Reference
Entity
  Counterparty     Notional
Amount*
(000’s omitted)
    Contract
Annual
Fixed Rate**
    Termination
Date
    Current
Market
Annual
Fixed Rate***
    Market
Value
   

Unamortized
Upfront
Payments

Received

(Paid)

   

Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)

 
Brazil     Citibank, N.A.     $ 8,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.70   $ (257,914   $ 386,332     $ 128,418  
Colombia     Goldman Sachs International       5,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.11       (19,937     73,594       53,657  
Croatia     Nomura International PLC       5,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/21       0.80       45,209       190,274       235,483  
Cyprus     Goldman Sachs International       5,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/21       1.87       (161,462     224,279       62,817  
Hungary     Barclays Bank PLC       2,200      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/21       0.74       25,121       8,537       33,658  
Kazakhstan     Barclays Bank PLC       2,500      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.25       (27,616     39,143       11,527  
Mexico     BNP Paribas       5,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.06       (9,802     31,050       21,248  
Romania     Barclays Bank PLC       2,200      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/21       0.78       21,634       (4,289     17,345  
Russia     Citibank, N.A.       5,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.28       (62,362     120,249       57,887  
Russia     Goldman Sachs International       4,000      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.28       (49,889     89,900       40,011  
Turkey     BNP Paribas       9,500      

1.00

(pays quarterly


)(1) 

    12/20/22       1.84       (366,798     344,609       (22,189

Total

          $ 53,400                             $ (863,816   $ 1,503,678     $ 639,862  

 

* If the Fund is the seller of credit protection, the notional amount is the maximum potential amount of future payments the Fund could be required to make if a credit event, as defined in the credit default swap agreement, were to occur. At October 31, 2017, such maximum potential amount for all open credit default swaps in which the Fund is the seller was $58,600,000.

 

** The contract annual fixed rate represents the fixed rate of interest received by the Fund (as a seller of protection) on the notional amount of the credit default swap contract.

 

*** Current market annual fixed rates, utilized in determining the net unrealized appreciation or depreciation as of period end, serve as an indicator of the market’s perception of the current status of the payment/performance risk associated with the credit derivative. The current market annual fixed rate of a particular reference entity reflects the cost, as quoted by the pricing vendor, of selling protection against default of that entity as of period end and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. The higher the fixed rate, the greater the market perceived risk of a credit event involving the reference entity. A rate identified as “Defaulted” indicates a credit event has occurred for the reference entity.

 

(1) 

Upfront payment is exchanged with the counterparty as a result of the standardized trading coupon.

 

  26   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Portfolio of Investments — continued

 

 

Abbreviations:

 

COF     Cost of Funds 11th District
EURIBOR     Euro Interbank Offered Rate
LIBOR     London Interbank Offered Rate
PIK     Payment In Kind

Currency Abbreviations:

 

EUR     Euro
GBP     British Pound Sterling
USD     United States Dollar

 

  27   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

 

Assets   October 31, 2017  

Unaffiliated investments, at value (identified cost, $328,734,794)

  $ 331,312,972  

Affiliated investment, at value (identified cost, $16,878,498)

    16,877,719  

Cash

    3,113,492  

Deposits for derivatives collateral —

 

Financial futures contracts

    537,546  

Centrally cleared swap contracts

    4,585,753  

OTC derivatives

    400,000  

Foreign currency, at value (identified cost, $352,157)

    348,269  

Interest receivable

    2,960,500  

Dividends receivable from affiliated investment

    16,975  

Receivable for investments sold

    944,967  

Receivable for variation margin on open centrally cleared swap contracts

    596  

Receivable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    99,080  

Receivable for open swap contracts

    662,051  

Premium paid on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    4,289  

Tax reclaims receivable

    20,393  

Prepaid upfront fees on notes payable

    26,731  

Other assets

    8,770  

Total assets

  $ 361,920,103  
Liabilities        

Notes payable

  $ 83,000,000  

Payable for investments purchased

    2,787,331  

Payable for variation margin on open financial futures contracts

    2,489  

Payable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    1,050  

Payable for open swap contracts

    22,189  

Premium received on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    1,507,967  

Payable to affiliates:

 

Investment adviser fee

    275,375  

Trustees’ fees

    2,063  

Accrued expenses

    484,351  

Total liabilities

  $ 88,082,815  

Commitments and contingencies (Note 10)

       

Net Assets

  $ 273,837,288  
Sources of Net Assets        

Common shares, $0.01 par value, unlimited number of shares authorized, 17,880,596 shares issued and outstanding

  $ 178,806  

Additional paid-in capital

    281,790,875  

Accumulated net realized loss

    (10,687,431

Accumulated distributions in excess of net investment income

    (948,004

Net unrealized appreciation

    3,503,042  

Net Assets

  $ 273,837,288  
Net Asset Value        

($273,837,288 ÷ 17,880,596 common shares issued and outstanding)

  $ 15.31  

 

  28   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Investment Income  

Year Ended

October 31, 2017

 

Interest and other income (net of foreign taxes, $2,387)

  $ 18,237,871  

Dividends

    185,087  

Dividends from affiliated investment

    146,467  

Total investment income

  $ 18,569,425  
Expenses        

Investment adviser fee

  $ 3,325,043  

Trustees’ fees and expenses

    26,017  

Custodian fee

    315,778  

Transfer and dividend disbursing agent fees

    19,510  

Legal and accounting services

    257,865  

Printing and postage

    71,332  

Interest expense and fees

    1,947,492  

Miscellaneous

    61,066  

Total expenses

  $ 6,024,103  

Net investment income

  $ 12,545,322  
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)        

Net realized gain (loss) —

 

Investment transactions

  $ 976,098  

Investment transactions — affiliated investment

    (1,170

Written options

    58,297  

Financial futures contracts

    (274,324

Swap contracts

    2,080,921  

Foreign currency transactions

    181,705  

Forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    (556,269

Net realized gain

  $ 2,465,258  

Change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) —

 

Investments

  $ 6,077,305  

Investments — affiliated investment

    (2,678

Written options

    (40,719

Financial futures contracts

    123,380  

Swap contracts

    698,806  

Foreign currency

    39,962  

Forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    397,920  

Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

  $ 7,293,976  

Net realized and unrealized gain

  $ 9,759,234  

Net increase in net assets from operations

  $ 22,304,556  

 

  29   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

    Year Ended October 31,  
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets   2017     2016  

From operations —

   

Net investment income

  $ 12,545,322     $ 12,927,271  

Net realized gain (loss)

    2,465,258       (2,351,002

Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

    7,293,976       2,921,109  

Net increase in net assets from operations

  $ 22,304,556     $ 13,497,378  

Distributions to shareholders —

   

From net investment income

  $ (16,312,002   $ (11,355,168

Tax return of capital

    (1,309,325     (7,959,521

Total distributions

  $ (17,621,327   $ (19,314,689

Capital share transactions —

   

Cost of shares repurchased (see Note 5)

  $     $ (723,031

Net decrease in net assets from capital share transactions

  $     $ (723,031

Net increase (decrease) in net assets

  $ 4,683,229     $ (6,540,342
Net Assets                

At beginning of year

  $ 269,154,059     $ 275,694,401  

At end of year

  $ 273,837,288     $ 269,154,059  
Accumulated undistributed (distributions in excess of) net investment income
included in net assets
               

At end of year

  $ (948,004   $ 708,271  

 

  30   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Statement of Cash Flows

 

 

Cash Flows From Operating Activities  

Year Ended

October 31, 2017

 

Net increase in net assets from operations

  $ 22,304,556  

Adjustments to reconcile net increase in net assets from operations to net cash provided by operating activities:

 

Investments purchased

    (172,985,823

Investments sold

    194,386,232  

Increase in short-term investments, net, excluding foreign government securities

    (3,614,168

Net amortization/accretion of premium (discount)

    7,202,962  

Amortization of prepaid upfront fees on notes payable

    70,192  

Increase in deposits for derivatives collateral — financial futures contracts

    (537,546

Increase in deposits for derivatives collateral — centrally cleared swap contracts

    (4,585,753

Decrease in deposits for derivatives collateral — OTC derivatives

    167,373  

Increase in interest receivable

    (215,109

Increase in dividends receivable from affiliated investment

    (16,975

Increase in receivable for variation margin on open centrally cleared swap contracts

    (596

Decrease in receivable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    1,890,908  

Increase in receivable for open swap contracts

    (662,051

Decrease in premium paid on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    36,090  

Increase in tax reclaims receivable

    (2,718

Increase in other assets

    (2,962

Decrease in cash collateral due to broker

    (567,373

Decrease in written options outstanding, at value

    (17,578

Increase in payable for variation margin on open financial futures contracts

    2,489  

Decrease in payable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

    (2,288,828

Increase in payable for open swap contracts

    9,089  

Increase in premium received on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    1,507,967  

Decrease in payable to affiliate for investment adviser fee

    (10,501

Increase in payable to affiliate for Trustees’ fees

    91  

Decrease in accrued expenses

    (33,844

Decrease in unfunded loan commitments

    (5,043

Net change in unrealized (appreciation) depreciation from investments

    (6,074,627

Net realized gain from investments

    (974,928

Net cash provided by operating activities

  $ 34,981,526  
Cash Flows From Financing Activities        

Distributions paid, net of reinvestments

  $ (17,621,327

Payment of prepaid upfront fees on notes payable

    (70,000

Proceeds from notes payable

    74,000,000  

Repayment of notes payable

    (93,000,000

Net cash used in financing activities

  $ (36,691,327

Net decrease in cash*

  $ (1,709,801

Cash at beginning of year(1)

  $ 5,171,562  

Cash at end of year(1)

  $ 3,461,761  
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information        

Cash paid for interest and fees

  $ 1,918,785  

 

(1)

Balance includes foreign currency, at value.

 

* Includes net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on foreign currency of $(2,070).

 

  31   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Financial Highlights

 

 

    Year Ended October 31,  
     2017     2016     2015     2014     2013  

Net asset value — Beginning of year

  $ 15.050     $ 15.370     $ 16.460     $ 16.970     $ 17.860  
Income (Loss) From Operations                                        

Net investment income(1)

  $ 0.702     $ 0.723     $ 0.777     $ 0.804     $ 0.824  

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

    0.544       0.030       (0.860     (0.261     (0.634

Total income (loss) from operations

  $ 1.246     $ 0.753     $ (0.083   $ 0.543     $ 0.190  
Less Distributions                                        

From net investment income

  $ (0.913   $ (0.635   $ (0.512   $ (0.759   $ (0.697

Tax return of capital

    (0.073     (0.445     (0.568     (0.321     (0.383

Total distributions

  $ (0.986   $ (1.080   $ (1.080   $ (1.080   $ (1.080

Anti-dilutive effect of share repurchase program (see Note 5)(1)

  $     $ 0.007     $ 0.073     $ 0.027     $  

Net asset value — End of year

  $ 15.310     $ 15.050     $ 15.370     $ 16.460     $ 16.970  

Market value — End of year

  $ 14.190     $ 13.360     $ 13.580     $ 14.530     $ 15.290  

Total Investment Return on Net Asset Value(2)

    9.16     6.10     0.84     4.10     1.47

Total Investment Return on Market Value(2)

    13.86     6.60     0.87     2.05     (5.72 )% 
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                        

Net assets, end of year (000’s omitted)

  $ 273,837     $ 269,154     $ 275,694     $ 306,210     $ 320,514  

Ratios (as a percentage of average daily net assets):

         

Expenses excluding interest and fees(3)

    1.49     1.53     1.51     1.53     1.55

Interest and fee expense(4)

    0.72     0.61     0.48     0.36     0.47

Total expenses(3)

    2.21     2.14     1.99     1.89     2.02

Net investment income

    4.61     4.81     4.84     4.80     4.72

Portfolio Turnover

    50     42     34     41     48

Senior Securities:

         

Total notes payable outstanding (in 000’s)

  $ 83,000     $ 102,000     $ 123,000     $ 128,000     $ 95,000  

Asset coverage per $1,000 of notes payable(5)

  $ 4,299     $ 3,639     $ 3,241     $ 3,392     $ 4,374  

 

(1) 

Computed using average common shares outstanding.

 

(2) 

Returns are historical and are calculated by determining the percentage change in net asset value or market value with all distributions reinvested. Distributions are assumed to be reinvested at prices obtained under the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan.

 

(3) 

Excludes the effect of custody fee credits, if any, of less than 0.005%. Effective September 1, 2015, custody fee credits, which were earned on cash deposit balances, were discontinued by the custodian.

 

(4) 

Interest and fee expense relates to borrowings for the purpose of financial leverage (see Note 7) and securities sold short.

 

(5) 

Calculated by subtracting the Fund’s total liabilities (not including the notes payable) from the Fund’s total assets, and dividing the result by the notes payable balance in thousands.

 

  32   See Notes to Financial Statements.


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

 

1  Significant Accounting Policies

Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund (the Fund) is a Massachusetts business trust registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as a diversified, closed-end management investment company. The Fund’s primary investment objective is to provide a high level of current income, with a secondary objective of seeking capital appreciation to the extent consistent with its primary goal.

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies of the Fund. The policies are in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (U.S. GAAP). The Fund is an investment company and follows accounting and reporting guidance in the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification Topic 946.

A  Investment Valuation — The following methodologies are used to determine the market value or fair value of investments.

Senior Floating-Rate Loans. Interests in senior floating-rate loans (Senior Loans) for which reliable market quotations are readily available are valued generally at the average mean of bid and ask quotations obtained from a third party pricing service. Other Senior Loans are valued at fair value by the investment adviser under procedures approved by the Trustees. In fair valuing a Senior Loan, the investment adviser utilizes one or more of the valuation techniques described in (i) through (iii) below to assess the likelihood that the borrower will make a full repayment of the loan underlying such Senior Loan relative to yields on other Senior Loans issued by companies of comparable credit quality. If the investment adviser believes that there is a reasonable likelihood of full repayment, the investment adviser will determine fair value using a matrix pricing approach that considers the yield on the Senior Loan. If the investment adviser believes there is not a reasonable likelihood of full repayment, the investment adviser will determine fair value using analyses that include, but are not limited to: (i) a comparison of the value of the borrower’s outstanding equity and debt to that of comparable public companies; (ii) a discounted cash flow analysis; or (iii) when the investment adviser believes it is likely that a borrower will be liquidated or sold, an analysis of the terms of such liquidation or sale. In certain cases, the investment adviser will use a combination of analytical methods to determine fair value, such as when only a portion of a borrower’s assets are likely to be sold. In conducting its assessment and analyses for purposes of determining fair value of a Senior Loan, the investment adviser will use its discretion and judgment in considering and appraising relevant factors. Fair value determinations are made by the portfolio managers of the Fund based on information available to such managers. The portfolio managers of other funds managed by the investment adviser that invest in Senior Loans may not possess the same information about a Senior Loan borrower as the portfolio managers of the Fund. At times, the fair value of a Senior Loan determined by the portfolio managers of other funds managed by the investment adviser that invest in Senior Loans may vary from the fair value of the same Senior Loan determined by the portfolio managers of the Fund. The fair value of each Senior Loan is periodically reviewed and approved by the investment adviser’s Valuation Committee and by the Trustees based upon procedures approved by the Trustees. Junior Loans (i.e., subordinated loans and second lien loans) are valued in the same manner as Senior Loans.

Debt Obligations. Debt obligations are generally valued on the basis of valuations provided by third party pricing services, as derived from such services’ pricing models. Inputs to the models may include, but are not limited to, reported trades, executable bid and asked prices, broker/dealer quotations, prices or yields of securities with similar characteristics, interest rates, anticipated prepayments, benchmark curves or information pertaining to the issuer, as well as industry and economic events. The pricing services may use a matrix approach, which considers information regarding securities with similar characteristics to determine the valuation for a security. Short-term obligations purchased with a remaining maturity of sixty days or less for which a valuation from a third party pricing service is not readily available may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value.

Equity Securities. Equity securities listed on a U.S. securities exchange generally are valued at the last sale or closing price on the day of valuation or, if no sales took place on such date, at the mean between the closing bid and asked prices therefore on the exchange where such securities are principally traded. Equity securities listed on the NASDAQ Global or Global Select Market generally are valued at the NASDAQ official closing price. Unlisted or listed securities for which closing sales prices or closing quotations are not available are valued at the mean between the latest available bid and asked prices.

Derivatives. U.S. exchange-traded options are valued at the mean between the bid and asked prices at valuation time as reported by the Options Price Reporting Authority. Non U.S. exchange-traded options and over-the-counter options (including options on securities, indices and foreign currencies) are valued by a third party pricing service using techniques that consider factors including the value of the underlying instrument, the volatility of the underlying instrument and the period of time until option expiration. Financial futures contracts are valued at the closing settlement price established by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded. Forward foreign currency exchange contracts are generally valued at the mean of the average bid and average asked prices that are reported by currency dealers to a third party pricing service at the valuation time. Such third party pricing service valuations are supplied for specific settlement periods and the Fund’s forward foreign currency exchange contracts are valued at an interpolated rate between the closest preceding and subsequent settlement period reported by the third party pricing service. Swaps are normally valued using valuations provided by a third party pricing service. Such pricing service valuations are based on the present value of fixed and projected floating rate cash flows over the term of the swap contract, and in the case of credit default swaps, based on credit spread quotations obtained from broker/dealers and expected default recovery rates determined by the pricing service using proprietary models. Future cash flows on swaps are discounted to their present value using swap rates provided by electronic data services or by broker/dealers.

Foreign Securities and Currencies. Foreign securities and currencies are valued in U.S. dollars, based on foreign currency exchange rate quotations supplied by a third party pricing service. The pricing service uses a proprietary model to determine the exchange rate. Inputs to the model include reported trades and implied bid/ask spreads. The daily valuation of exchange-traded foreign securities generally is determined as of the close of trading on the principal exchange on which such securities trade. Events occurring after the close of trading on foreign exchanges may result in adjustments to the valuation of foreign securities to more accurately reflect their fair value as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

 

  33  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

Affiliated Fund. The Fund may invest in Eaton Vance Cash Reserves Fund, LLC (Cash Reserves Fund), an affiliated investment company managed by Eaton Vance Management (EVM). While Cash Reserves Fund is not a registered money market mutual fund, it conducts all of its investment activities in accordance with the requirements of Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act. Investments in Cash Reserves Fund are valued at the closing net asset value per unit on the valuation day. Cash Reserves Fund generally values its investment securities based on available market quotations provided by a third party pricing service.

Fair Valuation. Investments for which valuations or market quotations are not readily available or are deemed unreliable are valued at fair value using methods determined in good faith by or at the direction of the Trustees of the Fund in a manner that fairly reflects the security’s value, or the amount that the Fund might reasonably expect to receive for the security upon its current sale in the ordinary course. Each such determination is based on a consideration of relevant factors, which are likely to vary from one pricing context to another. These factors may include, but are not limited to, the type of security, the existence of any contractual restrictions on the security’s disposition, the price and extent of public trading in similar securities of the issuer or of comparable companies or entities, quotations or relevant information obtained from broker/dealers or other market participants, information obtained from the issuer, analysts, and/or the appropriate stock exchange (for exchange-traded securities), an analysis of the company’s or entity’s financial condition, and an evaluation of the forces that influence the issuer and the market(s) in which the security is purchased and sold.

B  Investment Transactions — Investment transactions for financial statement purposes are accounted for on a trade date basis. Realized gains and losses on investments sold are determined on the basis of identified cost.

C  Income — Interest income is recorded on the basis of interest accrued, adjusted for amortization of premium or accretion of discount. Fees associated with loan amendments are recognized immediately. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date for dividends received in cash and/or securities. Withholding taxes on foreign interest have been provided for in accordance with the Fund’s understanding of the applicable countries’ tax rules and rates

D  Federal Taxes — The Fund’s policy is to comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute to shareholders each year substantially all of its net investment income, and all or substantially all of its net realized capital gains. Accordingly, no provision for federal income or excise tax is necessary.

As of October 31, 2017, the Fund had no uncertain tax positions that would require financial statement recognition, de-recognition, or disclosure. The Fund files a U.S. federal income tax return annually after its fiscal year-end, which is subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service for a period of three years from the date of filing.

E  Foreign Currency Translation — Investment valuations, other assets, and liabilities initially expressed in foreign currencies are translated each business day into U.S. dollars based upon current exchange rates. Purchases and sales of foreign investment securities and income and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars based upon currency exchange rates in effect on the respective dates of such transactions. Recognized gains or losses on investment transactions attributable to changes in foreign currency exchange rates are recorded for financial statement purposes as net realized gains and losses on investments. That portion of unrealized gains and losses on investments that results from fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates is not separately disclosed.

F  Unfunded Loan Commitments — The Fund may enter into certain loan agreements all or a portion of which may be unfunded. The Fund is obligated to fund these commitments at the borrower’s discretion. These commitments, if any, are disclosed in the accompanying Portfolio of Investments.

G  Use of Estimates — The preparation of the financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of income and expense during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

H  Indemnifications — Under the Fund’s organizational documents, its officers and Trustees may be indemnified against certain liabilities and expenses arising out of the performance of their duties to the Fund. Under Massachusetts law, if certain conditions prevail, shareholders of a Massachusetts business trust (such as the Fund) could be deemed to have personal liability for the obligations of the Fund. However, the Fund’s Declaration of Trust contains an express disclaimer of liability on the part of Fund shareholders and the By-laws provide that the Fund shall assume the defense on behalf of any Fund shareholders. Moreover, the By-laws also provide for indemnification out of Fund property of any shareholder held personally liable solely by reason of being or having been a shareholder for all loss or expense arising from such liability. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Fund enters into agreements with service providers that may contain indemnification clauses. The Fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Fund that have not yet occurred.

I  Financial Futures Contracts — Upon entering into a financial futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit with the broker, either in cash or securities, an amount equal to a certain percentage of the contract amount (initial margin). Subsequent payments, known as variation margin, are made or received by the Fund each business day, depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the underlying security, and are recorded as unrealized gains or losses by the Fund. Gains (losses) are realized upon the expiration or closing of the financial futures contracts. Should market conditions change unexpectedly, the Fund may not achieve the anticipated benefits of the financial futures contracts and may realize a loss. Futures contracts have minimal counterparty risk as they are exchange traded and the clearinghouse for the exchange is substituted as the counterparty, guaranteeing counterparty performance.

 

  34  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

J  Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts — The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts for the purchase or sale of a specific foreign currency at a fixed price on a future date. The forward foreign currency exchange contracts are adjusted by the daily exchange rate of the underlying currency and any gains or losses are recorded as unrealized until such time as the contracts have been closed. Risks may arise upon entering these contracts from the potential inability of counterparties to meet the terms of their contracts and from movements in the value of a foreign currency relative to the U.S. dollar.

K  Written Options — Upon the writing of a call or a put option, the premium received by the Fund is included in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a liability. The amount of the liability is subsequently marked-to-market to reflect the current market value of the option written, in accordance with the Fund’s policies on investment valuations discussed above. Premiums received from writing options which expire are treated as realized gains. Premiums received from writing options which are exercised or are closed are added to or offset against the proceeds or amount paid on the transaction to determine the realized gain or loss. When an index option is exercised, the Fund is required to deliver an amount of cash determined by the excess of the strike price of the option over the value of the index (in the case of a put) or the excess of the value of the index over the strike price of the option (in the case of a call) at contract termination. If a put option on a security is exercised, the premium reduces the cost basis of the securities purchased by the Fund. The Fund, as a writer of an option, may have no control over whether the underlying securities or other assets may be sold (call) or purchased (put) and, as a result, bears the market risk of an unfavorable change in the price of the securities or other assets underlying the written option. The Fund may also bear the risk of not being able to enter into a closing transaction if a liquid secondary market does not exist.

L  Purchased Options — Upon the purchase of a call or put option, the premium paid by the Fund is included in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as an investment. The amount of the investment is subsequently marked-to-market to reflect the current market value of the option purchased, in accordance with the Fund’s policies on investment valuations discussed above. As the purchaser of an index option, the Fund has the right to receive a cash payment equal to any depreciation in the value of the index below the strike price of the option (in the case of a put) or equal to any appreciation in the value of the index over the strike price of the option (in the case of a call) as of the valuation date of the option. If an option which the Fund had purchased expires on the stipulated expiration date, the Fund will realize a loss in the amount of the cost of the option. If the Fund enters into a closing sale transaction, the Fund will realize a gain or loss, depending on whether the sales proceeds from the closing sale transaction are greater or less than the cost of the option. If the Fund exercises a put option on a security, it will realize a gain or loss from the sale of the underlying security, and the proceeds from such sale will be decreased by the premium originally paid. If the Fund exercises a call option on a security, the cost of the security which the Fund purchases upon exercise will be increased by the premium originally paid. The risk associated with purchasing options is limited to the premium originally paid. Purchased options traded over-the-counter involve risk that the issuer or counterparty will fail to perform its contractual obligations.

M  Interest Rate Swaps — Swap contracts are privately negotiated agreements between the Fund and a counterparty. Certain swap contracts may be centrally cleared (“centrally cleared swaps”), whereby all payments made or received by the Fund pursuant to the contract are with a central clearing party (CCP) rather than the original counterparty. The CCP guarantees the performance of the original parties to the contract. Upon entering into centrally cleared swaps, the Fund is required to deposit with the CCP, either in cash or securities, an amount of initial margin determined by the CCP, which is subject to adjustment.

Pursuant to interest rate swap agreements, the Fund either makes floating-rate payments to the counterparty (or CCP in the case of centrally cleared swaps) based on a benchmark interest rate in exchange for fixed-rate payments or the Fund makes fixed-rate payments to the counterparty (or CCP in the case of a centrally cleared swap) in exchange for payments on a floating benchmark interest rate. Payments received or made are recorded as realized gains or losses. During the term of the outstanding swap agreement, changes in the underlying value of the swap are recorded as unrealized gains or losses. For centrally cleared swaps, the daily change in valuation is recorded as a receivable or payable for variation margin and settled in cash with the CCP daily. The value of the swap is determined by changes in the relationship between two rates of interest. The Fund is exposed to credit loss in the event of non-performance by the swap counterparty. In the case of centrally cleared swaps, counterparty risk is minimal due to protections provided by the CCP. Risk may also arise from movements in interest rates.

N  Credit Default Swaps — When the Fund is the buyer of a credit default swap contract, the Fund is entitled to receive the par (or other agreed-upon) value of a referenced debt obligation (or basket of debt obligations) from the counterparty (or CCP in the case of a centrally cleared swap) to the contract if a credit event by a third party, such as a U.S. or foreign corporate issuer or sovereign issuer, on the debt obligation occurs. In return, the Fund pays the counterparty a periodic stream of payments over the term of the contract provided that no credit event has occurred. If no credit event occurs, the Fund would have spent the stream of payments and received no proceeds from the contract. When the Fund is the seller of a credit default swap contract, it receives the stream of payments, but is obligated to pay to the buyer of the protection an amount up to the notional amount of the swap and in certain instances take delivery of securities of the reference entity upon the occurrence of a credit event, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement. Credit events are contract specific but may include bankruptcy, failure to pay, restructuring, obligation acceleration and repudiation/moratorium. If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Fund could be required to make would be an amount equal to the notional amount of the agreement. This potential amount would be partially offset by any recovery value of the respective referenced obligation, or net amount received from the settlement of a buy protection credit default swap agreement entered into by the Fund for the same referenced obligation. As the seller, the Fund may create economic leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the Fund is subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap. The interest fee paid or received on the swap contract, which is based on a specified interest rate on a fixed notional amount, is accrued daily as a component of unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and is recorded as realized gain upon receipt or realized loss upon payment. The Fund also records an increase or decrease to unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in an amount equal to the daily valuation. For centrally cleared swaps, the daily change in valuation is recorded as a receivable or payable for variation margin and

 

  35  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

settled in cash with the CCP daily. All upfront payments, if any, are amortized over the life of the swap contract as realized gains or losses. Those upfront payments that are paid or received, typically for non-centrally cleared swaps, are recorded as other assets or other liabilities, respectively, net of amortization. For financial reporting purposes, unamortized upfront payments, if any, are netted with unrealized appreciation or depreciation on swap contracts to determine the market value of swaps as presented in Notes 6 and 9. The Fund segregates assets in the form of cash or liquid securities in an amount equal to the notional amount of the credit default swaps of which it is the seller. The Fund segregates assets in the form of cash or liquid securities in an amount equal to any unrealized depreciation of the credit default swaps of which it is the buyer, marked-to-market on a daily basis. These transactions involve certain risks, including the risk that the seller may be unable to fulfill the transaction. In the case of centrally cleared swaps, counterparty risk is minimal due to protections provided by the CCP.

O  When-Issued Securities and Delayed Delivery Transactions — The Fund may purchase or sell securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. Payment and delivery may take place after the customary settlement period for that security. At the time the transaction is negotiated, the price of the security that will be delivered is fixed. The Fund maintains cash and/or security positions for these commitments such that sufficient liquid assets will be available to make payments upon settlement. Securities purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis are marked-to-market daily and begin earning interest on settlement date. Losses may arise due to changes in the market value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract.

P  Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities — The Fund may invest in Interest Only (IO) and Principal Only (PO) securities, a form of stripped mortgage-backed securities, whereby the IO security receives all the interest and the PO security receives all the principal on a pool of mortgage assets. The yield to maturity on an IO security is extremely sensitive to the rate of principal payments (including prepayments) on the related underlying mortgage assets, and a rapid rate of principal payments may have a material adverse effect on the yield to maturity from these securities. If the underlying mortgages experience greater than anticipated prepayments of principal, the Fund may fail to recoup its initial investment in an IO security. The market value of IO and PO securities can be unusually volatile due to changes in interest rates.

Q  Statement of Cash Flows — The cash amount shown in the Statement of Cash Flows of the Fund is the amount included in the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities and represents the unrestricted cash on hand at its custodian and does not include any short-term investments.

2  Distributions to Shareholders and Income Tax Information

The Fund intends to make monthly distributions to shareholders and at least one distribution annually of all or substantially all of its net realized capital gains (reduced by available capital loss carryforwards from prior years). In its distributions, the Fund intends to include amounts attributable to the imputed interest on foreign currency exposures through long and short positions in forward currency exchange contracts (represented by the difference between the foreign currency spot rate and the foreign currency forward rate) and the imputed interest derived from certain other derivative positions. Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Distributions to shareholders are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from U.S. GAAP. As required by U.S. GAAP, only distributions in excess of tax basis earnings and profits are reported in the financial statements as a return of capital. Permanent differences between book and tax accounting relating to distributions are reclassified to paid-in capital. For tax purposes, distributions from short-term capital gains are considered to be from ordinary income. In certain circumstances, a portion of distributions to shareholders may include a return of capital component.

The tax character of distributions declared for the years ended October 31, 2017 and October 31, 2016 was as follows:

 

    Year Ended October 31,  
     2017      2016  

Distributions declared from:

    

Ordinary income

  $ 16,312,002      $ 11,355,168  

Tax return of capital

  $ 1,309,325      $ 7,959,521  

During the year ended October 31, 2017, accumulated net realized loss was increased by $1,131,879, accumulated distributions in excess of net investment income was decreased by $2,110,405 and paid-in capital was decreased by $978,526 due to expired capital loss carryforwards and differences between book and tax accounting, primarily for foreign currency gain (loss), paydown gain (loss), swap contracts, tax straddle transactions, premium amortization and accretion of market discount. These reclassifications had no effect on the net assets or net asset value per share of the Fund.

As of October 31, 2017, the components of distributable earnings (accumulated losses) on a tax basis were as follows:

 

Capital loss carryforwards and deferred capital losses

  $ (8,949,812

Net unrealized appreciation

  $ 817,419  

 

  36  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

The differences between components of distributable earnings (accumulated losses) on a tax basis and the amounts reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities are primarily due to wash sales, foreign currency transactions, futures contracts, swap contracts, investments in partnerships, premium amortization, accretion of market discount and tax straddle transactions.

At October 31, 2017, the Fund, for federal income tax purposes, had capital loss carryforwards of $6,737,829 and deferred capital losses of $2,211,983 which would reduce its taxable income arising from future net realized gains on investment transactions, if any, to the extent permitted by the Internal Revenue Code, and thus would reduce the amount of distributions to shareholders, which would otherwise be necessary to relieve the Fund of any liability for federal income or excise tax. Such capital loss carryforwards will expire on October 31, 2018 ($5,165,932) and October 31, 2019 ($1,571,897) and their character is short-term. Under tax regulations, capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after December 2010 are considered deferred capital losses and are treated as arising on the first day of the Fund’s next taxable year, retaining the same short-term or long-term character as when originally deferred. Deferred capital losses are required to be used prior to capital loss carryforwards, which carry an expiration date. As a result of this ordering rule, capital loss carryforwards may be more likely to expire unused. Of the deferred capital losses at October 31, 2017, $2,211,983 are long-term.

The cost and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments, including open derivative contracts, of the Fund at October 31, 2017, as determined on a federal income tax basis, were as follows:

 

Aggregate cost

  $ 347,508,628  

Gross unrealized appreciation

  $ 8,473,500  

Gross unrealized depreciation

    (7,712,359

Net unrealized appreciation

  $ 761,141  

3  Investment Adviser Fee and Other Transactions with Affiliates

The investment adviser fee is earned by EVM as compensation for investment advisory services rendered to the Fund. Pursuant to the investment advisory agreement and subsequent fee reduction agreement between the Fund and EVM, the fee is computed at an annual rate of 0.75% of the Fund’s average daily total leveraged assets, subject to the limitation described below, and is payable monthly. Total leveraged assets as referred to herein represent net assets plus liabilities or obligations attributable to investment leverage and the notional value of long and short forward currency contracts, futures contracts and swaps held by the Fund. The notional value of a contract for purposes of calculating total leveraged assets is the stated dollar value of the underlying reference instrument at the time the derivative position is entered into and remains constant throughout the life of the derivative contract. However, the derivative contracts are marked-to-market daily and any unrealized appreciation or depreciation is reflected in the Fund’s net assets. When the Fund holds both long and short forward currency contracts in the same foreign currency, the offsetting positions are netted for purposes of determining total leveraged assets. When the Fund holds other long and short positions in foreign obligations denominated in the same currency, total leveraged assets are calculated by excluding the smaller of the long or short position.

The advisory agreements provide that if investment leverage exceeds 40% of the Fund’s total leveraged assets, EVM will not receive a management fee on total leveraged assets in excess of this amount. As of October 31, 2017, the Fund’s investment leverage was 37% of its total leveraged assets. For the year ended October 31, 2017, the Fund’s investment adviser fee amounted to $3,325,043 or 0.74% of the Fund’s average daily total leveraged assets and 1.22% of the Fund’s average daily net assets. The Fund invests its cash in Cash Reserves Fund. EVM does not currently receive a fee for advisory services provided to Cash Reserves Fund. EVM also serves as administrator of the Fund, but receives no compensation.

Trustees and officers of the Fund who are members of EVM’s organization receive remuneration for their services to the Fund out of the investment adviser fee. Trustees of the Fund who are not affiliated with EVM may elect to defer receipt of all or a percentage of their annual fees in accordance with the terms of the Trustees Deferred Compensation Plan. For the year ended October 31, 2017, no significant amounts have been deferred. Certain officers and Trustees of the Fund are officers of EVM.

 

  37  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

4  Purchases and Sales of Investments

Purchases and sales of investments, other than short-term obligations and including maturities, paydowns and principal repayments on Senior Loans, for the year ended October 31, 2017 were as follows:

 

     Purchases      Sales  

Investments (non-U.S. Government)

  $ 143,168,256      $ 152,612,463  

U.S. Government and Agency Securities

    24,488,860        29,580,154  
    $ 167,657,116      $ 182,192,617  

5  Common Shares of Beneficial Interest

The Fund may issue common shares pursuant to its dividend reinvestment plan. There were no common shares issued by the Fund for the years ended October 31, 2017 and October 31, 2016.

At October 31, 2017, one shareholder owned 19.9% of the outstanding shares of the Fund.

On November 11, 2013, the Board of Trustees of the Fund authorized the repurchase by the Fund of up to 10% of its then currently outstanding common shares in open-market transactions at a discount to net asset value (NAV). The repurchase program does not obligate the Fund to purchase a specific amount of shares. There were no repurchases of common shares by the Fund for the year ended October 31, 2017. During the year ended October 31, 2016, the Fund repurchased 55,500 of its common shares under the share repurchase program at a cost, including brokerage commissions, of $723,031 and an average price per share of $13.03. The weighted average discount per share to NAV on these repurchases amounted to 14.41% for the year ended October 31, 2016.

6  Financial Instruments

The Fund may trade in financial instruments with off-balance sheet risk in the normal course of its investing activities. These financial instruments may include written options, financial futures contracts, forward foreign currency exchange contracts and swap contracts and may involve, to a varying degree, elements of risk in excess of the amounts recognized for financial statement purposes. The notional or contractual amounts of these instruments represent the investment the Fund has in particular classes of financial instruments and do not necessarily represent the amounts potentially subject to risk. The measurement of the risks associated with these instruments is meaningful only when all related and offsetting transactions are considered. A summary of obligations under these financial instruments at October 31, 2017 is included in the Portfolio of Investments. At October 31, 2017, the Fund had sufficient cash and/or securities to cover commitments under these contracts.

In the normal course of pursuing its investment objectives, the Fund is subject to the following risks:

Credit Risk: The Fund enters into credit default swap contracts to manage certain investment risks and/or to enhance total return.

Foreign Exchange Risk: The Fund engages in forward foreign currency exchange contracts and currency options to enhance total return, to seek to hedge against fluctuations in currency exchange rates and/or as a substitute for the purchase or sale of securities or currencies.

Interest Rate Risk: The Fund utilizes various interest rate derivatives including interest rate futures contracts and interest rate swaps to enhance total return, to seek to hedge against fluctuations in interest rates and/or to change the effective duration of its portfolio.

The Fund enters into over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives that may contain provisions whereby the counterparty may terminate the contract under certain conditions, including but not limited to a decline in the Fund’s net assets below a certain level over a certain period of time, which would trigger a payment by the Fund for those derivatives in a liability position. At October 31, 2017, the fair value of derivatives with credit-related contingent features in a net liability position was $956,830. The aggregate fair value of assets pledged as collateral by the Fund for such liability was $1,093,070 at October 31, 2017.

The OTC derivatives in which the Fund invests (except for written options as the Fund, not the counterparty, is obligated to perform) are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the contract fails to perform its obligations under the contract. To mitigate this risk, the Fund has entered into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreement (“ISDA Master Agreement”) or similar agreement with substantially all its derivative counterparties. An ISDA Master Agreement is a bilateral agreement between the Fund and a counterparty that governs certain OTC derivatives and typically contains, among other things, set-off provisions in the event of a default and/or termination event as defined under the relevant ISDA Master Agreement. Under an ISDA Master Agreement, the Fund may, under certain circumstances, offset with the counterparty certain derivative financial instruments’ payables and/or receivables with collateral held and/or posted and create one single net payment. The provisions of the ISDA Master Agreement typically permit a single net payment in the event of default including the bankruptcy or insolvency of the counterparty. However, bankruptcy or insolvency laws of a

 

  38  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

particular jurisdiction may impose restrictions on or prohibitions against the right of offset in bankruptcy or insolvency. Certain ISDA Master Agreements allow counterparties to OTC derivatives to terminate derivative contracts prior to maturity in the event the Fund’s net assets decline by a stated percentage or the Fund fails to meet the terms of its ISDA Master Agreements, which would cause the counterparty to accelerate payment by the Fund of any net liability owed to it.

The collateral requirements for derivatives traded under an ISDA Master Agreement are governed by a Credit Support Annex to the ISDA Master Agreement. Collateral requirements are determined at the close of business each day and are typically based on changes in market values for each transaction under an ISDA Master Agreement and netted into one amount for such agreement. Generally, the amount of collateral due from or to a counterparty is subject to a minimum transfer threshold amount before a transfer is required, which may vary by counterparty. Collateral pledged for the benefit of the Fund and/or counterparty is held in segregated accounts by the Fund’s custodian and cannot be sold, re-pledged, assigned or otherwise used while pledged. The portion of such collateral representing cash, if any, is reflected as deposits for derivatives collateral and, in the case of cash pledged by a counterparty for the benefit of the Fund, a corresponding liability on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Securities pledged by the Fund as collateral, if any, are identified as such in the Portfolio of Investments.

The fair value of open derivative instruments (not considered to be hedging instruments for accounting disclosure purposes) by risk exposure at October 31, 2017 was as follows:

 

    Fair Value  
Statement of Assets and Liabilities Caption   Credit     

Foreign

Exchange

    

Interest

Rate

     Total  

Net unrealized appreciation*

  $ 35,133      $      $ 157,602      $ 192,735  

Receivable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

           99,080               99,080  

Receivable/Payable for open swap contracts; Premium paid/received on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    91,964                      91,964  

Total Asset Derivatives

  $ 127,097      $ 99,080      $ 157,602      $ 383,779  

Derivatives not subject to master netting or similar agreements

  $ 35,133      $      $ 157,602      $ 192,735  

Total Asset Derivatives subject to master netting or similar agreements

  $ 91,964      $ 99,080      $      $ 191,044  
          
     Credit      Foreign
Exchange
     Interest
Rate
     Total  

Net unrealized appreciation*

  $      $      $ (23,511    $ (23,511

Payable for open forward foreign currency exchange contracts

           (1,050             (1,050

Payable/Receivable for open swap contracts; Premium paid/received on open non-centrally cleared swap contracts

    (955,780                    (955,780

Total Liability Derivatives

  $ (955,780    $ (1,050    $ (23,511    $ (980,341

Derivatives not subject to master netting or similar agreements

  $      $      $ (23,511    $ (23,511

Total Liability Derivatives subject to master netting or similar agreements

  $ (955,780    $ (1,050    $      $ (956,830

 

* Amount represents cumulative unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) on futures contracts and centrally cleared swap contracts. Only the current day’s variation margin on open futures contracts and centrally cleared swap contracts is reported within the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as Receivable or Payable for variation margin on open financial futures contracts and centrally cleared swap contracts, as applicable.

 

  39  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

The Fund’s derivative assets and liabilities at fair value by risk, which are reported gross in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities, are presented in the table above. The following tables present the Fund’s derivative assets and liabilities by counterparty, net of amounts available for offset under a master netting agreement and net of the related collateral received by the Fund for such assets and pledged by the Fund for such liabilities as of October 31, 2017.

 

Counterparty  

Derivative

Assets Subject to

Master Netting

Agreement

    

Derivatives

Available

for Offset

    

Non-cash

Collateral

Received(a)

    

Cash

Collateral

Received(a)

    

Net Amount

of Derivative

Assets(b)

    

Total Cash

Collateral

Received

 

Barclays Bank PLC

  $ 46,755      $ (27,616    $  —      $      $ 19,139      $  

Deutsche Bank AG

    26,641                             26,641         

Goldman Sachs International

    27,044        (27,044                            

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.

    10,404                             10,404         

Nomura International PLC

    45,209               (45,209                     

State Street Bank and Trust Company

    34,991        (1,050                    33,941         
    $ 191,044      $ (55,710    $ (45,209    $      $ 90,125      $  
                
Counterparty  

Derivative

Liabilities Subject to

Master Netting

Agreement

    

Derivatives

Available

for Offset

    

Non-cash

Collateral

Pledged(a)

    

Cash

Collateral

Pledged(a)

    

Net Amount

of Derivative

Liabilities(c)

    

Total Cash
Collateral

Pledged

 

Barclays Bank PLC

  $ (27,616    $ 27,616      $      $      $      $  

BNP Paribas

    (376,600             376,600                       

Citibank, N.A.

    (320,276                    320,276               400,000  

Goldman Sachs International

    (231,288      27,044        204,244                       

State Street Bank and Trust Company

    (1,050      1,050                              
    $ (956,830    $ 55,710      $ 580,844      $ 320,276      $      $  

Total — Deposits for derivatives collateral —
OTC derivatives

                                               $ 400,000  

 

(a) 

In some instances, the total collateral received and/or pledged may be more than the amount shown due to overcollateralization.

 

(b) 

Net amount represents the net amount due from the counterparty in the event of default.

 

(c) 

Net amount represents the net amount payable to the counterparty in the event of default.

 

  40  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

The effect of derivative instruments (not considered to be hedging instruments for accounting disclosure purposes) on the Statement of Operations by risk exposure for the year ended October 31, 2017 was as follows:

 

Statement of Operations Caption   Credit      Foreign
Exchange
     Interest
Rate
 

Net realized gain (loss) —

       

Investment transactions

  $      $ (58,665    $  

Written options

           58,297         

Financial futures contracts

                  (274,324

Swap contracts

    2,054,035               26,886  

Forward foreign currency exchange contracts

           (556,269       

Total

  $ 2,054,035      $ (556,637    $ (247,438

Change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) —

       

Investments

  $      $ 41,087      $  

Written options

           (40,719       

Financial futures contracts

                  123,380  

Swap contracts

    688,095               10,711  

Forward foreign currency exchange contracts

           397,920         

Total

  $ 688,095      $ 398,288      $ 134,091  

The average notional cost of futures contracts and average notional amounts of other derivative contracts outstanding during the year ended October 31, 2017, which are indicative of the volume of these derivative types, were approximately as follows:

 

Futures
Contracts — Short
   

Forward

Foreign Currency
Exchange Contracts*

   

Swap

Contracts

 
  $7,617,000     $ 45,110,000     $ 47,639,000  

 

* The average notional amount for forward foreign currency exchange contracts is based on the absolute value of notional amounts of currency purchased and currency sold.

The average principal amounts of purchased and written currency options contracts outstanding during the year ended October 31, 2017, which are indicative of the volume of these derivative types, were approximately $303,000 and $303,000, respectively.

7  Credit Agreement

The Fund has entered into a Credit Agreement (the Agreement) with a bank to borrow up to a limit of $140 million pursuant to a 364-day revolving line of credit. Borrowings under the Agreement are secured by the assets of the Fund. Interest is charged at a rate above the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and is payable monthly. Under the terms of the Agreement, in effect through March 20, 2018, the Fund pays a commitment fee of 0.15% on the borrowing limit. In connection with the renewal of the Agreement on March 21, 2017, the Fund paid an upfront fee of $70,000, which is being amortized to interest expense through March 20, 2018. The unamortized balance at October 31, 2017 is approximately $27,000 and is included in prepaid upfront fees on notes payable on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Also included in interest expense is $26,923 of amortization of previously paid upfront fees related to the period from November 1, 2016 through March 21, 2017 when the Agreement was renewed. The Fund is required to maintain certain net asset levels during the term of the Agreement. At October 31, 2017, the Fund had borrowings outstanding under the Agreement of $83,000,000 at an interest rate of 2.05%. Based on the short-term nature of the borrowings under the Agreement and the variable interest rate, the carrying amount of the borrowings at October 31, 2017 approximated its fair value. If measured at fair value, borrowings under the Agreement would have been considered as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy (see Note 9) at October 31, 2017. For the year ended October 31, 2017, the average borrowings under the Agreement and the average annual interest rate (excluding fees) were $92,986,301 and 1.78%, respectively.

 

  41  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

8  Risks Associated with Foreign Investments

The Fund’s investments in foreign instruments can be adversely affected by changes in currency exchange rates and political, economic and market developments abroad. In emerging or less developed countries, these risks can be more significant. Investment markets in emerging market countries are typically substantially smaller, less liquid and more volatile than the major markets in developed countries. Emerging market countries may have relatively unstable governments and economies. Emerging market investments often are subject to speculative trading, which typically contributes to volatility.

The Fund may have difficulties enforcing its legal or contractual rights in a foreign country. Economic data as reported by foreign governments and other issuers may be delayed, inaccurate or fraudulent. In the event of a default by a sovereign entity, there are typically no assets to be seized or cash flows to be attached. Furthermore, the willingness or ability of a foreign government to renegotiate defaulted debt may be limited.

9  Fair Value Measurements

Under generally accepted accounting principles for fair value measurements, a three-tier hierarchy to prioritize the assumptions, referred to as inputs, is used in valuation techniques to measure fair value. The three-tier hierarchy of inputs is summarized in the three broad levels listed below.

 

 

Level 1 – quoted prices in active markets for identical investments

 

 

Level 2 – other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar investments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.)

 

 

Level 3 – significant unobservable inputs (including a fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments)

In cases where the inputs used to measure fair value fall in different levels of the fair value hierarchy, the level disclosed is determined based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

 

  42  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Notes to Financial Statements — continued

 

 

At October 31, 2017, the hierarchy of inputs used in valuing the Fund’s investments and open derivative instruments, which are carried at value, were as follows:

 

Asset Description   Level 1      Level 2      Level 3*      Total  

Senior Floating-Rate Loans

  $      $ 94,049,174      $ 330,296      $ 94,379,470  

Corporate Bonds & Notes

           51,487,633               51,487,633  

Foreign Government Securities

           22,757,652               22,757,652  

Sovereign Loans

           3,042,367               3,042,367  

Mortgage Pass-Throughs

           29,890,353               29,890,353  

Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

           64,185,986               64,185,986  

Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities

           19,704,380               19,704,380  

Asset-Backed Securities

           39,569,577               39,569,577  

U.S. Government Agency Obligations

           1,538,399               1,538,399  

Common Stocks

    34,874        820,432        708,707        1,564,013  

Convertible Preferred Stocks

                  0        0  

Short-Term Investments

              

Foreign Government Securities

           197,163               197,163  

U.S. Treasury Obligations

           2,995,979               2,995,979  

Other

           16,877,719               16,877,719  

Total Investments

  $ 34,874      $ 347,116,814      $ 1,039,003      $ 348,190,691  

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts

  $      $ 99,080      $      $ 99,080  

Futures Contracts

    123,380                      123,380  

Swap Contracts

           148,035               148,035  

Total

  $ 158,254      $ 347,363,929      $ 1,039,003      $ 348,561,186  

Liability Description

                                  

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts

  $      $ (1,050    $      $ (1,050

Swap Contracts

           (979,291             (979,291

Total

  $      $ (980,341    $      $ (980,341

 

* None of the unobservable inputs for Level 3 assets, individually or collectively, had a material impact on the Fund.

Level 3 investments at the beginning and/or end of the period in relation to net assets were not significant and accordingly, a reconciliation of Level 3 assets for the year ended October 31, 2017 is not presented. At October 31, 2017, there were no investments transferred between Level 1 and Level 2 during the year then ended.

10  Legal Proceedings

In May 2015, the Fund was served with an amended complaint filed in an adversary proceeding in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. The adversary proceeding was filed by the Motors Liquidation Company Avoidance Action Trust (“AAT”) against the former holders of a $1.5 billion term loan issued by General Motors Corp. (“GM”) in 2006 (the “Term Loan Lenders”) who received a full repayment of the term loan pursuant to a court order in the GM bankruptcy proceeding. The court order was made with the understanding that the term loan was fully secured at the time of GM’s bankruptcy filing in June 2009. The AAT is seeking (1) a determination from the Bankruptcy Court that the security interest held by the Term Loan Lenders was not perfected at the time GM filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection and thus the Term Loan Lenders should have been treated in the same manner as GM’s unsecured creditors, (2) disgorgement of any interest payments made to the Term Loan Lenders within ninety days of GM’s filing for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection, and (3) disgorgement of the $1.5 billion term loan repayment that was made to the Term Loan Lenders. The value of the payment received under the term loan agreement by the Fund is approximately $932,000 (equal to 0.34% of net assets at October 31, 2017). The Fund cannot predict the outcome of these proceedings or the effect, if any, on the Fund’s net asset value. The attorneys’ fees and costs related to these actions are expensed by the Fund as incurred.

 

  43  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

To the Trustees and Shareholders of Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund:

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund (the “Fund”), including the portfolio of investments, as of October 31, 2017, and the related statements of operations and cash flows for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. The Fund is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation of securities and senior loans owned as of October 31, 2017, by correspondence with the custodian, brokers and selling or agent banks; where replies were not received from brokers and selling or agent banks, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, such financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund as of October 31, 2017, the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

December 15, 2017

 

  44  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Federal Tax Information (Unaudited)

 

 

The Form 1099-DIV you receive in February 2018 will show the tax status of all distributions paid to your account in calendar year 2017. Shareholders are advised to consult their own tax adviser with respect to the tax consequences of their investment in the Fund. As required by the Internal Revenue Code and/or regulations, shareholders must be notified regarding the status of qualified dividend income for individuals and the dividends received deduction for corporations.

Qualified Dividend Income.  For the fiscal year ended October 31, 2017, the Fund designates approximately $185,087, or up to the maximum amount of such dividends allowable pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code, as qualified dividend income eligible for the reduced tax rate of 15%.

Dividends Received Deduction.  Corporate shareholders are generally entitled to take the dividends received deduction on the portion of the Fund’s dividend distribution that qualifies under tax law. For the Fund’s fiscal 2017 ordinary income dividends, 1.13% qualifies for the corporate dividends received deduction.

 

  45  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

 

 

The Fund offers a dividend reinvestment plan (Plan) pursuant to which shareholders may elect to have distributions automatically reinvested in common shares (Shares) of the Fund. You may elect to participate in the Plan by completing the Dividend Reinvestment Plan Application Form. If you do not participate, you will receive all distributions in cash paid by check mailed directly to you by American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC (AST) as dividend paying agent. On the distribution payment date, if the NAV per Share is equal to or less than the market price per Share plus estimated brokerage commissions, then new Shares will be issued. The number of Shares shall be determined by the greater of the NAV per Share or 95% of the market price. Otherwise, Shares generally will be purchased on the open market by AST, the Plan agent (Agent). Distributions subject to income tax (if any) are taxable whether or not Shares are reinvested.

If your Shares are in the name of a brokerage firm, bank, or other nominee, you can ask the firm or nominee to participate in the Plan on your behalf. If the nominee does not offer the Plan, you will need to request that the Fund’s transfer agent re-register your Shares in your name or you will not be able to participate.

The Agent’s service fee for handling distributions will be paid by the Fund. Plan participants will be charged their pro rata share of brokerage commissions on all open-market purchases.

Plan participants may withdraw from the Plan at any time by writing to the Agent at the address noted on the following page. If you withdraw, you will receive Shares in your name for all Shares credited to your account under the Plan. If a participant elects by written notice to the Agent to sell part or all of his or her Shares and remit the proceeds, the Agent is authorized to deduct a $5.00 fee plus brokerage commissions from the proceeds.

If you wish to participate in the Plan and your Shares are held in your own name, you may complete the form on the following page and deliver it to the Agent. Any inquiries regarding the Plan can be directed to the Agent at 1-866-439-6787.

 

  46  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Application for Participation in Dividend Reinvestment Plan

 

 

 

This form is for shareholders who hold their common shares in their own names. If your common shares are held in the name of a brokerage firm, bank, or other nominee, you should contact your nominee to see if it will participate in the Plan on your behalf. If you wish to participate in the Plan, but your brokerage firm, bank, or nominee is unable to participate on your behalf, you should request that your common shares be re-registered in your own name which will enable your participation in the Plan.

The following authorization and appointment is given with the understanding that I may terminate it at any time by terminating my participation in the Plan as provided in the terms and conditions of the Plan.

 

 

Please print exact name on account

 

Shareholder signature                                                           Date

 

Shareholder signature                                                           Date

Please sign exactly as your common shares are registered. All persons whose names appear on the share certificate must sign.

YOU SHOULD NOT RETURN THIS FORM IF YOU WISH TO RECEIVE YOUR DISTRIBUTIONS IN CASH. THIS IS NOT A PROXY.

This authorization form, when signed, should be mailed to the following address:

Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

c/o American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC

P.O. Box 922

Wall Street Station

New York, NY 10269-0560

 

 

Number of Employees

The Fund is organized as a Massachusetts business trust and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a closed-end management investment company, and has no employees.

Number of Shareholders

As of October 31, 2017, Fund records indicate that there are 7 registered shareholders and approximately 9,262 shareholders owning the Fund shares in street name, such as through brokers, banks and financial intermediaries.

If you are a street name shareholder and wish to receive Fund reports directly, which contain important information about the Fund, please write or call:

Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc.

Two International Place

Boston, MA 02110

1-800-262-1122

New York Stock Exchange symbol

The New York Stock Exchange symbol is EVG.

 

  47  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Management and Organization

 

 

Fund Management.  The Trustees of Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund (the Fund) are responsible for the overall management and supervision of the Fund’s affairs. The Trustees and officers of the Fund are listed below. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the last five years. The “Noninterested Trustees” consist of those Trustees who are not “interested persons” of the Fund, as that term is defined under the 1940 Act. The business address of each Trustee and officer is Two International Place, Boston, Massachusetts 02110. As used below, “EVC” refers to Eaton Vance Corp., “EV” refers to Eaton Vance, Inc., “EVM” refers to Eaton Vance Management, “BMR” refers to Boston Management and Research and “EVD” refers to Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc. EVC and EV are the corporate parent and trustee, respectively, of EVM and BMR. EVD is a wholly-owned subsidiary of EVC. Each officer affiliated with Eaton Vance may hold a position with other Eaton Vance affiliates that is comparable to his or her position with EVM listed below. Each Trustee oversees 176 portfolios in the Eaton Vance Complex (including all master and feeder funds in a master feeder structure). Each officer serves as an officer of certain other Eaton Vance funds. Each Trustee serves for a three year term. Each officer serves until his or her successor is elected.

 

Name and Year of Birth   

Position(s)

with the

Fund

    

Term Expiring;

Trustee

Since(1)

    

Principal Occupation(s) and Directorships

During Past Five Years and Other Relevant Experience

Interested Trustee

Thomas E. Faust Jr.

1958

  

Class I

Trustee

    

Until 2018.

Trustee since 2007.

    

Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President of EVC, Director and President of EV, Chief Executive Officer and President of EVM and BMR, and Director of EVD. Trustee and/or officer of 176 registered investment companies. Mr. Faust is an interested person because of his positions with EVM, BMR, EVD, EVC and EV, which are affiliates of the Fund.

Directorships in the Last Five Years.(2) Director of EVC and Hexavest Inc. (investment management firm).

            

Noninterested Trustees

Mark R. Fetting

1954

  

Class III

Trustee

    

Until 2020.

Trustee since 2016.

    

Private investor. Formerly held various positions at Legg Mason, Inc. (investment management firm) (2000-2012), including President, Chief Executive Officer, Director and Chairman (2008-2012), Senior Executive Vice President (2004-2008) and Executive Vice President (2001-2004). Formerly, President of Legg Mason family of funds (2001-2008). Formerly, Division President and Senior Officer of Prudential Financial Group, Inc. and related companies (investment management firm) (1991-2000).

Directorships in the Last Five Years. Formerly, Director and Chairman of Legg Mason, Inc. (2008-2012); Director/Trustee and Chairman of Legg Mason family of funds (14 funds) (2008-2012); and Director/Trustee of the Royce family of funds (35 funds) (2001-2012).

Cynthia E. Frost

1961

  

Class I

Trustee

    

Until 2018.

Trustee since 2014.

    

Private investor. Formerly, Chief Investment Officer of Brown University (university endowment) (2000-2012); Formerly, Portfolio Strategist for Duke Management Company (university endowment manager) (1995-2000); Formerly, Managing Director, Cambridge Associates (investment consulting company) (1989-1995); Formerly, Consultant, Bain and Company (management consulting firm) (1987-1989); Formerly, Senior Equity Analyst, BA Investment Management Company (1983-1985).

Directorships in the Last Five Years. None.

George J. Gorman

1952

  

Class II

Trustee

    

Until 2019.

Trustee since 2014.

    

Principal at George J. Gorman LLC (consulting firm). Formerly, Senior Partner at Ernst & Young LLP (a registered public accounting firm) (1974-2009).

Directorships in the Last Five Years. Formerly, Trustee of the BofA Funds Series Trust (11 funds) (2011-2014) and of the Ashmore Funds (9 funds) (2010-2014).

Valerie A. Mosley

1960

  

Class III

Trustee

    

Until 2020.

Trustee since

2014.

    

Chairwoman and Chief Executive Officer of Valmo Ventures (a consulting and investment firm). Former Partner and Senior Vice President, Portfolio Manager and Investment Strategist at Wellington Management Company, LLP (investment management firm) (1992-2012). Former Chief Investment Officer, PG Corbin Asset Management (1990-1992). Formerly worked in institutional corporate bond sales at Kidder Peabody (1986-1990).

Directorships in the Last Five Years.(2) Director of Dynex Capital, Inc. (mortgage REIT) (since 2013).

 

  48  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Management and Organization — continued

 

 

Name and Year of Birth   

Position(s)

with the

Fund

    

Term Expiring;

Trustee

Since(1)

    

Principal Occupation(s) and Directorships

During Past Five Years and Other Relevant Experience

Noninterested Trustees (continued)

William H. Park

1947

  

Chairperson of the Board and Class II

Trustee

    

Until 2019.

Chairperson of the Board since 2016 and Trustee since 2003.

    

Private investor. Formerly, Consultant (management and transactional) (2012-2014). Formerly, Chief Financial Officer, Aveon Group L.P. (investment management firm) (2010-2011). Formerly, Vice Chairman, Commercial Industrial Finance Corp. (specialty finance company) (2006-2010). Formerly, President and Chief Executive Officer, Prizm Capital Management, LLC (investment management firm) (2002-2005). Formerly, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, United Asset Management Corporation (investment management firm) (1982-2001). Formerly, Senior Manager, Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers) (a registered public accounting firm) (1972-1981).

Directorships in the Last Five Years.(2) None.

Helen Frame Peters

1948

  

Class III

Trustee

    

Until 2020.

Trustee since 2008.

    

Professor of Finance, Carroll School of Management, Boston College. Formerly, Dean, Carroll School of Management, Boston College (2000-2002). Formerly, Chief Investment Officer, Fixed Income, Scudder Kemper Investments (investment management firm) (1998-1999). Formerly, Chief Investment Officer, Equity and Fixed Income, Colonial Management Associates (investment management firm) (1991-1998).

Directorships in the Last Five Years.(2) Formerly, Director of BJ’s Wholesale Club, Inc. (wholesale club retailer) (2004-2011). Formerly, Trustee of SPDR Index Shares Funds and SPDR Series Trust (exchange traded funds) (2000-2009). Formerly, Director of Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston (a bank for banks) (2007-2009).

Susan J. Sutherland

1957

  

Class II

Trustee

    

Until 2019.

Trustee since 2015.

    

Private investor. Formerly, Associate, Counsel and Partner at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP (law firm) (1982-2013).

Directorships in the Last Five Years. Formerly, Director of Montpelier Re Holdings Ltd. (global provider of customized insurance and reinsurance products) (2013-2015).

Harriett Tee Taggart

1948

  

Class II

Trustee

    

Until 2019.

Trustee since 2011.

    

Managing Director, Taggart Associates (a professional practice firm). Formerly, Partner and Senior Vice President, Wellington Management Company, LLP (investment management firm) (1983-2006).

Directorships in the Last Five Years.(2) Director of Albemarle Corporation (chemicals manufacturer) (since 2007) and The Hanover Group (specialty property and casualty insurance company) (since 2009). Formerly, Director of Lubrizol Corporation (specialty chemicals) (2007-2011).

Scott E. Wennerholm

1959

  

Class I

Trustee

    

Until 2018.

Trustee since 2016.

    

Trustee at Wheelock College (postsecondary institution) (since 2012). Formerly, Consultant at GF Parish Group (executive recruiting firm) (2016-2017). Formerly, Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President at BNY Mellon Asset Management (investment management firm) (2005-2011). Formerly, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer at Natixis Global Asset Management (investment management firm) (1997-2004). Formerly, Vice President at Fidelity Investments Institutional Services (investment management firm) (1994-1997).

Directorships in the Last Five Years. None.

            

Principal Officers who are not Trustees

Name and Year of Birth   

Position(s)

with the

Fund

    

Officer

Since(3)

    

Principal Occupation(s)

During Past Five Years

Payson F. Swaffield

1956

   President      2003      Vice President and Chief Income Investment Officer of EVM and BMR. Also Vice President of Calvert Research and Management (“CRM”).

Maureen A. Gemma

1960

   Vice President, Secretary and Chief Legal Officer      2005      Vice President of EVM and BMR. Also Vice President of CRM.

James F. Kirchner

1967

   Treasurer      2007      Vice President of EVM and BMR. Also Vice President of CRM.

 

  49  


Eaton Vance

Short Duration Diversified Income Fund

October 31, 2017

 

Management and Organization — continued

 

 

Name and Year of Birth   

Position(s)

with the

Fund

    

Officer

Since(3)

    

Principal Occupation(s)

During Past Five Years

Principal Officers who are not Trustees (continued)

Richard F. Froio

1968

   Chief Compliance Officer      2017      Vice President of EVM and BMR since 2017. Formerly Deputy Chief Compliance Officer (Adviser/Funds) and Chief Compliance Officer (Distribution) at PIMCO (2012-2017) and Managing Director at BlackRock/Barclays Global Investors (2009-2012).

 

(1) 

Year first appointed to serve as Trustee for a fund in the Eaton Vance family of funds. Each Trustee has served continuously since appointment unless indicated otherwise. Each Trustee holds office until the annual meeting for the year in which his or her term expires and until his or her successor is elected and qualified, subject to a prior death, resignation, retirement, disqualification or removal.

(2) 

During their respective tenures, the Trustees (except for Mmes. Frost and Sutherland and Messrs. Fetting, Gorman and Wennerholm) also served as Board members of one or more of the following funds (which operated in the years noted): eUnitsTM 2 Year U.S. Market Participation Trust: Upside to Cap / Buffered Downside (launched in 2012 and terminated in 2014); eUnitsTM 2 Year U.S. Market Participation Trust II: Upside to Cap / Buffered Downside (launched in 2012 and terminated in 2014); and Eaton Vance National Municipal Income Trust (launched in 1998 and terminated in 2009). However, Ms. Mosley did not serve as a Board member of eUnitsTM 2 Year U.S. Market Participation Trust: Upside to Cap / Buffered Downside (launched in 2012 and terminated in 2014).

(3) 

Year first elected to serve as officer of a fund in the Eaton Vance family of funds when the officer has served continuously. Otherwise, year of most recent election as an officer of a fund in the Eaton Vance family of funds. Titles may have changed since initial election.

 

  50  


Eaton Vance Funds

 

IMPORTANT NOTICES

 

 

Privacy.  The Eaton Vance organization is committed to ensuring your financial privacy. Each of the financial institutions identified below has in effect the following policy (“Privacy Policy”) with respect to nonpublic personal information about its customers:

 

 

Only such information received from you, through application forms or otherwise, and information about your Eaton Vance fund transactions will be collected. This may include information such as name, address, social security number, tax status, account balances and transactions.

 

 

None of such information about you (or former customers) will be disclosed to anyone, except as permitted by law (which includes disclosure to employees necessary to service your account). In the normal course of servicing a customer’s account, Eaton Vance may share information with unaffiliated third parties that perform various required services such as transfer agents, custodians and broker-dealers.

 

 

Policies and procedures (including physical, electronic and procedural safeguards) are in place that are designed to protect the confidentiality of such information.

 

 

We reserve the right to change our Privacy Policy at any time upon proper notification to you. Customers may want to review our Privacy Policy periodically for changes by accessing the link on our homepage: www.eatonvance.com.

Our pledge of privacy applies to the following entities within the Eaton Vance organization: the Eaton Vance Family of Funds, Eaton Vance Management, Eaton Vance Investment Counsel, Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc., Eaton Vance Trust Company, Eaton Vance Management (International) Limited, Eaton Vance Advisers International Ltd., Eaton Vance Management’s Real Estate Investment Group and Boston Management and Research. In addition, our Privacy Policy applies only to those Eaton Vance customers who are individuals and who have a direct relationship with us. If a customer’s account (i.e., fund shares) is held in the name of a third-party financial advisor/broker-dealer, it is likely that only such advisor’s privacy policies apply to the customer. This notice supersedes all previously issued privacy disclosures. For more information about Eaton Vance’s Privacy Policy, please call 1-800-262-1122.

Delivery of Shareholder Documents.  The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) permits funds to deliver only one copy of shareholder documents, including prospectuses, proxy statements and shareholder reports, to fund investors with multiple accounts at the same residential or post office box address. This practice is often called “householding” and it helps eliminate duplicate mailings to shareholders. American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC (“AST”), the closed-end funds transfer agent, or your financial advisor, may household the mailing of your documents indefinitely unless you instruct AST, or your financial advisor, otherwise. If you would prefer that your Eaton Vance documents not be householded, please contact AST or your financial advisor. Your instructions that householding not apply to delivery of your Eaton Vance documents will typically be effective within 30 days of receipt by AST or your financial advisor.

Portfolio Holdings.  Each Eaton Vance Fund and its underlying Portfolio(s) (if applicable) will file a schedule of portfolio holdings on Form N-Q with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year. The Form N-Q will be available on the Eaton Vance website at www.eatonvance.com, by calling Eaton Vance at 1-800-262-1122 or in the EDGAR database on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Form N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s public reference room in Washington, D.C. (call 1-800-732-0330 for information on the operation of the public reference room).

Proxy Voting.  From time to time, funds are required to vote proxies related to the securities held by the funds. The Eaton Vance Funds or their underlying Portfolios (if applicable) vote proxies according to a set of policies and procedures approved by the Funds’ and Portfolios’ Boards. You may obtain a description of these policies and procedures and information on how the Funds or Portfolios voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30, without charge, upon request, by calling 1-800-262-1122 and by accessing the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

Share Repurchase Program.  The Fund’s Board of Trustees has approved a share repurchase program authorizing the Fund to repurchase up to 10% of its outstanding common shares as of the approved date in open-market transactions at a discount to net asset value. The repurchase program does not obligate the Fund to purchase a specific amount of shares. The Fund’s repurchase activity, including the number of shares purchased, average price and average discount to net asset value, is disclosed in the Fund’s annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders.

Additional Notice to Shareholders.  If applicable, a Fund may also redeem or purchase its outstanding preferred shares in order to maintain compliance with regulatory requirements, borrowing or rating agency requirements or for other purposes as it deems appropriate or necessary.

Closed-End Fund Information.  Eaton Vance closed-end funds make fund performance data and certain information about portfolio characteristics available on the Eaton Vance website shortly after the end of each month. Other information about the funds is available on the website. The funds’ net asset value per share is readily accessible on the Eaton Vance website. Portfolio holdings for the most recent month-end are also posted to the website approximately 30 days following the end of the month. This information is available at www.eatonvance.com on the fund information pages under “Individual Investors — Closed-End Funds”.

 

  51  


 

 

This Page Intentionally Left Blank


Investment Adviser and Administrator

Eaton Vance Management

Two International Place

Boston, MA 02110

Custodian

State Street Bank and Trust Company

State Street Financial Center, One Lincoln Street

Boston, MA 02111

Transfer Agent

American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC

6201 15th Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11219

Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Deloitte & Touche LLP

200 Berkeley Street

Boston, MA 02116-5022

Fund Offices

Two International Place

Boston, MA 02110

 


LOGO

2319    10.31.17


Item 2. Code of Ethics

The registrant has adopted a code of ethics applicable to its Principal Executive Officer, Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer. The registrant undertakes to provide a copy of such code of ethics to any person upon request, without charge, by calling 1-800-262-1122. The registrant has amended the code of ethics as described in Form N-CSR during the period covered by this report to make clarifying changes consistent with Rule 21F-17 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The registrant has not granted any waiver, including an implicit waiver, from a provision of the code of ethics as described in Form N-CSR during the period covered by this report.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert

The registrant’s Board has designated William H. Park, an independent trustee, as its audit committee financial expert. Mr. Park is a certified public accountant who is a private investor. Previously, he served as a consultant, as the Chief Financial Officer of Aveon Group, L.P. (an investment management firm), as the Vice Chairman of Commercial Industrial Finance Corp. (specialty finance company), as President and Chief Executive Officer of Prizm Capital Management, LLC (investment management firm), as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of United Asset Management Corporation (an institutional investment management firm) and as a Senior Manager at Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers) (an independent registered public accounting firm).

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

Rule 2-01(c)(1)(ii)(A) of Regulation S-X (the “Loan Rule”) prohibits an accounting firm, such as the Fund’s principal accountant, Deloitte & Touche LLP (“D&T”), from having certain financial relationships with their audit clients and affiliated entities. Specifically, the Loan Rule provides, in relevant part, that an accounting firm generally would not be independent if it or a “covered person” of the accounting firm (within the meaning of applicable SEC rules relating to auditor independence) receives a loan from a lender that is a “record or beneficial owner of more than ten percent of the audit client’s equity securities.” Based on information provided to the Audit Committee of the Board of Trustees (the “Audit Committee”) of the Eaton Vance family of funds by D&T, certain relationships between D&T and its affiliates (“Deloitte Entities”) and one or more lenders who are record owners of shares of one or more funds within the Eaton Vance family of funds (the “Funds”) implicate the Loan Rule, calling into question D&T’s independence with respect to the Funds. The Funds are providing this disclosure to explain the facts and circumstances as well as D&T’s conclusions concerning D&T’s objectivity and impartiality with respect to the audits of the Funds notwithstanding the existence of one or more breaches of the Loan Rule.

On June 20, 2016, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) issued no-action relief to another mutual fund complex (see Fidelity Management & Research Company et al., No-Action Letter (June 20, 2016) (the “No-Action Letter”)) related to an auditor independence issue arising under the Loan Rule. In the No-Action Letter, the SEC indicated that it would not recommend enforcement action against the fund group if the auditor is not in compliance with the Loan Rule provided that: (1) the auditor has complied with PCAOB Rule 3526(b)(1) and 3526(b)(2); (2) the auditor’s non-compliance under the Loan Rule is with respect to certain lending relationships; and (3) notwithstanding such non-compliance, the auditor has concluded that it is objective and impartial with respect to the issues encompassed within its engagement as auditor of the funds. The SEC has indicated that the no-action relief will expire 18 months from its issuance.

Based on information provided by D&T to the Audit Committee, the requirements of the No-Action Letter appear to be met with respect to D&T’s lending relationships described above. Among other things, D&T has advised the Audit Committee of its conclusion that the consequences of the breach of the Loan Rule have been satisfactorily addressed, that D&T’s objectivity and impartiality in the planning and conduct of the audits of the


Fund’s financial statements has not been compromised and that, notwithstanding the breach, D&T is in a position to continue as the auditor for the Funds and D&T does not believe any actions need to be taken with respect to previously issued reports by D&T. D&T has advised the Audit Committee that these conclusions were based in part on its consideration of the No-Action Letter and other relevant information communicated to the Audit Committee.

(a) –(d)

The following table presents the aggregate fees billed to the registrant for the registrant’s fiscal years ended October 31, 2016 and October 31, 2017 by D&T for professional services rendered for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements and fees billed for other services rendered by D&T during such periods.

 

Fiscal Years Ended

   10/31/16      10/31/17  

Audit Fees

   $ 104,350      $ 103,028  

Audit-Related Fees(1)

   $ 0      $ 0  

Tax Fees(2)

   $ 33,715      $ 25,743  

All Other Fees(3)

   $ 0      $ 0  
  

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total

   $ 138,065      $ 128,771  
  

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1)  Audit-related fees consist of the aggregate fees billed for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit of the registrant’s financial statements and are not reported under the category of audit fees.
(2)  Tax fees consist of the aggregate fees billed for professional services rendered by the principal accountant relating to tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning and specifically include fees for tax return preparation and other related tax compliance/planning matters.
(3) All other fees consist of the aggregate fees billed for products and services provided by the principal accountant other than audit, audit-related, and tax services.

(e)(1) The registrant’s audit committee has adopted policies and procedures relating to the pre-approval of services provided by the registrant’s principal accountant (the “Pre-Approval Policies”). The Pre-Approval Policies establish a framework intended to assist the audit committee in the proper discharge of its pre-approval responsibilities. As a general matter, the Pre-Approval Policies (i) specify certain types of audit, audit-related, tax, and other services determined to be pre-approved by the audit committee; and (ii) delineate specific procedures governing the mechanics of the pre-approval process, including the approval and monitoring of audit and non-audit service fees. Unless a service is specifically pre-approved under the Pre-Approval Policies, it must be separately pre-approved by the audit committee.

The Pre-Approval Policies and the types of audit and non-audit services pre-approved therein must be reviewed and ratified by the registrant’s audit committee at least annually. The registrant’s audit committee maintains full responsibility for the appointment, compensation, and oversight of the work of the registrant’s principal accountant.

(e)(2) No services described in paragraphs (b)-(d) above were approved by the registrant’s audit committee pursuant to the “de minimis exception” set forth in Rule 2-01 (c)(7)(i)(C) of Regulation S-X.

(f) Not applicable.

(g) The following table presents (i) the aggregate non-audit fees (i.e., fees for audit-related, tax, and other services) billed to the registrant by D&T for the registrant’s fiscal years ended October 31, 2016 and October 31, 2017; and (ii) the aggregate non-audit fees (i.e., fees for audit-related, tax, and other services) billed to the Eaton Vance organization by D&T for the same time periods.


Fiscal Years Ended

   10/31/16      10/31/17  

Registrant

   $ 33,715      $ 25,743  

Eaton Vance(1)

   $ 56,434      $ 148,018  

 

(1) The investment adviser to the registrant, as well as any of its affiliates that provide ongoing services to the registrant, are subsidiaries of Eaton Vance Corp.

(h) The registrant’s audit committee has considered whether the provision by the registrant’s principal accountant of non-audit services to the registrant’s investment adviser and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant that were not pre-approved pursuant to Rule 2-01(c)(7)(ii) of Regulation S-X is compatible with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

The registrant has a separately-designated standing audit committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. George J. Gorman (Chair), Valerie A. Mosley, William H. Park and Scott E. Wennerholm are the members of the registrant’s audit committee.

Item 6. Schedule of Investments

Please see schedule of investments contained in the Report to Stockholders included under Item 1 of this Form N-CSR.

Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies

The Board of Trustees of the Trust has adopted a proxy voting policy and procedure (the “Fund Policy”), pursuant to which the Trustees have delegated proxy voting responsibility to the Fund’s investment adviser and adopted the investment adviser’s proxy voting policies and procedures (the “Policies”) which are described below. The Trustees will review the Fund’s proxy voting records from time to time and will annually consider approving the Policies for the upcoming year. In the event that a conflict of interest arises between the Fund’s shareholders and the investment adviser, the administrator, or any of their affiliates or any affiliate of the Fund, the investment adviser will generally refrain from voting the proxies related to the companies giving rise to such conflict until it consults with the Board’s Special Committee except as contemplated under the Fund Policy. The Board’s Special Committee will instruct the investment adviser on the appropriate course of action.

The Policies are designed to promote accountability of a company’s management to its shareholders and to align the interests of management with those shareholders. An independent proxy voting service (“Agent”), currently Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc., has been retained to assist in the voting of proxies through the provision of vote analysis, implementation and recordkeeping and disclosure services. The investment adviser will generally vote proxies through the Agent. The Agent is required to vote all proxies and/or refer them back to the investment adviser pursuant to the Policies. It is generally the policy of the investment adviser to vote in accordance with the recommendation of the Agent. The Agent shall refer to the investment adviser proxies relating to mergers and restructurings, and the disposition of assets, termination, liquidation and mergers


contained in mutual fund proxies. The investment adviser will normally vote against anti-takeover measures and other proposals designed to limit the ability of shareholders to act on possible transactions, except in the case of closed-end management investment companies. The investment adviser generally supports management on social and environmental proposals. The investment adviser may abstain from voting from time to time where it determines that the costs associated with voting a proxy outweighs the benefits derived from exercising the right to vote or the economic effect on shareholders interests or the value of the portfolio holding is indeterminable or insignificant.

In addition, the investment adviser will monitor situations that may result in a conflict of interest between the Fund’s shareholders and the investment adviser, the administrator, or any of their affiliates or any affiliate of the Fund by maintaining a list of significant existing and prospective corporate clients. The investment adviser’s personnel responsible for reviewing and voting proxies on behalf of the Fund will report any proxy received or expected to be received from a company included on that list to the personnel of the investment adviser identified in the Policies. If such personnel expects to instruct the Agent to vote such proxies in a manner inconsistent with the guidelines of the Policies or the recommendation of the Agent, the personnel will consult with members of senior management of the investment adviser to determine if a material conflict of interests exists. If it is determined that a material conflict does exist, the investment adviser will seek instruction on how to vote from the Special Committee.

Information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12 month period ended June 30 is available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling 1-800-262-1122, and (2) on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s website at http://www.sec.gov.

Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies

Eaton Vance Management (“EVM” of “Eaton Vance”) is the investment adviser of the Fund. Catherine M. McDermott, Sarah C. Orvin, Scott H. Page, Eric A. Stein, Payson F. Swaffield and Andrew Szczurowski comprise the investment team responsible for the overall and day-to-day management of the Fund’s investments.

Ms. McDermott is a Vice President of EVM and has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since January 2008. Ms. Orvin is a Vice President of EVM and has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since December 2016. Mr. Page is a Vice President of EVM, has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since February 2005 and is Co-Director of EVM’s Floating-Rate Loan Group. Mr. Stein is a Vice President of EVM, has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since December 2012 and is Co-Director of EVM’s Global Income Group. Mr. Swaffield is a Vice President and Chief Income Investment Officer of EVM and has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since February 2005. Mr. Szczurowski is a Vice President of EVM and has been a portfolio manager of the Fund since November 2011. Ms. McDermott and Messrs. Page, Stein, Swaffield and Szczurowski have managed other Eaton Vance portfolios for more than five years. This information is provided as of the date of filing this report.


The following table shows, as of the Fund’s most recent fiscal year end, the number of accounts each portfolio manager managed in each of the listed categories and the total assets (in millions of dollars), in the accounts managed within each category. The table also shows the number of accounts with respect to which the advisory fee is based on the performance of the account, if any, and the total assets (in millions of dollars) in those accounts.

 

     Number of
All
Accounts
     Total Assets of
All
Accounts
     Number of
Accounts
Paying a
Performance
Fee
     Total Assets of
Accounts Paying
a
Performance Fee
 

Catherine C. McDermott

           

Registered Investment Companies

     2      $ 2,862.6        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Other Accounts

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Sarah C. Orvin

           

Registered Investment Companies

     1      $ 297.3        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Other Accounts

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Scott H. Page

           

Registered Investment Companies

     12      $ 28,396.1        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     12      $ 8,654.4        1      $ 2.4  

Other Accounts

     8      $ 5,145.5        0      $ 0  

Eric A. Stein(1)

           

Registered Investment Companies

     14      $ 42,990.5        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     3      $ 385.3        1      $ 15.6  

Other Accounts

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Payson F. Swaffield

           

Registered Investment Companies

     2      $ 2,862.6        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Other Accounts

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

Andrew Szczurowski(1)

           

Registered Investment Companies

     6      $ 6,630.0        0      $ 0  

Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

     1      $ 204.7        0      $ 0  

Other Accounts

     0      $ 0        0      $ 0  

 

(1)  This portfolio manager serves as portfolio manager of one or more registered investment companies and pooled investment vehicles that invest or may invest in one or more underlying registered investment companies in the Eaton Vance family of funds. The underlying investment companies may be managed by this portfolio manager or another portfolio manager.


The following table shows the dollar range of Fund shares beneficially owned by each portfolio manager as of the Fund’s most recent fiscal year end.

 

Portfolio Manager

   Dollar Range of
Equity Securities
Beneficially Owned
in the Fund
 

Catherine C. McDermott

     None  

Sarah C. Orvin

     None  

Scott H. Page

     None  

Eric A. Stein

     $1 - $10,000  

Payson F. Swaffield

     None  

Andrew Szczurowski

     None  

Potential for Conflicts of Interest. It is possible that conflicts of interest may arise in connection with a portfolio manager’s management of the Fund’s investments on the one hand and the investments of other accounts for which a portfolio manager is responsible on the other. For example, a portfolio manager may have conflicts of interest in allocating management time, resources and investment opportunities among the Fund and other accounts he or she advises. In addition, due to differences in the investment strategies or restrictions between the Fund and the other accounts, the portfolio manager may take action with respect to another account that differs from the action taken with respect to the Fund. In some cases, another account managed by a portfolio manager may compensate the investment adviser based on the performance of the securities held by that account. The existence of such a performance based fee may create additional conflicts of interest for the portfolio manager in the allocation of management time, resources and investment opportunities. Whenever conflicts of interest arise, the portfolio manager will endeavor to exercise his or her discretion in a manner that he or she believes is equitable to all interested persons. EVM has adopted several policies and procedures designed to address these potential conflicts including a code of ethics and policies that govern the investment adviser’s trading practices, including among other things the aggregation and allocation of trades among clients, brokerage allocations, cross trades and best execution.

Compensation Structure for EVM

Compensation of EVM’s portfolio managers and other investment professionals has three primary components: (1) a base salary, (2) an annual cash bonus, and (3) annual non-cash compensation consisting of options to purchase shares of Eaton Vance Corp.’s (“EVC’s”) nonvoting common stock, restricted shares of EVC’s nonvoting common stock and a Deferred Alpha Incentive Plan, which pays a deferred cash award tied to future excess returns in certain equity strategy portfolios. EVM’s investment professionals also receive certain retirement, insurance and other benefits that are broadly available to EVM’s employees. Compensation of EVM’s investment professionals is reviewed primarily on an annual basis. Cash bonuses, stock-based compensation awards, and adjustments in base salary are typically paid or put into effect at or shortly after the October 31st fiscal year end of EVC.

Method to Determine Compensation. EVM compensates its portfolio managers based primarily on the scale and complexity of their portfolio responsibilities and the total return performance of managed funds and accounts versus the benchmark(s) stated in the prospectus, as well as an appropriate peer group (as described below). In addition to rankings within peer groups of funds on the basis of absolute performance, consideration may also be given to relative risk-adjusted performance. Risk-adjusted performance measures include, but are not limited to, the Sharpe ratio (Sharpe ratio uses standard deviation and excess return to determine reward per unit of risk). Performance is normally based on periods ending on the September 30th preceding fiscal year end. Fund performance is normally evaluated primarily versus peer groups of funds as determined by Lipper Inc. and/or Morningstar, Inc. When a fund’s peer group as determined by Lipper or Morningstar is deemed by EVM’s management not to provide a fair comparison, performance may instead be evaluated primarily against a custom peer group or market index. In evaluating the performance of a fund and its manager, primary emphasis is normally placed on three-year performance, with secondary consideration of performance over longer and shorter periods. A portion of the compensation payable to equity portfolio managers and investment professionals will be determined based on the ability of one or more accounts managed by such manager to achieve a specified target average annual gross return over a three year period in excess of the account


benchmark. The cash bonus to be payable at the end of the three year term will be established at the inception of the term and will be adjusted positively or negatively to the extent that the average annual gross return varies from the specified target return. For funds that are tax-managed or otherwise have an objective of after-tax returns, performance is measured net of taxes. For other funds, performance is evaluated on a pre-tax basis. For funds with an investment objective other than total return (such as current income), consideration will also be given to the fund’s success in achieving its objective. For managers responsible for multiple funds and accounts, investment performance is evaluated on an aggregate basis, based on averages or weighted averages among managed funds and accounts. Funds and accounts that have performance-based advisory fees are not accorded disproportionate weightings in measuring aggregate portfolio manager performance.

The compensation of portfolio managers with other job responsibilities (such as heading an investment group or providing analytical support to other portfolios) will include consideration of the scope of such responsibilities and the managers’ performance in meeting them.

EVM seeks to compensate portfolio managers commensurate with their responsibilities and performance, and competitive with other firms within the investment management industry. EVM participates in investment-industry compensation surveys and utilizes survey data as a factor in determining salary, bonus and stock-based compensation levels for portfolio managers and other investment professionals. Salaries, bonuses and stock-based compensation are also influenced by the operating performance of EVM and its parent company. The overall annual cash bonus pool is generally based on a substantially fixed percentage of pre-bonus adjusted operating income. While the salaries of EVM’s portfolio managers are comparatively fixed, cash bonuses and stock-based compensation may fluctuate significantly from year to year, based on changes in manager performance and other factors as described herein. For a high performing portfolio manager, cash bonuses and stock-based compensation may represent a substantial portion of total compensation.

Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers

No such purchases this period.

Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

No material changes.

Item 11. Controls and Procedures

(a) It is the conclusion of the registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer that the effectiveness of the registrant’s current disclosure controls and procedures (such disclosure controls and procedures having been evaluated within 90 days of the date of this filing) provide reasonable assurance that the information required to be disclosed by the registrant has been recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time period specified in the Commission’s rules and forms and that the information required to be disclosed by the registrant has been accumulated and communicated to the registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer in order to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

(b) There have been no changes in the registrant’s internal controls over financial reporting during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12. Exhibits

 

(a)(1)   Registrant’s Code of Ethics – Not applicable (please see Item 2).
(a)(2)(i)   Treasurer’s Section 302 certification.
(a)(2)(ii)   President’s Section 302 certification.
(b)   Combined Section 906 certification.


Signatures

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

Eaton Vance Short Duration Diversified Income Fund
By:  

/s/ Payson F. Swaffield

  Payson F. Swaffield
  President
Date:   December 22, 2017

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

By:  

/s/ James F. Kirchner

  James F. Kirchner
  Treasurer
Date:   December 22, 2017

 

By:  

/s/ Payson F. Swaffield

  Payson F. Swaffield
  President
Date:   December 22, 2017