Item 1. Report to Stockholders:
The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant
to Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940:
What makes Putnam different?
In 1830, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Justice Samuel Putnam established The Prudent Man Rule, a legal foundation for responsible money management.
THE PRUDENT MAN RULE
All that can be required of a trustee to invest is that he shall conduct himself faithfully and exercise a sound discretion. He is to observe how men of prudence, discretion, and intelligence manage their own affairs, not in regard to speculation, but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable income, as well as the probable safety of the capital to be invested.
A time-honored tradition in money management
Since 1937, our values have been rooted in a profound sense of responsibility for the money entrusted to us.
A prudent approach to investing
We use a research-driven team approach to seek consistent, dependable, superior investment results over time, although there is no guarantee a fund will meet its objectives.
Funds for every investment goal
We offer a broad range of mutual funds and other financial products so investors and their advisors can build diversified portfolios.
A commitment to doing whats right for investors
We have stringent investor protections and provide a wealth of information about the Putnam funds.
Industry-leading service
We help investors, along with their financial advisors, make informed investment decisions with confidence.
Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust 10| 31| 05 Semiannual Report |
Message from the Trustees | 2 |
About the fund | 4 |
Report from the fund managers | 7 |
Performance | 13 |
Your funds management | 15 |
Terms and definitions | 18 |
Trustee approval of management contract | 19 |
Other information for shareholders | 24 |
Financial statements | 25 |
Shareholder meeting results | 46 |
Cover photograph: © Richard H. Johnson |
Message from the Trustees Dear Fellow Shareholder |
During the period that ended October 31, 2005, domestic stocks advanced at a pace reflecting their long-term average returns, while bonds registered sub-par results. Outside the United States, most markets showed more impressive gains. Although U.S. economic growth proceeded at a steady pace, new concerns emerged. High energy prices, the Federal Reserve Boards program of interest-rate increases, and the impact of the unusually active 2005 hurricane season proved challenging to consumers and sparked brief bouts of volatility in finan-cial markets. Putnam Management believes that energy prices, interest rates, and the aftereffects of this years storms are likely to continue to shape investment opportunities and risks in the months to come.
Amid the uncertainties of this environment, the professional research, diversification, and active management that mutual funds provide continue to make them an intelligent choice for investors. We want you to know that Putnam Investments management team, under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Ed Haldeman, continues to focus on investment performance and remains committed to putting the interests of shareholders first. In keeping with these goals, we have redesigned and expanded our shareholder reports to make it easier for you to learn more about your fund. Furthermore, on page 19 we provide information about the 2005 approval by the Trustees of your funds management contract with Putnam.
We would also like to take this opportunity to announce the retirement of one of your funds Trustees, Ronald J. Jackson, who has been an independent Trustee of the Putnam funds since 1996. We thank him for his service.
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In the following pages, members of your funds management team discuss the funds performance and strategies, and their outlook for the months ahead. As always, we thank you for your support of the Putnam funds.
Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust: potential for high current income exempt from federal income tax |
One of the most significant challenges of fixed-income investing is taxes on income. Investing in municipal bonds through a fund such as Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust can help address this challenge. While the stated yields on municipal bonds are usually lower than those of taxable bonds, the income most of these bonds pay has the advantage of being exempt from federal taxes. Residents of the state in which a bond is issued can benefit even more, as the bonds income may also be exempt from state and local taxes.
Municipal bonds are issued by states and local municipalities to raise funds for building and maintaining public facilities. These bonds are typically backed by either the issuing city or town, by revenues collected from usage fees, or by state tax revenues. Depending on the type of backing, the bonds will have varying degrees of credit risk, which is the risk that the issuer will not be able to repay the bond.
Many municipal bonds are not rated by independent rating agencies such as Standard & Poors and Moodys. This is primarily because many issuers decide not to pursue a rating that might be below investment grade. As a result, investment managers must do additional research to determine whether these bonds are prudent investments.
Evaluating a bonds credit risk is one area in which Putnam has particular expertise. Putnams municipal bond research team analyzes each issue in depth and assigns non-rated bonds an agency-equivalent Putnam rating. This analysis helps the team identify bonds with attractive risk/return profiles among the large number of bonds not rated by agencies.
Once the fund has invested in a bond, the funds management team continues to monitor developments that affect the overall bond market, the specific sector (for example, hospitals or utilities), and the issuer of the
Municipal bonds may finance a range of projects in your community and thus play a key role in its development. |
bond. Typically, higher-risk, lower-rated bonds are reviewed more frequently because of their greater potential risk.
The goal of the funds approach to research and active management is to stay a step ahead of the industry and pinpoint opportunities to adjust the funds holdings for the benefit of the fund and its shareholders.
Capital gains, if any, are taxable for federal and, in most cases, state purposes. For some investors, investment income may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax. Income from federally exempt funds may be subject to state and local taxes. Mutual funds that invest in bonds are subject to certain risks, including interest-rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds fall. Long-term bonds are more exposed to interest-rate risk than short-term bonds. Unlike bonds, bond funds have ongoing fees and expenses. Leverage can mean higher returns, but adds risk and may increase share price volatility.
How do closed-end funds differ from open-end funds? |
More assets at work Open-end funds must maintain a cash position to meet redemptions. Closed-end funds need not do so and can keep more of their assets invested in the market.
Traded like stocks Closed-end fund shares are traded on stock exchanges, and their prices fluctuate in response to supply and demand, among other factors.
Market price vs. net asset value Like an open-end funds net asset value (NAV) per share, the NAV of a closed-end fund share equals the current value of the funds assets, minus its liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding. When buying or selling closed-end fund shares, you pay or receive the market price, which may be higher or lower than the NAV.
Strategies for higher income Closed-end funds have greater flexibility to use strategies such as leverage -- for example, issuing preferred shares to raise capital, then seeking to invest it at higher rates to enhance income for common shareholders.
Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust is a leveraged fund that seeks to provide as high a level of current income free from federal income tax as Putnam Management believes is consistent with the preservation of capital. The fund invests in investment-grade and some below-investment-grade municipal bonds. The fund may be appropriate for investors seeking tax-free income and who are willing to accept a moderate degree of risk, including risk associated with the use of leverage.
Highlights |
* For the six months ended October 31, 2005, Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust had a |
total return of 1.14% at net asset value (NAV) and 0.74% at market price. |
* The funds benchmark, the Lehman Municipal Bond Index, returned 0.58%. |
* The average return for the funds Lipper category, General Municipal Debt Funds (leveraged |
closed-end), was 1.16%. |
* In June 2005, the funds monthly dividend was reduced to $0.0562 per share. See page 11 |
for details. |
* Additional fund performance, comparative performance, and Lipper data can be found in the |
performance section beginning on page 13. |
Performance
It is important to note that a funds performance at market price may differ from its results at NAV. Although market price performance generally reflects investment results, it may also be influenced by several other factors, including changes in investor perceptions of the fund or its investment advisor, market conditions, fluctuations in supply and demand for the funds shares, and changes in fund distributions.
Total return for periods ended 10/31/05
Since the fund's inception (5/28/93), average annual return is 6.46% at NAV and 4.90% at market price. | ||||
| ||||
Average annual return | Cumulative return | |||
NAV | Market price | NAV | Market price | |
10 years | 6.40% | 5.36% | 86.04% | 68.60% |
| ||||
5 years | 7.25 | 4.82 | 41.89 | 26.53 |
| ||||
1 year | 5.23 | -2.94 | 5.23 | -2.94 |
| ||||
6 months | -- | -- | 1.14 | 0.74 |
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Data is historical. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes.
6
Report from the fund
managers |
The period in review
Strong investor demand helped fuel a rally in lower-quality municipal bonds, which have benefited from solid credit fundamentals as a result of the economic recovery. With more than a quarter of its assets invested in bonds rated Baa and below, Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust benefited in turn. The funds performance at NAV surpassed that of its benchmark, the Lehman Municipal Bond Index, which consists solely of investment-grade municipal bonds. The funds results were in line with the average for funds in its Lipper category. The pre-refunding of a revenue bond in the transportation sector (discussed further on page 10) also contributed positively to performance.
Market
overview |
Signs of solid economic growth, and the desire to curb the potential inflation that often accompanies growth, prompted the Federal Reserve Board (the Fed) to increase short-term interest rates four times in 0.25% increments during the first half of the funds fiscal year. As a result, the federal funds rate rose from 2.75% at the beginning of the period to 3.75% at period-end. Yields rose across all maturities during the period and the yield curve flattened as shorter-term rates rose more than longer-term rates. The yield curve is a graphical representation of bond yields with the same quality plotted from the shortest to the longest maturity.
An improving economy and rising corporate earnings contributed to the strong performance of lower-rated bonds. Among uninsured bonds in general and especially bonds rated Baa and below, yield spreads tightened, benefiting from strong interest among both traditional and nontraditional buyers in search of higher yields. Based on continued favorable legal rulings, yields on tobacco settlement bonds declined overall for the year, and their prices rose accordingly. Airline-related industrial development bonds (IDBs) exhibited a high level of volatility and ended on weakness as both Northwest and Delta filed for bankruptcy in September 2005. No single state performed notably better than other states. Callable bonds (which can be redeemed by their issuers before
7
maturity) outperformed non-callable bonds, as investors generally expect that callable bonds will be less sensitive to interest-rate increases.
Strategy overview
Given our expectation for rising interest rates, we maintained a short (defensive) duration position for your portfolio. Duration is a measure of a funds sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Having a shorter-duration portfolio may help protect principal when interest rates are rising, but it can reduce the funds potential for appreciation when rates fall. Your fund benefited from its defensive duration strategy.
During the period, we took steps to better position the portfolio for a flattening yield curve. However, the degree of flattening exceeded our efforts to mitigate its impact, resulting in a net negative contribution to relative results from the funds yield curve position.
The fund benefited from its overweight to lower-rated, higher-yielding bonds in comparison with other funds in its peer group, as this segment of the market outperformed during the period. An overweight to tobacco settlement bonds relative to the funds peer group contributed to results as this sector outperformed. The funds relative underweight to airline-related IDBs also boosted returns as this sector underperformed over the period. We increased the funds exposure to the single-family housing sector, as we
Market sector performance
These indexes provide an overview of performance in different market sectors for the six months ended 10/31/05.
Bonds | |
Lehman Municipal Bond Index (tax-exempt bonds) | 0.58% |
| |
Lehman Aggregate Bond Index (broad bond market) | 0.15% |
| |
Lehman Government Bond Index (U.S. Treasury and agency securities) | 0.07% |
| |
JP Morgan Global High Yield Index (global high-yield corporate bonds) | 3.50% |
| |
Equities | |
S&P 500 Index (broad stock market) | 5.27% |
| |
Russell 1000 Growth Index (large-company growth stocks) | 7.59% |
| |
Russell 1000 Value Index (large-company value stocks) | 4.82% |
|
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believe rising interest rates and declining mortgage prepayments will help this sector outperform.
Your funds holdings
With the U.S. economy prospering, higher-yielding, lower-rated municipal bonds performed well during the six-month period. Increased demand and the ensuing higher prices of these bonds have contributed to a narrowing of the yield spread, or the difference in yield between higher- and lower-quality issues in the sector. Consequently, the funds investments in lower-rated bonds, such as the Tomball Hospital Authority for Tomball Regional Hospital revenue bonds, were rewarding. Tomball Regional Hospital is located about 30 miles northwest of Houston, Texas --an area experiencing tremendous economic growth and a burgeoning population. We expect this growth trend to continue as Houston expands toward the Tomball area. With a cancer center, a senior-care facility, and the modernization and upgrading of a number of patient service and support areas completed in 2003, we think Tomball Regional Hospital is in a good position to benefit from these trends.
We believe that the market has over-discounted the potentially negative impact of mortgage prepayments on the single-family housing sector, particularly in light of rising interest rates, which are likely to slow prepayments. During the period, we purchased
Comparison of the fund's maturity and duration
This chart compares changes in the funds duration (a measure of its sensitivity to interest-rate changes) and its average effective maturity (a weighted average of the holdings maturities).
Average effective maturity also takes into account put and call features, where applicable, and reflects prepayments for mortgage-backed securities.
9
$1,200,000 of single-family mortgage revenue bonds issued by Michigan State Housing Development Authority.
Tobacco settlement bonds also enjoyed strong performance during the first half of the fiscal year. Payments from tobacco settlement bonds are secured by income promised to various states through settlements from tobacco companies. This income could be jeopardized as a result of large judgments against the companies, and market sentiment with regard to this sector has tended to shift from concern about litigation to optimism. Bonds from this sector strengthened considerably during the period as the outcome of various litigation efforts proved positive for the tobacco industry. The fund holds tobacco settlement bonds issued by the states of South Carolina, Wisconsin, New Jersey, Washington, Rhode Island, South Dakota and New York. In August, the funds investments in some Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority revenue bonds were prere-funded. Pre-refundings occur when a municipality issues new bonds to raise funds to pay off an older issue. This money is then invested in a secure investment -- usually U.S. Treasury securities -- that matures at the older bonds first call date, effectively raising the bonds perceived rating and frequently its market value.
Finally, we maintained an underweight position in airline-related industrial
Credit quality overview
Credit qualities shown as a percentage of portfolio value as 10/31/05. A bond rated Baa or higher is considered investment grade. The chart reflects Moodys ratings; percentages may include bonds not rated by Moody's but considered by Putnam Management to be of comparable quality. Ratings will vary over time.
10
development bonds (IDBs). IDBs are issued by municipalities but backed by the credit of the institution benefiting from the financing. Investor perceptions about the backers health, or that of its industry group, can affect the prices of these bonds to a greater extent than the rating of the issuing municipality. In this case, the airline industrys struggles have negatively affected prices of many airline-related IDBs, so our underweighting was helpful to the fund. In addition, our decision to invest only in IDBs issued for American Airlines and British Airways proved wise, as they weathered the downturn better than other airline-related IDBs.
Please note that the holdings discussed in this report may not have been held by the fund for the entire period discussed, are subject to review in accordance with the funds investment strategy, and may vary in the future.
Of special interest
Several older holdings matured or were called during the period, requiring reinvestment of the assets at current lower interest rates. To reflect this reduction in earnings, the dividend was reduced in June from $0.0644 to $0.0562.
11
The outlook for
your fund |
The following commentary reflects anticipated developments that could affect your fund over the next six months, as well as your management teams plans for responding to them.
We expect the Fed to maintain its policy of increasing rates through 2005 and into 2006. We also expect more Fed tightening than is currently anticipated by the market, and believe that bond yields may begin to rise more quickly as other investors come to the same conclusion. We plan to maintain the funds defensive duration and to continue to increase its exposure to callable bonds, which, in our opinion, are likely to outperform in a rising-rate cycle.
We have a positive view of the single-family
housing sector and plan to add selectively to the funds positions. As the
outperformance of lower-rated, higher-yielding bonds is slowing, we continue to
reduce the funds exposure to this segment of the credit spectrum. We remain
bearish on airline-related IDBs, while our view on tobacco settlement bonds is
positive.
We will continue to search for the most attractive
opportunities among tax-exempt securities, and work to balance the pursuit of
current income with prudent risk management.
The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Putnam Management. They are not meant as investment advice.
Lower-rated bonds may offer higher yields in return for more risk. Capital gains, if any, are taxable for federal and, in most cases, state purposes. For some investors, investment income may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax. Income from federally exempt funds may be subject to state and local taxes. Mutual funds that invest in bonds are subject to certain risks, including interest-rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds fall. Long-term bonds are more exposed to interest-rate risk than short-term bonds. Unlike bonds, bond funds have ongoing fees and expenses. The fund uses leverage, which involves risk and may increase the volatility of the funds net asset value. The funds shares trade on a stock exchange at market prices, which may be higher or lower than the funds net asset value.
12
Your funds performance
This section shows your funds performance during the first half of its fiscal year, which ended October 31, 2005. In accordance with regulatory requirements, we also include performance for the most current calendar quarter-end. Performance should always be considered in light of a funds investment strategy. Data represents past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares.
Fund performance
Total return for periods ended 10/31/05
Lipper General | ||||
Lehman | Municipal Debt | |||
Municipal | Funds (leveraged | |||
Market | Bond | closed-end) | ||
NAV | price | Index | category average* | |
Annual average | ||||
Life of fund | ||||
(since 5/28/93) | 6.46% | 4.90% | 5.92% | 6.36% |
| ||||
10 years | 86.04 | 68.60 | 76.52 | 88.28 |
Annual average | 6.40 | 5.36 | 5.85 | 6.52 |
| ||||
5 years | 41.89 | 26.53 | 33.70 | 45.44 |
Annual average | 7.25 | 4.82 | 5.98 | 7.75 |
| ||||
1 year | 5.23 | --2.94 | 2.54 | 5.08 |
| ||||
6 months | 1.14 | 0.74 | 0.58 | 1.16 |
|
Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes.
Index and Lipper results should be compared to fund performance at net asset value. Lipper calculations for reinvested dividends may differ from actual performance.
* Over the 6-month and 1-, 5-, and 10-year periods ended 10/31/05, there were 64, 64, 48, and 43 funds, respectively, in this Lipper category.
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Fund price and distribution information | |||
For the six-month period ended 10/31/05 | |||
| |||
Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust | |||
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Distributions from common shares | |||
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Number | 6 | ||
| |||
Income | $0.3454 | ||
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Capital gains1 | -- | ||
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Total | $0.3454 | ||
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Series A | Series B | Series C | |
Distributions -- Preferred shares | (800 shares) | (1,620 shares) | (1,620 shares) |
Income | $659.47 | $316.07 | $316.79 |
| |||
Capital gains1 | -- | -- | -- |
| |||
Total | $659.47 | $316.07 | $316.79 |
| |||
Share value: | NAV | Market Price | |
4/30/05 | $13.15 | $11.72 | |
| |||
10/31/05 | 12.92 | 11.47 | |
| |||
Current yield (common shares, end of period) | |||
Current dividend rate2 | 5.22% | 5.88% | |
| |||
Taxable equivalent3 | 8.03 | 9.05 | |
|
1 Capital gains, if any, are taxable for federal and, in most cases, state purposes. For some investors, investment income may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax. Income from federally exempt funds may be subject to state and local taxes.
2 Most recent distribution, excluding capital gains, annualized and divided by NAV or POP at end of period.
3 Assumes maximum 35% federal tax rate for 2005. Results for investors subject to lower tax rates would not be as advantageous.
Fund performance for most recent calendar quarter
Total return for
periods ended 9/30/05 |
NAV | Market price | |
| ||
Annual average | ||
Life of fund (since 5/28/93) | 6.59% | 5.17% |
| ||
10 years | 90.39 | 79.38 |
Annual average | 6.65 | 6.02 |
| ||
5 years | 45.13 | 30.84 |
Annual average | 7.73 | 5.52 |
| ||
1 year | 7.69 | -0.51 |
| ||
6 months | 4.43 | 6.04 |
|
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Your funds management |
Your fund is managed by the members of the Putnam Tax Exempt Fixed-Income Team. David Hamlin is the Portfolio Leader, and Paul Drury, Susan McCormack, and James St. John are Portfolio Members of your fund. The Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members coordinate the teams management of the fund.
For a complete listing of the members of the Putnam Tax Exempt Fixed-Income Team, including those who are not Portfolio Leaders or Portfolio Members of your fund, visit Putnams Individual Investor Web site at www.putnam.com.
Fund ownership by the Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members
The table below shows how much the funds current Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members have invested in the fund (in dollar ranges). Information shown is as of October 31, 2005, and October 31, 2004.
$1 | $10,001 | $50,001 | $100,001 | $500,001 | $1,000,001 | |||
| ||||||||
Year $0 | $10,000 | $50,000 | $100,000 | $500,000 | $1,000,000 | and over | ||
David Hamlin | 2005 | * | ||||||
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Portfolio Leader | 2004 | * | ||||||
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Paul Drury | 2005 | * | ||||||
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Portfolio Member | 2004 | * | ||||||
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Susan McCormack | 2005 | * | ||||||
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Portfolio Member | 2004 | * | ||||||
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James St. John | 2005 | * | ||||||
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Portfolio Member | 2004 | * | ||||||
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Fund manager compensation |
The total 2004 fund manager compensation that is attributable to your fund is approximately $50,000. This amount includes a portion of 2004 compensation paid by Putnam Management to the fund managers listed in this section for their portfolio management responsibilities, calculated based on the fund assets they manage taken as a percentage of the total assets they manage. The compensation amount also includes a portion of the 2004 compensation paid to the Chief Investment Officer of the team and the Group Chief Investment Officer of the funds broader investment category for their oversight responsibilities, calculated based on the fund assets they oversee taken as a percentage of the total assets they oversee. This amount does not include compensation of other personnel involved in research, trading, administration, systems, compliance, or fund operations; nor does it include non-compensation costs. These percentages are determined as of the funds fiscal period-end. For personnel who joined Putnam Management during or after 2004, the calculation reflects annualized 2004 compensation or an estimate of 2005 compensation, as applicable.
Other Putnam funds managed by the Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members
David Hamlin is the Portfolio Leader and Paul Drury, Susan McCormack, and James St. John are Portfolio Members for Putnams tax-exempt funds for the following states: Arizona, California, Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. The same group also manages Putnam AMT-Free Insured Municipal Fund, Putnam California Investment Grade Municipal Trust, Putnam High Yield Municipal Trust, Putnam Investment Grade Municipal Trust, Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust, Putnam Municipal Bond Fund, Putnam New York Investment Grade Municipal Trust, Putnam Tax Exempt Income Fund, Putnam Tax-Free Health Care Fund, and Putnam Tax-Free High Yield Fund.
David Hamlin, Paul Drury, Susan McCormack, and James St. John may also manage other accounts and variable trust funds advised by Putnam Management or an affiliate.
Changes in your funds Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members
Your funds Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members did not change during the year ended October 31, 2005.
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Fund ownership by Putnams Executive Board
The table below shows how much the members of Putnams Executive Board have invested in the fund (in dollar ranges). Information shown is as of October 31, 2005, and October 31, 2004.
$1 | $10,001 | $50,001 | $100,001 | ||||
| |||||||
Year | $0 | $10,000 | $50,000 | $100,000 | and over | ||
Philippe Bibi | 2005 | * | |||||
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Chief Technology Officer | 2004 | * | |||||
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Joshua Brooks | 2005 | * | |||||
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Deputy Head of Investments | N/A | ||||||
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William Connolly | 2005 | * | |||||
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Head of Retail Management | N/A | ||||||
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Kevin Cronin | 2005 | * | |||||
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Head of Investments | 2004 | * | |||||
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Charles Haldeman, Jr. | 2005 | * | |||||
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President and CEO | 2004 | * | |||||
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Amrit Kanwal | 2005 | * | |||||
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Chief Financial Officer | 2004 | * | |||||
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Steven Krichmar | 2005 | * | |||||
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Chief of Operations | 2004 | * | |||||
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Francis McNamara, III | 2005 | * | |||||
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General Counsel | 2004 | * | |||||
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Richard Robie, III | 2005 | * | |||||
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Chief Administrative Officer | 2004 | * | |||||
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Edward Shadek | 2005 | * | |||||
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Deputy Head of Investments | N/A | ||||||
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Sandra Whiston | 2005 | * | |||||
| |||||||
Head of Institutional Management | N/A | ||||||
|
N/A indicates the individual was not a member of Putnams Executive Board as of 10/31/04.
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Terms and definitions |
Important terms |
Total return shows how the value of the funds shares changed over time, assuming you held the shares through the entire period and reinvested all distributions in the fund.
Net asset value (NAV) is the value of all your funds assets, minus any liabilities and the net assets allocated to any outstanding preferred shares, divided by the number of outstanding common shares.
Market price is the current trading price of one share of the fund. Market prices are set by transactions between buyers and sellers on exchanges such as the American Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange.
Comparative indexes |
JP Morgan Global High Yield Index is an unmanaged index of global high-yield fixed-income securities.
Lehman Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. investment-grade fixed-income securities.
Lehman Government Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. Treasury and agency securities. Lehman Municipal Bond Index is an unmanaged index of long-term fixed-rate investment-grade tax-exempt bonds.
Russell 1000 Growth Index is an unmanaged index of those companies in the large-cap Russell 1000 Index chosen for their growth orientation.
Russell 1000 Value Index is an unmanaged index of those companies in the large-cap Russell 1000 Index chosen for their value orientation.
S&P 500 Index is an unmanaged index of common stock performance.
Indexes assume reinvestment of all distributions and do not account for fees. Securities and performance of a fund and an index will differ. You cannot invest directly in an index.
Lipper is a third-party industry-ranking entity that ranks mutual funds. Lipper rankings are based on total return at net asset value and do not reflect sales charges. Funds are ranked among other funds with similar current investment styles or objectives as determined by Lipper. Lipper category averages reflect performance trends for funds within a category.
18
Trustee approval of management contract |
General
conclusions |
The Board of Trustees of the Putnam funds oversees the management of each fund and, as required by law, determines annually whether to approve the continuance of your funds management contract and administrative services contract with Putnam Management. In this regard, the Board of Trustees, with the assistance of its Contract Committee consisting solely of Trustees who are not interested persons (as such term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended) of the Putnam funds (the Independent Trustees), requests and evaluates all information it deems reasonably necessary under the circumstances. Over the course of several months beginning in March and ending in June 2005, the Contract Committee met five times to consider the information provided by Putnam Management and other information developed with the assistance of the Boards independent counsel and independent staff. The Contract Committee reviewed and discussed key aspects of this information with all of the Independent Trustees. Upon completion of this review, the Contract Committee recommended and the Independent Trustees approved the continuance of your funds management contract and administrative services contract, effective July 1, 2005.
This approval was based on the following conclusions:
* That the fee schedule currently in effect for your fund
(which includes fees paid under the administrative
services contract), subject to certain changes noted below, represents
reasonable compensation in light of the
nature and quality of the services being provided to the fund, the fees paid by competitive funds and the costs
incurred by Putnam Management in providing such
services, and
* That such fee schedule
represents an appropriate sharing between fund shareholders and Putnam Management of such economies of scale as may exist in
the management of the fund at current asset
levels.
These conclusions were based on a comprehensive consideration of all information provided to the Trustees and were not the result of any single factor. Some of the factors that figured particularly in the Trustees deliberations and how the Trustees considered these factors are described below, although individual Trustees may have evaluated the information presented differently, giving different weights to various factors. It is also important to recognize that the fee arrangements for your fund and the other Putnam funds are the result of many years of review and discussion between the Independent Trustees and Putnam Management, that certain aspects of such arrangements may receive greater scrutiny in some years than others, and that the Trustees conclusions may be based, in part, on their consideration of these same arrangements in prior years.
19
Model fee schedules and categories; total expenses
The Trustees review of the management fees and total expenses of the Putnam funds focused on three major themes:
* Consistency.
The Trustees, working in cooperation with Putnam Management, have devel-
oped and implemented a series of model fee
schedules for the Putnam funds designed to ensure that each funds management fee is consistent with the fees
for similar funds in the Putnam family of funds
and compares favorably with fees paid by competitive funds spon- sored by other investment advisors. Under this approach, each
Putnam fund is assigned to one of several fee
categories based on a combination of factors, including competitive fees
and perceived difficulty of management, and a
common fee schedule is implemented for all funds in a given fee category. The Trustees reviewed the model fee
schedules currently in effect for the Putnam
funds, including fee levels and breakpoints, and the assignment of your
fund to a particular fee category under this
structure. (Breakpoints refer to reductions in fee
rates that apply to additional assets once specified asset levels are
reached.)
Since their inception,
Putnams closed-end funds have generally had management fees that are higher than those of Putnams open-end funds pursuing
comparable investment strategies. These differences
ranged from five to 20 basis points. The Trustees have reexamined this
matter and recommend that these differences be
conformed to a uniform five basis points. As a
result, the Trustees approved a reduction in the management fees for your fund.
Under the new fee schedule, the fund pays a quarterly
fee to Putnam Management at the lower of the
following rates:
(a) | 0.55% of the funds average net assets |
(including assets attributable to both common and preferred shares) or | |
(b) | 0.65% of the first $500 million of the funds average net assets |
(including assets
attributable to both common and preferred shares); 0.55% of the next $500 million; 0.50% of the next $500 million; 0.45% of the next $5 billion; 0.425% of the next $5 billion; 0.405% of the next $5 billion; 0.39% of the next $5 billion; and 0.38% thereafter. | |
The new fee schedule for your fund will result in lower management fees paid by common shareholders. The Trustees approved the new fee schedule for your fund effective as of January 1, 2006, in order to provide Putnam Management an opportunity to accommodate the impact on revenues in its budget process for the coming year.
20
* Competitiveness. The Trustees also reviewed comparative fee and expense information for competitive funds, which indicated that, in a custom peer group of competitive funds selected by Lipper Inc., your fund ranked in the 57th percentile in management fees and in the 64th percentile in total expenses as of December 31, 2004 (the first percentile being the least expensive funds and the 100th percentile being the most expensive funds). The Trustees expressed their intention to monitor this information closely to ensure that fees and expenses of the Putnam funds continue to meet evolving competitive standards.
* Economies of scale. The Trustees concluded that the fee schedule currently in effect for your fund, subject to the changes noted above, represents an appropriate sharing of economies of scale at current asset levels. The Trustees examined the existing breakpoint structure of the Putnam funds management fees in light of competitive industry practices. The Trustees consid- ered various possible modifications to the Putnam Funds current breakpoint structure, but ultimately concluded that the current breakpoint structure continues to serve the interests of fund shareholders. Accordingly, the Trustees continue to believe that the fee schedules currently in effect for the funds, subject to the changes noted above, represent an appropriate sharing of economies of scale at current asset levels.
In connection with their review of the management fees and total expenses of the Putnam funds, the Trustees also reviewed the costs of the services to be provided and profits to be realized by Putnam Management and its affiliates from the relationship with the funds. This information included trends in revenues, expenses and profitability of Putnam Management and its affiliates relating to the investment management and distribution services provided to the funds. In this regard, the Trustees also reviewed an analysis of Putnam Managements revenues, expenses and profitability with respect to the funds management contracts, allocated on a fund-by-fund basis.
Investment
performance |
The quality of the investment process provided by Putnam Management represented a major factor in the Trustees evaluation of the quality of services provided by Putnam Management under your funds management contract. The Trustees were assisted in their review of the funds investment process and performance by the work of the Investment Oversight Committees of the Trustees, which meet on a regular monthly basis with the funds portfolio teams throughout the year. The Trustees concluded that Putnam Management generally provides a high-quality investment process -- as measured by the experience and skills of the individuals assigned to the management of fund portfolios, the resources made available to such personnel, and in general the ability of Putnam Management to attract and retain high-quality personnel -- but also recognize that this does not guarantee favorable investment results for every fund in every time period. The Trustees considered the investment performance of each fund over multiple time periods and considered information comparing the funds performance with various benchmarks and with
21
the performance of competitive funds. The Trustees noted the satisfactory investment performance of many Putnam funds. They also noted the disappointing investment performance of certain funds in recent years and continued to discuss with senior management of Putnam Management the factors contributing to such underperformance and actions being taken to improve performance. The Trustees recognized that, in recent years, Putnam Management has made significant changes in its investment personnel and processes and in the fund product line to address areas of underperformance. The Trustees indicated their intention to continue to monitor performance trends to assess the effectiveness of these changes and to evaluate whether additional remedial changes are warranted.
In the case of your fund, the Trustees considered that your funds common share performance at net asset value was in the following percentiles of its Lipper Inc. peer group (compared using tax-adjusted performance to recognize the different federal income tax treatment for capital gains distributions and exempt-interest distributions) for the one-, three- and five-year periods ended December 31, 2004 (the first percentile being the best-performing funds and the 100th percentile being the worst-performing funds):
One-year period | Three-year period | Five-year period |
| ||
36th | 56th | 57th |
(Because of the passage of time, these
performance results may differ from the performance results for more recent
periods shown elsewhere in this report.)
As a general matter, the
Trustees believe that cooperative efforts between the Trustees and Putnam
Management represent the most effective way to address investment performance
problems. The Trustees believe that investors in the Putnam funds have, in
effect, placed their trust in the Putnam organization, under the oversight of
the funds Trustees, to make appropriate decisions regarding the management of
the funds. Based on the responsiveness of Putnam Management in the recent past
to Trustee concerns about investment performance, the Trustees believe that it
is preferable to seek change within Putnam Management to address performance
shortcomings. In the Trustees view, the alternative of terminating a management
contract and engaging a new investment advisor for an underperforming fund would
entail significant disruptions and would not provide any greater assurance of
improved investment performance.
Brokerage and soft-dollar allocations; other benefits
The Trustees considered various potential benefits that Putnam Management may receive in connection with the services it provides under the management contract with your fund. These include principally benefits related to brokerage and soft-dollar allocations, whereby a portion of the commissions paid by a fund for brokerage is earmarked to pay for research services that may be utilized by a funds investment advisor. The Trustees believe that soft-dollar credits and other potential benefits associated with the allocation of fund brokerage, which pertains mainly
22
to funds investing in equity securities, represent assets of the funds that should be used for the benefit of fund shareholders. This area has been marked by significant change in recent years. In July 2003, acting upon the Contract Committees recommendation, the Trustees directed that allocations of brokerage to reward firms that sell fund shares be discontinued no later than December 31, 2003. In addition, commencing in 2004, the allocation of brokerage commissions by Putnam Management to acquire research services from third-party service providers has been significantly reduced, and continues at a modest level only to acquire research that is customarily not available for cash. The Trustees will continue to monitor the allocation of the funds brokerage to ensure that the principle of best price and execution remains paramount in the portfolio trading process.
The Trustees annual review of your funds management contract also included the review of your funds custodian agreement with Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company, which provides benefits to affiliates of Putnam Management.
Comparison of retail and institutional fee schedules
The information examined by the Trustees as part of their annual contract review has included for many years information regarding fees charged by Putnam Management and its affiliates to institutional clients such as defined benefit pension plans, college endowments, etc. This information included comparison of such fees with fees charged to the funds, as well as a detailed assessment of the differences in the services provided to these two types of clients. The Trustees observed, in this regard, that the differences in fee rates between institutional clients and the mutual funds are by no means uniform when examined by individual asset sectors, suggesting that differences in the pricing of investment management services to these types of clients reflect to a substantial degree historical competitive forces operating in separate market places. The Trustees considered the fact that fee rates across all asset sectors are higher on average for mutual funds than for institutional clients, as well as the differences between the services that Putnam Management provides to the Putnam funds and those that it provides to institutional clients of the firm, but have not relied on such comparisons to any significant extent in concluding that the management fees paid by your fund are reasonable.
23
Other information for shareholders |
Important notice regarding share repurchase program
In October 2005, the Trustees of your fund authorized Putnam Investments to implement a repurchase program on behalf of your fund, which would allow your fund to repurchase up to 5% of its outstanding shares over the 12 months following the announcement.
Important notice regarding delivery of shareholder documents
In accordance with SEC regulations, Putnam sends a single copy of annual and semiannual shareholder reports, prospectuses, and proxy statements to Putnam shareholders who share the same address. If you prefer to receive your own copy of these documents, please call Putnam at 1-800-225-1581, and Putnam will begin sending individual copies within 30 days.
Proxy voting |
Putnam is committed to managing our mutual funds in the best interests of our shareholders. The Putnam funds proxy voting guidelines and procedures, as well as information regarding how your fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the 12-month period ended June 30, 2005, are available on the Putnam Individual Investor Web site, www.putnam.com/individual, and on the SECs Web site, www.sec.gov. If you have questions about finding forms on the SECs Web site, you may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain the Putnam funds proxy voting guidelines and procedures at no charge by calling Putnams Shareholder Services at 1-800-225-1581.
Fund portfolio holdings |
The fund will file a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Shareholders may obtain the funds Forms N-Q on the SECs Web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the funds Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SECs public reference room in Washington, D.C. You may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for information about the SECs Web site or the operation of the public reference room.
24
Financial statements |
A guide to
financial statements |
These sections of the report, as well as the accompanying Notes, constitute the funds financial statements.
The funds portfolio lists all the funds investments and their values as of the last day of the reporting period. Holdings are organized by asset type and industry sector, country, or state to show areas of concentration and diversification.
Statement of assets and liabilities
shows how the funds net assets and share price
are determined. All investment and noninvestment assets are added together. Any
unpaid expenses and other liabilities are subtracted from this total. The result
is divided by the number of shares to determine the net asset value per share,
which is calculated separately for each class of shares. (For funds with
preferred shares, the amount subtracted from total assets includes the net
assets allocated to remarketed preferred shares.)
Statement of operations shows the funds net investment gain or loss. This is done
by first adding up all the funds earnings -- from dividends and interest income
-- and subtracting its operating expenses to determine net investment income (or
loss). Then, any net gain or loss the fund realized on the sales of its holdings
-- as well as any unrealized gains or losses over the period -- is added to or
subtracted from the net investment result to determine the funds net gain or
loss for the fiscal period.
Statement of changes in net assets shows how the funds net assets were affected by the funds
net investment gain or loss, by distributions to shareholders, and by changes in
the number of the funds shares. It lists distributions and their sources (net
investment income or realized capital gains) over the current reporting period
and the most recent fiscal year-end. The distributions listed here may not match
the sources listed in the Statement of operations because the distributions are
determined on a tax basis and may be paid in a different period from the one in
which they were earned.
Financial
highlights provide an overview of
the funds investment results, per-share distributions, expense ratios, net
investment income ratios, and portfolio turnover in one summary table,
reflecting the five most recent reporting periods. In a semiannual report, the
highlight table also includes the current reporting period. For open-end funds,
a separate table is provided for each share class.
25
The fund's portfolio 10/31/05 (Unaudited) |
Key to abbreviations | |
AMBAC AMBAC Indemnity Corporation | G.O. Bonds General Obligation Bonds |
COP Certificate of Participation | IFB Inverse Floating Rate Bonds |
FGIC Financial Guaranty Insurance Company | MBIA MBIA Insurance Company |
FHLMC Coll. Federal Home Loan Mortgage | PSFG Permanent School Fund Guaranteed |
Corporation Collateralized | U.S. Govt. Coll. U.S. Government Collateralized |
FNMA Coll. Federal National Mortgage Association | VRDN Variable Rate Demand Notes |
Collateralized | |
XLCA XL Capital Assurance | |
FSA Financial Security Assurance | |
GNMA Coll. Government National Mortgage | |
Association Collateralized |
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* | ||||||
|
||||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | ||||
Alabama (0.2%) | ||||||
Sylacauga, Hlth. Care Auth. Rev. Bonds (Coosa Valley | ||||||
Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, 6s, 8/1/25 | B/P | $ | 400,000 | $ | 402,596 | |
|
||||||
Arizona (1.4%) | ||||||
AZ Hlth. Fac. Auth. Hosp. Syst. Rev. Bonds (John C. | ||||||
Lincoln Hlth. Network), 6 3/8s, 12/1/37 | BBB | 750,000 | 811,433 | |||
Casa Grande, Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Casa Grande | ||||||
Regl. Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, 7 5/8s, 12/1/29 | B+/P | 950,000 | 1,041,552 | |||
Cochise Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Sierra | ||||||
Vista Cmnty. Hosp.), Ser. A, 6 3/4s, 12/1/26 | BB+/P | 475,000 | 487,797 | |||
Pima Cnty., Indl Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Horizon | ||||||
Cmnty. Learning Ctr.), 5.05s, 6/1/25 | BBB-- | 500,000 | 493,860 | |||
2,834,642 | ||||||
|
||||||
Arkansas (1.3%) | ||||||
Independence Cnty., Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | ||||||
(Entergy, Inc.), 5s, 1/1/21 | A-- | 1,000,000 | 1,011,110 | |||
Northwest Regl. Arpt. Auth. Rev. Bonds, 7 5/8s, | ||||||
2/1/27 (Prerefunded) | BB/P | 1,000,000 | 1,111,330 | |||
Washington Cnty., Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Regl. | ||||||
Med. Ctr.) | ||||||
Ser. A, 5s, 2/1/35 | Baa2 | 250,000 | 243,608 | |||
Ser. B, 5s, 2/1/25 | Baa2 | 250,000 | 249,980 | |||
2,616,028 | ||||||
|
||||||
California (25.9%) | ||||||
CA G.O. Bonds, 5s, 5/1/22 | A | 4,000,000 | 4,159,400 | |||
CA State G.O. Bonds | ||||||
5 1/8s, 4/1/23 | A2 | 500,000 | 520,950 | |||
5.1s, 2/1/34 | A2 | 750,000 | 764,978 | |||
26 |
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
California continued | |||||
CA State Dept. of Wtr. Resources | |||||
Rev.Bonds, Ser. A | |||||
6s, 5/1/15 | A2 | $ | 2,000,000 | $ | 2,247,140 |
AMBAC, 5 1/2s, 5/1/16 | Aaa | 2,000,000 | 2,181,960 | ||
CA State Econ. Recvy. G.O. Bonds, Ser. A, 5s, 7/1/16 | Aa | 31,000,000 | 1,072,140 | ||
CA State Public Wks. Board Rev. Bonds (Dept. of Hlth. | |||||
Svcs. Richmond Laboratory), Ser. B, XLCA, 5s, 11/1/22 | Aaa | 1,810,000 | 1,877,766 | ||
CA Statewide Cmnty. Dev. Auth. COP (The Internext | |||||
Group), 5 3/8s, 4/1/30 | BBB | 1,750,000 | 1,750,315 | ||
Cathedral City, Impt. Board Act of 1915 Special | |||||
Assmt. Bonds (Cove Impt. Dist.), Ser. 04-02, | |||||
5.05s, 9/2/35 | BB+/P | 250,000 | 242,635 | ||
Chula Vista COP, MBIA, 5s, 8/1/32 | Aaa | 4,000,000 | 4,105,160 | ||
Gilroy, Rev. Bonds (Bonfante Gardens Park), | |||||
8s, 11/1/25 | D/P | 576,000 | 466,278 | ||
Metropolitan Wtr. Dist. FRN (Southern CA Wter Works), | |||||
2.048s, 8/10/18 | AA+ | 3,000,000 | 3,000,000 | ||
Metropolitan Wtr. Dist. IFB (Southern CA Waterworks), | |||||
9.139s, 8/10/18 | AA+ | 3,000,000 | 3,848,760 | ||
Roseville, Cmnty. Fac. Special Tax (Dist. No. 1- | |||||
Westpark), 5 1/4s, 9/1/25 | BB/P | 875,000 | 886,331 | ||
Sacramento, Special Tax (North Natomas Cmnty. Fac.), | |||||
Ser. 97-01, 5s, 9/1/29 | BB/P | 1,190,000 | 1,171,995 | ||
Sacramento, City Unified School Dist. G.O. Bonds | |||||
(Election 1999), Ser. D, FSA, 5s, 7/1/28 | Aaa | 2,000,000 | 2,065,380 | ||
San Bernardino Cnty., COP (Med. Ctr. Fin.), Ser. A, | |||||
MBIA, 6 1/2s, 8/1/17 | Aaa | 5,000,000 | 5,891,900 | ||
San Diego Cnty., Certificates | |||||
of Participation, AMBAC | |||||
5 5/8s, 9/1/12 | Aaa | 6,000,000 | 6,702,420 | ||
5 1/2s, 9/1/07 | AAA | 6,000,000 | 6,268,920 | ||
San Jose, Redev. Agcy. Tax Alloc. Bonds (Merged Area | |||||
Redev. Project), MBIA, 5s, 8/1/32 | Aaa | 2,500,000 | 2,558,675 | ||
Sunnyvale, Cmnty. Fac. Dist. Special Tax Rev. Bonds, | |||||
7.65s, 8/1/21 | BB/P | 770,000 | 822,399 | ||
Vallejo, COP (Marine World Foundation), 7.2s, 2/1/26 | BBB/P | 1,300,000 | 1,364,051 | ||
53,969,553 | |||||
|
|||||
Colorado (4.9%) | |||||
Denver, City & Cnty. Arpt. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, MBIA, | |||||
5.7s, 11/15/25 (Prerefunded) | Aaa | 10,000,000 | 10,209,900 | ||
|
|||||
Delaware (0.7%) | |||||
GMAC Muni. Mtge. Trust 144A sub. notes, Ser. A1-2, | |||||
4.9s, 10/31/39 | A3 | 1,500,000 | 1,501,080 |
27
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
District of Columbia (9.1%) | |||||
DC G.O. Bonds, Ser. A, 6s, 6/1/26 (Prerefunded) # | A | $ | 12,450,000 | $ | 13,240,575 |
DC Wtr. & Swr. Auth. Pub. Util. Rev. Bonds, FGIC, 5s, | |||||
10/1/28 | Aaa | 5,550,000 | 5,673,432 | ||
18,914,007 | |||||
|
|||||
Florida (2.5%) | |||||
Highlands Cnty., Hlth. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Adventist Hlth.), Ser. A, 5s, 11/15/21 | A+ | 250,000 | 257,758 | ||
Lee Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Alliance | |||||
Cmnty.), Ser. C, 5 1/2s, 11/15/29 | BBB | 1,000,000 | 993,380 | ||
Miami Beach, Hlth. Fac. Auth. Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Mount | |||||
Sinai Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, 6.8s, 11/15/31 | BB+ | 600,000 | 649,998 | ||
Reunion West, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds, | |||||
6 1/4s, 5/1/36 | BB/P | 800,000 | 835,944 | ||
St. Lucie Cnty., School Board COP (Master Lease), | |||||
Ser. A, FSA, 5s, 7/1/26 | Aaa | 1,965,000 | 2,043,286 | ||
Tern Bay, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, | |||||
5s, 5/1/15 | BB/P | 400,000 | 401,200 | ||
5,181,566 | |||||
|
|||||
Georgia (6.2%) | |||||
Atlanta, Arpt. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, FGIC, | |||||
5 5/8s, 1/1/30 | Aaa | 3,000,000 | 3,137,550 | ||
Atlanta, Wtr. & Waste Wtr. Rev. Bonds, FSA, | |||||
5s, 11/1/24 | Aaa | 4,000,000 | 4,149,600 | ||
Burke Cnty., Poll. Control Dev. Auth. Mandatory Put | |||||
Bonds (GA Power Co.), 4.45s, 12/1/08 | A2 | 1,500,000 | 1,535,910 | ||
Effingham Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Pacific Corp.), 6 1/2s, 6/1/31 | Ba2 | 1,400,000 | 1,456,826 | ||
Rockdale Cnty., Dev. Auth. Solid Waste Disp. Rev. | |||||
Bonds (Visay Paper, Inc.), 7.4s, 1/1/16 | B+/P | 1,145,000 | 1,149,820 | ||
Savannah, Econ. Dev. Auth. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Intl. Paper Co.), Ser. A, 5.1s, 8/1/14 | Baa2 | 1,500,000 | 1,552,305 | ||
12,982,011 | |||||
|
|||||
Hawaii (0.8%) | |||||
HI State Hsg. & Cmnty. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds (Single | |||||
Fam. Mtge.), Ser. B, 3.7s, 1/1/22 | Aaa | 1,000,000 | 989,990 | ||
HI State Hsg. Fin. & Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
FNMA Coll., 5 3/4s, 7/1/30 | Aaa | 690,000 | 691,622 | ||
1,681,612 | |||||
|
|||||
Illinois (3.7%) | |||||
IL Hsg. Dev. Auth. Multi-Fam. Hsg. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
Ser. 91-A, 8 1/4s, 7/1/16 | A1 | 5,790,000 | 5,856,180 | ||
Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(McCormack Place Expansion Project), MBIA, | |||||
5s, 12/15/28 | Aaa | 1,770,000 | 1,817,259 | ||
7,673,439 |
28
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Indiana (7.2%) | |||||
Carmel Clay, Indl. Parks Bldg. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
MBIA, 5s, 1/15/26 | AAA | $ | 2,000,000 | $ | 2,068,420 |
Fairfield, School Bldg. Corp. Ind. Rev. Bonds, FGIC, | |||||
5s, 7/15/24 | AAA | 3,000,000 | 3,103,800 | ||
GCS School Bldg. Corp. Rev. Bonds (First Mtg.), FSA, | |||||
5s, 7/15/26 | AAA | 1,000,000 | 1,026,640 | ||
IN Hlth. Fac. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Cmnty. Hosp.), | |||||
Ser. A, AMBAC, 5s, 5/1/24 | Aaa | 2,695,000 | 2,789,756 | ||
IN State Dev. Fin. Auth. Env. Impt. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(USX Corp.), 5.6s, 12/1/32 | Baa1 | 2,100,000 | 2,159,115 | ||
Indianapolis, Arpt. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Federal | |||||
Express Corp.), 5.1s, 1/15/17 | Baa2 | 2,500,000 | 2,555,500 | ||
Rockport, Poll. Control Mandatory Put Bonds (Indiana | |||||
Michigan Pwr. Co.), Ser. C, 2 5/8s, 10/1/06 | BBB+ | 1,300,000 | 1,288,144 | ||
14,991,375 | |||||
|
|||||
Iowa (0.6%) | |||||
IA Fin. Auth. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Care Initiatives), 9 1/4s, 7/1/25 | BBB/P | 970,000 | 1,160,013 | ||
|
|||||
Louisiana (0.8%) | |||||
LA Local Govt. Env. Fac. Cmnty. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(St. James Place), Ser. A, 7s, 11/1/20 | B/P | 1,600,000 | 1,630,464 | ||
|
|||||
Maine (0.3%) | |||||
Rumford, Solid Waste Disp. Rev. Bonds (Boise | |||||
Cascade Corp.), 6 7/8s, 10/1/26 | Ba1 | 600,000 | 641,088 | ||
|
|||||
Massachusetts (2.7%) | |||||
MA State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(UMass Memorial), Ser. C, 6 1/2s, 7/1/21 | Baa2 | 1,875,000 | 2,000,606 | ||
(Berkshire Hlth. Syst.), Ser. E, 6 1/4s, 10/1/31 | BBB+ | 1,300,000 | 1,379,586 | ||
(Hlth. Care Syst. Covenant Hlth.), Ser. E, 6s, 7/1/31 | A | 1,800,000 | 1,933,308 | ||
MA State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Rev. Bonds, Ser. 53, MBIA, | |||||
6.15s, 12/1/29 | Aaa | 400,000 | 410,504 | ||
5,724,004 | |||||
|
|||||
Michigan (4.9%) | |||||
Detroit, G.O. Bonds, Ser. A, FGIC, 5s, 7/1/30 | Aaa | 4,500,000 | 4,606,560 | ||
MI Higher Ed. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Kalamazoo College), 5 1/2s, 12/1/18 | A1 | 500,000 | 535,315 | ||
MI State Hosp. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Oakwood Hosp.), | |||||
Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 4/1/32 | A2 | 1,000,000 | 1,047,810 | ||
MI State Hsg. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
3.9s, 6/1/30 | AA+ | 1,200,000 | 1,192,728 | ||
MI State Strategic Fund, Ltd. Rev. Bonds (Worthington | |||||
Armstrong Venture), U.S. Govt. Coll., 5 3/4s, 10/1/22 | AAA/P | 1,650,000 | 1,848,446 | ||
Midland Cnty., Econ. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
6 3/4s, 7/23/09 | BB | 1,000,000 | 1,041,950 | ||
10,272,809 |
29
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Minnesota (2.0%) | |||||
Cohasset, Poll. Control Rev. Bonds (Allete, Inc.), | |||||
4.95s, 7/1/22 | A | $ | 3,000,000 | $ | 3,016,590 |
MN State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (Res. Hsg. Fin.), | |||||
Ser. B, 5s, 7/1/34 | AA+ | 650,000 | 673,868 | ||
St. Paul, Hsg. & Redev. Auth. Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Hlth. | |||||
East), 6s, 11/15/25 | Baa3 | 450,000 | 484,421 | ||
4,174,879 | |||||
|
|||||
Mississippi (1.2%) | |||||
MS Bus. Fin. Corp. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Syst. Energy Resources, Inc.) | |||||
5.9s, 5/1/22 | BBB | 1,000,000 | 1,013,760 | ||
5 7/8s, 4/1/22 | BBB | 580,000 | 587,923 | ||
MS Home Corp. Rev. Bonds (Single Fam. Mtge.), | |||||
Ser. B-2, GNMA Coll., FNMA Coll., 6.45s, 12/1/33 | Aaa | 760,000 | 802,514 | ||
2,404,197 | |||||
|
|||||
Missouri (5.0%) | |||||
Cape Girardeau Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Hlth. Care | |||||
Fac. Rev. Bonds (St. Francis Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, | |||||
5 1/2s, 6/1/16 | A+ | 1,750,000 | 1,878,678 | ||
MO State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Washington U.), Ser. A, 5s, 2/15/33 | AAA | 2,500,000 | 2,570,475 | ||
MO State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. VRDN (Cox Hlth. | |||||
Syst.), AMBAC, 2.8s, 6/1/22 | VMIG1 | 4,450,000 | 4,450,000 | ||
MO State Hsg. Dev. Comm. Mtge. Rev. Bonds (Single | |||||
Fam. Homeowner Loan), Ser. C-1, GNMA Coll., FNMA | |||||
Coll., 7.15s, 3/1/32 | AAA | 805,000 | 845,741 | ||
MO State Hsg. Dev. Comm. Single Fam. Mtge. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Home Ownership Loan), Ser. C, GNMA Coll., FNMA | |||||
Coll., 5.6s, 9/1/35 | AAA | 600,000 | 639,750 | ||
10,384,644 | |||||
|
|||||
Montana (1.0%) | |||||
Forsyth, Poll. Control Mandatory Put Bonds | |||||
(Avista Corp.), AMBAC, 5s, 12/30/08 | Aaa | 1,075,000 | 1,111,378 | ||
Forsyth, Poll. Control VRDN (Pacific Corp.), | |||||
2.82s, 1/1/18 | VMIG1 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 | ||
2,111,378 | |||||
|
|||||
Nevada (5.0%) | |||||
Clark Cnty., G.O. Bonds (Pk. & Regl. Justice Ctr.), | |||||
FGIC, 5 5/8s, 11/1/19 (Prerefunded) | Aaa | 3,505,000 | 3,796,721 | ||
Clark Cnty., Arpt. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A-2, FGIC, | |||||
5 1/8s, 7/1/26 | Aaa | 5,000,000 | 5,199,950 | ||
Clark Cnty., Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. (Summerlin | |||||
No. 151), 5s, 8/1/25 | BB/P | 700,000 | 682,794 |
30
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Nevada continued | |||||
Henderson, Local Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. | |||||
(No. T-16), 5 1/8s, 3/1/25 | BB/P | $ | 200,000 | $ | 197,690 |
(No. T-17), 5s, 9/1/25 | BB/P | 175,000 | 171,537 | ||
Henderson, Local Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||||
(No. T-16), 5.1s, 3/1/21 | BB/P | 310,000 | 308,673 | ||
10,357,365 | |||||
|
|||||
New Hampshire (1.8%) | |||||
NH Higher Edl. & Hlth. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Riverwoods at Exeter), Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 3/1/23 | BB+/P | 1,450,000 | 1,477,101 | ||
Ser. 05, 6 3/8s, 1/1/27 | BBB | 765,000 | 787,483 | ||
Ser. 05, 6 3/8s, 1/1/27 (Prerefunded) | AAA/P | 270,000 | 284,918 | ||
NH Higher Edl. & Hlth. Facs. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(NH College), 6 3/8s, 1/1/27 (Prerefunded) | AAA/P | 215,000 | 226,879 | ||
NH State Bus. Fin. Auth. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds, | |||||
3 1/2s, 7/1/27 | Baa2 | 950,000 | 921,187 | ||
3,697,568 | |||||
|
|||||
New Jersey (8.1%) | |||||
Casino Reinvestment Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
MBIA, 5 1/4s, 6/1/18 | Aaa | 3,490,000 | 3,730,950 | ||
Newark, Hsg. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Port Auth. Newark | |||||
Marine Terminal), MBIA, 5 1/4s, 1/1/20 | AAA | 1,000,000 | 1,074,000 | ||
NJ Econ. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Cigarette Tax), 5 3/4s, 6/15/29 | Baa2 | 1,500,000 | 1,574,670 | ||
(Motor Vehicle), Ser. A, MBIA, 5s, 7/1/27 | Aaa | 2,000,000 | 2,087,000 | ||
NJ State Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Rowan U.), | |||||
Ser. C, MBIA, 5s, 7/1/23 | Aaa | 1,840,000 | 1,936,287 | ||
Passaic Cnty., Impt. Auth. Lease Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Preakness Hlth. Care Ctr.), AMBAC | |||||
5s, 5/1/25 | Aaa | 2,505,000 | 2,612,715 | ||
5s, 5/1/24 | Aaa | 2,385,000 | 2,491,323 | ||
Tobacco Settlement Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
6 3/4s, 6/1/39 | BBB | 1,150,000 | 1,322,500 | ||
16,829,445 | |||||
|
|||||
New Mexico (1.0%) | |||||
Farmington, Poll. Control VRDN (AZ Pub. Svc. Co.), | |||||
Ser. A, 2.75s, 5/1/24 | VMIG1 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 | ||
NM Mtge. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Single Fam. Mtge.), | |||||
Ser. C, GNMA Coll., FNMA Coll., FHLMC Coll., | |||||
5.82s, 9/1/33 | AAA | 1,000,000 | 1,044,660 | ||
2,044,660 | |||||
|
|||||
New York (10.9%) | |||||
Buffalo, G.O. Bonds, Ser. D, FGIC, 5 1/2s, 12/15/13 | Aaa | 1,000,000 | 1,089,120 | ||
Long Island, Pwr. Auth. NY Elec. Syst. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 12/1/24 | A3 | 1,000,000 | 1,065,130 |
31
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
New York continued | |||||
Niagara Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds, Ser. C, | |||||
5 5/8s, 11/15/24 | Baa3 | $ | 500,000 | $ | 521,340 |
NY City, G.O. Bonds, Ser. C, 5 1/4s, 8/1/11 | A1 | 3,000,000 | 3,212,820 | ||
NY City, City Transitional Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds, | |||||
AMBAC, 5 1/4s, 8/1/15 | Aaa | 1,000,000 | 1,077,480 | ||
NY City, Hsg. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, FGIC, | |||||
5s, 7/1/25 | Aaa | 500,000 | 520,575 | ||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Liberty-7 World Trade Ctr.), Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 3/1/15 | B/P | 750,000 | 798,638 | ||
(Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogen. Partners), 6.2s, 10/1/22 | BBB | 750,000 | 786,308 | ||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Special Arpt. Fac. Rev. | |||||
Bonds (Airis JFK I LLC), Ser. A, 5 1/2s, 7/1/28 | Baa3 | 2,100,000 | 2,070,411 | ||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Special Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(British Airways PLC), 5 1/4s, 12/1/32 | Ba2 | 700,000 | 600,215 | ||
NY Cntys., Tobacco Trust III Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Tobacco Settlement), 6s, 6/1/43 | BBB | 1,500,000 | 1,598,445 | ||
NY State Dorm. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
5 1/2s, 3/15/13 | AA | 2,000,000 | 2,197,720 | ||
NY State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Gas Fac. Rev. | |||||
Bonds (Brooklyn Union Gas), 6.952s, 7/1/26 | A+ | 2,000,000 | 2,085,180 | ||
NY State Hwy. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Hwy. & Bridge Trust | |||||
Fund), Ser. B, FGIC, 5s, 4/1/17 | AAA | 1,500,000 | 1,605,210 | ||
Onondaga Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (Solvay | |||||
Paperboard, LLC), 7s, 11/1/30 (acquired 6/30/04, | |||||
cost $827,862) | BB/P | 800,000 | 841,104 | ||
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev. | |||||
Bonds, Ser. A | |||||
5s, 1/1/32 (Prerefunded) | Aa2 | 2,125,000 | 2,287,988 | ||
5s, 1/1/32 | Aa2 | 375,000 | 385,781 | ||
22,743,465 | |||||
|
|||||
North Carolina (0.8%) | |||||
NC State Muni. Pwr. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (No. 1, | |||||
Catawba Elec.), Ser. B, 6 1/2s, 1/1/20 | A3 | 1,500,000 | 1,656,885 | ||
|
|||||
Ohio (6.5%) | |||||
Cleveland, G.O. Bonds, Ser. A, AMBAC, 5s, 10/1/15 | Aaa | 2,185,000 | 2,364,126 | ||
Cleveland, Muni. School Dist. G.O. Bonds, FSA, | |||||
5s, 12/1/27 | Aaa | 5,700,000 | 5,908,962 | ||
Coshocton Cnty., Env. Rev. Bonds (Smurfit-Stone | |||||
Container), 5 1/8s, 8/1/13 | B | 500,000 | 482,460 | ||
Field, Local School Dist. G.O. Bonds (School Fac. | |||||
Construction & Impt.), AMBAC, 5s, 12/1/25 | Aaa | 1,355,000 | 1,414,701 | ||
Montgomery Cnty., Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Kettering Med. | |||||
Ctr.), 6 3/4s, 4/1/22 | A2 | 1,000,000 | 1,079,790 | ||
Rickenbacker, Port Auth. Rev. Bonds (OASBO Expanded | |||||
Asset Pooled), Ser. A, 5 3/8s, 1/1/32 | A2 | 2,165,000 | 2,305,617 | ||
13,555,656 |
32
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Oklahoma (0.5%) | |||||
OK Dev. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Hillcrest Hlth. Care | |||||
Syst.), Ser. A, U.S. Govt. Coll., 5 5/8s, 8/15/29 | |||||
(Prerefunded) | Aaa | $ | 950,000 | $ | 1,029,933 |
|
|||||
Pennsylvania (7.6%) | |||||
Allegheny Cnty., Hosp. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Pittsburgh Mercy Hlth. Syst. ), AMBAC, | |||||
5 5/8s, 8/15/26 | Aaa | 5,000,000 | 5,109,800 | ||
Beaver Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Control | |||||
Mandatory Put Bonds (Cleveland Elec.), 3 3/4s, | |||||
10/1/08 | Baa2 | 1,350,000 | 1,347,759 | ||
Carbon Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Panther | |||||
Creek Partners), 6.65s, 5/1/10 | BBB | 800,000 | 848,784 | ||
Hempfield, Area School Dist. G.O. Bonds | |||||
(Westmoreland Cnty.), Ser. A, FGIC, 5 1/4s, 3/15/21 | AAA | 4,000,000 | 4,314,200 | ||
Lancaster Cnty., Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Gen. Hosp.), | |||||
5 1/2s, 3/15/26 | A | 1,500,000 | 1,569,030 | ||
Lehigh Cnty., Gen. Purpose Auth. Rev. Bonds (Lehigh | |||||
Valley Hosp. Hlth. Network), Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 7/1/32 | A1 | 1,000,000 | 1,024,290 | ||
Sayre, Hlth. Care Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Guthrie | |||||
Hlth.), Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 12/1/31 | A | 1,450,000 | 1,541,350 | ||
15,755,213 | |||||
|
|||||
Rhode Island (0.1%) | |||||
Tobacco Settlement Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
6 1/4s, 6/1/42 | BBB | 200,000 | 211,904 | ||
|
|||||
South Carolina (6.8%) | |||||
Lexington Cnty. Hlth. Svcs. Dist. Inc. Hosp. Rev. | |||||
Bonds, 5 1/2s, 5/1/37 | A2 | 750,000 | 787,335 | ||
SC Jobs Econ. Dev. Auth. Hosp. Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Palmetto Hlth. Alliance), Ser. C, 6s, 8/1/20 | Baa1 | 1,250,000 | 1,350,150 | ||
SC State Pub. Svcs. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, AMBAC, | |||||
5s, 1/1/29 | Aaa | 5,000,000 | 5,172,350 | ||
SC Tobacco Settlement Rev. Mgt. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, | |||||
6 3/8s, 5/15/30 | BBB | 3,000,000 | 3,372,960 | ||
SC Trans. Infrastructure Bk. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
AMBAC, 5s, 10/1/27 | Aaa | 2,460,000 | 2,564,058 | ||
Spartanburg Cnty., Solid Waste Disp. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(BMW Project), 7.55s, 11/1/24 | A1 | 1,000,000 | 1,010,510 | ||
14,257,363 | |||||
|
|||||
South Dakota (0.2%) | |||||
SD Edl. Enhancement Funding Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, | |||||
6 1/2s, 6/1/32 | BBB | 450,000 | 484,124 | ||
|
|||||
Tennessee (1.5%) | |||||
Johnson City, Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Board Hosp. Rev. | |||||
Bonds (First Mtge. -Mountain States Hlth.), Ser. A, | |||||
7 1/2s, 7/1/33 | BBB+ | 2,750,000 | 3,218,573 |
33
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
|
|||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Texas (9.5%) | |||||
Alliance, Arpt. Auth. Rev. Bonds (American | |||||
Airlines, Inc.), 7 1/2s, 12/1/29 | Caa2 | $ | 1,000,000 | $ | 752,950 |
Bexar Cnty., Hlth. Fac. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds (St. | |||||
Luke's Hlth. Syst.), FSA, 6.1s, 11/15/23 | Aaa | 4,000,000 | 4,134,560 | ||
Edgewood, Indpt. School Dist. Bexar Cnty. G.O. Bonds, | |||||
Ser. A, PSFG, 5s, 2/15/26 | Aaa | 2,020,000 | 2,087,650 | ||
El Paso, Indpt. School Dist. G.O. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||||
PSFG, 5 1/4s, 8/15/21 | AAA | 2,345,000 | 2,511,706 | ||
Gateway, Pub. Fac. Corp. Rev. Bonds (Stonegate Villas | |||||
Apt.), FNMA Coll., 4.55s, 7/1/34 | Aaa | 750,000 | 765,578 | ||
Harris Cnty., Hlth. Fac. Dev. Corp. Hosp. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Memorial Hermann Hlth. Care Syst.), Ser. A, | |||||
5 1/4s, 12/1/18 | A2 | 610,000 | 647,033 | ||
McKinney, Indpt. School Dist. G.O. Bonds, PSFG, | |||||
5 1/4s, 2/15/20 | Aaa | 3,185,000 | 3,419,416 | ||
San Antonio Wtr. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, FSA, 5s, 5/15/32 | Aaa | 2,000,000 | 2,041,280 | ||
Snyder, Indpt. School Dist. G.O. Bonds (School | |||||
Bldg.), AMBAC, 5 1/4s, 2/15/25 | AAA | 1,280,000 | 1,363,098 | ||
Tomball, Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Tomball Regl. | |||||
Hosp.), 6s, 7/1/29 | Baa3 | 2,000,000 | 2,110,140 | ||
19,833,411 | |||||
|
|||||
Utah (1.0%) | |||||
Salt Lake City, Hosp. Rev. Bonds, AMBAC, | |||||
6 3/4s, 5/15/20 | AAA | 2,000,000 | 2,004,220 | ||
|
|||||
Virginia (2.0%) | |||||
Fredericksburg, Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Medicorp | |||||
Hlth. Syst.), Ser. B, 5 1/8s, 6/15/33 | A3 | 500,000 | 505,700 | ||
Front Royal & Warren Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Lease | |||||
Rev. Bonds (School Cap. Impt.), Ser. B, FSA, | |||||
5s, 4/1/29 | Aaa | 2,500,000 | 2,576,025 | ||
Henrico Cnty. Econ. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(United Methodist), Ser. A, 6.7s, 6/1/27 | BB+/P | 1,000,000 | 1,050,690 | ||
4,132,415 | |||||
|
|||||
Washington (5.7%) | |||||
Chelan Cnty. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds (Alcoa), | |||||
5.85s, 12/1/31 | A2 | 4,000,000 | 4,086,960 | ||
King Cnty., G.O. Bonds, Ser. C, 6 1/4s, 1/1/32 | AAA | 2,250,000 | 2,368,463 | ||
Tobacco Settlement Auth. of WA Rev. Bonds, | |||||
6 1/2s, 6/1/26 | BBB | 1,235,000 | 1,338,456 | ||
WA State G.O. Bonds (Motor Vehicle Fuel), Ser. B, | |||||
MBIA, 5s, 7/1/24 | Aaa | 4,000,000 | 4,182,800 | ||
11,976,679 | |||||
|
|||||
West Virginia (0.5%) | |||||
Princeton, Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Cmnty. Hosp. | |||||
Assn., Inc.), 6.1s, 5/1/29 | B2 | 1,300,000 | 1,145,729 |
34
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (156.0%)* continued | |||||
| |||||
Rating ** | Principal amount | Value | |||
Wisconsin (4.1%) | |||||
Badger Tobacco Settlement Asset | |||||
Securitization Corp. Rev. Bonds | |||||
7s, 6/1/28 | BBB | $ | 2,600,000 | $ | 2,865,352 |
6 3/8s, 6/1/32 | BBB | 2,500,000 | 2,658,900 | ||
WI Hsg. & Econ. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Home Ownership), Ser. D, 4 7/8s, 3/1/36 | Aa2 | 500,000 | 516,080 | ||
WI State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||||
(Wheaton Franciscan), 5 3/4s, 8/15/30 | A2 | 2,400,000 | 2,534,016 | ||
8,574,348 | |||||
| |||||
TOTAL INVESTMENTS | |||||
Total investments (cost $313,365,455) | $ | 324,970,241 |
* | Percentages indicated are based on net assets of $208,352,469. |
** | The Moody's or Standard & Poor's ratings indicated are believed to be the most recent ratings available at October 31, 2005 for the securities listed. Ratings are generally ascribed to securities at the time of issuance. While the agencies may from time to time revise such ratings, they undertake no obligation to do so, and the ratings do not necessarily represent what the agencies would ascribe to these securities at October 31, 2005. Securities rated by Putnam are indicated by /P. Security ratings are defined in the Statement of Additional Information. |
# A portion of this security was pledged and
segregated with the custodian to cover margin requirements for futures
contracts at October 31,
2005.
Restricted,
excluding 144A securities, as to public resale. The total market value of
restricted securities held at October 31, 2005
was $841,104 or 0.4% of net assets.
144A after the name of a security represents those
exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of
1933.
These securities may be
resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified
institutional buyers.
The rates shown on
VRDN and Mandatory Put Bonds are the current interest rates at October 31,
2005.
The dates shown on
Mandatory Put Bonds are the next mandatory put dates.
Inverse Floating Rate Bonds (IFB) are securities that
pay interest rates that vary inversely to changes in the market
interest rates. As interest rates
rise, inverse floaters produce less current income. The interest rates shown are
the current interest rates at October 31,
2005.
The fund had the
following industry group concentrations greater than 10% at October 31, 2005 (as
a percentage of net assets):
Health care | 28.7% |
Transportation | 16.1 |
Utilities | 14.8 |
Water and sewer | 11.2 |
The fund had the following insurance concentrations greater than 10% at October 31, 2005 (as a percentage of net assets):
AMBAC | 23.8% |
MBIA | 19.2 |
FGIC | 15.9 |
FSA | 11.5 |
35
FUTURES CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 10/31/05 (Unaudited) | ||||
| ||||
Number of | Expiration | Unrealized | ||
contracts | Value | date | appreciation | |
| ||||
U.S. Treasury Bond (Short) | 26 | $2,911,188 | Dec-05 | $129,744 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
36
Statement of assets and liabilities 10/31/05 (Unaudited) | |
|
|
ASSETS | |
Investments in securities, at value (identified cost $313,365,455) (Note 1) | $324,970,241 |
|
|
Cash | 771,528 |
|
|
Interest and other receivables | 5,495,391 |
|
|
Receivable for securities sold | 15,403 |
|
|
Total assets | 331,252,563 |
|
|
LIABILITIES | |
Payable for variation margin (Note 1) | 4,062 |
|
|
Distributions payable to shareholders | 927,972 |
|
|
Accrued preferred shares distribution payable (Note 1) | 62,289 |
|
|
Payable for shares of the fund repurchased | 192,232 |
|
|
Payable for compensation of Manager (Note 2) | 559,829 |
|
|
Payable for investor servicing and custodian fees (Note 2) | 17,451 |
|
|
Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2) | 38,560 |
|
|
Payable for administrative services (Note 2) | 1,192 |
|
|
Other accrued expenses | 96,507 |
|
|
Total liabilities | 1,900,094 |
|
|
Series A remarketed preferred shares: 800 shares | |
authorized and issued at $50,000 per share (Note 4) | 40,000,000 |
|
|
Series B and C remarketed preferred shares: 3,240 shares | |
authorized and issued at $25,000 per share (Note 4) | 81,000,000 |
|
|
Net assets applicable to common shares outstanding | $208,352,469 |
|
|
REPRESENTED BY | |
Paid-in capital -- common shares (Unlimited shares authorized) (Note 1) | $218,208,780 |
|
|
Distributions in excess of net investment income (Note 1) | (123,159) |
|
|
Accumulated net realized loss on investments (Note 1) | (21,467,682) |
|
|
Net unrealized appreciation of investments | 11,734,530 |
|
|
Total -- Representing net assets applicable to common shares outstanding | $208,352,469 |
|
|
COMPUTATION OF NET ASSET VALUE | |
Net asset value per common share | |
($208,352,469 divided by 16,125,163 shares) | $12.92 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
37
Statement of operations 10/31/05 (Unaudited) |
INTEREST INCOME | $ 8,424,207 | |
|
||
EXPENSES | ||
Compensation of Manager (Note 2) | 1,106,943 | |
|
||
Investor servicing fees (Note 2) | 53,525 | |
|
||
Custodian fees (Note 2) | 58,751 | |
|
||
Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2) | 12,941 | |
|
||
Administrative services (Note 2) | 7,672 | |
|
||
Preferred share remarketing agent fees | 148,442 | |
|
||
Other | 167,543 | |
|
||
Total expenses | 1,555,817 | |
|
||
Expense reduction (Note 2) | (37,380) | |
|
||
Net expenses | 1,518,437 | |
|
||
Net investment income | 6,905,770 | |
|
||
Net realized gain on investments (Notes 1 and 3) | 134,076 | |
|
||
Net realized loss on futures contracts (Note 1) | (24,936) | |
|
||
Net unrealized depreciation of investments | ||
and futures contracts during the period | (3,668,387) | |
|
||
Net loss on investments | (3,559,247) | |
|
||
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations | $ 3,346,523 | |
|
||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SERIES A, B, AND C REMARKETED PREFERRED SHAREHOLDERS: (NOTE 1) | ||
From tax exempt income | (1,552,823) | |
|
||
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations | ||
(applicable to common shareholders) | $ 1,793,700 | |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements. | ||
38 |
Statement of changes in net assets | ||
| ||
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS | ||
| ||
Six months ended | Year ended | |
10/31/05* | 1/31/04 | |
| ||
Operations: | ||
Net investment income | $ 6,905,770 | $ 14,727,475 |
| ||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 109,140 | (1,461,140) |
| ||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments | (3,668,387) | 9,639,649 |
| ||
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations | 3,346,523 | 22,905,984 |
| ||
Distributions to Series A, B, and C remarketed | ||
preferred shareholders: (Note 1) | ||
| ||
From tax exempt income | (1,552,823) | (1,889,278) |
| ||
From ordinary income | -- | (2,396) |
| ||
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations | ||
(applicable to common shareholders) | 1,793,700 | 21,014,310 |
| ||
Distributions to common shareholders: (Note 1) | ||
| ||
From tax exempt income | (5,580,237) | (14,049,514) |
| ||
From ordinary income | -- | (30,696) |
| ||
Decrease from shares repurchased (Note 5) | (366,249) | -- |
| ||
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | (4,152,786) | 6,934,100 |
| ||
NET ASSETS | ||
Beginning of period | 212,505,255 | 205,571,155 |
| ||
End of period (including distributions in excess | ||
of net investment income of $123,159 | ||
and undistributed net investment income | ||
of $104,131, respectively) | $208,352,469 | $212,505,255 |
| ||
NUMBER OF FUND SHARES | ||
Common shares outstanding at beginning of period | 16,157,092 | 16,157,092 |
| ||
Shares repurchased (Note 5) | (31,929) | -- |
| ||
Common shares outstanding at end of period | 16,125,163 | 16,157,092 |
| ||
Remarketed preferred shares outstanding | ||
at beginning and end of period | 4,040 | 4,040 |
* Unaudited. |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
39
Financial highlights (For a common share outstanding throughout the period)
PER-SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE | |||||||
| |||||||
Six months ended** | Year ended | ||||||
10/31/05 | 4/30/05 | 4/30/04 | 4/30/03 | 4/30/02 | 4/30/01 | ||
Net asset value, | |||||||
beginning of period | |||||||
(common shares) | $13.15 | $12.72 | $12.98 | $13.00 | $13.00 | $12.51 | |
| |||||||
Investment operations: | |||||||
Net investment income (a) | .43 | .91 | 1.00 | 1.09 | 1.16 | 1.15 | |
| |||||||
Net realized and unrealized | |||||||
gain (loss) on investments | (.21) | .51 | (.24) | (.10) | (.10) | .56 | |
| |||||||
Total from | |||||||
investment operations | .22 | 1.42 | .76 | .99 | 1.06 | 1.71 | |
| |||||||
Distributions to | |||||||
preferred shareholders: | |||||||
From net investment income | (.10) | (.12) | (.07) | (.10) | (.15) | (.31) | |
| |||||||
Total from investment operations | |||||||
(applicable to | |||||||
common shareholders) | .12 | 1.30 | .69 | .89 | .91 | 1.40 | |
| |||||||
Distributions to | |||||||
common shareholders: | |||||||
From net investment income | (.35) | (.87) | (.95) | (.91) | (.91) | (.91) | |
| |||||||
Total distributions | (.35) | (.87) | (.95) | (.91) | (.91) | (.91) | |
| |||||||
Net asset value, end of period | |||||||
(common shares) | $12.92 | $13.15 | $12.72 | $12.98 | $13.00 | $13.00 | |
| |||||||
Market price, end of period | |||||||
(common shares) | $11.47 | $11.72 | $12.47 | $12.48 | $12.50 | $13.59 | |
| |||||||
Total return at market | |||||||
price (%) (common shares) (b) | 0.74* | .82 | 7.49 | 7.35 | (1.57) | 25.32 | |
| |||||||
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA | |||||||
Net assets, end of period | |||||||
(common shares) | |||||||
(in thousands) | $208,352 | $212,505 | $205,571 | $209,697 | $210,081 | $210,097 | |
| |||||||
Ratio of expenses to | |||||||
average net assets (%)(c,d) | .73* | 1.40 | 1.37 | 1.41 | 1.43 | 1.44 | |
| |||||||
Ratio of net investment income | |||||||
to average net assets (%)(d) | 2.51* | 6.15 | 7.05 | 7.65 | 7.63 | 6.50 | |
| |||||||
Portfolio turnover (%) | 9.59* | 29.51 | 19.19 | 12.30 | 20.84 | 14.59 |
* | Not annualized. | |
** | Unaudited. | |
(a) | Per share net investment income has been determined on the basis of the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period. | |
(b) | Total return assumes dividend reinvestment. | |
(c) | Includes amounts paid through expense offset arrangements (Note 2). | |
(d) | Ratios reflect net assets available to common shares only: net investment income ratio also reflects reduction for dividend payments to preferred shareholders. | |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements. | ||
40
Notes to financial statements 10/31/05
(Unaudited) |
Note 1: Significant accounting policies
Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust (the
fund) is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a
non-diversified, closed-end management investment company. The funds investment
objective is to seek as high a level of current income from federal income tax
as Putnam Management believes is consistent with the preservation of capital.
The fund intends to achieve its objective by investing in a portfolio of
investment grade and some below investment-grade municipal bonds selected by
Putnam Investment Management, LLC (Putnam Management), the funds manager, an
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam, LLC.
In the normal course of
business, the fund enters into contracts that may include agreements to
indemnify another party under given circumstances. The funds maximum exposure
under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may
be, but have not yet been, made against the fund. However, the fund expects the
risk of material loss to be remote.
The following is a summary of
significant accounting policies consistently followed by the fund in the
preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements
is in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States of America and requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial
statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets
from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from
those estimates.
A) Security valuation Tax-exempt bonds and notes are valued on the basis of valuations provided by an independent pricing service, approved by the Trustees. Such services use information with respect to transactions in bonds, quotations from bond dealers, market transactions in comparable securities and various relationships between securities in determining value. Other investments are valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees. Such valuations and procedures are reviewed periodically by the Trustees.
B) Security transactions and related investment income Security transactions are recorded on the trade date (the date the order to buy or sell is executed). Gains or losses on securities sold are determined on the identified cost basis. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. All premiums/discounts are amortized /accreted on a yield-to-maturity basis. All premiums/discounts are amortized/accreted on a yield-to-maturity basis. The premium in excess of the call price, if any, is amortized to the call date; thereafter, any remaining premium is amortized to maturity.
C) Futures and options contracts The fund may use futures and options contracts to hedge
against changes in the values of securities the fund owns or expects to
purchase. The fund may also write options on swaps or securities it owns or in
which it may invest to increase its current returns.
The potential risk
to the fund is that the change in value of futures and options contracts may not
correspond to the change in value of the hedged instruments. In addition, losses
may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments, if there is
an illiquid secondary market for the contracts, or if the counterparty to the
contract is unable to perform. Risks may exceed amounts recognized on the
statement of assets and liabilities. When the contract is closed, the fund
records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the
contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed.
Realized gains and losses on purchased options are included in realized gains
and losses on investment securities. If a written call option is exercised, the
premium originally received is recorded as an addition to sales proceeds. If a
written put option is exercised, the premium originally received is recorded as
a reduction to the cost of investments.
Futures contracts are valued at the quoted daily settlement prices established by the exchange on
41
which they trade. The fund and the broker agree to exchange an amount of cash equal to the daily fluctuation in the value of the futures contract. Such receipts or payments are known as variation margin. Exchange traded options are valued at the last sale price, or if no sales are reported, the last bid price for purchased options and the last ask price for written options. Options traded over-the-counter are valued using prices supplied by dealers. Futures and written option contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the funds portfolio.
D) Federal taxes It is the policy of the fund to distribute all of its income within the prescribed time and otherwise comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code) applicable to regulated investment companies. It is also the intention of the fund to distribute an amount sufficient to avoid imposition of any excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code, as amended. Therefore, no provision has been made for federal taxes on income, capital gains or unrealized appreciation on securities held nor for excise tax on income and capital gains.
At April 30, 2005, the fund had a capital loss carryover of $21,523,518 available to the extent allowed by tax law to offset future net capital gain, if any. The amount of the carryover and the expiration dates are:
Loss Carryover | Expiration |
$ 126,586 | April 30, 2007 |
| |
2,788,662 | April 30, 2008 |
| |
1,503,027 | April 30, 2009 |
| |
2,243,569 | April 30, 2010 |
| |
3,588,009 | April 30, 2011 |
| |
8,885,378 | April 30, 2012 |
| |
2,388,287 | April 30, 2013 |
|
The aggregate identified cost on a tax basis is $313,346,855, resulting in gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation of $13,902,985 and $2,279,599, respectively, or net unrealized appreciation of $11,623,386.
E) Distributions to shareholders Distributions to common and preferred shareholders from net investment income are recorded by the fund on the ex-dividend date. Distributions from capital gains, if any, are recorded on the ex-dividend date and paid at least annually. Dividends on remar-keted preferred shares become payable when, as and if declared by the Trustees. Each dividend period for the remarketed preferred shares is generally a 28-day period for Series A and a 7-day period for Series B and Series C . The applicable dividend rate for the remarketed preferred shares on October 31, 2005 was 2.70% for Series A, 2.70% for Series B and 2.70% for Series C. The amount and character of income and gains to be distributed are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. Reclassifications are made to the funds capital accounts to reflect income and gains available for distribution (or available capital loss carryovers) under income tax regulations.
F) Determination of net asset value Net asset value of the common shares is determined by dividing the value of all assets of the fund, less all liabilities and the liquidation preference of any outstanding remarketed preferred shares, by the total number of common shares outstanding as of period end.
Note 2: Management fee, administrative services and other transactions
Putnam Management is paid for management and
investment advisory services quarterly based on the average net assets of the
fund. Such fee is based on 0.65% of the funds average weekly net assets
attributable to common and preferred shares.
In June 2005, the Trustees
and Putnam Management agreed to a reduced management fee structure for the fund
that will go into effect on January 1, 2006. Effective on that date, the funds
management fee is expected to be an annual rate of 0.55% of the average weekly
net assets of the fund attributable to common and
42
preferred shares (based on the funds current asset level).
If dividends payable on remarketed preferred shares during any dividend payment period plus any expenses attributable to remarketed preferred shares for that period exceed the funds gross income attributable to the proceeds of the remarketed preferred shares during that period, then the fee payable to Putnam Management for that period will be reduced by the amount of the excess (but not more than 0.65% of the liquidation preference of the remarketed preferred shares outstanding during the period).
The fund reimburses Putnam Management an allocated amount for the compensation and related expenses of certain officers of the fund and their staff who provide administrative services to the fund. The aggregate amount of all such reimbursements is determined annually by the Trustees.
Custodial functions for the funds assets are provided by Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company (PFTC), a subsidiary of Putnam, LLC. PFTC receives fees for custody services based on the funds asset level, the number of its security holdings and transaction volumes. Putnam Investor Services, a division of PFTC, provides investor servicing agent functions to the fund. Putnam Investor Services is paid a monthly fee for investor servicing at an annual rate of 0.05% of the funds average net assets. During the six months ended October 31, 2005, the fund paid PFTC $112,276 for these services.
The fund has entered into an arrangement with
PFTC whereby credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances are used
to reduce a portion of the funds expenses. For the six months ended October 31,
2005, the funds expenses were reduced by $37,380 under these arrangements.
Each independent Trustee of the fund receives an annual Trustee fee, of
which $263, as a quarterly retainer, has been allocated to the fund, and an
additional fee for each Trustees meeting attended. Trustees receive additional
fees for attendance at certain committee
meetings, industry seminars and for certain compliance-related matters. Trustees
also are reimbursed for expenses they incur relating to their services as
Trustees. George Putnam, III, who is not an independent Trustee, also receives
the foregoing fees for his services as Trustee.
The fund has adopted a
Trustee Fee Deferral Plan (the Deferral Plan) which allows the Trustees to
defer the receipt of all or a portion of Trustees fees payable on or after July
1, 1995. The deferred fees remain invested in certain Putnam funds until
distribution in accordance with the Deferral Plan.
The fund has adopted
an unfunded noncontributory defined benefit pension plan (the Pension Plan)
covering all Trustees of the fund who have served as a Trustee for at least five
years and were first elected prior to 2004. Benefits under the Pension Plan are
equal to 50% of the Trustees average total retainer and meeting fees for the
three years preceding retirement. Pension expense for the fund is included in
Trustee compensation and expenses in the statement of operations. Accrued
pension liability is included in Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses
in the statement of assets and liabilities. The Trustees have terminated the
Pension Plan with respect to any Trustee first elected after 2003.
Note 3: Purchases and sales of securities
During the six months ended October 31, 2005, cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities other than short-term investments aggregated $31,453,710 and $41,401,233, respectively. There were no purchases or sales of U.S. government securities.
Note 4: Preferred shares
The Series A, B and C shares are redeemable at the option of the fund on any dividend payment date at a redemption price of $50,000, $25,000 and $25,000 respectively, per share, plus an amount equal to any dividends accumulated on a daily basis but unpaid through the redemption date (whether
43
or not such dividends have been declared) and, in certain circumstances, a call premium.
It is anticipated that dividends paid to
holders of remarketed preferred shares will be considered tax-exempt dividends
under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. To the extent that the fund earns
taxable income and capital gains by the conclusion of a fiscal year, it may be
required to apportion to the holders of the remarketed preferred shares
throughout that year additional dividends as necessary to result in an after-tax
equivalent to the applicable dividend rate for the period.
Under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the fund is required to maintain asset coverage
of at least 200% with respect to the remarketed preferred shares as of the last
business day of each month in which any such shares are outstanding.
Additionally, the fund is required to meet more stringent asset coverage
requirements under terms of the remarketed preferred shares and restrictions
imposed by the shares rating agencies. Should these requirements not be met, or
should dividends accrued on the remarketed preferred shares not be paid, the
fund may be restricted in its ability to declare dividends to common
shareholders or may be required to redeem certain of the remarketed preferred
shares. At October 31, 2005, no such restrictions have been placed on the
fund.
Note 5: Share repurchase program
On October 7, 2005, the Trustees authorized Putnam Management to implement a share repurchase program pursuant to which the fund may, over the 12 months following the announcement, repurchase up to 5% of its common shares outstanding as of such date . Repurchases will only be made when the funds shares are trading at less than net asset value and at such times and amounts as is believed to be in the best interest of the funds shareholders.
For the period ended October 31, 2005, the fund repurchased 31,929 common shares for an aggregate purchase price of $366,249, which reflects a weighted-average discount from net asset value per share of 11.3%.
Note 6: Regulatory matters and litigation
Putnam Management has entered into agreements with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Massachusetts Securities Division settling charges connected with excessive short-term trading by Putnam employees and, in the case of the charges brought by the Massachusetts Securities Division, by participants in some Putnam-administered 401(k) plans. Pursuant to these settlement agreements, Putnam Management will pay a total of $193.5 million in penalties and restitution, with $153.5 million being paid to shareholders and the funds. The amount will be allocated to shareholders and funds pursuant to a plan developed by an independent consultant, and will be paid following approval of the plan by the SEC and the Massachusetts Securities Division.
The Securities and Exchange Commissions and Massachusetts Securities Divisions allegations and related matters also serve as the general basis for numerous lawsuits, including purported class action lawsuits filed against Putnam Management and certain related parties, including certain Putnam funds. Putnam Management will bear any costs incurred by Putnam funds in connection with these lawsuits. Putnam Management believes that the likelihood that the pending private lawsuits and purported class action lawsuits will have a material adverse financial impact on the fund is remote, and the pending actions are not likely to materially affect its ability to provide investment management services to its clients, including the Putnam funds.
Putnam Management and Putnam Retail Management are named as defendants in a civil suit in which the plaintiffs allege that the management and distribution fees paid by certain Putnam funds were excessive and seek recovery under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Putnam Management and Putnam Retail Management
44
have contested the plaintiffs claims and the matter is currently pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Based on currently available information, Putnam Management believes that this action is without merit and that it is unlikely to have a material effect on Putnam Managements and Putnam Retail Managements ability to provide services to their clients, including the fund.
45
Shareholder meeting results (Unaudited) |
The annual meeting of shareholders of the fund was held on October 28, 2005.
At the meeting, each of the nominees for Trustees was elected, as follows:
Common and preferred shares | |||
Votes for | Votes withheld | ||
Jameson Adkins Baxter | 12,981,141 | 592,534 | |
| |||
Charles B. Curtis | 12,979,776 | 593,899 | |
| |||
Myra R. Drucker | 12,974,415 | 599,260 | |
| |||
Charles E. Haldeman Jr. | 12,986,013 | 587,662 | |
| |||
Paul L. Joskow | 12,983,913 | 589,762 | |
| |||
Elizabeth T. Kennan | 12,963,279 | 610,396 | |
| |||
John H. Mullin III | 12,987,599 | 586,076 | |
| |||
George Putnam, III | 12,934,034 | 639,641 | |
| |||
W. Thomas Stephens | 12,971,410 | 602,265 | |
| |||
Richard B. Worley | 12,982,858 | 590,817 | |
| |||
Preferred shares | |||
Votes for | Votes withheld | ||
John A. Hill | 3,839 | 176 | |
| |||
Robert E. Patterson | 3,839 | 176 | |
|
All tabulations are rounded to nearest whole number.
46
Fund information |
Founded over 65 years ago, Putnam Investments was built around the concept that a balance between risk and reward is the hallmark of a well-rounded financial program. We manage over 100 mutual funds in growth, value, blend, fixed income, and international.
Investment Manager |
Putnam Investment |
Management, LLC |
One Post Office Square |
Boston, MA 02109 |
Marketing Services |
Putnam Retail Management |
One Post Office Square |
Boston, MA 02109 |
Custodian |
Putnam Fiduciary |
Trust Company |
Legal Counsel |
Ropes & Gray LLP |
Trustees |
John A. Hill, Chairman |
Jameson Adkins Baxter, |
Vice Chairman |
Charles B. Curtis |
Myra R. Drucker |
Charles E. Haldeman, Jr. |
Paul L. Joskow |
Elizabeth T. Kennan |
John H. Mullin, III |
Robert E. Patterson |
George Putnam, III |
W. Thomas Stephens |
Richard B. Worley |
Officers |
George Putnam, III |
President |
Charles E. Porter |
Executive Vice President, |
Associate Treasurer and |
Principal Executive Officer |
Jonathan S. Horwitz |
Senior Vice President |
and Treasurer |
Steven D. Krichmar |
Vice President and |
Principal Financial Officer |
Michael T. Healy |
Assistant Treasurer and |
Principal Accounting Officer |
Daniel T. Gallagher |
Senior Vice President, |
Staff Counsel and |
Compliance Liaison |
Beth S. Mazor |
Vice President |
James P. Pappas |
Vice President |
Richard S. Robie, III |
Vice President |
Mark C. Trenchard |
Vice President and |
BSA Compliance Officer |
Francis J. McNamara, III |
Vice President and |
Chief Legal Officer |
Charles A. Ruys de Perez |
Vice President and |
Chief Compliance Officer |
Judith Cohen |
Vice President, Clerk and |
Assistant Treasurer |
Wanda M. McManus |
Vice President, Senior Associate |
Treasurer and Assistant Clerk |
Nancy T. Florek |
Vice President, Assistant Clerk, |
Assistant Treasurer |
and Proxy Manager |
47
Call 1-800-225-1581 weekdays between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time, or visit our Web site (www.putnam.com) anytime for up-to-date information about the funds NAV.
Item 2. Code of Ethics: Not applicable Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert: Not applicable Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services: Not applicable Item 5. Audit Committee: Not applicable Item 6. Schedule of Investments: Not applicable Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures For Closed-End Management Investment Companies: Not applicable Item 8. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers Registrant Purchase of Equity Securities |
Total Number of Shares | ||||
Purchased as Part | Maximum Number (or Approximate Dollar | |||
Total Number of | Average Price Paid | of Publicly Announced | Value ) of Shares that May Yet Be Purchased | |
Period | Shares Purchased | per Share | Plans or Programs | under the Plans or Programs |
October 7- | ||||
October 31,2005 | 31,929 | $11.47 | 31,929 | 775,926 |
The Board of Trustees announced a repurchase plan on October 7, 2005 for which 807,855 shares have been approved to be repurchased by the fund. The repurchase | ||||
plan has been approved through October 6, 2006. |
Item 9. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security
Holders: Not applicable Item 10. Controls and Procedures: (a) The registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded, based on their evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report, that the design and operation of such procedures are generally effective to provide reasonable |
assurance that information required to be disclosed by the
registrant |