OMB APPROVAL | ||
OMB Number: 3235-0570 | ||
Expires: January 31, 2014 | ||
Estimated average burden | ||
hours per response: 20.6 | ||
1555 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta, Georgia 30309 | ||
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code) |
Annual Report to Shareholders
|
February 29, 2012 |
2 |
Letters to Shareholders | |
4 |
Performance Summary | |
4 |
Management Discussion | |
6 |
Additional Information | |
7 |
Dividend Reinvestment Plan | |
8 |
Schedule of Investments | |
18 |
Financial Statements | |
20 |
Notes to Financial Statements | |
25 |
Financial Highlights | |
26 |
Auditors Report | |
27 |
Tax Information | |
28 |
Supplemental Information | |
T-1 |
Trustees and Officers |
Trust at NAV |
18.92 | % | ||
Trust at Market Value |
24.50 | |||
Barclays High Yield Municipal Bond Index▼ |
14.16 | |||
Market Price Discount to NAV as of 2/29/12 |
-1.68 | |||
Sell decisions are based on: |
n | A deterioration or likely deterioration of an individual issuers capacity to meet its debt obligations on a timely basis. | |
n | A deterioration or likely deterioration of the broader fundamentals of a particular industry or sector. | |
n | Opportunities in the secondary or primary market to exchange into a security with better relative value. |
Revenue Bonds |
96.0 | % | ||
General Obligation Bonds |
3.7 | |||
Other |
0.3 |
1. | Broward (County of) |
2.3 | % | |||||
2. | South Miami (City of) Health Facilities Authority |
2.2 | ||||||
3. | Des Peres (City of) |
1.4 | ||||||
4. | Golden State Tobacco Securitization Corp. |
1.4 | ||||||
5. | New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority |
1.3 |
Total Net Assets |
$140.1 million | |||
Total Number of Holdings |
256 |
1 | A credit rating is an assessment provided by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) of the creditworthiness of an issuer with respect to debt obligations, including specific securities, money market instruments or other debts. Ratings are measured on a scale that generally ranges from AAA (highest) to D (lowest); ratings are subject to change without notice. For more information on rating methodologies, please visit the following NRSRO websites: standardandpoors.com and select Understanding Ratings under Rating Resources on the homepage; moodys.com and select Rating Methodologies under Research and Ratings on the homepage; and fitchratings.com and select Ratings Definitions on the homepage. | |
2 | Source: Lipper Inc. | |
3 | Source: CBS News | |
4 | Source: The Bond Buyer |
n | Unless otherwise stated, information presented in this report is as of February 29, 2012, and is based on total net assets. |
n | Unless otherwise noted, all data provided by Invesco. | |
n | To access your Trusts reports, visit invesco.com/fundreports. |
n | The Barclays High Yield Municipal Bond Index is an unmanaged index consisting of non-investment grade bonds. |
n | The Barclays Municipal Bond Index is an unmanaged index considered representative of the tax-exempt bond market. |
n | The Barclays U.S. Aggregate Index is an unmanaged index considered representative of the US investment-grade, fixed-rate bond market. |
n | The Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield Index is an unmanaged index that covers the universe of fixed-rate, noninvestment-grade debt. |
n | The Barclays U.S. Corporate Investment Grade Index is an unmanaged index considered representative of fixed-rate, investment grade taxable bond debt. |
n | The Barclays U.S. Mortgage Backed Securities Index is an unmanaged index comprising 15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities backed by mortgage pools of Ginnie Mae, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. |
n | The Trust is not managed to track the performance of any particular index, including the index(es) defined here, and consequently, the performance of the Trust may deviate significantly from the performance of the index(es). |
n | A direct investment cannot be made in an index. Unless otherwise indicated, index results include reinvested dividends, and they do not reflect sales charges. Performance of the peer group, if applicable, reflects fund expenses; performance of a market index does not. |
n | The Chartered Financial Analyst® (CFA®) designation is globally recognized and attests to a charterholders success in a rigorous and comprehensive study program in the field of investment management and research analysis. |
n | The returns shown in managements discussion of Trust performance are based on net asset values calculated for shareholder transactions. Generally accepted accounting principles require adjustments to be made to the net assets of the Trust at period end for financial reporting purposes, and as such, the net asset values for shareholder transactions and the returns based on those net asset values may differ from the net asset values and returns reported in the Financial Highlights. |
NYSE Symbol |
OIA |
n | Add to your account: You may increase the amount of shares in your Trust easily and automatically with the Plan. |
n | Low transaction costs: Transaction costs are low because the new shares are bought in blocks and the brokerage commission is shared among all participants. |
n | Convenience: You will receive a detailed account statement from Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (the Agent) which administers the Plan. The statement shows your total Distributions, date of investment, shares acquired, and price per share, as well as the total number of shares in your reinvestment account. You can also access your account via the Internet. To do this, please go to invesco.com/us. |
n | Safekeeping: The Agent will hold the shares it has acquired for you in safekeeping. |
1. | If you opt to continue to hold your non-certificated shares, whole shares will be held by the Agent and fractional shares will be sold. The proceeds will be sent via check to your address of record after deducting per share fees. Per share fees include any applicable brokerage commissions the Agent is required to pay. |
2. | If you opt to sell your shares through the Agent, we will sell all full and fractional shares and send the proceeds via check to your address of record after deducting per share fees. Per share fees include any applicable brokerage commissions the Agent is required to pay. | ||
3. | You may sell your shares through your financial adviser through the Direct Registration System (DRS). DRS is a service within the securities industry that allows Trust shares to be held in your name in electronic format. You retain full ownership of your shares, without having to hold a stock certificate. You should contact your financial adviser to learn more about any restrictions or fees that may apply. |
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Municipal Obligations104.37% |
||||||||||||||||
Alabama0.21% |
||||||||||||||||
Huntsville (City of)Redstone Village Special Care
Facilities Financing Authority; Series 2007, Retirement
Facility RB
|
5.50 | % | 01/01/43 | $ | 370 | $ | 301,361 | |||||||||
Arizona3.14% |
||||||||||||||||
Casa Grande (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Casa
Grande Regional Medical Center); Series 2001 A, Ref.
Hospital RB
|
7.63 | % | 12/01/29 | 400 | 412,816 | |||||||||||
Phoenix (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Great Hearts
Academies); Series 2012, Education RB
|
6.40 | % | 07/01/47 | 240 | 242,628 | |||||||||||
Pima (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Constellation
Schools); Series 2008, Lease RB
|
7.00 | % | 01/01/38 | 1,225 | 1,204,738 | |||||||||||
Pima (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Global Water
Resources, LLC); Series 2007, Water &
Wastewater RB(a)
|
6.55 | % | 12/01/37 | 800 | 822,224 | |||||||||||
Pima (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Noah Webster
Basic Schools); Series 2004 A, Education RB
|
6.00 | % | 12/15/24 | 500 | 501,220 | |||||||||||
Pinal (County of) Electric District No. 4;
Series 2008, Electrical System RB
|
6.00 | % | 12/01/38 | 660 | 705,573 | |||||||||||
Quechan Indian Tribe of Fort Yuma (California &
Arizona Governmental); Series 2008, RB
|
7.00 | % | 12/01/27 | 530 | 505,143 | |||||||||||
4,394,342 | ||||||||||||||||
California8.36% |
||||||||||||||||
Alhambra (City of) (Atherton Baptist Homes);
Series 2010 A, RB
|
7.63 | % | 01/01/40 | 400 | 432,984 | |||||||||||
Bakersfield (City of); Series 2007 A, Wastewater RB
(INSAGM)(b)(c)
|
5.00 | % | 09/15/32 | 390 | 419,956 | |||||||||||
California (State of) Municipal Finance Authority (High Tech
High-Media Arts); Series 2008 A, Educational
Facility RB(d)
|
5.88 | % | 07/01/28 | 335 | 315,687 | |||||||||||
California (State of) Statewide Communities Development
Authority (California Baptist University);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007 A, RB
|
5.50 | % | 11/01/38 | 1,000 | 950,350 | |||||||||||
Series 2011, RB
|
7.25 | % | 11/01/31 | 400 | 446,040 | |||||||||||
California (State of) Statewide Communities Development
Authority (Thomas Jefferson School of Law);
Series 2008 A, RB(d)
|
7.25 | % | 10/01/38 | 200 | 211,038 | |||||||||||
California County Tobacco Securitization Agency (The) (Gold
Country Settlement Funding Corp.); Series 2006, Tobacco
Settlement Asset-Backed
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 06/01/33 | 1,680 | 167,042 | |||||||||||
Daly City (City of) Housing Development Finance Agency
(Franciscan Mobile Home Park Acquisition);
Series 2007 C, Ref. Third Tier Mobile Home Park RB
|
6.50 | % | 12/15/47 | 980 | 974,483 | |||||||||||
Desert Community College District (Election of 2004);
Series 2007 C, Unlimited Tax CAB GO Bonds
(INSAGM)(b)(e)
|
0.00 | % | 08/01/46 | 4,000 | 571,200 | |||||||||||
Golden State Tobacco Securitization Corp.;
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007
A-1, Sr.
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed RB
|
4.50 | % | 06/01/27 | 400 | 335,592 | |||||||||||
Series 2007
A-1, Sr.
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed RB
|
5.13 | % | 06/01/47 | 2,850 | 1,973,112 | |||||||||||
Los Angeles Regional Airports Improvement Corp. (American
Airlines, Inc. Terminal); Series 2002 C,
Lease RB(a)(f)
|
7.50 | % | 12/01/24 | 400 | 365,144 | |||||||||||
National City (City of) Community Development Commission
(National City Redevelopment); Series 2011, Tax Allocation
RB
|
7.00 | % | 08/01/32 | 400 | 470,204 | |||||||||||
Poway Unified School District (School Facilities Improvement);
Series 2011, Unlimited Tax CAB GO
Bonds(e)
|
0.00 | % | 08/01/39 | 4,350 | 1,008,243 | |||||||||||
Riverside (County of) Redevelopment Agency (Mid-County
Redevelopment Project Area); Series 2010 C, Tax
Allocation RB
|
6.25 | % | 10/01/40 | 400 | 406,000 | |||||||||||
Sacramento (County of) Community Facilities District
No. 2005-2
(North Vineyard Station No. 1); Series 2007 A,
Special Tax RB
|
6.00 | % | 09/01/37 | 400 | 393,332 | |||||||||||
San Buenaventura (City of) (Community Memorial Health System);
Series 2011, RB
|
7.50 | % | 12/01/41 | 400 | 451,024 | |||||||||||
San Francisco (City & County of) Redevelopment
Financing Authority (Mission Bay South Redevelopment);
Series 2011 D, Tax Allocation RB
|
7.00 | % | 08/01/41 | 560 | 630,347 | |||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
California(continued) |
||||||||||||||||
Southern California Logistics Airport Authority;
Series 2008 A, Tax Allocation
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 12/01/44 | $ | 7,235 | $ | 499,432 | |||||||||
Union City (City of) Community Redevelopment Agency (Community
Redevelopment); Series 2011, Sub. Lien Tax Allocation RB
|
6.88 | % | 12/01/33 | 600 | 687,204 | |||||||||||
11,708,414 | ||||||||||||||||
Colorado3.51% |
||||||||||||||||
Colorado (State of) Educational & Cultural Facilities
Authority (National Jewish Federation Bond Program);
Series 2005
A-7, VRD RB
(LOCBank of
America, N.A.)(g)(h)
|
0.13 | % | 07/01/29 | 500 | 500,000 | |||||||||||
Colorado (State of) Health Facilities Authority (Christian
Living Communities);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2006 A, RB
|
5.75 | % | 01/01/37 | 600 | 600,696 | |||||||||||
Series 2009 A, RB
|
9.00 | % | 01/01/34 | 500 | 529,000 | |||||||||||
Colorado (State of) Health Facilities Authority (Total Longterm
Care National Obligated Group); Series 2010 A, RB
|
6.25 | % | 11/15/40 | 400 | 435,660 | |||||||||||
Colorado (State of) Housing & Finance Authority;
Series 1998 D-2, Sr. Single Family
Program RB(a)
|
6.35 | % | 11/01/29 | 190 | 206,473 | |||||||||||
Colorado (State of) Regional Transportation District (Denver
Transit Partners Eagle P3); Series 2010, Private
Activity RB
|
6.00 | % | 01/15/41 | 400 | 431,336 | |||||||||||
Copperleaf Metropolitan District No. 2; Series 2006,
Limited Tax GO Bonds
|
5.95 | % | 12/01/36 | 1,000 | 681,820 | |||||||||||
Denver (City of) Convention Center Hotel Authority;
Series 2006, Ref. Sr. RB
(INSSGI)(b)
|
5.00 | % | 12/01/35 | 370 | 368,442 | |||||||||||
Montrose (County of) Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees;
Series 2003, Enterprise RB
|
6.00 | % | 12/01/33 | 400 | 417,076 | |||||||||||
Northwest Metropolitan District No. 3; Series 2005,
Limited Tax GO Bonds
|
6.25 | % | 12/01/35 | 800 | 743,088 | |||||||||||
4,913,591 | ||||||||||||||||
Connecticut0.71% |
||||||||||||||||
Georgetown (City of) Special Taxing District;
Series 2006 A, Unlimited Tax GO
Bonds(d)(f)
|
5.13 | % | 10/01/36 | 1,970 | 996,682 | |||||||||||
Delaware0.24% |
||||||||||||||||
Sussex (County of) (Cadbury at Lewes); Series 2006 A,
First Mortgage RB
|
6.00 | % | 01/01/35 | 400 | 337,516 | |||||||||||
District of Columbia0.77% |
||||||||||||||||
District of Columbia (Cesar Chavez Charter School);
Series 2011, RB
|
7.88 | % | 11/15/40 | 400 | 437,284 | |||||||||||
District of Columbia; Series 2009 B, Ref. Sec. Income
Tax RB(c)
|
5.00 | % | 12/01/25 | 540 | 641,655 | |||||||||||
1,078,939 | ||||||||||||||||
Florida13.78% |
||||||||||||||||
Alachua (County of) (North Florida Retirement Village, Inc.);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007, IDR
|
5.25 | % | 11/15/17 | 500 | 483,215 | |||||||||||
Series 2007, IDR
|
5.88 | % | 11/15/36 | 800 | 679,528 | |||||||||||
Series 2007, IDR
|
5.88 | % | 11/15/42 | 400 | 334,512 | |||||||||||
Alachua (County of) Health Facilities Authority (Terraces at
Bonita Springs); Series 2011 A, RB
|
8.13 | % | 11/15/46 | 400 | 413,528 | |||||||||||
Beacon Lakes Community Development District;
Series 2003 A, Special Assessment RB
|
6.90 | % | 05/01/35 | 725 | 737,876 | |||||||||||
Brevard (County of) Health Facilities Authority (Buena Vida
Estates, Inc.); Series 2008, Residential Care Facility RB
|
6.75 | % | 01/01/37 | 625 | 515,813 | |||||||||||
Broward (County of) (Civic Arena); Series 2006 A, Ref.
Professional Sports Facilities Tax RB
(INSAGM)(b)(c)
|
5.00 | % | 09/01/23 | 2,960 | 3,216,604 | |||||||||||
Capital Trust Agency (Million Air One LLC);
Series 2011, RB(a)
|
7.75 | % | 01/01/41 | 400 | 420,816 | |||||||||||
Collier (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Arlington
Naples); Series 2011, Continuing Care Community BAN
|
14.00 | % | 05/15/15 | 200 | 199,924 | |||||||||||
Florida (State of) Mid-Bay Bridge Authority;
Series 2011 A, Springing Lien RB
|
7.25 | % | 10/01/40 | 400 | 437,552 | |||||||||||
Florida Development Finance Corp. (Renaissance Charter School,
Inc.); Series 2010 A, Educational Facilities RB
|
6.00 | % | 09/15/40 | 400 | 408,284 | |||||||||||
Lee (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Cypress Cove
Health Park); Series 1997 A, Health Care Facilities RB
|
6.38 | % | 10/01/25 | 400 | 310,732 | |||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Florida(continued) |
||||||||||||||||
Lee (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Lee County
Community Charter Schools, LLC);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007 A, IDR
|
5.25 | % | 06/15/27 | $ | 400 | $ | 364,604 | |||||||||
Series 2007 A, IDR
|
5.38 | % | 06/15/37 | 1,000 | 876,810 | |||||||||||
Miami-Dade (County of);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2009, Sub. Special Obligation
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 10/01/39 | 2,000 | 399,420 | |||||||||||
Series 2009, Sub. Special Obligation
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 10/01/42 | 3,200 | 531,616 | |||||||||||
Midtown Miami Community Development District;
Series 2004 A, Special Assessment RB
|
6.25 | % | 05/01/37 | 1,000 | 1,009,391 | |||||||||||
Orange (County of) Health Facilities Authority (Orlando Lutheran
Towers, Inc.);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2005, Ref. RB
|
5.70 | % | 07/01/26 | 500 | 482,315 | |||||||||||
Series 2007, First Mortgage RB
|
5.50 | % | 07/01/32 | 1,000 | 911,020 | |||||||||||
Orange (County of) Health Facilities Authority (Westminster
Community Care); Series 1999, RB
|
6.75 | % | 04/01/34 | 1,000 | 1,000,190 | |||||||||||
Pinellas (County of) Health Facilities Authority (The Oaks of
Clearwater); Series 2004, RB
|
6.25 | % | 06/01/34 | 600 | 617,946 | |||||||||||
Renaissance Commons Community Development District;
Series 2005 A, Special Assessment RB
|
5.60 | % | 05/01/36 | 920 | 805,515 | |||||||||||
South Miami (City of) Health Facilities Authority (Baptist
Health South Florida Obligated Group); Series 2007,
Hospital
RB(c)
|
5.00 | % | 08/15/32 | 2,860 | 3,019,845 | |||||||||||
St. Johns (County of) Industrial Development Authority
(Presbyterian Retirement Communities); Series 2010 A,
RB
|
6.00 | % | 08/01/45 | 400 | 431,336 | |||||||||||
Tolomato Community Development District;
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007, Special
Assessment RB(f)
|
6.55 | % | 05/01/27 | 565 | 241,328 | |||||||||||
Series 2007 A, Special
Assessment RB(f)
|
5.25 | % | 05/01/39 | 485 | 207,304 | |||||||||||
University Square Community Development District;
Series 2007
A-1, Capital
Improvement Special Assessment RB
|
5.88 | % | 05/01/38 | 250 | 250,915 | |||||||||||
19,307,939 | ||||||||||||||||
Georgia1.27% |
||||||||||||||||
Atlanta (City of) (Beltline); Series 2009 B, Tax
Allocation RB
|
7.38 | % | 01/01/31 | 400 | 437,464 | |||||||||||
Atlanta (City of) (Eastside); Series 2005 B, Tax
Allocation RB
|
5.60 | % | 01/01/30 | 1,000 | 1,024,030 | |||||||||||
Clayton (County of) Development Authority (Delta Air Lines,
Inc.); Series 2009 B, Special
Facilities RB(a)
|
9.00 | % | 06/01/35 | 300 | 324,465 | |||||||||||
1,785,959 | ||||||||||||||||
Hawaii1.40% |
||||||||||||||||
Hawaii (State of) Department of Budget & Finance (15
Craigside); Series 2009 A, Special Purpose Senior
Living RB
|
8.75 | % | 11/15/29 | 400 | 470,404 | |||||||||||
Hawaii (State of) Department of Budget & Finance
(Hawaiian Electric Co., Inc. & Subsidiary);
Series 2009, Special Purpose RB
|
6.50 | % | 07/01/39 | 400 | 445,536 | |||||||||||
Hawaii (State of) Department of Budget & Finance
(Kahala Nui); Series 2003 A, Special Purpose RB
|
8.00 | % | 11/15/33 | 1,000 | 1,044,010 | |||||||||||
1,959,950 | ||||||||||||||||
Idaho0.61% |
||||||||||||||||
Idaho (State of) Health Facilities Authority (Valley Vista Care
Corp.); Series 2007, Ref. RB
|
6.13 | % | 11/15/27 | 885 | 854,211 | |||||||||||
Illinois11.89% |
||||||||||||||||
Bolingbrook (Village of) Special Services Area No. 1
(Forest City); Series 2005, Special Tax RB
|
5.90 | % | 03/01/27 | 750 | 659,557 | |||||||||||
Bolingbrook (Village of); Series 2005, Sales Tax RB
|
6.25 | % | 01/01/24 | 1,000 | 686,000 | |||||||||||
Chicago (City of) (Lakeshore East); Series 2002, Special
Assessment Improvement RB
|
6.75 | % | 12/01/32 | 1,797 | 1,855,420 | |||||||||||
Chicago (City of); Series 2011, COP
|
7.13 | % | 05/01/25 | 430 | 458,475 | |||||||||||
Cook (County of) (Navistar International Corp.);
Series 2010, Recovery Zone Facility RB
|
6.50 | % | 10/15/40 | 400 | 429,996 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Collegiate Housing
Foundation- DeKalb II, LLC.- Northern Illinois University);
Series 2011, Student Housing RB
|
6.88 | % | 10/01/43 | 400 | 443,272 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Friendship Village of
Schaumburg); Series 2010, RB
|
7.00 | % | 02/15/38 | 580 | 583,039 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Greenfields of Geneva);
Series 2010 A, RB
|
8.00 | % | 02/15/30 | 450 | 454,712 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Kewanee Hospital);
Series 2006, RB
|
5.00 | % | 08/15/26 | 395 | 376,222 | |||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Illinois(continued) |
||||||||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Luther Oaks);
Series 2006 A, RB
|
6.00 | % | 08/15/39 | $ | 1,000 | $ | 846,740 | |||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Montgomery Place);
Series 2006 A, RB
|
5.75 | % | 05/15/38 | 800 | 739,008 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (Park Place of Elmhurst);
Series 2010 A, RB
|
8.25 | % | 05/15/45 | 400 | 408,504 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (The Admiral at the Lake);
Series 2010 A, RB
|
7.25 | % | 05/15/20 | 400 | 403,512 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (The Landing at Plymouth
Place); Series 2005 A, RB
|
6.00 | % | 05/15/37 | 1,000 | 846,960 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority (United Neighborhood
Organization Charter School Network, Inc.);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2011, Ref. Charter School RB
|
6.88 | % | 10/01/31 | 200 | 208,416 | |||||||||||
Series 2011, Ref. Charter School RB
|
7.13 | % | 10/01/41 | 200 | 208,698 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Finance Authority; Series 2003 A,
RB
|
7.00 | % | 11/15/32 | 800 | 798,152 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Metropolitan Pier & Exposition
Authority (McCormick Place Expansion);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2010 A, RB(c)
|
5.50 | % | 06/15/50 | 390 | 422,475 | |||||||||||
Series 2010 B, Ref. CAB RB
(INSAGM)(b)(e)
|
0.00 | % | 06/15/43 | 4,000 | 733,360 | |||||||||||
Illinois (State of) Toll Highway Authority;
Series 2008 B, RB(c)
|
5.50 | % | 01/01/33 | 1,200 | 1,316,064 | |||||||||||
Long Grove (Village of) (Sunset Grove); Series 2010,
Limited Obligation Tax Increment Allocation RB
|
7.50 | % | 01/01/30 | 400 | 414,572 | |||||||||||
Pingree Grove (Village of) (Cambridge Lakes Learning Center);
Series 2011, RB
|
8.50 | % | 06/01/41 | 400 | 424,084 | |||||||||||
Pingree Grove (Village of) Special Service Area No. 7
(Cambridge Lakes);
Series 2006-1,
Special Tax RB
|
6.00 | % | 03/01/36 | 984 | 937,211 | |||||||||||
United City of Yorkville (City of) Special Service Area
No. 2006-113
(Cannonball/Beecher Road); Series 2007, Special Tax RB
|
5.75 | % | 03/01/28 | 975 | 951,122 | |||||||||||
Upper Illinois River Valley Development Authority (Pleasant View
Luther Home); Series 2010, RB
|
7.38 | % | 11/15/45 | 400 | 414,688 | |||||||||||
Will (County of) & Kankakee (City of) Regional Development
Authority (Senior Estates Supportive Living); Series 2007,
MFH RB(a)
|
7.00 | % | 12/01/42 | 640 | 641,798 | |||||||||||
16,662,057 | ||||||||||||||||
Indiana1.00% |
||||||||||||||||
Crown Point (City of) (Wittenberg Village);
Series 2009 A, Economic Development RB
|
8.00 | % | 11/15/39 | 400 | 433,860 | |||||||||||
Indiana (State of) Finance Authority (Kings Daughters
Hospital & Health Services); Series 2010,
Hospital RB
|
5.50 | % | 08/15/45 | 300 | 298,626 | |||||||||||
St. Joseph (County of) (Holy Cross Village at Notre Dame);
Series 2006 A, Economic Development RB
|
6.00 | % | 05/15/26 | 285 | 287,286 | |||||||||||
Vigo (County of) Hospital Authority (Union Hospital, Inc.);
Series 2007, RB(d)
|
5.80 | % | 09/01/47 | 400 | 387,844 | |||||||||||
1,407,616 | ||||||||||||||||
Iowa1.72% |
||||||||||||||||
Cass (County of) (Cass County Memorial Hospital);
Series 2010 A, Hospital RB
|
7.25 | % | 06/01/35 | 400 | 444,828 | |||||||||||
Iowa (State of) Finance Authority (Bethany Life Communities);
Series 2006 A, Ref. Senior Housing RB
|
5.55 | % | 11/01/41 | 1,000 | 909,680 | |||||||||||
Iowa (State of) Finance Authority (Madrid Home);
Series 2007, Ref. Health Care Facility RB
|
5.90 | % | 11/15/37 | 750 | 668,933 | |||||||||||
Orange City (City of); Series 2008, Ref. Hospital Capital
Loan RN
|
5.60 | % | 09/01/32 | 400 | 380,092 | |||||||||||
2,403,533 | ||||||||||||||||
Kansas0.40% |
||||||||||||||||
Olathe (City of) (Catholic Care Campus, Inc.);
Series 2006 A, Senior Living Facility RB
|
6.00 | % | 11/15/38 | 560 | 564,962 | |||||||||||
Kentucky0.30% |
||||||||||||||||
Kentucky (State of) Economic Development Finance Authority
(Masonic Home Independent Living II); Series 2011, RB
|
7.38 | % | 05/15/46 | 400 | 422,300 | |||||||||||
Louisiana1.42% |
||||||||||||||||
Lakeshore Villages Master Community Development District;
Series 2007, Special
Assessment RB(f)
|
5.25 | % | 07/01/17 | 794 | 317,552 | |||||||||||
Louisiana (State of) Local Government Environmental
Facilities & Community Development Authority (Westlake
Chemical Corp.); Series 2009 A, RB
|
6.50 | % | 08/01/29 | 400 | 450,176 | |||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Louisiana(continued) |
||||||||||||||||
Louisiana (State of) Public Facilities Authority (Lake Charles
Memorial Hospital); Series 2007, Ref.
Hospital RB(d)
|
6.38 | % | 12/01/34 | $ | 400 | $ | 408,452 | |||||||||
Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp.; Series 2001 B,
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed RB
|
5.88 | % | 05/15/39 | 800 | 806,352 | |||||||||||
1,982,532 | ||||||||||||||||
Maine0.31% |
||||||||||||||||
Maine (State of) Health & Higher Educational
Facilities Authority (Maine General Medical Center);
Series 2011, RB
|
6.75 | % | 07/01/41 | 400 | 435,184 | |||||||||||
Maryland1.67% |
||||||||||||||||
Baltimore (City of) (East Baltimore Research Park);
Series 2008 A, Special Obligation Tax Allocation RB
|
7.00 | % | 09/01/38 | 400 | 423,488 | |||||||||||
Harford (County of); Series 2011, Special Obligation Tax
Allocation RB
|
7.50 | % | 07/01/40 | 400 | 436,636 | |||||||||||
Maryland (State of) Health & Higher Educational
Facilities Authority (King Farm Presbyterian Retirement
Community); Series 2007 A, RB
|
5.30 | % | 01/01/37 | 750 | 622,290 | |||||||||||
Maryland (State of) Health & Higher Educational
Facilities Authority (Washington Christian Academy);
Series 2006, RB(f)
|
5.50 | % | 07/01/38 | 800 | 349,920 | |||||||||||
Maryland (State of) Industrial Development Financing Authority
(Our Lady of Good Counsel High School Facility);
Series 2005 A, Economic Development RB
|
6.00 | % | 05/01/35 | 500 | 509,325 | |||||||||||
2,341,659 | ||||||||||||||||
Massachusetts2.42% |
||||||||||||||||
Massachusetts (Commonwealth of); Series 2004 A, Ref.
Limited Tax GO Bonds
(INSAMBAC)(b)(c)
|
5.50 | % | 08/01/30 | 390 | 527,545 | |||||||||||
Massachusetts (State of) Development Finance Agency (Linden
Ponds, Inc. Facility);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2011
A-1, RB
|
6.25 | % | 11/15/46 | 301 | 216,900 | |||||||||||
Series 2011
A-2, RB
|
5.50 | % | 11/15/46 | 16 | 9,834 | |||||||||||
Series 2011 B,
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 11/15/56 | 80 | 421 | |||||||||||
Massachusetts (State of) Development Finance Agency (Loomis
Community); Series 1999 A, First Mortgage RB
|
5.75 | % | 07/01/23 | 1,500 | 1,501,095 | |||||||||||
Massachusetts (State of) Development Finance Agency
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology);
Series 2002 K, RB(c)
|
5.50 | % | 07/01/32 | 195 | 277,914 | |||||||||||
Massachusetts (State of) Development Finance Agency (The Groves
in Lincoln); Series 2009 A, Senior Living
Facility RB
|
7.75 | % | 06/01/39 | 400 | 399,024 | |||||||||||
Massachusetts (State of) Development Finance Agency (Tufts
Medical Center); Series 2011 I, RB
|
6.88 | % | 01/01/41 | 400 | 453,480 | |||||||||||
3,386,213 | ||||||||||||||||
Michigan0.68% |
||||||||||||||||
Dearborn Economic Development Corp. (Henry Ford Village, Inc.);
Series 2008, Ref. Limited Obligation RB
|
7.00 | % | 11/15/28 | 500 | 506,855 | |||||||||||
Michigan (State of) Strategic Fund (The Dow Chemical Co.);
Series 2003
A-1, Ref.
Limited
Obligation RB(a)(g)(i)
|
6.75 | % | 06/02/14 | 400 | 446,636 | |||||||||||
953,491 | ||||||||||||||||
Minnesota3.44% |
||||||||||||||||
Anoka (City of) (The Homestead at Anoka, Inc.);
Series 2011 A, Health Care Facilities RB
|
7.00 | % | 11/01/40 | 400 | 417,384 | |||||||||||
Bloomington (City of) Port Authority (Radisson Blu Mall of
America, LLC); Series 2010, Recovery Zone Facility RB
|
9.00 | % | 12/01/35 | 400 | 427,684 | |||||||||||
Brooklyn Park (City of) (Prairie Seeds Academy);
Series 2009 A, Lease RB
|
9.25 | % | 03/01/39 | 450 | 506,228 | |||||||||||
Minneapolis (City of) (Fairview Health Services);
Series 2008 A, Health Care System RB
|
6.75 | % | 11/15/32 | 600 | 705,300 | |||||||||||
Minnesota (State of) Tobacco Securitization Authority;
Series 2011 B, Tobacco Settlement RB
|
5.25 | % | 03/01/31 | 400 | 435,900 | |||||||||||
North Oaks (City of) (Presbyterian Homes of North Oaks, Inc.);
Series 2007, Senior Housing RB
|
6.13 | % | 10/01/39 | 750 | 760,732 | |||||||||||
Rochester (City of) (Samaritan Bethany, Inc.);
Series 2009 A, Ref. Health Care & Housing RB
|
7.38 | % | 12/01/41 | 400 | 433,476 | |||||||||||
St. Paul (City of) Housing & Redevelopment Authority
(Emerald Gardens); Series 2010, Ref. Tax Increment
Allocation RB
|
6.25 | % | 03/01/25 | 400 | 423,328 | |||||||||||
West St. Paul (City of) (Walker Thompson Hill, LLC);
Series 2011A, Health Care Facilities RB
|
7.00 | % | 09/01/46 | 280 | 290,562 | |||||||||||
Winsted (City of) (St. Marys Care Center);
Series 2010 A, Health Care RB
|
6.88 | % | 09/01/42 | 400 | 411,868 | |||||||||||
4,812,462 | ||||||||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Mississippi0.29% |
||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Business Finance Corp. (System Energy Resources,
Inc.); Series 1998, PCR
|
5.88 | % | 04/01/22 | $ | 400 | $ | 401,200 | |||||||||
Missouri4.15% |
||||||||||||||||
Branson (City of) Regional Airport Transportation Development
District; Series 2007 B, Airport RB
|
6.00 | % | 07/01/37 | 500 | 174,875 | |||||||||||
Branson Hills Infrastructure Facilities Community Improvement
District; Series 2007 A, Special Assessment RB
|
5.50 | % | 04/01/27 | 750 | 548,377 | |||||||||||
Bridgeton (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Sarah
Community); Series 2011 A, Ref. & Improvement
Senior Housing RB
|
6.38 | % | 05/01/35 | 400 | 408,780 | |||||||||||
Cass (County of); Series 2007, Hospital RB
|
5.63 | % | 05/01/38 | 400 | 402,492 | |||||||||||
Des Peres (City of) (West County Center);
Series 2002 A, Ref. Tax Increment Allocation RB
|
5.75 | % | 04/15/20 | 2,000 | 2,001,900 | |||||||||||
Kansas City (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Ward
Parkway Center Community Improvement District);
Series 2011, Sales Tax RB
|
6.75 | % | 10/01/41 | 400 | 410,204 | |||||||||||
Kirkwood (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Aberdeen
Heights); Series 2010 A, Retirement Community RB
|
8.25 | % | 05/15/39 | 400 | 440,464 | |||||||||||
St. Louis (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Grand
Center Redevelopment); Series 2011, Tax Increment
Allocation Improvement RB
|
6.38 | % | 12/01/25 | 400 | 417,964 | |||||||||||
St. Louis (County of) Industrial Development Authority
(Ranken-Jordan); Series 2007, Ref. Health Facilities RB
|
5.00 | % | 11/15/22 | 250 | 247,530 | |||||||||||
St. Louis (County of) Industrial Development Authority (St.
Andrews Resources for Seniors); Series 2007 A,
Senior Living Facilities RB
|
6.38 | % | 12/01/41 | 750 | 755,715 | |||||||||||
5,808,301 | ||||||||||||||||
Nebraska0.31% |
||||||||||||||||
Gage (County of) Hospital Authority No. 1 (Beatrice
Community Hospital & Health Center);
Series 2010 B, Health Care Facilities RB
|
6.75 | % | 06/01/35 | 400 | 433,192 | |||||||||||
Nevada1.63% |
||||||||||||||||
Director of the State of Nevada Department of
Business & Industry (Las Vegas Monorail);
Series 2000, Second
Tier RB(f)
|
7.38 | % | 01/01/40 | 1,000 | 1,200 | |||||||||||
Henderson (City of) (Local Improvement District
No. T-18);
Series 2006, Special Assessment RB
|
5.30 | % | 09/01/35 | 450 | 242,280 | |||||||||||
Las Vegas (City of) Redevelopment Agency;
Series 2009 A, Tax Increment Allocation RB
|
8.00 | % | 06/15/30 | 500 | 597,100 | |||||||||||
Mesquite (City of) (Special Improvement District
No. 07-01-Anthem
at Mesquite); Series 2007, Special Assessment Local
Improvement RB
|
6.00 | % | 08/01/23 | 960 | 906,883 | |||||||||||
Sparks (City of) (Local Improvement Districts
No. 3-Legends
at Sparks Marina); Series 2008, Special Assessment Limited
Obligation Improvement RB
|
6.50 | % | 09/01/20 | 520 | 540,920 | |||||||||||
2,288,383 | ||||||||||||||||
New Hampshire0.61% |
||||||||||||||||
New Hampshire (State of) Business Finance Authority (Huggins
Hospital); Series 2009, First Mortgage RB
|
6.88 | % | 10/01/39 | 400 | 437,224 | |||||||||||
New Hampshire (State of) Health & Education Facilities
Authority (Rivermead); Series 2011 A, RB
|
6.88 | % | 07/01/41 | 400 | 421,196 | |||||||||||
858,420 | ||||||||||||||||
New Jersey4.69% |
||||||||||||||||
Essex (County of) Improvement Authority (Newark);
Series 2010 A, RB
|
6.25 | % | 11/01/30 | 400 | 452,380 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority
(Continental Airlines, Inc.);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 1999, Special
Facility RB(a)
|
6.25 | % | 09/15/19 | 400 | 401,056 | |||||||||||
Series 1999, Special
Facility RB(a)
|
6.40 | % | 09/15/23 | 210 | 210,271 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority (Lions
Gate); Series 2005 A, First Mortgage RB
|
5.88 | % | 01/01/37 | 730 | 686,879 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority
(Presbyterian Home at Montgomery); Series 2001 A,
First Mortgage RB
|
6.38 | % | 11/01/31 | 1,000 | 926,330 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority (Seashore
Gardens Living Center); Series 2006, First Mortgage RB
|
5.38 | % | 11/01/36 | 700 | 566,839 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Economic Development Authority (United
Methodist Homes); Series 1998, Ref. RB
|
5.13 | % | 07/01/25 | 2,000 | 1,882,200 | |||||||||||
New Jersey (State of) Health Care Facilities Financing Authority
(St. Josephs Health Care System); Series 2008, RB
|
6.63 | % | 07/01/38 | 400 | 427,296 | |||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
New Jersey(continued) |
||||||||||||||||
Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp.;
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2007 1A, Asset-Backed RB
|
4.50 | % | 06/01/23 | $ | 400 | $ | 377,316 | |||||||||
Series 2007 1A, Asset-Backed RB
|
5.00 | % | 06/01/29 | 400 | 354,972 | |||||||||||
Series 2007 1A, Asset-Backed RB
|
5.00 | % | 06/01/41 | 380 | 289,317 | |||||||||||
6,574,856 | ||||||||||||||||
New Mexico0.31% |
||||||||||||||||
New Mexico (State of) Hospital Equipment Loan Council (La Vida
Llena); Series 2010 A, First Mortgage RB
|
6.13 | % | 07/01/40 | 400 | 427,956 | |||||||||||
New York4.50% |
||||||||||||||||
Brooklyn Arena Local Development Corp. (Barclays Center);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2009, PILOT
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 07/15/35 | 560 | 149,828 | |||||||||||
Series 2009, PILOT
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 07/15/46 | 4,000 | 544,640 | |||||||||||
Nassau (County of) Industrial Development Agency (Amsterdam at
Harborside); Series 2007 A, Continuing Care Retirement
Community RB
|
6.50 | % | 01/01/27 | 625 | 527,100 | |||||||||||
New York & New Jersey (States of) Port Authority;
|
||||||||||||||||
One Hundred Sixty-Ninth Series 2011,
Consolidated RB(a)(c)
|
5.00 | % | 10/15/27 | 680 | 775,567 | |||||||||||
One Hundred Sixty-Ninth Series 2011,
Consolidated RB(a)(c)
|
5.00 | % | 10/15/28 | 520 | 589,404 | |||||||||||
New York (City of) Industrial Development Agency (7 World Trade
Center, LLC); Series 2005 A, Liberty RB
|
6.50 | % | 03/01/35 | 640 | 640,864 | |||||||||||
New York (City of) Industrial Development Agency (Polytechnic
University); Series 2007, Ref. Civic Facility RB
(INSACA)(b)
|
5.25 | % | 11/01/37 | 500 | 509,035 | |||||||||||
New York (State of) Dormitory Authority (Orange Regional Medical
Center); Series 2008, RB
|
6.25 | % | 12/01/37 | 400 | 412,488 | |||||||||||
New York Liberty Development Corp. (Bank of America Tower at One
Bryant Park); Series 2010, Ref. Second Priority Liberty RB
|
6.38 | % | 07/15/49 | 400 | 435,152 | |||||||||||
New York Liberty Development Corp. (National Sports Museum);
Series 2006 A, RB(d)(f)
|
6.13 | % | 02/15/19 | 1,000 | 10 | |||||||||||
Seneca (County of) Industrial Development Agency (Seneca
Meadows, Inc.);
Series 2005, RB(a)(d)(g)(i)
|
6.63 | % | 10/01/13 | 400 | 404,392 | |||||||||||
Suffolk (County of) Industrial Development Agency (Medford
Hamlet Assisted Living); Series 2005, Assisted Living
Facility
RB(a)
|
6.38 | % | 01/01/39 | 1,425 | 1,317,669 | |||||||||||
6,306,149 | ||||||||||||||||
North Carolina0.31% |
||||||||||||||||
North Carolina (State of) Medical Care Commission (WhiteStone);
Series 2011 A, First Mortgage Retirement
Facilities RB
|
7.75 | % | 03/01/41 | 400 | 428,056 | |||||||||||
North Dakota0.64% |
||||||||||||||||
Grand Forks (City of) (4000 Valley Square); Series 2006,
Ref. Senior Housing RB
|
5.30 | % | 12/01/34 | 1,000 | 901,030 | |||||||||||
Ohio2.31% |
||||||||||||||||
Centerville (City of) (Bethany Lutheran Village Continuing Care
Facility Expansion); Series 2007 A, Health Care RB
|
6.00 | % | 11/01/38 | 600 | 600,222 | |||||||||||
Cuyahoga (County of) (Eliza Jennings Senior Care Network);
Series 2007 A, Health Care & Independent
Living Facilities RB
|
5.75 | % | 05/15/27 | 850 | 840,165 | |||||||||||
Lorain (County of) Port Authority (U.S. Steel Corp.);
Series 2010, Recovery Zone Facility RB
|
6.75 | % | 12/01/40 | 400 | 429,444 | |||||||||||
Montgomery (County of) (St. Leonard); Series 2010, Ref.
& Improvement Health Care & MFH RB
|
6.63 | % | 04/01/40 | 400 | 420,512 | |||||||||||
Ohio (State of) Air Quality Development Authority (FirstEnergy
Generation Corp.); Series 2009 C, Ref. PCR
|
5.63 | % | 06/01/18 | 400 | 458,700 | |||||||||||
Toledo-Lucas (County of) Port Authority (Crocker Park Public
Improvement); Series 2003, Special Assessment RB
|
5.38 | % | 12/01/35 | 480 | 482,789 | |||||||||||
3,231,832 | ||||||||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Oklahoma0.66% |
||||||||||||||||
Citizen Potawatomi Nation; Series 2004 A, Sr.
Obligation Tax RB
|
6.50 | % | 09/01/16 | $ | 500 | $ | 489,575 | |||||||||
Tulsa (County of) Industrial Authority (Montereau, Inc.);
Series 2010 A, Senior Living Community RB
|
7.25 | % | 11/01/45 | 400 | 431,212 | |||||||||||
920,787 | ||||||||||||||||
Pennsylvania4.16% |
||||||||||||||||
Allegheny (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Propel
Charter School-Montour); Series 2010 A, Charter School
RB
|
6.75 | % | 08/15/35 | 390 | 395,706 | |||||||||||
Bucks (County of) Industrial Development Authority (Anns
Choice, Inc. Facility); Series 2005 A, Retirement
Community RB
|
6.13 | % | 01/01/25 | 1,500 | 1,510,110 | |||||||||||
Cumberland (County of) Municipal Authority (Asbury Pennsylvania
Obligated Group); Series 2010, RB
|
6.13 | % | 01/01/45 | 385 | 391,591 | |||||||||||
Harrisburg (City of) Authority (Harrisburg University of
Science); Series 2007 B, University RB
|
6.00 | % | 09/01/36 | 750 | 648,615 | |||||||||||
Montgomery (County of) Industrial Development Authority
(Philadelphia Presbytery Homes, Inc.); Series 2010, RB
|
6.63 | % | 12/01/30 | 400 | 441,208 | |||||||||||
Pennsylvania (State of) Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority
(City of Philadelphia Funding Program); Series 2009, Ref.
Special
Tax RB(c)
|
5.00 | % | 06/15/21 | 1,230 | 1,465,459 | |||||||||||
Washington (County of) Redevelopment Authority (Victory Centre
Tanger Outlet Development); Series 2006 A, Tax
Allocation
RB(g)(i)
|
5.45 | % | 07/01/17 | 970 | 975,723 | |||||||||||
5,828,412 | ||||||||||||||||
Puerto Rico0.53% |
||||||||||||||||
Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp.;
|
||||||||||||||||
First Subseries 2010 A,
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 08/01/34 | 1,600 | 481,712 | |||||||||||
First Subseries 2010 C,
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 08/01/39 | 1,200 | 260,052 | |||||||||||
741,764 | ||||||||||||||||
Rhode Island0.24% |
||||||||||||||||
Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp.; Series 2002 A,
Asset-Backed RB
|
6.25 | % | 06/01/42 | 335 | 334,980 | |||||||||||
South Carolina1.57% |
||||||||||||||||
Georgetown (County of) (International Paper Co.);
Series 2000 A, Ref. Environmental Improvement RB
|
5.95 | % | 03/15/14 | 300 | 323,649 | |||||||||||
Myrtle Beach (City of) (Myrtle Beach Air Force Base);
Series 2006 A, Tax Increment Allocation RB
|
5.30 | % | 10/01/35 | 1,250 | 1,014,850 | |||||||||||
South Carolina (State of) Jobs-Economic Development Authority
(The Woodlands at Furman);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2012, Ref. RB
|
6.00 | % | 11/15/42 | 446 | 238,539 | |||||||||||
Series 2012, Ref. Sub. CAB
RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 11/15/47 | 191 | 517 | |||||||||||
South Carolina (State of) Jobs-Economic Development Authority
(Wesley Commons); Series 2006, Ref. First Mortgage Health
Facilities RB
|
5.30 | % | 10/01/36 | 750 | 623,610 | |||||||||||
2,201,165 | ||||||||||||||||
South Dakota0.25% |
||||||||||||||||
Sioux Falls (City of) (Dow Rummel Village); Series 2006,
Ref. Health Facilities RB
|
5.00 | % | 11/15/33 | 400 | 343,536 | |||||||||||
Tennessee2.38% |
||||||||||||||||
Johnson City (City of) Health & Educational Facilities
Board (Mountain States Health Alliance);
Series 2006 A, First Mortgage Hospital RB
|
5.50 | % | 07/01/31 | 800 | 841,296 | |||||||||||
Metropolitan Government of Nashville (City of) & Davidson
(County of) Health & Educational Facilities Board
(Blakeford at Green Hills); Series 1998, Ref. RB
|
5.65 | % | 07/01/24 | 400 | 399,264 | |||||||||||
Shelby (County of) Health, Educational & Housing
Facilities Board (The Village at Germantown);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2003 A, Residential Care Facility Mortgage RB
|
7.25 | % | 12/01/34 | 750 | 749,880 | |||||||||||
Series 2006, Residential Care Facility Mortgage RB
|
6.25 | % | 12/01/34 | 475 | 422,617 | |||||||||||
Shelby (County of) Health, Educational & Housing
Facilities Board (Trezevant Manor); Series 2006 A, RB
|
5.75 | % | 09/01/37 | 500 | 488,240 | |||||||||||
Trenton (City of) Health & Educational Facilities
Board (RHA/Trenton MR, Inc.); Series 2009, RB
|
9.25 | % | 04/01/39 | 400 | 437,212 | |||||||||||
3,338,509 | ||||||||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Texas8.73% |
||||||||||||||||
Alliance Airport Authority, Inc. (Federal Express Corp.);
Series 2006, Ref. Special
Facilities RB(a)
|
4.85 | % | 04/01/21 | $ | 500 | $ | 536,170 | |||||||||
Austin Convention Enterprises, Inc.; Series 2006 B,
Ref. Second Tier Convention
Center RB(d)
|
5.75 | % | 01/01/34 | 600 | 590,424 | |||||||||||
Capital Area Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp. (The
Roman Catholic Diocese of Austin); Series 2005 B, RB
|
6.13 | % | 04/01/45 | 400 | 432,936 | |||||||||||
Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority; Series 2011,
Sub. Lien RB
|
6.75 | % | 01/01/41 | 400 | 427,948 | |||||||||||
Clifton Higher Education Finance Corp. (Uplift Education);
Series 2010 A, Education RB
|
6.25 | % | 12/01/45 | 400 | 438,932 | |||||||||||
Decatur (City of) Hospital Authority (Wise Regional Health
System); Series 2004 A, RB
|
7.13 | % | 09/01/34 | 700 | 708,918 | |||||||||||
HFDC of Central Texas, Inc. (Sears Tyler Methodist);
Series 2009 A, RB
|
7.75 | % | 11/15/44 | 400 | 404,076 | |||||||||||
HFDC of Central Texas, Inc.; Series 2006 A, Retirement
Facilities RB
|
5.75 | % | 11/01/36 | 400 | 363,784 | |||||||||||
Houston (City of) (Continental Airlines, Inc.);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2001 E, Airport System Special
Facilities RB(a)
|
6.75 | % | 07/01/21 | 425 | 426,840 | |||||||||||
Series 2001 E, Airport System Special
Facilities RB(a)
|
6.75 | % | 07/01/29 | 215 | 215,894 | |||||||||||
Houston Higher Education Finance Corp. (Cosmos Foundation,
Inc.); Series 2011 A, RB
|
6.88 | % | 05/15/41 | 400 | 456,684 | |||||||||||
La Vernia Higher Education Finance Corp. (Knowledge is Power
Program, Inc.); Series 2009 A, RB
|
6.25 | % | 08/15/39 | 400 | 439,952 | |||||||||||
Lubbock Health Facilities Development Corp. (Carillon Senior
LifeCare Community); Series 2005 A, Ref. First
Mortgage RB
|
6.50 | % | 07/01/26 | 875 | 885,098 | |||||||||||
North Texas Tollway Authority;
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2008 A, Ref. First Tier System RB
(INSBHAC)(b)(c)
|
5.75 | % | 01/01/48 | 1,200 | 1,340,736 | |||||||||||
Series 2011 B, Special Project System
CAB RB(e)
|
0.00 | % | 09/01/37 | 2,800 | 654,556 | |||||||||||
San Antonio Convention Hotel Finance Corp. (Empowerment Zone);
Series 2005 A, Contract RB
(INSAMBAC)(a)(b)
|
5.00 | % | 07/15/39 | 400 | 383,020 | |||||||||||
Tarrant County Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp.
(Mirador); Series 2010 A, Retirement Facility RB
|
8.13 | % | 11/15/39 | 400 | 413,824 | |||||||||||
Tarrant County Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp.
(Northwest Senior Housing Corp.-Edgemere);
Series 2006 A, Retirement Facility RB
|
6.00 | % | 11/15/36 | 450 | 455,463 | |||||||||||
Texas (State of) Turnpike Authority (Central Texas Turnpike
System); Series 2002, CAB RB
(INSAMBAC)(b)(e)
|
0.00 | % | 08/15/33 | 1,665 | 463,803 | |||||||||||
Texas Private Activity Bond Surface Transportation Corp. (LBJ
Infrastructure); Series 2010, Sr. Lien RB
|
7.00 | % | 06/30/40 | 400 | 456,004 | |||||||||||
Texas Private Activity Bond Surface Transportation Corp. (NTE
Mobility Partners LLC North Tarrant Express Management Lanes);
Series 2009, Sr. Lien RB
|
6.88 | % | 12/31/39 | 400 | 454,484 | |||||||||||
Texas State Public Finance Authority Charter School Finance
Corp. (Odyssey Academy, Inc.); Series 2010 A,
Education RB
|
7.13 | % | 02/15/40 | 400 | 429,264 | |||||||||||
Travis County Health Facilities Development Corp. (Westminster
Manor); Series 2010, RB
|
7.00 | % | 11/01/30 | 400 | 442,936 | |||||||||||
Tyler Health Facilities Development Corp. (Mother Frances
Hospital Regional Health Care Center); Series 2007, Ref.
Hospital RB
|
5.00 | % | 07/01/33 | 400 | 405,864 | |||||||||||
12,227,610 | ||||||||||||||||
Utah1.00% |
||||||||||||||||
Emery (County of) (Pacificorp); Series 1996, Environmental
Improvement RB(a)
|
6.15 | % | 09/01/30 | 1,000 | 1,000,450 | |||||||||||
Utah (State of) Charter School Finance Authority (North Davis
Preparatory Academy); Series 2010, Charter School RB
|
6.38 | % | 07/15/40 | 400 | 401,248 | |||||||||||
1,401,698 | ||||||||||||||||
Virginia1.68% |
||||||||||||||||
Chesterfield (County of) Economic Development Authority
(Brandermill Woods); Series 1998, Ref.
Mortgage RB(d)
|
6.50 | % | 01/01/28 | 800 | 796,000 | |||||||||||
Lexington (City of) Industrial Development Authority (Kendal at
Lexington); Series 2007 A, Residential Care Facilities
Mortgage RB
|
5.50 | % | 01/01/37 | 420 | 389,962 | |||||||||||
Peninsula Town Center Community Development Authority;
Series 2007, Special Obligation RB
|
6.45 | % | 09/01/37 | 695 | 636,022 | |||||||||||
Virginia (State of) Small Business Financing Authority (Hampton
Roads Proton Beam Therapy Institute at Hampton University, LLC);
Series 2009, RB(d)
|
9.00 | % | 07/01/39 | 500 | 532,340 | |||||||||||
2,354,324 | ||||||||||||||||
Principal |
||||||||||||||||
Interest |
Maturity |
Amount |
||||||||||||||
Rate | Date | (000) | Value | |||||||||||||
Washington2.77% |
||||||||||||||||
King (County of) Public Hospital District No. 4 (Snoqualmie
Valley Hospital);
|
||||||||||||||||
Series 2009, Ref. & Improvement Limited Tax GO Bonds
|
7.25 | % | 12/01/38 | $ | 400 | $ | 409,268 | |||||||||
Series 2011, Ref. & Improvement Limited Tax GO Bonds
|
7.00 | % | 12/01/40 | 400 | 418,344 | |||||||||||
King (County of); Series 2011 B, Ref.
Sewer RB(c)
|
5.00 | % | 01/01/34 | 1,200 | 1,363,620 | |||||||||||
Seattle Industrial Development Corp. (Northwest Airlines, Inc.);
Series 2001, Special
Facilities RB(a)
|
7.25 | % | 04/01/30 | 650 | 650,000 | |||||||||||
Washington (State of) Health Care Facilities Authority (Central
Washington Health Services Association);
Series 2009, RB
|
7.00 | % | 07/01/39 | 400 | 448,216 | |||||||||||
Washington (State of) Health Care Facilities Authority (Seattle
Cancer Care Alliance); Series 2009, RB
|
7.38 | % | 03/01/38 | 500 | 584,085 | |||||||||||
3,873,533 | ||||||||||||||||
West Virginia0.28% |
||||||||||||||||
West Virginia (State of) Hospital Finance Authority (Thomas
Health System); Series 2008, RB
|
6.50 | % | 10/01/38 | 400 | 397,964 | |||||||||||
Wisconsin1.12% |
||||||||||||||||
Wisconsin (State of) Health & Educational Facilities
Authority (Prohealth Care, Inc. Obligated Group);
Series 2009, RB
|
6.38 | % | 02/15/29 | 600 | 698,292 | |||||||||||
Wisconsin (State of) Health & Educational Facilities
Authority (St. Johns Community, Inc.);
Series 2009 A, RB
|
7.63 | % | 09/15/39 | 400 | 447,056 | |||||||||||
Wisconsin (State of) Public Finance Authority (Glenridge Palmer
Ranch); Series 2011 A, Continuing Care Retirement
Community RB
|
8.25 | % | 06/01/46 | 400 | 425,436 | |||||||||||
1,570,784 | ||||||||||||||||
TOTAL
INVESTMENTS(j)104.37%
(Cost $146,019,794)
|
146,205,354 | |||||||||||||||
FLOATING RATE NOTE OBLIGATIONS(6.16)%
|
||||||||||||||||
Notes with interest rates ranging from 0.16% to 0.28% at
02/29/12 and
contractual maturities of collateral ranging from
06/15/21 to
06/15/50
(See
Note 1H)(k)
|
(8,635,000 | ) | ||||||||||||||
OTHER ASSETS LESS LIABILITIES1.79%
|
2,509,319 | |||||||||||||||
NET ASSETS100.00%
|
$ | 140,079,673 | ||||||||||||||
ACA
|
ACA Financial Guaranty Corp. | |
AGM
|
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. | |
AMBAC
|
American Municipal Bond Assurance Corp. | |
BAN
|
Bond Anticipation Notes | |
BHAC
|
Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp. | |
CAB
|
Capital Appreciation Bonds | |
COP
|
Certificates of Participation | |
GO
|
General Obligation | |
IDR
|
Industrial Development Revenue Bonds | |
INS
|
Insurer | |
LOC
|
Letter of Credit | |
MFH
|
Multi-Family Housing | |
PCR
|
Pollution Control Revenue Bonds | |
PILOT
|
Payment-in-Lieu-of-Tax | |
RB
|
Revenue Bonds | |
Ref.
|
Refunding | |
RN
|
Revenue Notes | |
SGI
|
Syncora Guarantee, Inc. | |
Sr.
|
Senior | |
Sub.
|
Subordinated | |
VRD
|
Variable Rate Demand |
(a) | Security subject to the alternative minimum tax. | |
(b) | Principal and/or interest payments are secured by the bond insurance company listed. | |
(c) | Underlying security related to Dealer Trusts entered into by the Trust. See Note 1H. | |
(d) | Security purchased or received in a transaction exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. The security may be resold pursuant to an exemption from registration under the 1933 Act, typically to qualified institutional buyers. The aggregate value of these securities at February 29, 2012 was $4,642,869, which represented 3.31% of the Trusts Net Assets. | |
(e) | Zero coupon bond issued at a discount. | |
(f) | Defaulted security. Currently, the issuer is partially or fully in default with respect to interest payments. The aggregate value of these securities at February 29, 2012 was $2,718,196, which represented 1.94% of the Trusts Net Assets. | |
(g) | Demand security payable upon demand by the Trust at specified time intervals no greater than thirteen months. Interest rate is redetermined periodically. Rate shown is rate in effect at February 29, 2012. | |
(h) | Principal and interest payments are fully enhanced by a letter of credit from the bank listed or a predecessor bank, branch or subsidiary. | |
(i) | Security has an irrevocable call by the issuer or mandatory put by the holder. Maturity date reflects such call or put. | |
(j) | Entities may either issue, guarantee, back or otherwise enhance the credit quality of a security. The entities are not primarily responsible for the issuers obligation but may be called upon to satisfy issuers obligations. No concentration of any single entity was greater than 5%. | |
(k) | Floating rate note obligations related to securities held. The interest rates shown reflect the rates in effect at February 29, 2012. At February 29, 2012, the Trusts investments with a value of $15,376,844 are held by Dealer Trusts and serve as collateral for the $8,635,000 in the floating rate note obligations outstanding at that date. |
Assets: |
||||
Investments, at value (Cost $146,019,794)
|
$ | 146,205,354 | ||
Cash
|
262,100 | |||
Receivable for:
|
||||
Investments sold
|
18,030 | |||
Interest
|
2,373,444 | |||
Investment for trustee deferred compensation and retirement plans
|
5,981 | |||
Other assets
|
2,838 | |||
Total assets
|
148,867,747 | |||
Liabilities: |
||||
Floating rate note obligations
|
8,635,000 | |||
Accrued other operating expenses
|
78,741 | |||
Trustee deferred compensation and retirement plans
|
74,333 | |||
Total liabilities
|
8,788,074 | |||
Net assets applicable to shares outstanding
|
$ | 140,079,673 | ||
Net assets consist of: |
||||
Shares of beneficial interest
|
$ | 167,900,930 | ||
Undistributed net investment income
|
931,100 | |||
Undistributed net realized gain (loss)
|
(28,937,917 | ) | ||
Unrealized appreciation
|
185,560 | |||
$ | 140,079,673 | |||
Shares outstanding, $0.01 par value per share, with an unlimited number of shares authorized: |
||||
Shares outstanding
|
19,620,474 | |||
Net asset value per share
|
$ | 7.14 | ||
Market value per share
|
$ | 7.02 | ||
Investment income: |
||||
Interest
|
$ | 9,052,211 | ||
Expenses: |
||||
Advisory fees
|
656,990 | |||
Administrative services fees
|
50,000 | |||
Custodian fees
|
6,894 | |||
Interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
72,185 | |||
Transfer agent fees
|
9,780 | |||
Trustees and officers fees and benefits
|
28,673 | |||
Professional services fees
|
50,281 | |||
Other
|
81,560 | |||
Total expenses
|
956,363 | |||
Net investment income
|
8,095,848 | |||
Realized and unrealized gain (loss) from: |
||||
Net realized gain (loss) from investment securities
|
(1,997,358 | ) | ||
Change in net unrealized appreciation of investment securities
|
16,445,098 | |||
Net realized and unrealized gain
|
14,447,740 | |||
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations
|
$ | 22,543,588 | ||
For the year |
For the nine |
For the year |
||||||||||
ended |
months ended |
ended |
||||||||||
February 29, |
February 28, |
May 31, |
||||||||||
2012 | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||||||
Operations: |
||||||||||||
Net investment income
|
$ | 8,095,848 | $ | 6,207,380 | $ | 8,695,598 | ||||||
Net realized gain (loss)
|
(1,997,358 | ) | (3,283,460 | ) | (2,415,491 | ) | ||||||
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)
|
16,445,098 | (4,167,641 | ) | 19,377,939 | ||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations
|
22,543,588 | (1,243,721 | ) | 25,658,046 | ||||||||
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income
|
(8,240,599 | ) | (6,180,451 | ) | (8,240,602 | ) | ||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets
|
14,302,989 | (7,424,172 | ) | 17,417,444 | ||||||||
Net assets: |
||||||||||||
Beginning of period
|
125,776,684 | 133,200,856 | 115,783,412 | |||||||||
End of period (includes undistributed net investment income of
$931,100, $1,183,418 and $1,113,589, respectively)
|
$ | 140,079,673 | $ | 125,776,684 | $ | 133,200,856 | ||||||
A. | Security Valuations Securities, including restricted securities, are valued according to the following policy. | |
Securities are fair valued using an evaluated quote provided by an independent pricing service approved by the Board of Trustees. Evaluated quotes provided by the pricing service may be determined without exclusive reliance on quoted prices and may reflect appropriate factors such as institution-size trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, individual trading characteristics and other market data. Securities with a demand feature exercisable within one to seven days are valued at par. Debt securities are subject to interest rate and credit risks. In addition, all debt securities involve some risk of default with respect to interest and principal payments. | ||
Securities for which market quotations either are not readily available or are unreliable are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by or under the supervision of the Trusts officers following procedures approved by the Board of Trustees. Some of the factors which may be considered in determining fair value are fundamental analytical data relating to the investment; the nature and duration of any restrictions on transferability or disposition; trading in similar securities by the same issuer or comparable companies; relevant political, economic or issuer specific news; and other relevant factors under the circumstances. | ||
Valuations change in response to many factors including the historical and prospective earnings of the issuer, the value of the issuers assets, general economic conditions, interest rates, investor perceptions and market liquidity. Because of the inherent uncertainties of valuation, the values reflected in the financial statements may materially differ from the value received upon actual sale of those investments. | ||
B. | Securities Transactions and Investment Income Securities transactions are accounted for on a trade date basis. Realized gains or losses on sales are computed on the basis of specific identification of the securities sold. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis from settlement date. Dividend income (net of withholding tax, if any) is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Bond premiums and discounts are amortized and/or accreted for financial reporting purposes. | |
The Trust may periodically participate in litigation related to Trust investments. As such, the Trust may receive proceeds from litigation settlements. Any proceeds received are included in the Statement of Operations as realized gain (loss) for investments no longer held and as unrealized gain (loss) for investments still held. | ||
Brokerage commissions and mark ups are considered transaction costs and are recorded as an increase to the cost basis of securities purchased and/or a reduction of proceeds on a sale of securities. Such transaction costs are included in the determination of net realized and unrealized gain (loss) from investment securities reported in the Statement of Operations and the Statement of Changes in Net Assets and the net realized and unrealized gains (losses) on securities per share in the Financial Highlights. Transaction costs are included in the calculation of the Trusts net asset value and, accordingly, they reduce the Trusts total returns. These transaction costs are not considered operating expenses and are not reflected in net investment income reported in the Statement of Operations and Statement of Changes in Net Assets, or the net investment income per share and ratios of expenses and net investment income reported in the Financial Highlights, nor are they limited by any expense limitation arrangements between the Trust and the investment adviser. |
C. | Country Determination For the purposes of making investment selection decisions and presentation in the Schedule of Investments, the investment adviser may determine the country in which an issuer is located and/or credit risk exposure based on various factors. These factors include the laws of the country under which the issuer is organized, where the issuer maintains a principal office, the country in which the issuer derives 50% or more of its total revenues and the country that has the primary market for the issuers securities, as well as other criteria. Among the other criteria that may be evaluated for making this determination are the country in which the issuer maintains 50% or more of its assets, the type of security, financial guarantees and enhancements, the nature of the collateral and the sponsor organization. Country of issuer and/or credit risk exposure has been determined to be the United States of America, unless otherwise noted. | |
D. | Distributions Distributions from income are declared and paid monthly. Distributions from net realized capital gain, if any, are generally paid annually and recorded on the ex-dividend date. The Trust may elect to treat a portion of the proceeds from redemptions as distributions for federal income tax purposes. | |
E. | Federal Income Taxes The Trust intends to comply with the requirements of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code necessary to qualify as a regulated investment company and to distribute substantially all of the Trusts taxable earnings to shareholders. As such, the Trust will not be subject to federal income taxes on otherwise taxable income (including net realized capital gain) that is distributed to shareholders. Therefore, no provision for federal income taxes is recorded in the financial statements. | |
The Trust files tax returns in the U.S. Federal jurisdiction and certain other jurisdictions. Generally, the Trust is subject to examinations by such taxing authorities for up to three years after the filing of the return for the tax period. | ||
The Trust files tax returns in the U.S. Federal jurisdiction and certain other jurisdictions. Generally, the Trust is subject to examinations by such taxing authorities for up to three years after the filing of the return for the tax period. | ||
F. | Accounting Estimates The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP) requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period including estimates and assumptions related to taxation. Actual results could differ from those estimates by a significant amount. In addition, the Trust monitors for material events or transactions that may occur or become known after the period-end date and before the date the financial statements are released to print. | |
G. | Indemnifications Under the Trusts organizational documents, each Trustee, officer, employee or other agent of the Trust is indemnified against certain liabilities that may arise out of performance of their duties to the Trust. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Trust enters into contracts, including the Trusts servicing agreements that contain a variety of indemnification clauses. The Trusts maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Trust that have not yet occurred. The risk of material loss as a result of such indemnification claims is considered remote. | |
H. | Floating Rate Note Obligations The Trust invests in inverse floating rate securities, such as Residual Interest Bonds (RIBs) or Tender Option Bonds (TOBs) for investment purposes and to enhance the yield of the Trust. Inverse floating rate investments tend to underperform the market for fixed rate bonds in a rising interest rate environment, but tend to outperform the market for fixed rate bonds when interest rates decline or remain relatively stable. Such transactions may be purchased in the secondary market without first owning the underlying bond or by the sale of fixed rate bonds by the Trust to special purpose trusts established by a broker dealer (Dealer Trusts) in exchange for cash and residual interests in the Dealer Trusts assets and cash flows, which are in the form of inverse floating rate securities. The Dealer Trusts finance the purchases of the fixed rate bonds by issuing floating rate notes to third parties and allowing the Trust to retain residual interest in the bonds. The floating rate notes issued by the Dealer Trusts have interest rates that reset weekly and the floating rate note holders have the option to tender their notes to the Dealer Trusts for redemption at par at each reset date. The residual interests held by the Trust (inverse floating rate investments) include the right of the Trust (1) to cause the holders of the floating rate notes to tender their notes at par at the next interest rate reset date, and (2) to transfer the municipal bond from the Dealer Trusts to the Trust, thereby collapsing the Dealer Trusts. | |
TOBs are presently classified as private placement securities. Private placement securities are subject to restrictions on resale because they have not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended or are otherwise not readily marketable. As a result of the absence of a public trading market for these securities, they may be less liquid than publicly traded securities. Although these securities may be resold in privately negotiated transactions, the prices realized from these sales could be less than those originally paid by the Trust or less than what may be considered the fair value of such securities. | ||
The Trust accounts for the transfer of bonds to the Dealer Trusts as secured borrowings, with the securities transferred remaining in the Trusts investment assets, and the related floating rate notes reflected as Trust liabilities under the caption Floating rate note obligations on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The Trust records the interest income from the fixed rate bonds under the caption Interest and records the expenses related to floating rate obligations and any administrative expenses of the Dealer Trusts as a component of Interest, facilities and maintenance fees on the Statement of Operations. | ||
The Trust generally invests in inverse floating rate securities that include embedded leverage, thus exposing the Trust to greater risks and increased costs. The primary risks associated with inverse floating rate securities are varying degrees of liquidity and the changes in the value of such securities in response to changes in market rates of interest to a greater extent than the value of an equal principal amount of a fixed rate security having similar credit quality, redemption provisions and maturity which may cause the Trusts net asset value to be more volatile than if it had not invested in inverse floating rate securities. In certain instances, the short-term floating rate interests created by the special purpose trust may not be able to be sold to third parties or, in the case of holders tendering (or putting) such interests for repayment of principal, may not be able to be remarketed to third parties. In such cases, the special purpose trust holding the long-term fixed rate bonds may be collapsed. In the case of RIBs or TOBs created by the contribution of long-term fixed income bonds by the Trust, the Trust will then be required to repay the principal amount of the tendered securities. During times of market volatility, illiquidity or uncertainty, the Trust could be required to sell other portfolio holdings at a disadvantageous time to raise cash to meet that obligation. |
I. | Interest, Facilities and Maintenance Fees Interest, Facilities and Maintenance Fees include interest and related borrowing costs such as commitment fees and other expenses associated with lines of credit and interest and administrative expenses related to establishing and maintaining floating rate note obligations, if any. | |
J. | Other Risks The value of, payment of interest on, repayment of principal for and the ability to sell a municipal security may be affected by constitutional amendments, legislative enactments, executive orders, administrative regulations, voter initiatives and the economics of the regions in which the issuers are located. | |
Since many municipal securities are issued to finance similar projects, especially those relating to education, health care, transportation and utilities, conditions in those sectors can affect the overall municipal securities market and a Trusts investments in municipal securities. | ||
There is some risk that a portion or all of the interest received from certain tax-free municipal securities could become taxable as a result of determinations by the Internal Revenue Service. |
Level 1 | Prices are determined using quoted prices in an active market for identical assets. | |
Level 2 | Prices are determined using other significant observable inputs. Observable inputs are inputs that other market participants may use in pricing a security. These may include quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, loss severities, default rates, discount rates, volatilities and others. | |
Level 3 | Prices are determined using significant unobservable inputs. In situations where quoted prices or observable inputs are unavailable (for example, when there is little or no market activity for an investment at the end of the period), unobservable inputs may be used. Unobservable inputs reflect the Trusts own assumptions about the factors market participants would use in determining fair value of the securities or instruments and would be based on the best available information. |
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||||||
Municipal Obligations
|
$ | | $ | 146,205,354 | $ | | $ | 146,205,354 | ||||||||
For the year |
Nine months |
For the year |
||||||||||
ended |
ended |
ended |
||||||||||
February 29, |
February 28, |
May 31, |
||||||||||
2012 | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||||||
Tax-exempt income
|
$ | 8,240,599 | $ | 6,180,451 | $ | 8,240,602 | ||||||
2012 | ||||
Undistributed ordinary income
|
$ | 983,548 | ||
Net unrealized appreciation investments
|
229,470 | |||
Temporary book/tax differences
|
(73,703 | ) | ||
Post-October deferrals
|
(204,288 | ) | ||
Capital loss carryforward
|
(28,756,284 | ) | ||
Shares of beneficial interest
|
167,900,930 | |||
Total net assets
|
$ | 140,079,673 | ||
Capital Loss Carryforward* | ||||||||||||
Expiration | Short-Term | Long-Term | Total | |||||||||
February 28, 2013
|
$ | 4,876,449 | $ | | $ | 4,876,449 | ||||||
February 29, 2016
|
9,386,909 | | 9,386,909 | |||||||||
February 28, 2017
|
4,049,616 | | 4,049,616 | |||||||||
February 28, 2018
|
3,586,578 | | 3,586,578 | |||||||||
February 28, 2019
|
3,761,358 | | 3,761,358 | |||||||||
Not subject to expiration
|
43,813 | 3,051,561 | 3,095,374 | |||||||||
$ | 25,704,723 | $ | 3,051,561 | $ | 28,756,284 | |||||||
* | Capital loss carryforward as of the date listed above is reduced for limitations, if any, to the extent required by the Internal Revenue Code. |
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities on a Tax Basis | ||||
Aggregate unrealized appreciation of investment securities
|
$ | 9,413,126 | ||
Aggregate unrealized (depreciation) of investment securities
|
(9,183,656 | ) | ||
Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities
|
$ | 229,470 | ||
Cost of investments for tax purposes is $145,975,884. |
For the year |
For the nine |
For the year |
||||||||||
ended |
months ended |
ended |
||||||||||
February 29, |
February 28, |
May 31, |
||||||||||
2012 | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||||||
Beginning Shares
|
19,620,474 | 19,620,474 | 19,620,474 | |||||||||
Shares issued through dividend reinvestment
|
| | | |||||||||
Ending Shares
|
19,620,474 | 19,620,474 | 19,620,474 | |||||||||
Declaration Date | Amount Per Share | Record Date | Payable Date | |||||||||
March 1, 2012
|
$ | 0.035 | March 14, 2012 | March 30, 2012 | ||||||||
April 2, 2012
|
$ | 0.035 | April 13, 2012 | April 30, 2012 | ||||||||
Nine months |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year ended |
ended |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
February 29, |
February 28, |
Year ended May 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.41 | $ | 6.79 | $ | 5.90 | $ | 7.38 | $ | 8.28 | $ | 8.02 | ||||||||||||||
Net investment
income(a)
|
0.41 | 0.32 | 0.44 | 0.45 | 0.46 | 0.48 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.74 | (0.38 | ) | 0.87 | (1.46 | ) | (0.87 | ) | 0.32 | |||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
1.15 | (0.06 | ) | 1.31 | (1.01 | ) | (0.41 | ) | 0.80 | |||||||||||||||||
Less distributions from net investment income
|
(0.42 | ) | (0.32 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.47 | ) | (0.49 | ) | (0.54 | ) | ||||||||||||||
Anti-dilutive effect of shares
repurchased(a)
|
| | | 0.00 | (b) | 0.00 | (b) | | ||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 7.14 | $ | 6.41 | $ | 6.79 | $ | 5.90 | $ | 7.38 | $ | 8.28 | ||||||||||||||
Market value, end of period
|
$ | 7.02 | $ | 6.02 | $ | 6.51 | $ | 5.67 | $ | 7.87 | $ | 9.68 | ||||||||||||||
Total return at net asset
value(c)
|
18.92 | % | (0.90 | )% | 23.12 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total return at market
value(d)
|
24.50 | % | (2.93 | )% | 22.83 | % | (22.15 | )% | (13.65 | )% | 16.99 | % | ||||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 140,080 | $ | 125,777 | $ | 133,201 | $ | 115,783 | $ | 144,960 | $ | 163,002 | ||||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover
rate(e)
|
22 | % | 12 | % | 13 | % | 15 | % | 35 | % | 26 | % | ||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses
|
0.73 | %(f) | 0.72 | %(g) | 0.78 | % | 0.89 | %(h) | 0.95 | %(h)(i) | 0.80 | %(i) | ||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses excluding interest, facilities and maintenance
fees(j)
|
0.68 | %(f) | 0.67 | %(g) | 0.73 | % | 0.73 | %(h) | 0.72 | %(h)(i) | 0.72 | %(i) | ||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income
|
6.15 | %(f) | 6.28 | %(g) | 6.90 | % | 7.25 | % | 5.89 | % | 5.88 | % | ||||||||||||||
Rebate from Morgan Stanley affiliate
|
0.00 | %(k) | 0.00 | %(k) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. | |
(b) | Includes anti-dilutive effect of acquiring treasury shares of less than $0.005. | |
(c) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. | |
(d) | Total return assumes an investment at the market price at the beginning of the period indicated, reinvestment of all distributions for the period in accordance with the Trusts dividend reinvestment plan, and sale of all shares at the closing market price at the end of the period indicated. Not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. | |
(e) | Portfolio turnover is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. | |
(f) | Ratios are based on average daily net assets (000s) of $131,613. | |
(g) | Annualized. | |
(h) | The ratios reflect the rebate of certain Trust expenses in connection with investments in a Morgan Stanley affiliate during the period. The effect of the rebate on the ratios is disclosed in the above table as Rebate from Morgan Stanley affiliate. | |
(i) | Does not reflect the effect of expense offset of 0.01%. | |
(j) | For the years ended May 31, 2010 and prior, ratio does not exclude facilities and maintenance fees. | |
(k) | Amount is less than 0.005%. |
Federal and State Income
Tax
|
||||
Qualified Dividend Income*
|
0.00% | |||
Corporate Dividends Received Deduction*
|
0.00% | |||
Tax-exempt interest dividends*
|
98.79% |
* | The above percentages are based on ordinary income dividends paid to shareholders during the Trusts fiscal year. |
Supplemental Information |
| Variable rate securities, which bear rates of interest that are adjusted periodically according to formulae intended to reflect market rates of interest. | |
| Municipal notes, including tax, revenue and bond anticipation notes of short maturity, generally less than three years, which are issued to obtain temporary funds for various public purposes. | |
| Variable rate demand notes, which are obligations that contain a floating or variable interest rate adjustment formula and which are subject to a right of demand for payment of the principal balance plus accrued interest either at any time or at specified intervals. The interest rate on a variable rate demand note may be based on a known lending rate, such as a banks prime rate, and may be adjusted when such rate changes, or the interest rate may be a market rate that is adjusted at specified intervals. The adjustment formula maintains the value of the variable rate demand note at approximately the par value of such note at the adjustment date. | |
| Municipal leases, which are obligations issued by state and local governments or authorities to finance the acquisition of equipment and facilities. Certain municipal lease obligations may include non-appropriation clauses which provide that the municipality has no obligation to make lease or installment purchase payments in future years unless money is appropriated for such purpose on a yearly basis. | |
| Private activity bonds, which are issued by, or on behalf of, public authorities to finance privately operated facilities. | |
| Participation certificates, which are obligations issued by state or local governments or authorities to finance the acquisition of equipment and facilities. They may represent participations in a lease, an installment purchase contract or a conditional sales contract. | |
| Municipal securities that may not be backed by the faith, credit and taxing power of the issuer. | |
| Municipal securities that are privately placed and that may have restrictions on the Funds ability to resell, such as timing restrictions or requirements that the securities only be sold to qualified institutional investors. | |
| Municipal securities that are insured by financial insurance companies. |
Number of
Funds |
||||||||
Name, Year of
Birth and |
Trustee
and/ |
Principal
Occupation(s) |
in Fund
Complex |
Other
Directorship(s) |
||||
Position(s) Held with the Trust | or Officer Since | During Past 5 Years | Overseen by Trustee | Held by Trustee | ||||
Interested
Persons
|
||||||||
Martin L.
Flanagan1
1960
Trustee |
2010 | Executive Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, Invesco Ltd. (ultimate parent of Invesco and a global investment management firm); Advisor to the Board, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.); Trustee, The Invesco Funds; Vice Chair, Investment Company Institute; and Member of Executive Board, SMU Cox School of Business | 140 | None | ||||
Formerly: Chairman, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (registered investment adviser); Director, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, IVZ Inc. (holding company), INVESCO Group Services, Inc. (service provider) and Invesco North American Holdings, Inc. (holding company); Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, Invesco Holding Company Limited (parent of Invesco and a global investment management firm); Director, Invesco Ltd.; Chairman, Investment Company Institute and President, Co-Chief Executive Officer, Co-President, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer, Franklin Resources, Inc. (global investment management organization) | ||||||||
Philip A.
Taylor2
1954
Trustee, President and Principal Executive Officer |
2010 | Head of North American Retail and Senior Managing Director, Invesco Ltd.; Director, Co-Chairman, Co-President and Co-Chief Executive Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Director, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.) (financial services holding company); Director and President, INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. (registered investment adviser and registered transfer agent); Director and Chairman, Invesco Investment Services, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.) (registered transfer agent) and IVZ Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as INVESCO Distributors, Inc.) (registered broker dealer); Director, President and Chairman, Invesco Inc. (holding company) and Invesco Canada Holdings Inc. (holding company); Chief Executive Officer, Invesco Corporate Class Inc. (corporate mutual fund company) and Invesco Canada Fund Inc. (corporate mutual fund company); Director, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Invesco Canada Ltd. (formerly known as Invesco Trimark Ltd./Invesco Trimark Ltèe) (registered investment adviser and registered transfer agent); Trustee, President and Principal Executive Officer, The Invesco Funds (other than AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust); Trustee and Executive Vice President, The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust only); Director, Invesco Investment Advisers LLC (formerly known as Van Kampen Asset Management); Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, Van Kampen Exchange Corp. | 140 | None | ||||
Formerly: Director and Chairman, Van Kampen Investor Services Inc.: Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, 1371 Preferred Inc. (holding company); and Van Kampen Investments Inc.; Director and President, AIM GP Canada Inc. (general partner for limited partnerships); and Van Kampen Advisors, Inc.; Director and Chief Executive Officer, Invesco Trimark Dealer Inc. (registered broker dealer); Director, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.) (registered broker dealer); Manager, Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC; Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, Invesco Advisers, Inc.; Director, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; President, Invesco Trimark Dealer Inc. and Invesco Trimark Ltd./Invesco Trimark Ltèe; Director and President, AIM Trimark Corporate Class Inc. and AIM Trimark Canada Fund Inc.; Senior Managing Director, Invesco Holding Company Limited; Trustee and Executive Vice President, Tax-Free Investments Trust; Director and Chairman, Fund Management Company (former registered broker dealer); President and Principal Executive Officer, The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust), Short-Term Investments Trust and Tax-Free Investments Trust only); President, AIM Trimark Global Fund Inc. and AIM Trimark Canada Fund Inc. | ||||||||
Wayne W.
Whalen3
1939
Trustee |
2010 | Of Counsel, and prior to 2010, partner in the law firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, legal counsel to funds in the Fund Complex | 158 | Director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation | ||||
1 | Mr. Flanagan is considered an interested person of the Trust because he is an officer of the adviser to the Trust, and an officer and a director of Invesco Ltd., ultimate parent of the adviser to the Trust. |
2 | Mr. Taylor is considered an interested person of the Trust because he is an officer and a director of the adviser to, and a director of the principal underwriter of, the Trust. |
3 | Mr. Whalen has been deemed to be an interested person of the Trust because of his prior service as counsel to the predecessor funds of certain Invesco open-end funds and his affiliation with the law firm that served as counsel to such predecessor funds and continues to serve as counsel to the Invesco Van Kampen closed-end funds. |
Number of
Funds |
||||||||
Name, Year of
Birth and |
Trustee
and/ |
Principal
Occupation(s) |
in Fund
Complex |
Other
Directorship(s) |
||||
Position(s) Held with the Trust | or Officer Since | During Past 5 Years | Overseen by Trustee | Held by Trustee | ||||
Independent
Trustees
|
||||||||
Bruce L. Crockett 1944
Trustee and Chair |
2010 |
Chairman, Crockett Technology Associates (technology consulting company)
Formerly: Director, Captaris (unified messaging provider); Director, President and Chief Executive Officer COMSAT Corporation; and Chairman, Board of Governors of INTELSAT (international communications company) |
140 | ACE Limited (insurance company); and Investment Company Institute | ||||
David C. Arch 1945
Trustee |
2010 | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Blistex Inc., a consumer health care products manufacturer. | 158 | Member of the Heartland Alliance Advisory Board, a nonprofit organization serving human needs based in Chicago. Board member of the Illinois Manufacturers Association. Member of the Board of Visitors, Institute for the Humanities, University of Michigan | ||||
Frank S. Bayley 1939
Trustee |
2010 |
Retired
Formerly: Director, Badgley Funds, Inc. (registered investment company) (2 portfolios) and Partner, law firm of Baker & McKenzie |
140 | Director and Chairman, C.D. Stimson Company (a real estate investment company) | ||||
James T. Bunch 1942
Trustee |
2010 |
Managing Member, Grumman Hill Group LLC (family office private equity management)
Formerly: Founder, Green, Manning & Bunch Ltd. (investment banking firm)(1988-2010); Executive Committee, United States Golf Association; and Director, Policy Studies, Inc. and Van Gilder Insurance Corporation |
140 | Chairman, Board of Governors, Western Golf Association, Chairman-elect, Evans Scholars Foundation and Director, Denver Film Society | ||||
Rodney F. Dammeyer 1940 Trustee
|
2010 |
Chairman of CAC, LLC, a private company offering capital investment and management advisory services.
Formerly: Prior to January 2004, Director of TeleTech Holdings Inc.; Prior to 2002, Director of Arris Group, Inc.; Prior to 2001, Managing Partner at Equity Group Corporate Investments. Prior to 1995, Vice Chairman of Anixter International. Prior to 1985, experience includes Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Household International, Inc, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Northwest Industries, Inc. and Partner of Arthur Andersen & Co. |
158 | Director of Quidel Corporation and Stericycle, Inc. Prior to May 2008, Trustee of The Scripps Research Institute. Prior to February 2008, Director of Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. Prior to April 2007, Director of GATX Corporation. Prior to April 2004, Director of TheraSense, Inc. | ||||
Albert R. Dowden 1941
Trustee |
2010 | Director of a number of public and private business corporations, including the Boss Group, Ltd. (private investment and management); Reich & Tang Funds (5 portfolios) (registered investment company); and Homeowners of America Holding Corporation/Homeowners of America Insurance Company (property casualty company) | 140 | Board of Natures Sunshine Products, Inc. | ||||
Formerly: Director, Continental Energy Services, LLC (oil and gas pipeline service); Director, CompuDyne Corporation (provider of product and services to the public security market) and Director, Annuity and Life Re (Holdings), Ltd. (reinsurance company); Director, President and Chief Executive Officer, Volvo Group North America, Inc.; Senior Vice President, AB Volvo; Director of various public and private corporations; Chairman, DHJ Media, Inc.; Director Magellan Insurance Company; and Director, The Hertz Corporation, Genmar Corporation (boat manufacturer), National Media Corporation; Advisory Board of Rotary Power International (designer, manufacturer, and seller of rotary power engines); and Chairman, Cortland Trust, Inc. (registered investment company) | ||||||||
Jack M. Fields 1952
Trustee |
2010 |
Chief Executive Officer, Twenty First Century Group, Inc. (government affairs company); and Owner and Chief Executive Officer, Dos Angelos Ranch, L.P. (cattle, hunting, corporate entertainment), Discovery Global Education Fund (non-profit) and Cross Timbers Quail Research Ranch (non-profit)
Formerly: Chief Executive Officer, Texana Timber LP (sustainable forestry company) and member of the U.S. House of Representatives |
140 | Insperity (formerly known as Administaff) | ||||
Carl Frischling 1937
Trustee |
2010 | Partner, law firm of Kramer Levin Naftalis and Frankel LLP | 140 | Director, Reich & Tang Funds (6 portfolios) | ||||
Prema Mathai-Davis 1950
Trustee |
2010 |
Retired
Formerly: Chief Executive Officer, YWCA of the U.S.A. |
140 | None | ||||
Larry Soll 1942
Trustee |
2010 |
Retired
Formerly, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, Synergen Corp. (a biotechnology company) |
140 | None | ||||
Number of
Funds |
||||||||
Name, Year of
Birth and |
Trustee
and/ |
Principal
Occupation(s) |
in Fund
Complex |
Other
Directorship(s) |
||||
Position(s) Held with the Trust | or Officer Since | During Past 5 Years | Overseen by Trustee | Held by Trustee | ||||
Independent
Trustees
|
||||||||
Hugo F. Sonnenschein 1940
Trustee |
2010 | Distinguished Service Professor and President Emeritus of the University of Chicago and the Adam Smith Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago. Prior to July 2000, President of the University of Chicago. | 158 | Trustee of the University of Rochester and a member of its investment committee. Member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences | ||||
Raymond Stickel, Jr. 1944
Trustee |
2010 |
Retired
Formerly: Director, Mainstay VP Series Funds, Inc. (25 portfolios) and Partner, Deloitte & Touche |
140 | |||||
Other
Officers
|
||||||||
Russell C. Burk 1958
Senior Vice President and Senior Officer |
2010 | Senior Vice President and Senior Officer of Invesco Funds | N/A | N/A | ||||
John M. Zerr 1962
Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary |
2010 | Director, Senior Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.) and Van Kampen Exchange Corp.; Senior Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Senior Vice President and Secretary, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.); Director, Vice President and Secretary, Invesco Investment Services, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.) and IVZ Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as INVESCO Distributors, Inc.); Director and Vice President, INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.; Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary, The Invesco Funds; Manager, Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC; Director, Secretary and General Counsel, Invesco Investment Advisers LLC (formerly known as Van Kampen Asset Management); Secretary and General Counsel, Van Kampen Funds Inc. and Chief Legal Officer, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust | N/A | N/A | ||||
Formerly: Director and Secretary, Van Kampen Advisors Inc.; Director Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel Van Kampen Investor Services Inc.; Director, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.); Director, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Invesco Advisers, Inc.; and Van Kampen Investments Inc.; Director, Vice President and Secretary, Fund Management Company; Director, Senior Vice President, Secretary, General Counsel and Vice President, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; Chief Operating Officer and General Counsel, Liberty Ridge Capital, Inc. (an investment adviser); Vice President and Secretary, PBHG Funds (an investment company) and PBHG Insurance Series Fund (an investment company); Chief Operating Officer, General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Investment Partners (a broker-dealer); General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Fund Services (an administrator) and Old Mutual Shareholder Services (a shareholder servicing center); Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Capital, Inc. (an investment adviser); and Vice President and Secretary, Old Mutual Advisors Funds (an investment company) | ||||||||
Lisa O. Brinkley 1959
Vice President |
2010 |
Global Assurance Officer, Invesco Ltd.; Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Investment Services, Inc.(formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.); and Vice President, The Invesco Funds
Formerly: Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.) and Van Kampen Investor Services Inc.; Senior Vice President, Invesco Management Group, Inc.; Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and The Invesco Funds; Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Invesco Distributors, Inc.; Vice President, Invesco Investment Services, Inc. and Fund Management Company |
N/A | N/A | ||||
Number of
Funds |
||||||||
Name, Year of
Birth and |
Trustee
and/ |
Principal
Occupation(s) |
in Fund
Complex |
Other
Directorship(s) |
||||
Position(s) Held with the Trust | or Officer Since | During Past 5 Years | Overseen by Trustee | Held by Trustee | ||||
Other
Officers
|
||||||||
Karen Dunn Kelley 1960
Vice President |
2010 | Head of Invescos World Wide Fixed Income and Cash Management Group; Senior Vice President, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.) and Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Executive Vice President, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.); Director, Invesco Mortgage Capital Inc.; Vice President, The Invesco Funds (other than AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust); and President and Principal Executive Officer, The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust only). | N/A | N/A | ||||
Formerly: Senior Vice President, Van Kampen Investments Inc.; Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.); Director of Cash Management and Senior Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; President and Principal Executive Officer, Tax-Free Investments Trust; Director and President, Fund Management Company; Chief Cash Management Officer, Director of Cash Management, Senior Vice President, and Managing Director, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; Director of Cash Management, Senior Vice President, and Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust), Short-Term Investments Trust and Tax-Free Investments Trust only) | ||||||||
Sheri S. Morris 1964
Vice President, Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer |
2010 | Vice President, Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer, The Invesco Funds; Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser). | N/A | N/A | ||||
Formerly: Treasurer, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc., Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Invesco Aim Private Asset Management, Inc.; Assistant Vice President and Assistant Treasurer, The Invesco Funds and Assistant Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc., Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Invesco Aim Private Asset Management, Inc. | ||||||||
Yinka Akinsola 1977
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer |
2011 | Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.), Invesco Investment Services, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.), The Invesco Funds, Invesco Van Kampen Closed-End Funds, Van Kampen Funds Inc., PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust | N/A | N/A | ||||
Formerly: Regulatory Analyst III, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). | ||||||||
Todd L. Spillane 1958
Chief Compliance Officer |
2010 | Senior Vice President, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.) and Van Kampen Exchange Corp.; Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (registered investment adviser) (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.); Chief Compliance Officer, The Invesco Funds, INVESCO Private Capital Investments, Inc. (holding company) and Invesco Private Capital, Inc. (registered investment adviser); Vice President, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.) and Invesco Investment Services, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.). | N/A | N/A | ||||
Formerly: Senior Vice President, Van Kampen Investments Inc.; Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; Chief Compliance Officer, Invesco Global Asset Management (N.A.), Inc., Invesco Senior Secured Management, Inc. (registered investment adviser) and Van Kampen Investor Services Inc., PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust; Vice President, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Fund Management Company | ||||||||
Office of the Fund 1555 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, GA 30309 |
Investment Adviser Invesco Advisers, Inc. 1555 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, GA 30309 |
Auditors PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP 1201 Louisiana Street, Suite 2900 Houston, TX 77002-5678 |
Custodian State Street Bank and Trust Company 225 Franklin Boston, MA 02110-2801 |
|||
Counsel to the Fund Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP 2600 One Commerce Square Philadelphia, PA 19103 |
Counsel to the Independent Trustees Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP 1177 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10036-2714 |
Transfer Agent Computershare Trust Company, N.A. P.O. Box 43078 Providence, RI 02940-3078 |
MS-CE-MIOPP-AR-1 | Invesco Distributors, Inc. |
Percentage of Fees | Percentage of Fees | ||||||||||||||||||
Billed Applicable to | Billed Applicable to | ||||||||||||||||||
Non-Audit Services | Non-Audit Services | ||||||||||||||||||
Fees Billed for | Provided for fiscal | Fees Billed for | Provided for fiscal | ||||||||||||||||
Services Rendered to | year end 2/29/2012 | Services Rendered to | year end 2/28/2011 | ||||||||||||||||
the Registrant for | Pursuant to Waiver of | the Registrant for | Pursuant to Waiver of | ||||||||||||||||
fiscal year end | Pre-Approval | fiscal year end | Pre-Approval | ||||||||||||||||
2/29/2012 | Requirement(1) | 2/28/2011 | Requirement(1) | ||||||||||||||||
Audit Fees |
$ | 31,200 | N/A | $ | 22,425 | N/A | |||||||||||||
Audit-Related Fees |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
Tax Fees(2) |
$ | 4,300 | 0 | % | $ | 2,300 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
All Other Fees |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
Total Fees |
$ | 35,500 | 0 | % | $ | 24,725 | 0 | % |
(1) | With respect to the provision of non-audit services, the pre-approval requirement is waived pursuant to a de minimis exception if (i) such services were not recognized as non-audit services by the Registrant at the time of engagement, (ii) the aggregate amount of all such services provided is no more than 5% of the aggregate audit and non-audit fees paid by the Registrant to PWC during a fiscal year; and (iii) such services are promptly brought to the attention of the Registrants Audit Committee and approved by the Registrants Audit Committee prior to the completion of the audit. | |
(2) | Tax fees for the fiscal year end February 29, 2012 includes fees billed for reviewing tax returns. Tax fees for the fiscal year end February 28, 2011 includes fees billed for reviewing tax returns. |
Fees Billed for Non- | Fees Billed for Non- | |||||||||||||||
Audit Services | Audit Services | |||||||||||||||
Rendered to Invesco | Percentage of Fees | Rendered to Invesco | Percentage of Fees | |||||||||||||
and Invesco Affiliates | Billed Applicable to | and Invesco Affiliates | Billed Applicable to | |||||||||||||
for fiscal year end | Non-Audit Services | for fiscal year end | Non-Audit Services | |||||||||||||
2/29/2012 That Were | Provided for fiscal year | 2/28/2011 That Were | Provided for fiscal year | |||||||||||||
Required | end 2/29/2012 | Required | end 2/28/2011 | |||||||||||||
to be Pre-Approved | Pursuant to Waiver of | to be Pre-Approved | Pursuant to Waiver of | |||||||||||||
by the Registrants | Pre-Approval | by the Registrants | Pre-Approval | |||||||||||||
Audit Committee | Requirement(1) | Audit Committee | Requirement(1) | |||||||||||||
Audit-Related Fees |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % | ||||||||
Tax Fees |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % | ||||||||
All Other Fees |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % | ||||||||
Total Fees(2) |
$ | 0 | 0 | % | $ | 0 | 0 | % |
(1) | With respect to the provision of non-audit services, the pre-approval requirement is waived pursuant to a de minimis exception if (i) such services were not recognized as non-audit services by the Registrant at the time of engagement, (ii) the aggregate amount of all such services provided is no more than 5% of the aggregate audit and non-audit fees paid by the Registrant, Invesco and Invesco Affiliates to PWC during a fiscal year; and (iii) such services are promptly brought to the attention of the Registrants Audit Committee and approved by the Registrants Audit Committee prior to the completion of the audit. | |
(2) | Including the fees for services not required to be pre-approved by the registrants audit committee, PWC billed Invesco and Invesco Affiliates aggregate non-audit fees of $0 for the fiscal year ended February 29, 2012, and $0 for the fiscal year ended February 28, 2011, for non-audit services rendered to Invesco and Invesco Affiliates. | |
The Audit Committee also has considered whether the provision of non-audit services that were rendered to Invesco and Invesco Affiliates that were not required to be pre-approved pursuant to SEC regulations, if any, is compatible with maintaining PWCs independence. To the extent that such services were provided, the Audit Committee determined that the provision of such services is compatible with PWC maintaining independence with respect to the Registrant. |
1. | Describe in writing to the Audit Committees, which writing may be in the form of the proposed engagement letter: |
a. | The scope of the service, the fee structure for the engagement, and any side letter or amendment to the engagement letter, or any other agreement between the Auditor and the Fund, relating to the service; and | ||
b. | Any compensation arrangement or other agreement, such as a referral agreement, a referral fee or fee-sharing arrangement, between the Auditor and any person (other than the Fund) with respect to the promoting, marketing, or recommending of a transaction covered by the service; |
2. | Discuss with the Audit Committees the potential effects of the services on the independence of the Auditor; and | ||
3. | Document the substance of its discussion with the Audit Committees. |
| Bookkeeping or other services related to the accounting records or financial statements of the audit client | ||
| Financial information systems design and implementation | ||
| Appraisal or valuation services, fairness opinions, or contribution-in-kind reports | ||
| Actuarial services | ||
| Internal audit outsourcing services |
| Management functions | ||
| Human resources | ||
| Broker-dealer, investment adviser, or investment banking services | ||
| Legal services | ||
| Expert services unrelated to the audit | ||
| Any service or product provided for a contingent fee or a commission | ||
| Services related to marketing, planning, or opining in favor of the tax treatment of confidential transactions or aggressive tax position transactions, a significant purpose of which is tax avoidance | ||
| Tax services for persons in financial reporting oversight roles at the Fund | ||
| Any other service that the Public Company Oversight Board determines by regulation is impermissible. |
(a) | The registrant has a separately-designed standing audit committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Members of the audit committee are: David C. Arch, Frank S. Bayley, James T. Bunch, Bruce L. Crockett, Rodney Dammeyer, Larry Soll and Raymond Stickel, Jr. | ||
(b) | Not applicable. |
Investments in securities of unaffiliated issuers is included as part of the reports to stockholders filed under Item 1 of this Form. |
ITEM 7. | DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES. |
Applicable to
|
Institutional Accounts | |
Risk Addressed by Policy
|
breach of fiduciary duty to client under Investment Advisers Act of 1940 by placing Invesco personal interests ahead of client best economic interests in voting proxies | |
Relevant Law and Other Sources
|
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 | |
Last Tested Date |
||
Policy/Procedure Owner
|
Advisory Compliance, Proxy Committee | |
Policy Approver
|
Invesco Risk Management Committee | |
Approved/Adopted Date
|
January 1, 2010 |
January 2010 | I.1 1 |
January 2010 | I.1 2 |
January 2010 | I.1 3 |
(1) | describe any real or perceived conflict of interest, | ||
(2) | determine whether such real or perceived conflict of interest is material, | ||
(3) | discuss any procedure used to address such conflict of interest, | ||
(4) | report any contacts from outside parties (other than routine communications from proxy solicitors), and | ||
(5) | include confirmation that the recommendation as to how the proxies are to be voted is in the best economic interests of clients and was made without regard to any conflict of interest. |
January 2010 | I.1 4 |
January 2010 | I.1 5 |
| Business Relationships where Invesco manages money for a company or an employee group, manages pension assets or is actively soliciting any such business, or leases office space from a company; | ||
| Personal Relationships where an Invesco person has a personal relationship with other proponents of proxy proposals, participants in proxy contests, corporate directors, or candidates for directorships; and | ||
| Familial Relationships where an Invesco person has a known familial relationship relating to a company (e.g. a spouse or other relative who serves as a director of a public company or is employed by the company). |
January 2010 | I.1 6 |
January 2010 | I.1 7 |
Print Name | |||
Date | Signature |
I.1 Proxy Policy Appendix A | Acknowledgement and Certification |
| William Black, Portfolio Manager, who has been responsible for the Fund since 2009 and has been associated with Invesco and/or its affiliates since 2010. Mr. Black was associated with Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. in an investment management capacity (1998 to 2010). | ||
| Mark Paris, Portfolio Manager, who has been responsible for the Fund since 2009 and has been associated with Invesco and/or its affiliates since 2010. Mr. Paris was associated with Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. in an investment management capacity (2002 to 2010). | ||
| Jim Phillips, Portfolio Manager, who has been responsible for the Fund since 2009 and has been associated with Invesco and/or its affiliates since 2010. Mr. Phillips was associated with Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. in an investment management capacity (1991 to 2010). |
Dollar Range of | Dollar Range of Investments | Dollar Range of all Investments in | ||||||||||
Investments in each | in Invesco pooled investment | Funds and Invesco pooled | ||||||||||
Portfolio Manager | Fund1 | vehicles2 | investment vehicles | |||||||||
Invesco Municipal Income Opportunities Trust | ||||||||||||
William Black |
None | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 | ||||||||
Mark Paris |
None | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 | ||||||||
Jim Phillips |
None | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 |
1 | This column reflects investments in a Funds shares beneficially owned by a portfolio manager (as determined in accordance with Rule 16a-1(a) (2) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended). Beneficial ownership includes ownership by a portfolio managers immediate family members sharing the same household. | |
2 | This column reflects portfolio managers investments made either directly or through a deferred compensation or a similar plan in Invesco pooled investment vehicles with the same or similar objectives and strategies as the Fund as of the most recent fiscal year end of the Fund. |
Other Registered | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment | Other Pooled Investment | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Companies Managed | Vehicles Managed | Other Accounts Managed | ||||||||||||||||||||||
(assets in millions) | (assets in millions) | (assets in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of | Number of | Number of | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Portfolio Manager | Accounts | Assets | Accounts | Assets | Accounts | Assets | ||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Municipal Income Opportunities Trust | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
William Black |
4 | $ | 6,171.7 | None | None | None | None | |||||||||||||||||
Mark Paris |
4 | $ | 6,171.7 | None | None | None | None | |||||||||||||||||
Jim Phillips |
4 | $ | 6,171.7 | None | None | None | None |
Ø | The management of multiple Funds and/or other accounts may result in a portfolio manager devoting unequal time and attention to the management of each Fund and/or other account. The Adviser and each Sub-Adviser seek to manage such competing interests for the time and attention of portfolio managers by having portfolio managers focus on a particular investment discipline. Most other accounts managed by a portfolio manager are managed using the same investment models that are used in connection with the management of the Funds. | |
Ø | If a portfolio manager identifies a limited investment opportunity which may be suitable for more than one Fund or other account, a Fund may not be able to take full advantage of that opportunity due to an allocation of filled purchase or sale orders across all eligible Funds and other accounts. To deal with these situations, the Adviser, each Sub-Adviser and the Funds have adopted procedures for allocating portfolio transactions across multiple accounts. | |
Ø | The Adviser and each Sub-Adviser determine which broker to use to execute each order for securities transactions for the Funds, consistent with its duty to seek best execution of the transaction. However, for certain other accounts (such as mutual funds for which Invesco or an affiliate acts as sub-adviser, other pooled investment vehicles that are not registered mutual funds, and other accounts managed for organizations and individuals), the Adviser and each Sub-Adviser may be limited by the client with respect to the selection of brokers or may be instructed to direct trades through a particular broker. In these cases, trades for a Fund in a particular security may be placed separately from, rather than aggregated with, such other accounts. Having separate transactions with respect to a security may temporarily affect the market price of the security or the execution of the transaction, or both, to the possible detriment of the Fund or other account(s) involved. | |
Ø | Finally, the appearance of a conflict of interest may arise where the Adviser or Sub-Adviser has an incentive, such as a performance-based management fee, which relates to the management of one Fund or account but not all Funds and accounts for which a portfolio manager has day-to-day management responsibilities. |
Sub-Adviser | Performance time period3 | |
Invesco 4 Invesco Australia4 Invesco Deutschland |
One-, Three- and Five-year performance against Fund peer group. | |
Invesco Advisors- Invesco Real Estate5 Invesco Senior Secured4, 6 |
Not applicable | |
Invesco Canada4 |
One-year performance against Fund
peer group. Three- and Five-year performance against entire universe of Canadian funds. |
|
Invesco Hong Kong4
Invesco Asset Management |
One-, Three- and Five-year performance against Fund peer group. | |
Invesco Japan7
|
One-, Three- and Five-year performance against the appropriate Micropol benchmark. |
3 | Rolling time periods based on calendar year-end. | |
4 | Portfolio Managers may be granted an annual deferral award that vests on a pro-rata basis over a four year period and final payments are based on the performance of eligible Funds selected by the portfolio manager at the time the award is granted. | |
5 | Portfolio Managers for Invesco Global Real Estate Fund, Invesco Real Estate Fund, Invesco Global Real Estate Income Fund and Invesco V.I. Global Real Estate Fund base their bonus on new operating profits of the U.S. Real Estate Division of Invesco. | |
6 | Invesco Senior Secureds bonus is based on annual measures of equity return and standard tests of collateralization performance. | |
7 | Portfolio Managers for Invesco Pacific Growth Funds compensation is based on the one-, three- and five-year performance against the appropriate Micropol benchmark. |
ITEM 9. | PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS. |
ITEM 10. | SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS. |
ITEM 11. | CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES. |
(a) | As of March 21, 2012, an evaluation was performed under the supervision and with the participation of the officers of the Registrant, including the Principal Executive Officer (PEO) and Principal Financial Officer (PFO), to assess the effectiveness of the Registrants disclosure controls and procedures, as that term is defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Act), as amended. Based on that evaluation, the Registrants officers, including the PEO and PFO, concluded that, as of March 21, 2012, the Registrants disclosure controls and procedures were reasonably designed to ensure: (1) that information required to be disclosed by the Registrant on Form N-CSR is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified by the rules and forms of the Securities and Exchange Commission; and (2) that material information relating to the Registrant is made known to the PEO and PFO as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. | |
(b) | There have been no changes in the Registrants internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Act) that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by the report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrants internal control over financial reporting. | |
ITEM 12. EXHIBITS. | ||
12(a) (1) | Code of Ethics | |
12(a) (2) | Certifications of principal executive officer and principal financial officer as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. | |
12(a) (3) | Not applicable. | |
12(b) | Certifications of principal executive officer and principal financial officer as required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. |
Registrant: Invesco Municipal Income Opportunities Trust |
||||
By: | /s/ Philip A. Taylor | |||
Philip A. Taylor | ||||
Principal Executive Officer |
By: | /s/ Philip A. Taylor | |||
Philip A. Taylor | ||||
Principal Executive Officer |
By: | /s/ Sheri Morris | |||
Sheri Morris | ||||
Principal Financial Officer |
12(a)(1)
|
Code of Ethics. | |
12(a)(2)
|
Certifications of principal executive officer and principal Financial officer as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. | |
12(a)(3)
|
Not applicable. | |
12(b)
|
Certifications of principal executive officer and principal financial officer as required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. |