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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
FORM N-CSR
CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES
Investment Company Act file number: 811-21786
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund
7337 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd., Scottsdale, AZ 85258
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)
Hvey P. Falqoot, Jr.,
7337 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85258
(Name and address of agent for service)
Registrants telephone number, including area code: 1-800-992-0180
Date of fiscal year end: February 28
Date of reporting period: August 31, 2006
Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.
The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Act (17 CFR 270.30e-1):
Funds |
Semi-Annual Report | |
August 31, 2006 |
ING Global Advantage and | |
Premium Opportunity Fund |
E-Delivery Sign-up details inside |
This report is submitted for general information to shareholders of the ING Funds. It is not authorized for distribution to prospective shareholders unless accompanied or preceded by a prospectus which includes details regarding the funds investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and other information. This information should be read carefully. |
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Go Paperless with E-Delivery! | ||||||||
Sign up now for on-line prospectuses, fund reports, and proxy statements. In less than five minutes, you can help reduce paper mail and lower fund costs. | ||||||||
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You will be notified by e-mail when these communications become available on the internet. Documents that are not available on the internet will continue to be sent by mail.
(THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK)
JAMES M. HENNESSY
Dear Shareholder,
The ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund (the Fund) is a diversified, closed-end investment company traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol IGA. The primary objective of the Fund is to provide a high level of income, with a secondary objective of capital appreciation.
The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by investing at least 80% of its managed assets in a diversified global equity portfolio. It looks to earn additional income through a strategy of writing index call options.
I am very pleased to report that for the six months ended August 31, 2006, the Fund continued to provide you with attractive monthly distributions generated by its global-equity strategy coupled with its index call writing strategy.
Based on its share price as of August 31,
2006, the Fund provided a six-month total return of
11.93%.1 This return reflects an increase in its
share price from $18.61 on February 28, 2006, to $19.85 on
August 31, 2006, plus the reinvestment of $0.93 per
share in distributions. Based on net asset value (NAV), the Fund
had a total return of 5.30% for the six-month
period.2 During the period, the Fund made two
quarterly distributions of $0.465 per share. As of
August 31, 2006, the Fund had 18,076,478 shares
outstanding. For more information on your Funds
At ING Investments, LLC our mission is to set the standard in helping our clients manage their financial future. We seek to assist you and your financial advisor by offering a range of global investment solutions. We invite you to visit our website at www.ingfunds.com. Here you will find our products and services, including current market data and fund statistics on our open-and closed-end funds.
ING Investments, LLC continues to offer a broad variety of equity, fixed income and multi-asset funds that aim to fulfill particular investor needs. We have a broad range of global and international solutions both traditional and structured. We thank you for trusting ING Investments, LLC with your investment assets, and we look forward to serving you in the months and years ahead.
Sincerely,
International investing does pose special risks including currency fluctuation, economic and political risks not found in investments that are solely domestic. Investments in issuers that are principally engaged in real estate, including REITs, may subject the Fund to risks similar to those associated with the direct ownership of real estate, including terrorist attacks, war or other acts that destroy real property (in addition to market risks). These companies are sensitive to factors such as changes in real estate values and property taxes, interest rates, cash flow of underlying real estate assets, supply and demand, and the management skill and creditworthiness of the issuer. REITs may also be affected by tax and regulatory requirements.
1 Total investment return at net asset value has been calculated assuming a purchase at net asset value at the beginning of each period and a sale at net asset value at the end of each period and assumes reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at net asset value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
2 Total investment return at market value measures the change in the market value of your investment assuming reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the Funds dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at market value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
1
In our last report, we noted that global equities had achieved little after early January. They resumed their rise in March however, giving investors the best first calendar quarter since 1998. But this was undone early in May as fears began to grip markets that zealous, inflation fighting central bankers would raise interest rates by more than enough to choke off the global growth enjoyed in recent years. Only after Federal Reserve Board (the Fed) inaction on August 8 did markets recover to register a positive result for the six months ended August 31, 2006. The Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) World® Index(1) in dollars, including net reinvested dividends gained 4.97%. But more than half of this arose from currency fluctuations. The dollar fell back against the European units on perceptions that the gap between U.S. and European interest rates would soon fall. The dollar slid 7.0% and 7.9% against the euro and the pound, respectively, but after an initial drop, added 1.4% against the yen.
For most investors worldwide, not just those in U.S. fixed income securities, a key issue was when would the Fed stop raising the federal funds rate. In January 2006, Dr. Ben Bernanke replaced Alan Greenspan as Federal Reserve Chairman. The Federal Open Market Committee (the FOMC) had raised rates in May for the sixteenth time since June 2004. But hints about a pause after May had emerged. Meanwhile, the price of oil and other commodities, and stock markets, had been making new records. The combination of inflationary pressures and the Fed apparently about to go on hold got commentators wondering, out loud and in print, if Mr. Bernanke was just a little bit soft on inflation.
To re-establish his inflation fighting credentials, every single member of the FOMC over the next few weeks made a point of stressing in public that inflation was the prime concern. Investors feared that with all this tough talk the FOMC would now have to keep raising rates, even as the economy was obviously cooling. So the seventeenth interest rate increase to 5.25% on June 29, surprised no one. By then, every yield on the Treasury curve was below the Federal Funds rate: the markets vote that the FOMC had already gone too far.
Not everyone was convinced that the FOMC was finally done and the doubts intensified when renewed conflict in the Middle East sent the price of a barrel of oil to another all-time record on July 14. But the flow of data, especially on housing, pointed almost without exception to a slowing economy. At the August 8 meeting, the FOMC did indeed pause on the basis of the 17 prior increases and other factors restraining aggregate demand. By August 31, those factors were plain for all to see. For the six months ended August 31, 2006, the yield on the ten-year Treasury note/bond rose by 18 basis points (bps) to 4.73%, and the three month Treasury Bill rose by 40bps to 4.91%. The month-end gap between three-month and ten-year yields had not been higher since December 2000.
U.S. equities in the form of the Standard and Poors 500® Composite Stock Price (S&P 500®) Index(2), rose 2.8% including dividends, and traded at a P/E ratio of 14.8 times earnings for the current fiscal year. Stocks were then actually cheaper than the preceding year, as profits had grown faster than prices. Second quarter profits registered double-digit year-over-year growth for the twelfth straight quarter. But investors seemed only to have eyes for interest rates. They were encouraged through early May 2006 when an early end to the tightening cycle seemed to be at hand. The S&P 500® Index even reached a five-year high on May 5. But these hopes were soon dashed by the hawkish FOMC rhetoric. By August 8, the S&P 500® Index was just 5bps higher than at February 28. However, the Feds pause at that point, plus subsequent evidence that it was probably justified, let relieved investors push stock prices up again.
In international markets, based on MSCI local currency indices, the pattern of results resembled that in the U.S. In Japan an early rally stalled, then resumed as it became clear the economy was on a sustainable growth path and deflation was a thing of the past. On May 8, the market was up 6.5% since February 28. But from there, stocks slumped on U.S. interest rate fears combined with signals from the Bank of Japan, followed by the fact on July 14, local interest rates would rise for the first time in six years. The market had fallen 15.6% by July 18, but positive, albeit cooler, economic data continued to emerge encouraging markets to recover and score a gain for the six months, of 1bp In the same period, European ex UK markets added 3.2%. They peaked on May 9, initially supported by widespread merger and acquisition activity and improving conditions. But events in the U.S. and two 25bps increases in euro interest rates as inflation remained stubbornly above 2%, sent stocks down 13.1% before surprisingly good gross domestic product growth and that FOMC pause allowed markets to bounce back. By May 9,
2
UK equities were up 6.4%, near their highs since February 28, boosted by acquisition-prone financials and the large energy and materials sectors, as commodity prices surged. The reversal in these prices and interest rate concerns dragged the market down 9.3% by mid June, before better economic news, resurgent energy and what the FOMC didnt do on August 8, let stocks claw back a 4.1% gain for the six months ended August 31, 2006.
(2) The Standard & Poors 500® Composite Stock Price Index is an unmanaged index that measures the performance of securities of approximately 500 large-capitalization companies whose securities are traded on major U.S. stock markets.
All indices are unmanaged and investors cannot invest directly in an index.
Past performance does not guarantee future results. The performance quoted represents past performance. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, and shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. The Funds performance is subject to change since the periods end and may be lower or higher than the performance data shown. Please call (800) 992-0180 or log on to www.ingfunds.com to obtain performance data current to the most recent month end.
Market Perspective reflects the views of the ING Chief Investment Risk Officer only through the end of the period, and is subject to change based on market and other conditions.
3
The ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Funds (the Fund) primary investment objective is to provide a high level of income. Capital appreciation is a secondary investment objective. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by:
| investing at least 80% of its managed assets in a diversified global equity portfolio. |
| utilizing an integrating option writing strategy. |
The Fund is managed by Omar Aguilar, Mary Ann Fernandez, Paul Zemsky, Ernie Tang, Carl Ghielen, Martin Jansen, Bas Peeters, and Frank Van Etten, Portfolio Managers, ING Investment Management Co. the Sub-Adviser.
Portfolio Construction: Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest in a diversified portfolio of common stocks of companies located in a number of different countries throughout the world, normally in approximately 550 common stocks, seeking to reduce the Funds exposure to individual stock risk. The Fund normally expects to invest across a broad range of countries, industries and market sectors, including investments in issuers located in countries with emerging markets.
The Funds weighting between U.S. and international equities will depend on the Sub-Advisers ongoing assessment of market opportunities for the Fund. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will seek to maintain a target weighting of 60% in U.S. domestic common stocks and not less than 40% in international (ex-U.S.) common stocks.
Country Allocation
United States | 56.9% |
Japan | 10.3% |
United Kingdom | 9.1% |
France | 3.9% |
Netherlands | 3.0% |
Switzerland | 3.0% |
Germany | 2.9% |
Australia | 2.2% |
Italy | 1.7% |
Spain | 1.6% |
Sweden | 1.0% |
0.5% 0.8% Countries(1) | 3.2% |
0.3% 0.5% Countries(2) | 1.5% |
<0.3% Countries(3) | 0.3% |
Other Assets and Liabilities, Net* | (0.6)% |
Total Assets | 100.0% |
(1) |
Includes five countries, which each represents 0.5% 0.8% of net assets. | |
(2) |
Includes five countries, which each represents 0.3% 0.5% of net assets. | |
(3) |
Includes four countries, which each represents <0.3% of net assets. | |
* |
Includes short-term investments related to repurchase agreement. |
Portfolio holdings are subject to change daily.
The Funds Integrated Option Strategy: The option strategy of the Fund is designed to generate premiums by writing (selling) index call options on selected indices in an amount equal to 60% to 100% of the value of the Funds holdings in common stocks.
Writing index call options involves granting the buyer the right to appreciation of the value of an index above at a particular price (the strike price) at a particular time. If the purchaser exercises a index call option sold by the Fund, or the Fund will pay the purchaser the difference between the cash value of the index and the strike price of the option.
The Fund seeks to generate income and gains from its portfolio
index call option strategy and, to a lesser extent, income from
dividends on the common stocks held in the Funds
portfolio. The extent of index call option writing activity
depends upon market conditions and the Sub-Advisers
ongoing assessment of the attractiveness of writing index call
options on selected indices. Index call options are primarily be
written in over-the-counter markets with major international banks,
broker-dealers and financial institutions. The Fund may also
write call options in exchange-listed option
markets.
Banks | 11.2% |
Oil & Gas | 9.0% |
Telecommunications | 6.5% |
Diversified Financial Services | 6.1% |
Pharmaceuticals | 6.1% |
Retail | 5.9% |
Insurance | 5.5% |
Electric | 3.7% |
Beverages | 2.9% |
Miscellaneous Manufacturing | 2.9% |
Portfolio holdings are subject to change daily.
4
The Fund sells call options that are generally short-term (between 10 days and three months until expiration) and at- or near-the-money. The Fund typically maintains its covered call positions until expiration, but it retains the option to buy back the covered call options and sell new covered call options.
The Fund may, and during the period has, hedged the vast majority of its foreign currency exposure by selling forward against the U.S. dollar various currencies in which its equity holdings are denominated, including the Australian Dollar, the Swiss Franc, the Euro, the Great British Pound Sterling and the Japanese Yen.
Performance: Based on its share price as of August 31, 2006, the Fund provided a six-month total return of 11.93%. This return reflects an increase in its share price from $18.61 on February 28, 2006, to $19.85 on August 31, 2006, plus the reinvestment of $0.93 per share in distributions. Based on net asset value (NAV), the Fund had a total return of 5.30% for the six-month period. The Standard & Poors 500® Composite Stock Price Index (S&P 500®), the Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australasia and Far East Index (MSCI EAFE® Index) and the Chicago Board Options Exchange BuyWrite Monthly Index returned 2.79%, 7.94% and 4.63% respectively, for the same period. During the period, the Fund made two quarterly distributions of $0.465 per share. As of August 31, 2006, the Fund had 18,076,478 shares outstanding.
Market and Portfolio Review: Global financial markets performed well over the six-month period ending August 31, 2006.
The beginning of the reporting period saw a decline in global markets and a move to safety and stability. Two consecutive disappointing U.S. inflation numbers triggered a sell-off in global equity markets. A decelerating U.S. housing market and comments by U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman, Dr. Ben Bernanke, about the need to be vigilant against inflation, prompted a sharp increase in the markets expectations for U.S. interest rates. This in turn raised fears that global economic growth could be stifled by rising rates. Even positive corporate news and merger and acquisition activity could not take away interest rate concerns. The Fed raised the overnight rate to 5.25% at its June 29 meeting, but the committee introduced some dovish language that might be interpreted as more cautious on the economic picture. Against this backdrop, markets saw an unwinding of risk appetite and investors preferred the more stable markets of the United States and Europe to the higher-risk emerging markets. They favored defensive sectors such as utilities, telecoms and consumer staples while moving away from information technology, industrials and consumer discretionary.
Towards the end of the reporting period, lower-than-expected inflation numbers buoyed investor sentiment, as many saw it as a sign that the U.S. Federal Reserve Board (the Fed) was close to ending its current monetary tightening cycle. Strong earnings reports by U.S. companies through the period and increased merger and acquisition activity were also received positively.
While the Funds relatively neutral sector and country allocation added no value in the international portion of the portfolio, security selection benefited the Fund. The telecommunications and industrials sector holdings outperformed their sector position while an underweight position in the financials sector hurt the Fund relative to the MSCI EAFE® Index.
The domestic U.S. portion of the Fund outperformed the S&P 500® Index. Security selection was the main driver of performance, with selection in telecom technology and utilities helping the Fund. By contrast, positions in health care and consumer discretionary acted as a drag. While an overweight position in consumer staples and an underweight position in industrials benefited the Fund, an overweight position in consumer discretionary and an underweight position in utilities detracted from results.
The major currency markets strengthened against the U.S. dollar during the first part of the reporting period on concerns about the future direction of U.S. interest rates and global imbalances. While our currency hedge acted as a drag during this period, it helped the Fund in the second half of the period.
During the reporting period, call options were written on the S&P 500® Index, the Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index (FTSE 100), the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 (Price) Index (EuroStoxx50) and the Nikkei All Stock Index (Nikkei). The option portfolio consists of a basket of short-dated index options with a low-tracking
5
error to the Funds equity portfolio. The actual composition of the basket may be adjusted to capitalize on the relative attractiveness of volatility premiums and market trading opportunities. Over the reporting period, call options were written on approximately 67% of the Funds assets.
As a result of the general market decline in May and June, the majority of the Funds written call options expired out-of-the-money. The Fund realized a short-term gain on these positions, partially offsetting the decline in vale of the Funds equity portfolio. As global equity markets recovered in July and August, the calls written by the Fund expired in-the-money. Rising implied volatility over the period also resulted in higher option premiums. In August, the Funds coverage ratio was lowered from approximately 70% to 65% of the value of the Funds equity portfolio. The strikes of the traded options were close to the money, with average maturity between four and six weeks.
Outlook and Current Strategy: The underlying U.S. and EAFE strategies seek to reward investors with sector- and country-diversification that is close to the S&P 500® and MSCI EAFE® indices, while seeking outperformance through portfolio construction techniques.
If the market falls or moves sideways, the premiums generated from our call-writing strategies, dividends and our disciplined equity strategies may make up an important part of the Funds total return. In the case of a strong market rally, the strategy may generate an absolute positive return; however, the upside may be limited as call options will likely be exercised.
After a spike in June, equity option volatility levels gradually decreased and reverted to their lows at the end of July. For the coming months we expect these concerns to continue, implying volatility could move higher. Risk premiums should, under this scenario, remain attractive.
6
ASSETS:
|
||||||
Investments in securities at value*
|
$ | 369,579,348 | ||||
Repurchase agreement
|
932,000 | |||||
Cash
|
1,407,351 | |||||
Cash collateral for futures
|
31,500 | |||||
Foreign currencies at value**
|
35,625 | |||||
Receivables:
|
||||||
Investment securities sold
|
3,219,689 | |||||
Dividends and interest
|
1,003,924 | |||||
Variation margin
|
250 | |||||
Unrealized appreciation on forward currency
contracts
|
318,470 | |||||
Prepaid expenses
|
465 | |||||
Total assets
|
376,528,622 | |||||
LIABILITIES:
|
||||||
Payable for investment securities purchased
|
3,975,638 | |||||
Unrealized depreciation on forward currency
contracts
|
449,272 | |||||
Payable to affiliates
|
141,111 | |||||
Payable for trustee fees
|
11,006 | |||||
Other accrued expenses and liabilities
|
189,543 | |||||
Options written (premium received $3,974,597)
|
4,705,747 | |||||
Total liabilities
|
9,472,317 | |||||
NET ASSETS (equivalent to $20.31 per share on
18,076,478 shares outstanding)
|
$ | 367,056,305 | ||||
NET ASSETS WERE COMPRISED OF:
|
||||||
Paid-in capital shares of beneficial
interest at $0.01 par value (unlimited shares authorized)
|
$ | 344,567,285 | ||||
Undistributed net investment income
|
4,260,831 | |||||
Distributions in excess of net realized gains on
investments, foreign currency related transactions and options
|
(6,831,052 | ) | ||||
Net unrealized appreciation on investments,
foreign currency related transactions and options
|
25,059,241 | |||||
NET ASSETS
|
$ | 367,056,305 | ||||
* Cost of investments in securities
|
$ | 343,664,810 | ||||
** Cost of foreign currencies
|
$ | 35,675 |
7
INVESTMENT INCOME:
|
|||||
Dividends, net of foreign taxes withheld*
|
$ | 5,080,716 | |||
Interest
|
85,714 | ||||
Total investment income
|
5,166,430 | ||||
EXPENSES:
|
|||||
Investment management fees
|
1,363,823 | ||||
Transfer agent fees
|
10,811 | ||||
Administrative service fees
|
181,842 | ||||
Shareholder reporting expense
|
29,583 | ||||
Professional fees
|
38,801 | ||||
Custody and accounting fees
|
74,651 | ||||
Trustee fees
|
9,532 | ||||
Miscellaneous expense
|
13,478 | ||||
Total expenses
|
1,722,521 | ||||
Net investment income
|
3,443,909 | ||||
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON
INVESTMENTS, FOREIGN CURRENCY RELATED TRANSACTIONS, FUTURES AND
OPTIONS:
|
|||||
Net realized gain (loss) on:
|
|||||
Investments
|
11,765,163 | ||||
Foreign currency related transactions
|
(7,158,187 | ) | |||
Futures and options written
|
8,003,026 | ||||
Net realized gain on investments, foreign
currency related transactions, futures and options
|
12,610,002 | ||||
Net change in unrealized appreciation or
depreciation on:
|
|||||
Investments
|
3,107,258 | ||||
Foreign currency related transactions
|
705,428 | ||||
Futures and options written
|
(1,826,930 | ) | |||
Net change in unrealized appreciation or
depreciation on investments, foreign currency related
transactions, futures and options
|
1,985,756 | ||||
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments,
foreign currency related transactions, futures and options
|
14,595,758 | ||||
Increase in net assets resulting from
operations
|
$ | 18,039,667 | |||
* Foreign taxes withheld
|
$ | 283,712 |
8
Six Months | October 31, | |||||||
Ended | 2005(1) to | |||||||
August 31, | February 28, | |||||||
2006 | 2006 | |||||||
FROM OPERATIONS:
|
||||||||
Net investment income
|
$ | 3,443,909 | $ | 1,002,354 | ||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments, foreign
currency related transactions and options
|
12,610,002 | (36,811 | ) | |||||
Net change in unrealized appreciation or
depreciation on investments, foreign currency related
transactions and options
|
1,985,756 | 23,073,485 | ||||||
Net increase in net assets resulting from
operations
|
18,039,667 | 24,039,028 | ||||||
FROM DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS:
|
||||||||
Net investment income
|
(812,038 | ) | (2,798,525 | ) | ||||
Net realized gains
|
(15,979,112 | ) | | |||||
Total distributions
|
(16,791,150 | ) | (2,798,525 | ) | ||||
FROM CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS:
|
||||||||
Net proceeds from sale of shares
|
| 344,033,000 | (2) | |||||
Dividends reinvested
|
434,285 | | ||||||
Net increase in net assets resulting from capital
share transactions
|
434,285 | 344,033,000 | ||||||
Net increase in net assets
|
1,682,802 | 365,273,503 | ||||||
NET ASSETS:
|
||||||||
Beginning of period
|
365,373,503 | 100,000 | ||||||
End of period
|
$ | 367,056,305 | $ | 365,373,503 | ||||
Undistributed net investment income (accumulated
net investment loss) at end of period
|
$ | 4,260,831 | $ | 1,628,960 | ||||
(1) | Commencement of operations |
(2) | Proceeds from sale of shares net of sales load of $16,245,000 and offering costs of $722,000 |
9
Selected data for a share of beneficial interest outstanding throughout each period.
Six Months | October 31, | |||||||||
Ended | 2005(1) to | |||||||||
August 31, | February 28, | |||||||||
2006 | 2006 | |||||||||
Per Share Operating Performance:
|
||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ | 20.24 | 19.06 | (2) | ||||||
Income from investment operations: | ||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 0.19 | 0.06 | * | ||||||
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments | $ | 0.81 | 1.28 | |||||||
Total from investment operations | $ | 1.00 | 1.34 | |||||||
Less distributions from: | ||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 0.04 | 0.16 | |||||||
Net realized gains | $ | 0.89 | | |||||||
Total distributions | $ | 0.93 | 0.16 | |||||||
Net asset value, end of period | $ | 20.31 | 20.24 | |||||||
Market value, end of period | $ | 19.85 | 18.61 | |||||||
Total investment return at net asset value(3) | % | 5.30 | 7.08 | |||||||
Total investment return at market value(4) | % | 11.93 | (6.17 | ) | ||||||
Ratios and Supplemental Data:
|
||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (millions) | $ | 367 | 365 | |||||||
Ratios to average net assets: | ||||||||||
Net expenses after expense reimbursement(5)(6) | % | 0.95 | 1.00 | |||||||
Gross expenses prior to expense reimbursement(5) | % | 0.95 | 1.06 | |||||||
Net investment income after expense reimbursement (5)(6) | % | 1.89 | 0.86 | |||||||
Portfolio turnover rate | % | 61 | 41 | |||||||
(1) Commencement of operations.
(2) Net asset value at beginning of period reflects the deduction of the sales load of $0.90 per share and offering costs of $0.04 per share paid by the shareholder from the $20.00 offering price.
(3) Total investment return at net asset value has been calculated assuming a purchase at net asset value at the beginning of each period and a sale at net asset value at the end of each period and assumes reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at net asset value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
(4) Total investment return at market value measures the change in the market value of your investment assuming reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the Funds dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at market value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
(5) Annualized for periods less than one year.
(6) The Investment Adviser has agreed to limit expenses, (excluding interest, taxes, brokerage and extraordinary expenses) subject to possible recoupment by ING Investments, LLC within three years of being incurred.
* Per share data calculated using average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
10
NOTE 1 ORGANIZATION
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund (the Fund) is a diversified, closed-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act). The Fund is organized as a Delaware statutory trust. The primary investment objective for the Fund is to provide a high level of income. Capital appreciation is a secondary investment objective. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by investing in a portfolio of global common stocks and utilizing an integrated options writing strategy.
NOTE 2 SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The following significant accounting policies are consistently followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements, and such policies are in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies.
A. | Security Valuation. Investments in equity securities traded on a national securities exchange are valued at the last reported sale price. Securities reported by NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ official closing prices. Securities traded on an exchange or NASDAQ for which there has been no sale and equity securities traded in the over-the-counter-market are valued at the mean between the last reported bid and ask prices. All investments quoted in foreign currencies will be valued daily in U.S. dollars on the basis of the foreign currency exchange rates prevailing at that time. Debt securities are valued at prices obtained from independent services or from one or more dealers making markets in the securities and may be adjusted based on the Funds valuation procedures. U.S. government obligations are valued by using market quotations or independent pricing services which use prices provided by market-makers or estimates of market values obtained from yield data relating to instruments or securities with similar characteristics. |
Securities and assets for which market quotations are not readily available (which may include certain restricted securities which are subject to limitations as to their sale) are valued at their fair values as determined in good faith by or under the supervision of the Funds Board of Trustees (Board), in accordance with methods that are specifically authorized by the Board. Securities traded on exchanges, including foreign exchanges, which close earlier than the time that the Fund calculates its net asset value (NAV) may also be valued at their fair values as determined in good faith by or under the supervision of the Funds Board, in accordance with methods that are specifically authorized by the Board. The value of a foreign security traded on an exchange outside the United States is generally based on its price on the principal foreign exchange where it trades as of the time the Fund determines its NAV or if the foreign exchange closes prior to the time the Fund determines its NAV, the most recent closing price of the foreign security on its principal exchange. Trading in certain non-U.S. securities may not take place on all days on which the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is open. Further, trading takes place in various foreign markets on days on which the NYSE is not open. Consequently, the calculation of the Funds NAV may not take place contemporaneously with the determination of the prices of securities held by the Fund in foreign securities markets. Further, the value of the Funds assets may be significantly affected by foreign trading on days when a shareholder cannot purchase or redeem shares of the Fund. In calculating the Funds NAV, foreign securities denominated in foreign currency are converted to U.S. dollar equivalents. If an event occurs after the time at which the market for foreign securities held by the Fund closes but before the time that the Funds NAV is calculated, such event may cause the closing price on the foreign exchange to not represent a readily available reliable market value quotation for such securities at the time the Fund determines its NAV. In such a case, the Fund will use the fair value of such securities as determined under the Funds valuation procedures. Events after the close of trading on a foreign market that could require the Fund to fair value some or all of its foreign securities include, among others, securities trading in the U.S. and other markets, corporate announcements, natural and other disasters, and political and other events. Among other elements of analysis in the determination of a securitys fair value, the Board has authorized the use of one or more independent research services to assist with such determinations. An independent research service may use statistical analyses and quantitative |
11
models to help determine fair value as of the time the Fund calculates its NAV. There can be no assurance that such models accurately reflect the behavior of the applicable markets or the effect of the behavior of such markets on the fair value of securities, or that such markets will continue to behave in a fashion that is consistent with such models. Unlike the closing price of a security on an exchange, fair value determinations employ elements of judgment. Consequently, the fair value assigned to a security may not represent the actual value that the Fund could obtain if it were to sell the security at the time of the close of the NYSE. Pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board, the Fund is not obligated to use the fair valuations suggested by any research service, and valuation recommendations provided by such research services may be overridden if other events have occurred or if other fair valuations are determined in good faith to be more accurate. Unless an event is such that it causes the Fund to determine that the closing prices for one or more securities do not represent readily available reliable market value quotations at the time the Fund determines its NAV, events that occur between the time of the close of the foreign market on which they are traded and the close of regular trading on the NYSE will not be reflected in the Funds NAV. Investments in securities maturing in 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost, which, when combined with accrued interest, approximates market value. | |
Options that are traded over-the-counter will be valued using one of three methods: (1) dealer quotes, (2) industry models with objective inputs, or (3) by using a benchmark arrived at by comparing prior-day dealer quotes with the corresponding change in the underlying security. Exchange traded options will be valued using the last reported sale. If no last sale is reported, exchange traded options will be valued using an industry accepted model such as Black Scholes. Options on currencies purchased by the Fund are valued at their last bid price in the case of listed options or at the average of the last bid prices obtained from dealers in the case of over-the-counter options. | |
B. | Security Transactions and Revenue Recognition. Security transactions are recorded on the trade date. Realized gains or losses on sales of investments are calculated on the identified cost basis. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. Premium amortization and discount accretion are determined using the effective yield method. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, or in the case of some foreign dividends, when the information becomes available to the Fund. |
C. | Foreign Currency Translation. The books and records of the Fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. Any foreign currency amounts are translated into U.S. dollars on the following basis: |
(1) | Market value of investment securities, other assets and liabilities at the exchange rates prevailing at the end of the day. | |
(2) | Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and expenses at the rates of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions. |
Although the net assets and the market values are presented at the foreign exchange rates at the end of the day, the Fund does not isolate the portion of the results of operations resulting from changes in foreign exchange rates on investments from the fluctuations arising from changes in market prices of securities held. Such fluctuations are included with the net realized and unrealized gains or losses from investments. For securities, which are subject to foreign withholding tax upon disposition, liabilities are recorded on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities for the estimated tax withholding based on the securities current market value. Upon disposition, realized gains or losses on such securities are recorded net of foreign withholding tax. Reported net realized foreign exchange gains or losses arise from sales of foreign currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions, the difference between the amounts of dividends, interest, and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the Funds books and the U.S. dollar equivalent of the amounts actually received or paid. Net unrealized foreign exchange gains and losses arise from changes in the value of assets and liabilities other than investments in securities at period end, resulting from changes in the exchange rate. Foreign security and currency |
12
transactions may involve certain considerations and risks not typically associated with investing in U.S. companies and U.S. government securities. These risks include, but are not limited to, revaluation of currencies and future adverse political and economic developments which could cause securities and their markets to be less liquid and prices more volatile than those of comparable U.S. companies and U.S. government securities. | |
D. | Forward Foreign Currency Contracts. The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency contracts primarily to hedge against foreign currency exchange rate risks on their non-U.S. dollar denominated investment securities. When entering into a currency forward contract, the Fund agrees to receive or deliver a fixed quantity of foreign currency for an agreed-upon price on an agreed future date. These contracts are valued daily and the Funds net equity therein, representing unrealized gain or loss on the contracts as measured by the difference between the forward foreign exchange rates at the dates of entry into the contracts and the forward rates at the reporting date, is included in the statement of assets and liabilities. Realized and unrealized gains and losses on forward foreign currency contracts are included on the Statement of Operations. These instruments involve market and/or credit risk in excess of the amount recognized in the statement of assets and liabilities. Risks arise from the possible inability of counterparties to meet in terms of their contracts and from movement in currency and securities values and interest rates. |
E. | Distributions to Shareholders. Dividends from net investment income and net realized gains, if any, are declared and paid quarterly by the Fund. Distributions are determined annually in accordance with federal tax principles, which may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies. The Fund may make distributions on a more frequent basis to comply with the distribution requirements of the Internal Revenue Code. Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. |
The Fund intends to make regular quarterly distributions based on the past and projected performance of the Fund. The tax treatment and characterization of the Funds distributions may vary significantly from time to time depending on whether the Fund has gains or losses on the call options written on its portfolio versus gains or losses on the equity securities in the portfolio. The Funds distributions will normally reflect past and projected net investment income, and may include income from dividends and interest, capital gains and/or a return of capital. The final composition of the tax characteristics of the distributions cannot by determined with certainty until after the end of the year, and will be reported to shareholders at that time. The amount of quarterly distributions will vary, depending on a number of factors. As portfolio and market conditions change, the rate of dividends on the common shares will change. There can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to declare a dividend in each period. The Fund estimates that all prior distributions for the tax year commencing on January 1, 2006, will be comprised of approximately 5% net investment income and 95% short term capital gain. | |
F. | Federal Income Taxes. It is the policy of the Fund to comply with subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and related excise tax provisions applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute substantially all of its net investment income and any net realized capital gains to its shareholders. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required. No capital gain distributions shall be made until any capital loss carryforwards have been fully utilized or expired. |
G. | Use of Estimates. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. |
H. | Securities Lending. Under an agreement with The Bank of New York (BNY) the Fund has the option to temporarily loan up to 30% of its managed assets to brokers, dealers or other financial institutions in exchange for a negotiated lenders fee. The borrower is required |
13
to fully collateralize the loans with cash or U.S. government securities. Generally, in the event of counterparty default, the Fund has the right to use collateral to offset losses incurred. There would be potential loss to the Fund in the event the Fund is delayed or prevented from exercising its right to dispose of the collateral. The Fund bears the risk of loss with respect to the investment of collateral. Engaging in securities lending could have a leveraging effect, which may intensify the credit, market and other risks associated with investing in the Fund. | |
I. | Organization Expenses and Offering Costs. Costs incurred with the offering of common shares were recorded as a reduction of capital paid in excess of par applicable to common shares. Organization expenses are expensed as incurred. |
J. | Options Contracts. The Fund may purchase put and call options and may write (sell) put options and covered call options. The premium received by the Fund upon the writing of a put or call option is included in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a liability which is subsequently marked-to-market until it is exercised or closed, or it expires. The Fund will realize a gain or loss upon the expiration or closing of the option contract. When an option is exercised, the proceeds on sales of the underlying security for a written call option or purchased put option or the purchase cost of the security for a written put option or a purchased call option is adjusted by the amount of premium received or paid. The risk in writing a call option is that the Fund gives up the opportunity for profit if the market price of the security increases and the option is exercised. The risk in writing a put option is that the Fund may incur a loss if the market price of the security decreases and the option is exercised. The risk in buying an option is that the Fund pays a premium whether or not the option is exercised. Risks may also arise from an illiquid secondary market or from the inability of counterparties to meet the terms of the contract. |
K. | Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may invest in repurchase agreements only with government securities dealers recognized by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Under such agreements, the seller of the security agrees to repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon time and price. The resale price is in excess of the purchase price and reflects an agreed upon interest rate for the period of time the agreement is outstanding. The period of the repurchase agreements is usually short, from overnight to one week, while the underlying securities generally have longer maturities. The Fund will receive as collateral securities acceptable to it whose market value is equal to at least 100% of the carrying amount of the repurchase agreements, plus accrued interest, being invested by the Fund. The underlying collateral is valued daily on a mark to market basis to assure that the value, including accrued interest is at least equal to the repurchase price. There would be potential loss to the Fund in the event the Fund is delayed or prevented from exercising its right to dispose of the collateral, and it might incur disposition costs in liquidating the collateral. |
NOTE 3 INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEES
ING Investments, LLC (ING Investments or the Investment Adviser), an Arizona limited liability company, is the Investment Adviser of the Fund. The Fund pays an Investment Adviser for its services under the investment management agreement (Management Agreement), a fee, payable monthly, based on an annual rate of 0.75% of the Funds average daily managed assets. For the purposes of the Management Agreement, managed assets are defined as the Funds average daily gross asset value, minus the sum of the Funds accrued and unpaid dividends on any outstanding preferred shares and accrued liabilities (other than liabilities for the principal amount of any borrowings incurred, commercial paper or notes issued by the Fund and the liquidation preference of any outstanding preferred shares). As of August 31, 2006, there were no preferred shares outstanding.
The Investment Adviser entered into a sub-advisory agreement (Sub-Advisory Agreement) with ING Investment Management Co. (ING IM). Subject to policies as the Board or the Investment Adviser might determine, ING IM manages the Funds assets in accordance with the Funds investment objectives, policies and limitations.
ING Funds Services, LLC (the Administrator) serves as Administrator to the Fund. The Fund pays the Administrator for its services a fee based on an annual rate of 0.10% of the Funds average daily managed
14
assets. The Investment Adviser, ING IM, and the Administrator are indirect, wholly-owned subsidiaries of ING Groep N.V. (ING Groep). ING Groep is one of the largest financial services organizations in the world, and offers an array of banking, insurance and asset management services to both individuals and institutional investors.
The Investment Adviser has entered into a written expense limitation agreement (Expense Limitation Agreement) with the Fund under which it will limit the expenses of the Fund, excluding interest, taxes, leverage expenses, and extraordinary expenses to 1.00% of average net assets. The Investment Adviser may at a later day recoup from the Fund fees waived and other expenses assumed by the Investment Adviser during the previous 36 months, but only if, after such reimbursement, the Funds expense ratio does not exceed the percentage described above. The Expense Limitation Agreement is contractual and shall renew automatically for one-year terms unless ING Investments provides written notice of the termination within 90 days of the end of the then current term.
NOTE 4 OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATED AND RELATED PARTIES
At August 31, 2006, the Fund had the following amounts recorded in payable to affiliates on the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities:
Accrued | ||||
Investment | Accrued | |||
Management | Administrative | |||
Fees | Fees | Total | ||
$110,346 | $30,765 | $141,111 |
The Fund has adopted a Retirement Policy covering all Independent Trustees of the Fund who will have served as an Independent Trustee for at least five years at the time of retirement. Benefits under this plan are based on an annual rate as defined in the plan agreement and are recorded as trustee fees in the financial statements.
NOTE 5 PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENT SECURITIES
The cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments for the six months ended August 31, 2006, excluding short-term securities, were $221,434,383 and $233,861,884, respectively.
NOTE 6 CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN
Written option activity for the Fund for the six months ended August 31, 2006 was as follows:
Number of | Premiums | |||||||
Contracts | Received | |||||||
Options outstanding at February 28, 2006
|
2,242,544 | $ | 4,359,982 | |||||
Options written
|
1,805,495 | 25,643,284 | ||||||
Options expired
|
(2,732,850 | ) | (8,954,145 | ) | ||||
Options exercised
|
(958,189 | ) | (17,074,524 | ) | ||||
Options outstanding at August 31, 2006
|
357,000 | $ | 3,974,597 | |||||
NOTE 7 CONCENTRATION OF INVESTMENT RISKS
Foreign Securities and Emerging Markets. The Fund makes significant investments in foreign securities and may invest up to 20% of its managed assets in securities issued by companies located in countries with emerging markets. Investments in foreign securities may entail risks not present in domestic investments. Since investments in securities are denominated in foreign currencies, changes in the relationship of these foreign currencies to the U.S. dollar can significantly affect the value of the investments and earnings of the Fund. Foreign investments may also subject the Fund to foreign government exchange restrictions, expropriation, taxation or other political, social or economic developments, as well as from movements in currency, security value and interest rate, all of which could affect the market and/or credit risk of the investments. The risks of investing in foreign securities can be intensified in the case of investments in issuers located in countries with emerging markets.
Leverage. Although the Fund has no current intention to do so, the Fund is authorized to utilize leverage through the issuance of preferred shares and/or borrowings, including the issuance of debt securities. In the event that the Fund determines in the future to utilize investment leverage, there can be no assurance that such a leveraging strategy will be successful during any period in which it is employed.
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NOTE 8 CAPITAL SHARES
Transaction in capital shares and dollars were as follows:
Six Months | October 31, | |||||||
Ended | 2005(1) to | |||||||
August 31, | February 28, | |||||||
2006 | 2006 | |||||||
Number of Shares
|
||||||||
Shares sold
|
| 18,050,000 | ||||||
Dividends reinvested
|
21,478 | | ||||||
Net increase in shares outstanding
|
21,478 | 18,050,000 | ||||||
Shares sold
|
$ | | $ | 344,033,000 | ||||
Dividends reinvested
|
434,285 | | ||||||
Net increase
|
$ | 434,285 | $ | 344,033,000 | ||||
(1) | Commencement of operations. |
(2) | Proceeds from sales of shares net of sales load paid of $16,245,000 and offering costs of $722,000. |
NOTE 9 FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
The amount of distributions from net investment income and net realized capital gains are determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations, which may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies. These book/tax differences may be either temporary or permanent. Permanent differences are reclassified within the capital accounts based on their federal tax-basis treatment; temporary differences are not reclassified. Key differences include the treatment of short-term capital gains, foreign currency transactions, and wash sale deferrals. Distributions in excess of net investment income and/or net realized capital gains for tax purposes are reported as distributions of paid-in capital.
Dividends paid by the Fund from net investment income and distributions of net realized short-term capital gains are, for federal income tax purposes, taxable as ordinary income to shareholders.
The tax composition of dividends and distributions to shareholders was as follows(1):
Six Months Ended | October 31, 2005(1) | |
August 31, 2006 | to February 28, 2006 | |
Ordinary | Ordinary | |
Income | Income | |
$16,791,150 | $2,798,525 |
(1) | Composition of dividends and distributions presented herein differ from final amounts based on the Funds tax year-end of December 31, 2005. |
The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the expiration dates of the capital loss carryforwards which may be used to offset future realized capital gains for federal income tax purposes as of the tax year ended December 31, 2005 were:
Post-October | ||||||||
Undistributed | Undistributed | Unrealized | Capital | Capital | ||||
Ordinary | Long Term | Appreciation/ | Losses | Loss | ||||
Income | Capital Gains | Depreciation | Deferred | Carryforwards | ||||
$812,038 | $ | $23,302,192 | $(4,803,692) | $ |
NOTE 10 OTHER ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued FASB Interpretation 48 (FIN 48), Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes. This standard defines the threshold for recognizing the benefits of tax-return positions in the financial statements as more-likely-than-not to be sustained by the taxing authority and requires measurement of a tax position meeting the more-likely-than-not criterion, based on the largest benefit that is more than 50 percent likely to be realized. FIN 48 is effective as of the beginning of the first fiscal year beginning after December 15, 2006, with early application permitted if no interim financial statements have been issued. At adoption, companies must adjust their financial statements to reflect only those tax positions that are more likely-than-not to be sustained as of the adoption date.
On September 15, 2006, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 157 (SFAS No. 157), Fair Value Measurements. The new accounting statement defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value in generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), and expands disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS No. 157 defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date ( an exit price). SFAS No. 157 also stipulates that, as a market-based measurement, fair value measurement should be determined based on the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability, and establishes a fair value hierarchy that distinguishes between (a) market participant assumptions developed based on market data obtained from sources independent of the reporting entity (observable inputs) and (b) the reporting entitys own assumptions about market participant assumptions developed based on the best information available in the circumstances (unobservable inputs). SFAS No. 157 is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. As of August 31, 2006, the Fund is currently
16
assessing the impact, if any, that will result from adopting Fin 48 and SFAS No. 157.
NOTE 11 INFORMATION REGARDING TRADING OF INGS U.S. MUTUAL FUNDS
In 2004, ING Investments reported to the Boards of Directors/ Trustees (the Boards) of the ING Funds that, like many U.S. financial services companies, ING Investments and certain of its U.S. affiliates have received informal and formal requests for information since September 2003 from various governmental and self-regulatory agencies in connection with investigations related to mutual funds and variable insurance products. ING Investments has advised the Boards that it and its affiliates have cooperated fully with each request.
In addition to responding to regulatory and governmental requests, ING Investments reported that management of U.S. affiliates of ING Groep, including ING Investments (collectively, ING), on their own initiative, have conducted, through independent special counsel and a national accounting firm, an extensive internal review of trading in ING insurance, retirement, and mutual fund products. The goal of this review was to identify any instances of inappropriate trading in those products by third parties or by ING investment professionals and other ING personnel. INGs internal review related to mutual fund trading is now substantially completed. ING has reported that, of the millions of customer relationships that ING maintains, the internal review identified several isolated arrangements allowing third parties to engage in frequent trading of mutual funds within INGs variable insurance and mutual fund products, and identified other circumstances where frequent trading occurred, despite measures taken by ING intended to combat market timing. ING further reported that each of these arrangements has been terminated and fully disclosed to regulators. The results of the internal review were also reported to the independent members of the Boards.
ING Investments has advised the Boards that most of the identified arrangements were initiated prior to INGs acquisition of the businesses in question in the U.S. ING Investments further reported that the companies in question did not receive special benefits in return for any of these arrangements, which have all been terminated.
Based on the internal review, ING Investments has advised the Boards that the identified arrangements do not represent a systemic problem in any of the companies that were involved.
In September 2005, ING Funds Distributor, LLC (IFD), the distributor of certain ING Funds, settled an administrative proceeding with the NASD regarding three arrangements, dating from 1995, 1996 and 1998, under which the administrator to the then-Pilgrim Funds, which subsequently became part of the ING Funds, entered into formal and informal arrangements that permitted frequent trading. Under the terms of the Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent (AWC) with the NASD, under which IFD neither admitted nor denied the allegations or findings, IFD consented to the following sanctions: (i) a censure; (ii) a fine of $1.5 million; (iii) restitution of approximately $1.44 million to certain ING Funds for losses attributable to excessive trading described in the AWC; and (iv) agreement to make certification to NASD regarding the review and establishment of certain procedures.
In addition to the arrangements discussed above, in 2004 ING Investments reported to the Boards that, at that time, these instances include the following, in addition to the arrangements subject to the AWC discussed above:
| Aeltus Investment Management, Inc. (a predecessor entity to ING Investment Management Co.) identified two investment professionals who engaged in extensive frequent trading in certain ING Funds. One was subsequently terminated for cause and incurred substantial financial penalties in connection with this conduct and the second has been disciplined. |
| ReliaStar Life Insurance Company (ReliaStar) entered into agreements seven years ago permitting the owner of policies issued by the insurer to engage in frequent trading and to submit orders until 4pm Central Time. In 2001 ReliaStar also entered into a selling agreement with a broker-dealer that engaged in frequent trading. Employees of ING affiliates were terminated and/or disciplined in connection with these matters. |
| In 1998, Golden American Life Insurance Company entered into arrangements permitting a broker-dealer to frequently trade up to certain specific limits in a fund available in an ING variable annuity product. No employee responsible for this arrangement remains at the company. |
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For additional information regarding these matters, you may consult the Form 8-K and Form 8-K/A for each of four life insurance companies, ING USA Annuity and Life Insurance Company, ING Life Insurance and Annuity Company, ING Insurance Company of America, and ReliaStar Life Insurance Company of New York, each filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) on October 29, 2004 and September 8, 2004. These Forms 8-K and Forms 8-K/A can be accessed through the SECs website at http://www.sec.gov. Despite the extensive internal review conducted through independent special counsel and a national accounting firm, there can be no assurance that the instances of inappropriate trading reported to the Boards are the only instances of such trading respecting the ING Funds.
ING Investments reported to the Boards that ING is committed to conducting its business with the highest standards of ethical conduct with zero tolerance for noncompliance. Accordingly, ING Investments advised the Boards that ING management was disappointed that its voluntary internal review identified these situations. Viewed in the context of the breadth and magnitude of its U.S. business as a whole, ING management does not believe that INGs acquired companies had systemic ethical or compliance issues in these areas. Nonetheless, ING Investments reported that given INGs refusal to tolerate any lapses, it has taken the steps noted below, and will continue to seek opportunities to further strengthen the internal controls of its affiliates.
| ING has agreed with the ING Funds to indemnify and hold harmless the ING Funds from all damages resulting from wrongful conduct by ING or its employees or from INGs internal investigation, any investigations conducted by any governmental or self-regulatory agencies, litigation or other formal proceedings, including any proceedings by the SEC. ING Investments reported to the Boards that ING management believes that the total amount of any indemnification obligations will not be material to ING or its U.S. business. |
| ING updated its Code of Conduct for employees reinforcing its employees obligation to conduct personal trading activity consistent with the law, disclosed limits, and other requirements. |
| The ING Funds, upon a recommendation from ING, updated their respective Codes of Ethics applicable to investment professionals with ING entities and certain other fund personnel, requiring such personnel to pre-clear any purchases or sales of ING Funds that are not systematic in nature (i.e., dividend reinvestment), and imposing minimum holding periods for shares of ING Funds. |
| ING instituted excessive trading policies for all customers in its variable insurance and retirement products and for shareholders of the ING Funds sold to the public through financial intermediaries. ING does not make exceptions to these policies. |
| ING reorganized and expanded its U.S. Compliance Department, and created an Enterprise Compliance team to enhance controls and consistency in regulatory compliance. |
Other Regulatory Matters
The New York Attorney General (the NYAG) and other federal and state regulators are also conducting broad inquiries and investigations involving the insurance industry. These initiatives currently focus on, among other things, compensation and other sales incentives; potential conflicts of interest; potential anti-competitive activity; reinsurance; marketing practices (including suitability); specific product types (including group annuities and indexed annuities); fund selection for investment products and brokerage sales; and disclosure. It is likely that the scope of these industry investigations will further broaden before they conclude. ING has received formal and informal requests in connection with such investigations, and is cooperating fully with each request. In connection with one such investigation, affiliates of ING Investments were named in a petition for relief and cease and desist order filed by the New Hampshire Bureau of Securities Regulation (the NH Bureau) concerning their administration of the New Hampshire state employees deferred compensation plan.
On October 10, 2006, an affiliate of ING Investments entered into an assurance of discontinuance with the NYAG (the NYAG Agreement) regarding the endorsement of its products by the New York State United Teachers Union Member Benefits Trust (NYSUT) and the sale of their products to NYSUT members. Under the terms of the NYAG Agreement, the affiliate of ING Investments, without admitting or denying the NYAGs findings, will distribute $30 million to NYSUT members, and/or former NYSUT
18
members, who participated in the NYSUT-endorsed products at any point between January 1, 2001 and June 30, 2006. The affiliate also agreed with the NYAGs office to develop a one-page disclosure that will further improve transparency and disclosure regarding retirement product fees (the One-Page Disclosure). Pursuant to the terms of the NYAG Agreement, the affiliate has agreed for a five year period to provide its retirement product customers with the One-Page Disclosure.
In addition, on the same date, these affiliates of ING Investments entered into a consent agreement with the NH Bureau (the NH Agreement) to resolve this petition for relief and cease and desist order. Under the terms of the NH Agreement, these affiliates of ING Investments, without admitting or denying the NH Bureaus claims, have agreed to pay $3 million to resolve the matter, and for a five year period to provide their retirement product customers with the One-Page Disclosure described above.
Other federal and state regulators could initiate similar actions in this or other areas of INGs businesses.
These regulatory initiatives may result in new legislation and regulation that could significantly affect the financial services industry, including businesses in which ING is engaged.
In light of these and other developments, ING continuously reviews whether modifications to its business practices are appropriate.
At this time, in light of the current regulatory factors, ING U.S. is actively engaged in reviewing whether any modifications in our practices are appropriate for the future.
There can be no assurance that these matters, or the adverse publicity associated with them, will not result in increased fund redemptions, reduced sale of fund shares, or other adverse consequences to ING Funds.
NOTE 12 SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
Dividends: Subsequent to August 31, 2006, the Fund declared a quarterly distribution dividend of:
Per Share | Declaration | Payable | Record | |||
Amount | Date | Date | Date | |||
$0.465 | 9/22/2006 | 10/16/2006 | 10/04/2006 |
To seek to achieve a return on uninvested cash or for other reasons, the Fund may invest its assets in ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund and/or one or more other money market funds advised by ING affiliates (ING Money Market Funds). The Funds purchase of shares of an ING Money Market Fund will result in the Fund paying a proportionate share of the expenses of the ING Money Market Fund. The Funds Adviser will waive its fee in an amount equal to the advisory fee received by the adviser of the ING Money Market Fund in which the Fund invests resulting from the Funds investment into the ING Money Market Fund.
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Shares | Value | |||||||||
COMMON STOCK: 100.0% | ||||||||||
Australia: 2.2% | ||||||||||
36,751 |
ABC Learning Centres Ltd.
|
$ | 181,730 | |||||||
106,916 |
Amcor Ltd.
|
547,429 | ||||||||
9,303 |
Australian Gas Light Co., Ltd.
|
143,092 | ||||||||
9,737 |
BHP Billiton Ltd.
|
205,100 | ||||||||
173,048 |
BlueScope Steel Ltd.
|
895,593 | ||||||||
23,598 |
Boral Ltd.
|
122,239 | ||||||||
17,431 |
Brambles Industries Ltd.
|
158,705 | ||||||||
159,612 |
Centro Properties Group
|
932,600 | ||||||||
40,019 |
Coles Myer Ltd.
|
427,138 | ||||||||
31,777 |
Commonwealth Bank of Australia
|
1,107,402 | ||||||||
3,053 |
CSL Ltd.
|
118,239 | ||||||||
78,195 |
CSR Ltd.
|
187,664 | ||||||||
52,097 |
Fosters Group Ltd.
|
236,497 | ||||||||
112,542 |
Insurance Australia Group Ltd.
|
460,782 | ||||||||
31,730 |
John Fairfax Holdings Ltd.
|
97,601 | ||||||||
20,843 |
Macquarie Airports Management Ltd.
|
47,325 | ||||||||
35,968 |
National Australia Bank Ltd.
|
994,902 | ||||||||
14,524 |
OneSteel Ltd.
|
47,134 | ||||||||
93,855 |
Qantas Airways Ltd.
|
246,101 | ||||||||
41,267 |
Santos Ltd.
|
352,567 | ||||||||
32,994 |
Suncorp-Metway Ltd.
|
515,660 | ||||||||
55,647 |
Symbion Health Ltd.
|
137,750 | ||||||||
33,577 |
Telstra Corp., Ltd.
|
92,318 | ||||||||
8,255,568 | ||||||||||
Austria: 0.3% | ||||||||||
1,104 |
Boehler-Uddeholm AG
|
59,402 | ||||||||
3,647 |
Erste Bank der Oesterreichischen Sparkassen AG
|
220,591 | ||||||||
14,835 | @ |
IMMOFINANZ Immobilien Anlagen AG
|
171,914 | |||||||
2,366 |
OMV AG
|
126,284 | ||||||||
5,188 |
Telekom Austria AG
|
127,260 | ||||||||
1,130 |
Verbund Oesterreichische
Elektrizitaetswirtschafts AG
|
56,910 | ||||||||
1,876 |
Voestalpine AG
|
71,079 | ||||||||
2,242 |
Wienerberger AG
|
107,587 | ||||||||
941,027 | ||||||||||
Belgium: 0.5% | ||||||||||
3,461 |
Belgacom SA
|
122,153 | ||||||||
1,350 |
Delhaize Group
|
102,755 | ||||||||
23,497 |
Fortis
|
914,956 | ||||||||
2,746 |
InBev NV
|
142,495 | ||||||||
4,251 |
KBC Groep NV
|
457,838 | ||||||||
1,324 |
Solvay SA
|
160,252 | ||||||||
1,170 |
UCB SA
|
68,583 | ||||||||
1,969,032 | ||||||||||
Bermuda: 0.1% | ||||||||||
4,350 |
Frontline Ltd.
|
177,866 | ||||||||
177,866 | ||||||||||
China: 0.0% | ||||||||||
38,000 | @ |
Foxconn International Holdings Ltd.
|
100,332 | |||||||
100,332 | ||||||||||
Denmark: 0.3% | ||||||||||
22 |
AP Moller Maersk A/S
|
183,239 | ||||||||
7,900 |
Danske Bank A/S
|
303,843 | ||||||||
2,325 |
East Asiatic Co., Ltd. A/S
|
99,495 | ||||||||
1,139 |
FLSmidth & Co. A/S
|
49,325 | ||||||||
3,550 |
Novo-Nordisk A/S
|
262,202 | ||||||||
500 | @ |
Topdanmark A/S
|
71,623 | |||||||
3,800 | @ |
Vestas Wind Systems A/S
|
106,434 | |||||||
1,400 | @ |
William Demant Holding
|
103,476 | |||||||
1,179,637 | ||||||||||
Developed Markets: 0.8% | ||||||||||
44,800 |
iShares MSCI
EAFE®
Index Fund
|
3,028,480 | ||||||||
3,028,480 | ||||||||||
Finland: 0.7% | ||||||||||
5,420 |
Cargotec Corp.
|
235,266 | ||||||||
2,250 |
Elisa OYJ
|
45,644 | ||||||||
5,400 |
Fortum OYJ
|
145,107 | ||||||||
1,300 |
Kesko OYJ
|
55,062 | ||||||||
4,450 |
Neste Oil OYJ
|
139,846 | ||||||||
58,450 |
Nokia OYJ
|
1,221,672 | ||||||||
2,100 | @ |
Orion OYJ
|
38,285 | |||||||
11,100 |
Rautaruukki OYJ
|
324,458 | ||||||||
7,100 |
Sampo OYJ
|
146,969 | ||||||||
2,000 |
UPM-Kymmene OYJ
|
47,331 | ||||||||
2,399,640 | ||||||||||
France: 3.9% | ||||||||||
7,289 |
Accor SA
|
466,780 | ||||||||
2,731 |
Air France-KLM
|
74,550 | ||||||||
22,924 | @ |
Alcatel SA
|
287,251 | |||||||
2,688 | @,# |
Atos Origin
|
141,324 | |||||||
23,797 |
AXA SA
|
885,098 | ||||||||
3,563 |
BNP Paribas
|
378,845 | ||||||||
10,951 |
Bouygues
|
576,948 | ||||||||
2,029 |
Capgemini SA
|
111,277 | ||||||||
5,424 |
Carrefour SA
|
334,854 | ||||||||
2,366 |
Casino Guichard Perrachon SA
|
203,098 | ||||||||
11,295 |
Cie de Saint-Gobain
|
837,961 | ||||||||
1,489 | # |
Cie Generale DOptique Essilor International
SA
|
154,173 | |||||||
8,905 |
Compagnie Generale des Etablissements Michelin
|
604,800 | ||||||||
17,329 |
Credit Agricole SA
|
704,160 | ||||||||
10,057 |
Gaz de France
|
374,280 | ||||||||
4,603 |
Groupe Danone
|
633,406 | ||||||||
4,460 |
LOreal SA
|
467,009 | ||||||||
1,682 |
Lafarge SA
|
216,847 | ||||||||
2,124 |
Lagardere SCA
|
155,669 | ||||||||
4,579 |
LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA
|
471,690 | ||||||||
1,522 |
M6-Metropole Television
|
47,524 | ||||||||
966 |
PPR
|
133,378 | ||||||||
1,227 |
Publicis Groupe
|
48,468 | ||||||||
13,325 |
Sanofi-Aventis
|
1,196,739 | ||||||||
7,583 |
Societe Generale
|
1,224,821 | ||||||||
11,830 |
Suez SA
|
506,524 | ||||||||
14,318 |
Technip SA
|
825,673 | ||||||||
18,444 |
Total SA
|
1,245,484 | ||||||||
1,033 |
Unibail
|
201,610 | ||||||||
2,823 |
Veolia Environnement
|
158,347 | ||||||||
17,037 |
Vivendi
|
585,714 | ||||||||
14,254,302 | ||||||||||
Germany: 2.3% | ||||||||||
4,460 |
Adidas AG
|
213,451 | ||||||||
1,052 |
Allianz AG
|
178,807 | ||||||||
2,814 |
Beiersdorf AG
|
156,107 | ||||||||
2,484 |
Celesio AG
|
126,824 | ||||||||
10,461 |
Deutsche Bank AG
|
1,195,781 | ||||||||
9,353 |
Deutsche Lufthansa AG
|
185,221 | ||||||||
4,623 |
Deutsche Post AG
|
117,086 | ||||||||
35,004 |
Deutsche Telekom AG
|
512,091 | ||||||||
1,938 |
EON AG
|
246,010 | ||||||||
435 |
Fresenius Medical Care AG & Co. KGaA
|
57,345 | ||||||||
19,321 |
Hochtief AG
|
1,097,817 |
20
Shares | Value | |||||||||
Germany (continued) | ||||||||||
8,867 | @ |
Infineon Technologies AG
|
$ | 104,506 | ||||||
1,672 |
Merck KGaA
|
165,772 | ||||||||
2,269 |
Metro AG
|
133,216 | ||||||||
7,374 |
Muenchener Rueckversicherungs AG
|
1,108,656 | ||||||||
10,103 |
Salzgitter AG
|
905,023 | ||||||||
3,020 |
SAP AG
|
576,573 | ||||||||
1,983 |
Siemens AG
|
168,474 | ||||||||
14,961 |
ThyssenKrupp AG
|
508,977 | ||||||||
2,541 |
TUI AG
|
49,849 | ||||||||
5,543 |
Volkswagen AG
|
442,506 | ||||||||
333 |
Wincor Nixdorf AG
|
46,500 | ||||||||
8,296,592 | ||||||||||
Greece: 0.3% | ||||||||||
1,530 |
Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Co. SA
|
50,412 | ||||||||
5,728 |
Cosmote Mobile Telecommunications SA
|
133,153 | ||||||||
11,686 |
EFG Eurobank Ergasias SA
|
353,307 | ||||||||
3,352 |
Hellenic Petroleum SA
|
43,709 | ||||||||
6,416 |
National Bank of Greece SA
|
265,018 | ||||||||
3,700 |
OPAP SA
|
131,303 | ||||||||
1,149 |
Titan Cement Co. SA
|
57,059 | ||||||||
1,033,961 | ||||||||||
Hong Kong: 0.7% | ||||||||||
63,000 |
Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd.
|
117,501 | ||||||||
31,500 |
Esprit Holdings Ltd.
|
261,545 | ||||||||
129,355 |
Hang Lung Properties Ltd.
|
275,571 | ||||||||
32,096 |
Henderson Land Development Co., Ltd.
|
181,241 | ||||||||
12,000 |
Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd.
|
81,365 | ||||||||
84,000 |
HongKong Electric Holdings
|
401,635 | ||||||||
34,000 |
Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.
|
308,431 | ||||||||
35,000 |
New World Development Ltd.
|
62,738 | ||||||||
118,074 |
PCCW Ltd.
|
73,721 | ||||||||
124,000 |
Sino Land Co.
|
208,988 | ||||||||
11,000 |
Swire Pacific Ltd.
|
120,246 | ||||||||
7,000 |
Television Broadcasts Ltd.
|
39,731 | ||||||||
32,000 |
Wharf Holdings Ltd.
|
108,058 | ||||||||
37,000 |
Wing Hang Bank Ltd.
|
355,454 | ||||||||
2,596,225 | ||||||||||
Ireland: 0.5% | ||||||||||
23,263 |
Allied Irish Banks PLC
|
607,489 | ||||||||
8,023 |
CRH PLC
|
277,709 | ||||||||
33,088 |
Depfa Bank PLC
|
617,575 | ||||||||
2,597 | @ |
Elan Corp. PLC
|
42,882 | |||||||
5,800 | @ |
Grafton Group PLC
|
79,412 | |||||||
15,987 |
Independent News & Media PLC
|
50,732 | ||||||||
4,065 |
Irish Life & Permanent PLC
|
104,634 | ||||||||
5,960 |
Kerry Group PLC
|
132,810 | ||||||||
1,913,243 | ||||||||||
Italy: 1.7% | ||||||||||
3,132 |
Autogrill S.p.A.
|
47,460 | ||||||||
3,801 |
Autostrade S.p.A.
|
107,713 | ||||||||
32,282 |
Banca Fideuram S.p.A.
|
207,125 | ||||||||
112,757 |
Banca Intesa S.p.A.
|
754,734 | ||||||||
1,768 |
Banche Popolari Unite Scpa
|
49,923 | ||||||||
162,799 |
Capitalia S.p.A.
|
1,420,050 | ||||||||
33,967 |
ENI S.p.A.
|
1,038,581 | ||||||||
8,212 | @ |
Fiat S.p.A.
|
117,709 | |||||||
14,760 |
Fondiaria-Sai S.p.A.
|
624,724 | ||||||||
1,858 |
Italcementi S.p.A.
|
45,827 | ||||||||
1,203 |
Lottomatica S.p.A.
|
46,545 | ||||||||
3,566 |
Luxottica Group S.p.A.
|
103,255 | ||||||||
10,495 |
Mediaset S.p.A.
|
121,219 | ||||||||
128,750 |
Pirelli & C S.p.A.
|
112,274 | ||||||||
122,327 |
Seat Pagine Gialle S.p.A.
|
57,106 | ||||||||
19,084 |
Telecom Italia S.p.A.
|
52,839 | ||||||||
220,315 |
Telecom Italia RNC
|
541,848 | ||||||||
224,662 |
Terna S.p.A.
|
639,636 | ||||||||
5,961 |
UniCredito Italiano S.p.A.
|
47,502 | ||||||||
6,136,070 | ||||||||||
Japan: 10.3% | ||||||||||
1,020 |
Acom Co., Ltd.
|
45,517 | ||||||||
400 |
Advantest Corp.
|
38,343 | ||||||||
4,100 |
Aiful Corp.
|
163,718 | ||||||||
22,700 |
Asahi Breweries Ltd.
|
332,686 | ||||||||
63,000 |
Bridgestone Corp.
|
1,335,592 | ||||||||
4,500 |
Canon, Inc.
|
223,552 | ||||||||
28 |
Central Japan Railway Co.
|
302,479 | ||||||||
16,300 |
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
|
360,440 | ||||||||
21,000 |
Dai Nippon Printing Co., Ltd.
|
312,015 | ||||||||
97,000 |
Dainippon Screen Manufacturing Co., Ltd.
|
812,935 | ||||||||
31,000 |
Daiwa Securities Group, Inc.
|
366,933 | ||||||||
15,000 |
Denki Kagaku Kogyo K K
|
57,317 | ||||||||
24 |
East Japan Railway Co.
|
176,848 | ||||||||
9,000 |
Eisai Co., Ltd.
|
427,441 | ||||||||
56,000 |
Fuji Electric Holdings Co., Ltd.
|
282,996 | ||||||||
54,000 |
Fujitsu Ltd.
|
431,022 | ||||||||
2,500 |
Hakuhodo DY Holdings, Inc.
|
166,994 | ||||||||
3,400 |
Hikari Tsushin, Inc.
|
186,924 | ||||||||
97,000 |
Hino Motors Ltd.
|
521,482 | ||||||||
160,000 |
Hitachi Ltd.
|
1,012,693 | ||||||||
11,400 |
Isetan Co., Ltd.
|
191,595 | ||||||||
138 |
Japan Tobacco, Inc.
|
524,162 | ||||||||
14,600 |
JFE Holdings, Inc.
|
592,303 | ||||||||
11,000 |
Kajima Corp.
|
50,973 | ||||||||
5,000 |
Kaneka Corp.
|
45,380 | ||||||||
14,000 |
Kao Corp.
|
372,709 | ||||||||
39,000 |
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.
|
252,782 | ||||||||
13,000 |
Keisei Electric Railway Co., Ltd.
|
78,647 | ||||||||
40 |
Keyence Corp.
|
9,198 | ||||||||
28,000 |
Kintetsu Corp.
|
90,247 | ||||||||
93,000 |
Kobe Steel Ltd.
|
295,942 | ||||||||
1,400 |
Lawson, Inc.
|
48,765 | ||||||||
18,800 |
Leopalace21 Corp.
|
663,493 | ||||||||
24,300 |
Makita Corp.
|
711,934 | ||||||||
7,000 |
Meiji Dairies Corp.
|
43,902 | ||||||||
17 |
Millea Holdings, Inc.
|
311,540 | ||||||||
60,000 |
Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corp.
|
392,739 | ||||||||
11,000 |
Mitsubishi Materials Corp.
|
47,602 | ||||||||
60 |
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.
|
813,951 | ||||||||
31,000 |
Mitsui Chemicals, Inc.
|
217,067 | ||||||||
16,000 |
Mitsui Fudosan Co., Ltd.
|
356,820 | ||||||||
40,000 |
Mitsui OSK Lines Ltd.
|
303,688 | ||||||||
21,000 |
Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Co., Ltd.
|
255,055 | ||||||||
128,000 |
Mitsui Trust Holdings, Inc.
|
1,490,763 | ||||||||
39 |
Mizuho Financial Group, Inc.
|
314,155 | ||||||||
2,000 |
NGK Spark Plug Co., Ltd.
|
40,536 | ||||||||
700 |
Nidec Corp.
|
50,546 | ||||||||
34,000 |
Nikon Corp.
|
612,382 | ||||||||
4,400 |
Nintendo Co., Ltd.
|
899,489 | ||||||||
50 |
Nippon Paper Group, Inc.
|
185,316 | ||||||||
124,000 |
Nippon Steel Corp.
|
516,009 | ||||||||
210 |
Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp.
|
1,057,885 | ||||||||
26,000 |
Nippon Yusen KK
|
160,565 | ||||||||
212,000 |
Nishi-Nippon City Bank Ltd.
|
1,024,727 | ||||||||
92,000 |
Nisshin Steel Co., Ltd.
|
274,742 | ||||||||
2,200 |
Nomura Holdings, Inc.
|
42,210 | ||||||||
170,000 |
Oki Electric Industry Ltd.
|
373,745 | ||||||||
2,000 |
Olympus Corp.
|
59,136 | ||||||||
1,180 |
ORIX Corp.
|
311,538 | ||||||||
900 |
Promise Co., Ltd.
|
40,162 | ||||||||
409 |
Resona Holdings, Inc.
|
1,282,614 | ||||||||
7,700 |
Sankyo Co., Ltd
|
415,577 | ||||||||
43,000 |
Sekisui Chemical Co., Ltd.
|
375,863 |
21
Shares | Value | |||||||||
Japan (continued) | ||||||||||
1,400 |
Seven & I Holdings Co., Ltd.
|
$ | 49,233 | |||||||
210,000 |
Shimizu Corp.
|
1,241,086 | ||||||||
1,600 |
Shinko Electric Industries
|
46,263 | ||||||||
107,000 |
Shinko Securities Co., Ltd.
|
429,938 | ||||||||
34,800 |
Showa Shell Sekiyu KK
|
387,650 | ||||||||
141,100 | @ |
Sojitz Corp.
|
495,236 | |||||||
23,000 |
Sompo Japan Insurance, Inc.
|
302,679 | ||||||||
3,600 |
Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd.
|
46,302 | ||||||||
44,000 |
Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd.
|
180,273 | ||||||||
9 |
Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Inc.
|
100,937 | ||||||||
6,500 |
Suzuken Co., Ltd.
|
242,065 | ||||||||
433,000 |
Taisei Corp.
|
1,551,896 | ||||||||
22,000 |
Takashimaya Co., Ltd.
|
275,975 | ||||||||
15,500 |
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
|
1,024,215 | ||||||||
6,750 |
Takefuji Corp.
|
363,299 | ||||||||
11,000 |
Tobu Railway Co., Ltd.
|
56,469 | ||||||||
55,000 |
Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc.
|
1,566,478 | ||||||||
6,600 |
Tokyo Electron Ltd.
|
432,251 | ||||||||
9,000 |
Tokyo Gas Co., Ltd.
|
47,741 | ||||||||
1,300 |
Tokyo Seimitsu Co., Ltd.
|
62,430 | ||||||||
9,000 |
Toppan Printing Co., Ltd.
|
101,640 | ||||||||
87,000 |
Toshiba Corp.
|
617,082 | ||||||||
142,000 |
Tosoh Corp.
|
540,245 | ||||||||
147,000 |
Toyobo Co., Ltd.
|
389,040 | ||||||||
24,200 |
Toyota Motor Corp.
|
1,307,815 | ||||||||
2,000 |
Toyota Tsusho Corp.
|
52,444 | ||||||||
18,000 |
Ube Industries Ltd. Japan
|
49,039 | ||||||||
40,000 |
UNY Co., Ltd.
|
565,935 | ||||||||
38 |
West Japan Railway Co.
|
161,963 | ||||||||
50,900 |
Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd.
|
1,350,309 | ||||||||
37,794,309 | ||||||||||
Netherlands: 3.0% | ||||||||||
31,846 |
Aegon NV
|
569,042 | ||||||||
10,751 | @ |
ASML Holding NV
|
236,007 | |||||||
11,384 |
Buhrmann NV
|
154,961 | ||||||||
1,409 |
Euronext NV
|
126,877 | ||||||||
19,294 |
European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. NV
|
582,243 | ||||||||
32,616 | @ |
Koninklijke Ahold NV
|
314,034 | |||||||
12,157 |
Koninklijke DSM NV
|
480,957 | ||||||||
23,055 |
Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV
|
791,022 | ||||||||
17,824 |
Mittal Steel Co. NV
|
604,463 | ||||||||
981 |
Rodamco Europe NV
|
105,968 | ||||||||
68,991 |
Royal Dutch Shell PLC Class A
|
2,386,603 | ||||||||
58,906 |
Royal Dutch Shell PLC Class B
|
2,105,530 | ||||||||
40,633 |
Royal KPN NV
|
501,736 | ||||||||
5,357 |
SBM Offshore NV
|
146,743 | ||||||||
8,842 |
TNT NV
|
332,598 | ||||||||
44,077 |
Unilever NV
|
1,051,076 | ||||||||
1,288 |
Wereldhave NV
|
135,277 | ||||||||
15,672 |
Wolters Kluwer NV
|
396,407 | ||||||||
11,021,544 | ||||||||||
New Zealand: 0.1% | ||||||||||
15,695 |
Fletcher Building Ltd.
|
89,092 | ||||||||
47,373 |
Telecom Corp. of New Zealand Ltd.
|
131,807 | ||||||||
220,899 | ||||||||||
Norway: 0.3% | ||||||||||
9,800 | @ |
Acergy SA
|
174,604 | |||||||
480 |
Aker Kvaerner ASA
|
45,860 | ||||||||
10,400 |
DNB NOR ASA
|
134,589 | ||||||||
2,200 |
Norsk Hydro ASA
|
56,667 | ||||||||
3,150 |
Orkla ASA
|
154,313 | ||||||||
7,840 | @ |
Petroleum Geo-Services ASA
|
408,467 | |||||||
1,550 |
Statoil ASA
|
41,849 | ||||||||
11,400 |
Telenor ASA
|
144,370 | ||||||||
5,300 |
Yara International ASA
|
78,237 | ||||||||
1,238,956 | ||||||||||
Portugal: 0.1% | ||||||||||
50,492 |
Banco Comercial Portugues SA
|
155,290 | ||||||||
3,687 |
Banco Espirito Santo SA
|
56,629 | ||||||||
27,874 |
Electricidade de Portugal SA
|
112,198 | ||||||||
11,582 |
Portugal Telecom SGPS SA
|
145,567 | ||||||||
29,425 |
Sonae SGPS SA
|
49,014 | ||||||||
518,698 | ||||||||||
Singapore: 0.3% | ||||||||||
58,000 |
CapitaLand Ltd.
|
175,121 | ||||||||
95,000 |
ComfortDelgro Corp., Ltd.
|
90,458 | ||||||||
80,000 |
Fraser and Neave Ltd.
|
201,998 | ||||||||
7,000 |
Singapore Airlines Ltd.
|
58,687 | ||||||||
22,000 |
Singapore Press Holdings Ltd.
|
55,591 | ||||||||
95,000 |
Singapore Telecommunications Ltd.
|
150,117 | ||||||||
50,000 |
United Overseas Bank Ltd.
|
495,319 | ||||||||
1,227,291 | ||||||||||
Spain: 1.6% | ||||||||||
4,734 |
Abertis Infraestructuras SA
|
115,584 | ||||||||
2,522 |
Acerinox SA
|
47,506 | ||||||||
4,085 |
Altadis SA
|
193,484 | ||||||||
9,544 |
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA
|
218,318 | ||||||||
146,454 |
Banco Santander Central Hispano SA
|
2,274,697 | ||||||||
30,087 |
Endesa SA
|
1,050,413 | ||||||||
5,362 |
Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas SA
|
418,244 | ||||||||
3,386 |
Inditex SA
|
152,595 | ||||||||
1,119 |
Metrovacesa SA
|
105,906 | ||||||||
12,643 |
Repsol YPF SA
|
363,755 | ||||||||
58,978 |
Telefonica SA
|
1,012,421 | ||||||||
5,952,923 | ||||||||||
Sweden: 1.0% | ||||||||||
7,600 |
Atlas Copco AB
|
183,832 | ||||||||
5,000 |
Castellum AB
|
53,807 | ||||||||
3,700 |
Electrolux AB
|
57,215 | ||||||||
5,000 |
Getinge AB
|
91,142 | ||||||||
4,300 |
Kungsleden AB
|
41,670 | ||||||||
1,250 | @ |
Modern Times Group AB
|
65,153 | |||||||
8,850 |
Nobia AB
|
275,416 | ||||||||
5,000 |
Scania AB
|
237,420 | ||||||||
4,600 |
Securitas AB
|
80,993 | ||||||||
3,600 |
SKF AB
|
51,551 | ||||||||
7,200 |
Ssab Svenskt Stal AB
|
138,552 | ||||||||
3,200 |
Svenska Cellulosa AB
|
137,096 | ||||||||
28,300 |
Svenska Handelsbanken AB
|
738,307 | ||||||||
5,200 |
Swedish Match AB
|
87,934 | ||||||||
203,000 |
Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson
|
676,750 | ||||||||
31,000 |
TeliaSonera AB
|
191,798 | ||||||||
2,200 |
Trelleborg AB
|
42,764 | ||||||||
9,200 |
Volvo AB
|
524,110 | ||||||||
3,675,510 | ||||||||||
Switzerland: 3.0% | ||||||||||
3,001 |
Adecco SA
|
175,264 | ||||||||
10,883 |
Ciba Specialty Chemicals AG
|
609,984 | ||||||||
7,496 |
Compagnie Financiere Richemont AG
|
356,267 | ||||||||
15,323 |
Credit Suisse Group
|
854,034 | ||||||||
805 |
Kuehne & Nagel International AG
|
56,637 | ||||||||
2,829 | @ |
Logitech International SA
|
61,471 | |||||||
5,126 |
Nestle SA
|
1,761,145 | ||||||||
17,681 |
Novartis AG
|
1,008,665 | ||||||||
3,602 |
Phonak Holding AG
|
214,964 | ||||||||
13,835 |
Roche Holding AG
|
2,549,122 |
22
Shares | Value | |||||||||
Switzerland (continued) | ||||||||||
8,991 |
Schindler Holding AG
|
$ | 468,743 | |||||||
11,029 |
STMicroelectronics NV
|
181,766 | ||||||||
1,383 |
Swatch Group AG
|
54,547 | ||||||||
343 |
Swisscom AG
|
115,209 | ||||||||
32,451 |
UBS AG
|
1,834,433 | ||||||||
3,229 |
Zurich Financial Services AG
|
736,042 | ||||||||
11,038,293 | ||||||||||
United Kingdom: 9.1% | ||||||||||
74,649 |
Amvescap PLC
|
770,539 | ||||||||
1,703 |
Anglo American PLC
|
73,686 | ||||||||
33,775 |
AstraZeneca PLC
|
2,191,765 | ||||||||
3,941 |
Aviva PLC
|
55,383 | ||||||||
79,817 |
Barclays PLC
|
1,000,009 | ||||||||
2,779 |
Barratt Developments PLC
|
52,571 | ||||||||
22,846 |
Boots Group PLC
|
335,394 | ||||||||
225,011 |
BP PLC
|
2,553,273 | ||||||||
24,686 |
Brambles Industries PLC
|
216,365 | ||||||||
17,479 | @ |
British Airways PLC
|
136,697 | |||||||
15,482 |
British American Tobacco PLC
|
425,408 | ||||||||
265,628 |
BT Group PLC
|
1,248,578 | ||||||||
21,829 |
Cable & Wireless PLC
|
51,010 | ||||||||
4,688 |
Cadbury Schweppes PLC
|
50,000 | ||||||||
5,019 |
Carnival PLC
|
215,573 | ||||||||
9,439 |
Carphone Warehouse Group PLC
|
50,501 | ||||||||
9,147 |
Collins Stewart Tullett PLC
|
135,735 | ||||||||
48,798 |
Corus Group PLC
|
364,321 | ||||||||
3,462 | @ |
CSR PLC
|
77,294 | |||||||
29,450 |
Davis Service Group PLC
|
271,668 | ||||||||
50,463 |
DSG International PLC
|
197,070 | ||||||||
11,868 |
EMI Group PLC
|
60,445 | ||||||||
43,989 |
First Choice Holidays PLC
|
177,835 | ||||||||
8,464 |
Firstgroup PLC
|
75,263 | ||||||||
8,957 |
GKN PLC
|
52,008 | ||||||||
48,184 |
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
|
1,366,987 | ||||||||
29,201 |
Hammerson PLC
|
707,074 | ||||||||
91,907 |
HBOS PLC
|
1,755,143 | ||||||||
110,614 |
HSBC Holdings PLC
|
2,007,246 | ||||||||
16,088 |
Intercontinental Hotels Group PLC
|
281,624 | ||||||||
290,902 |
International Power PLC
|
1,758,982 | ||||||||
23,316 |
Ladbrokes PLC
|
169,912 | ||||||||
148,857 |
Legal & General Group PLC
|
372,789 | ||||||||
44,466 |
LogicaCMG PLC
|
131,885 | ||||||||
68,663 |
Marks & Spencer Group PLC
|
774,391 | ||||||||
1,504 |
Next PLC
|
47,733 | ||||||||
114,411 |
Old Mutual PLC
|
356,997 | ||||||||
7,986 |
Reckitt Benckiser PLC
|
331,580 | ||||||||
11,354 |
Resolution PLC
|
128,625 | ||||||||
137,958 |
Rexam PLC
|
1,425,613 | ||||||||
21,977 |
Rio Tinto PLC
|
1,108,724 | ||||||||
274,531 |
Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Group
|
723,898 | ||||||||
72,456 |
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC
|
2,457,683 | ||||||||
34,093 |
SABMiller PLC
|
671,626 | ||||||||
55,939 |
Scottish & Newcastle PLC
|
586,261 | ||||||||
15,057 |
Smith & Nephew PLC
|
130,608 | ||||||||
11,447 |
Sportingbet PLC
|
55,217 | ||||||||
45,478 |
Stagecoach Group PLC
|
100,405 | ||||||||
48,487 |
Taylor Woodrow PLC
|
316,673 | ||||||||
93,780 |
Tesco PLC
|
673,963 | ||||||||
229,972 |
Tomkins PLC
|
1,246,839 | ||||||||
1,857 |
Travis Perkins PLC
|
59,603 | ||||||||
42,325 |
Unilever PLC
|
1,011,835 | ||||||||
100,226 |
United Business Media PLC
|
1,177,689 | ||||||||
358,562 |
Vodafone Group PLC
|
777,072 | ||||||||
33,553,068 | ||||||||||
United States: 56.9% | ||||||||||
12,900 |
3M Co.
|
924,930 | ||||||||
26,000 |
Abbott Laboratories
|
1,266,200 | ||||||||
35,700 | @ |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
|
892,143 | |||||||
37,600 |
Aetna, Inc.
|
1,401,352 | ||||||||
14,500 |
Alcoa, Inc.
|
414,555 | ||||||||
31,800 |
Allstate Corp.
|
1,842,492 | ||||||||
33,200 |
Altria Group, Inc.
|
2,773,196 | ||||||||
20,900 |
American Express Co.
|
1,098,086 | ||||||||
42,400 |
American International Group, Inc.
|
2,705,968 | ||||||||
17,400 |
AmerisourceBergen Corp.
|
768,384 | ||||||||
18,800 | @ |
Amgen, Inc.
|
1,277,084 | |||||||
35,100 |
Anheuser-Busch Cos., Inc.
|
1,733,238 | ||||||||
11,500 | @ |
Apollo Group, Inc.
|
577,415 | |||||||
14,100 | @ |
Apple Computer, Inc.
|
956,685 | |||||||
34,900 |
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.
|
1,436,833 | ||||||||
180,600 |
AT&T, Inc.
|
5,622,078 | ||||||||
18,400 | @ |
Autodesk, Inc.
|
639,584 | |||||||
74,500 |
Bank of America Corp.
|
3,834,515 | ||||||||
8,200 |
Bear Stearns Cos., Inc.
|
1,068,870 | ||||||||
12,600 |
BellSouth Corp.
|
513,072 | ||||||||
25,700 |
Best Buy Co., Inc.
|
1,207,900 | ||||||||
8,500 | @ |
Big Lots, Inc.
|
155,975 | |||||||
17,000 | @ |
BMC Software, Inc.
|
452,540 | |||||||
30,300 |
Boeing Co.
|
2,269,470 | ||||||||
15,300 |
Campbell Soup Co.
|
574,821 | ||||||||
10,800 |
Caterpillar, Inc.
|
716,580 | ||||||||
12,300 |
CBS Corp. Class B
|
351,165 | ||||||||
60,200 |
Chevron Corp.
|
3,876,880 | ||||||||
25,800 |
Chubb Corp.
|
1,294,128 | ||||||||
13,100 |
Circuit City Stores, Inc.
|
309,291 | ||||||||
194,200 | @ |
Cisco Systems, Inc.
|
4,270,458 | |||||||
81,200 |
Citigroup, Inc.
|
4,007,220 | ||||||||
14,900 | @ |
Citrix Systems, Inc.
|
457,132 | |||||||
30,400 | @ |
Coach, Inc.
|
917,776 | |||||||
67,400 |
Coca-Cola Co.
|
3,020,194 | ||||||||
31,900 | @ |
Comcast Corp.
|
1,116,500 | |||||||
13,300 |
Comerica, Inc.
|
761,425 | ||||||||
30,300 | @ |
Compuware Corp.
|
230,280 | |||||||
48,300 |
ConocoPhillips
|
3,063,669 | ||||||||
7,500 | @ |
Cooper Industries Ltd.
|
614,100 | |||||||
26,100 |
Costco Wholesale Corp.
|
1,221,219 | ||||||||
13,500 | @ |
Coventry Health Care, Inc.
|
732,240 | |||||||
37,800 | @ |
Dell, Inc.
|
852,390 | |||||||
7,000 |
Dominion Resources, Inc.
|
559,230 | ||||||||
15,700 |
Dow Chemical Co.
|
598,641 | ||||||||
25,000 |
Duke Energy Corp.
|
750,000 | ||||||||
12,300 |
Eaton Corp.
|
817,950 | ||||||||
15,500 |
EI DuPont de Nemours & Co.
|
619,535 | ||||||||
19,700 |
Emerson Electric Co.
|
1,618,355 | ||||||||
15,800 |
EOG Resources, Inc.
|
1,024,156 | ||||||||
10,500 |
Equifax, Inc.
|
333,795 | ||||||||
14,500 |
Exelon Corp.
|
884,210 | ||||||||
11,300 | @ |
Express Scripts, Inc.
|
950,104 | |||||||
128,400 |
ExxonMobil Corp.
|
8,688,828 | ||||||||
15,800 |
Fannie Mae
|
831,870 | ||||||||
34,900 |
Federated Department Stores, Inc.
|
1,325,502 | ||||||||
27,500 |
FirstEnergy Corp.
|
1,569,150 | ||||||||
32,300 | @ |
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
|
998,393 | |||||||
21,600 |
General Dynamics Corp.
|
1,459,080 | ||||||||
165,100 |
General Electric Co.
|
5,623,306 | ||||||||
23,100 |
General Mills, Inc.
|
1,252,713 | ||||||||
15,900 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
2,363,535 | ||||||||
3,200 | @ |
Google, Inc.
|
1,211,296 | |||||||
46,400 |
Halliburton Co.
|
1,513,568 | ||||||||
5,300 |
Harman International Industries, Inc.
|
429,936 | ||||||||
93,800 |
Hewlett-Packard Co.
|
3,429,328 | ||||||||
31,700 |
Home Depot, Inc.
|
1,086,993 | ||||||||
42,300 |
Honeywell International, Inc.
|
1,637,856 | ||||||||
13,400 | @ |
Hospira, Inc.
|
490,842 | |||||||
13,700 | @ |
Humana, Inc.
|
834,741 | |||||||
94,500 |
Intel Corp.
|
1,846,530 | ||||||||
25,300 |
International Business Machines Corp.
|
2,048,541 | ||||||||
16,800 |
JC Penney Co., Inc.
|
1,059,072 | ||||||||
48,400 |
Johnson & Johnson
|
3,129,544 |
23
Shares | Value | |||||||||
United States (continued) | ||||||||||
9,000 |
Jones Apparel Group, Inc.
|
$ | 281,700 | |||||||
56,000 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
|
2,556,960 | ||||||||
18,900 | @ |
King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
|
306,558 | |||||||
26,600 |
Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.
|
1,697,346 | ||||||||
9,000 | @ |
Lexmark International, Inc.
|
504,630 | |||||||
25,900 |
Limited Brands, Inc.
|
666,407 | ||||||||
20,100 |
Lincoln National Corp.
|
1,220,070 | ||||||||
18,900 |
Lockheed Martin Corp.
|
1,561,140 | ||||||||
29,400 |
Loews Corp.
|
1,131,312 | ||||||||
25,600 |
Lowes Cos., Inc.
|
692,736 | ||||||||
32,800 | @ |
LSI Logic Corp.
|
264,040 | |||||||
17,500 |
Marathon Oil Corp.
|
1,461,250 | ||||||||
51,400 |
McDonalds Corp.
|
1,845,260 | ||||||||
22,500 |
McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.
|
1,257,975 | ||||||||
21,800 |
McKesson Corp.
|
1,107,440 | ||||||||
73,400 |
Merck & Co., Inc.
|
2,976,370 | ||||||||
15,400 |
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.
|
1,132,362 | ||||||||
36,000 |
Metlife, Inc.
|
1,981,080 | ||||||||
7,100 |
MGIC Investment Corp.
|
410,877 | ||||||||
54,900 |
Micron Technology, Inc.
|
948,672 | ||||||||
143,300 |
Microsoft Corp.
|
3,681,377 | ||||||||
38,700 |
Morgan Stanley
|
2,546,073 | ||||||||
98,200 |
Motorola, Inc.
|
2,295,916 | ||||||||
35,400 |
National City Corp.
|
1,224,132 | ||||||||
28,900 |
National Semiconductor Corp.
|
701,981 | ||||||||
7,400 |
Newmont Mining Corp.
|
379,250 | ||||||||
101,000 |
News Corp., Inc.
|
1,922,030 | ||||||||
26,200 |
Norfolk Southern Corp.
|
1,119,526 | ||||||||
21,100 |
Nucor Corp.
|
1,031,157 | ||||||||
35,000 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp.
|
1,784,650 | ||||||||
22,000 | @ |
Office Depot, Inc.
|
810,480 | |||||||
12,300 |
Omnicom Group
|
1,075,266 | ||||||||
62,500 | @ |
Oracle Corp.
|
978,125 | |||||||
27,300 |
Paychex, Inc.
|
980,343 | ||||||||
11,500 |
Pepsi Bottling Group, Inc.
|
402,615 | ||||||||
50,500 |
PepsiCo, Inc.
|
3,296,640 | ||||||||
117,600 |
Pfizer, Inc.
|
3,241,056 | ||||||||
13,300 |
PPG Industries, Inc.
|
842,688 | ||||||||
83,300 |
Procter & Gamble Co.
|
5,156,270 | ||||||||
23,200 |
Prudential Financial, Inc.
|
1,703,112 | ||||||||
27,400 |
Qualcomm, Inc.
|
1,032,158 | ||||||||
28,000 |
Raytheon Co.
|
1,321,880 | ||||||||
12,300 |
Rohm & Haas Co.
|
542,430 | ||||||||
9,700 |
Safeco Corp.
|
559,787 | ||||||||
18,400 |
Schlumberger Ltd.
|
1,127,920 | ||||||||
8,300 |
Sherwin-Williams Co.
|
428,612 | ||||||||
4,300 |
Snap-On, Inc.
|
187,910 | ||||||||
56,500 |
Southwest Airlines Co.
|
978,580 | ||||||||
50,500 |
Staples, Inc.
|
1,139,280 | ||||||||
44,000 | @ |
Starbucks Corp.
|
1,364,440 | |||||||
10,200 |
Sunoco, Inc.
|
733,482 | ||||||||
13,100 |
Target Corp.
|
633,909 | ||||||||
9,100 |
Temple-Inland, Inc.
|
405,132 | ||||||||
67,200 |
Time Warner, Inc.
|
1,116,864 | ||||||||
31,600 |
TXU Corp.
|
2,092,236 | ||||||||
27,200 | @ |
Unisys Corp.
|
145,520 | |||||||
10,200 |
United States Steel Corp.
|
593,334 | ||||||||
16,300 |
United Technologies Corp.
|
1,022,173 | ||||||||
51,000 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.
|
2,649,450 | ||||||||
69,700 |
US BanCorp.
|
2,235,279 | ||||||||
27,400 |
Valero Energy Corp.
|
1,572,760 | ||||||||
10,750 | @ |
Viacom Inc. Class B
|
390,225 | |||||||
26,500 |
Wachovia Corp.
|
1,447,695 | ||||||||
38,800 |
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
|
1,735,136 | ||||||||
40,800 |
Walgreen Co.
|
2,017,968 | ||||||||
32,800 |
Walt Disney Co.
|
972,520 | ||||||||
8,700 | @ |
Waters Corp.
|
371,055 | |||||||
26,900 | @ |
WellPoint, Inc.
|
2,082,329 | |||||||
55,600 |
Wells Fargo & Co.
|
1,932,100 | ||||||||
8,500 |
Wendys International, Inc.
|
543,150 | ||||||||
22,500 |
Wyeth
|
1,095,750 | ||||||||
208,854,569 | ||||||||||
Total Common Stock
(Cost $341,956,129) |
367,378,035 | |||||||||
PREFERRED STOCK: 0.6% | ||||||||||
Germany: 0.6% | ||||||||||
1,813 |
ProSieben SAT.1 Media AG
|
48,820 | ||||||||
16,641 |
RWE AG
|
1,369,163 | ||||||||
13,855 |
Volkswagen AG
|
782,453 | ||||||||
2,200,436 | ||||||||||
Total Preferred Stock
(Cost $1,708,681) |
2,200,436 | |||||||||
RIGHT: 0.0% | ||||||||||
Italy: 0.0% | ||||||||||
3,801 |
Autotrade S.p.A.
|
5 | ||||||||
Total Right
(Cost $ ) |
5 | |||||||||
WARRANTS: 0.0% | ||||||||||
Switzerland: 0.0% | ||||||||||
343 |
Swisscom AG
|
872 | ||||||||
Total Warrants
(Cost $ ) |
872 | |||||||||
Total Long-Term Investments
(Cost $343,664,810) |
369,579,348 | |||||||||
Principal | ||||||||||
Amount | Value | |||||||||
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT: 0.3% | ||||||||||
Repurchase Agreement: 0.3% | ||||||||||
$ | 932,000 |
Morgan Stanley Repurchase Agreement
dated 08/31/06, 5.250%, due 09/01/06, $932,136 to be
received upon repurchase (Collateralized by $1,985,000
Resolution Funding Corp, Discount Note, Market Value $950,716,
due 01/15/21)
|
$ | 932,000 | ||||||
Total Short-Term Investment
(Cost $932,000) |
932,000 | |||||||||
Total Investments in Securities
(Cost $344,596,810)* |
100.9 | % | $ | 370,511,348 | ||||||||
Other Assets and
Liabilities-Net |
(0.9 | ) | (3,455,043 | ) | ||||||||
Net Assets
|
100.0 | % | $ | 367,056,305 | ||||||||
24
Certain foreign securities have been fair valued in accordance with procedures approved by the Board of Directors/ Trustees (Note 2A) | ||
@
|
Non-income producing security | |
#
|
Securities with purchases pursuant to Rule 144A, under the Securities Act of 1933 and may not be resold subject to that rule except to qualified institutional buyers. These securities have been determined to be liquid under the guidelines established by the Funds Board of Directors/ Trustees | |
*
|
Cost for federal income tax purposes is $344,917,316. Net unrealized appreciation consists of: |
Gross Unrealized Appreciation
|
$ | 32,691,541 | ||
Gross Unrealized Depreciation
|
(7,097,509 | ) | ||
Net Unrealized Appreciation
|
$ | 25,594,032 | ||
Percentage of | ||||
Industry | Net Assets | |||
Advertising
|
0.4 | % | ||
Aerospace/ Defense
|
2.2 | |||
Agriculture
|
1.5 | |||
Airlines
|
0.5 | |||
Apparel
|
0.4 | |||
Auto Manufacturers
|
1.1 | |||
Auto Parts & Equipment
|
0.6 | |||
Banks
|
11.2 | |||
Beverages
|
2.9 | |||
Biotechnology
|
0.4 | |||
Building Materials
|
0.6 | |||
Chemicals
|
1.5 | |||
Commercial Services
|
1.3 | |||
Computers
|
2.4 | |||
Cosmetics/ Personal Care
|
1.7 | |||
Distribution/ Wholesale
|
0.3 | |||
Diversified Financial Services
|
6.1 | |||
Electric
|
3.7 | |||
Electrical Components & Equipment
|
0.9 | |||
Electronics
|
0.6 | |||
Engineering & Construction
|
1.4 | |||
Entertainment
|
0.1 | |||
Equity Fund
|
0.8 | |||
Food
|
2.3 | |||
Forest Products & Paper
|
0.2 | |||
Gas
|
0.2 | |||
Hand/ Machine Tools
|
0.5 | |||
Healthcare Products
|
1.1 | |||
Healthcare Services
|
2.1 | |||
Holding Companies Diversified
|
0.6 | |||
Home Builders
|
0.2 | |||
Home Furnishings
|
0.2 | |||
Household Products/ Wares
|
0.1 | |||
Insurance
|
5.5 | |||
Internet
|
0.3 | |||
Investment Companies
|
0.0 | |||
Iron/ Steel
|
2.0 | |||
Leisure Time
|
0.6 | |||
Lodging
|
0.2 | |||
Machinery Construction &
Mining
|
0.2 | |||
Media
|
2.7 | |||
Metal Fabricate/ Hardware
|
0.0 | |||
Mining
|
0.6 | |||
Miscellaneous Manufacturing
|
2.9 | |||
Office/ Business Equipment
|
0.1 | |||
Oil & Gas
|
9.0 | |||
Oil & Gas Services
|
1.1 | |||
Packaging & Containers
|
0.5 | |||
Pharmaceuticals
|
6.1 | |||
Real Estate
|
1.1 | |||
Real Estate Investment Trust
|
0.1 | |||
Retail
|
5.9 | |||
Semiconductors
|
1.8 | |||
Software
|
1.9 | |||
Telecommunications
|
6.5 | |||
Textiles
|
0.1 | |||
Toys/ Games/ Hobbies
|
0.2 | |||
Transportation
|
1.1 | |||
Water
|
0.0 | |||
Repurchase Agreement
|
0.3 | |||
Other Assets and Liabilities Net
|
(0.9 | ) | ||
Total Net Assets
|
100.0 | % | ||
No. of | Expiration | Strike | Premiums | |||||||||||||||||
Contracts | Date | Price/Rate | Received | Value | ||||||||||||||||
WRITTEN OPTIONS | ||||||||||||||||||||
Call Options Written | ||||||||||||||||||||
236,000 | Nikkei 225 Index | 09/01/06 | 15,480.00 JPY | $ | 754,908 | $ | (1,328,651 | ) | ||||||||||||
6,400 | Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 | 10/02/06 | 3,812.00 EUR | 550,102 | (502,835 | ) | ||||||||||||||
3,400 | FTSE 100 Index | 10/02/06 | 5,912.60 GBP | 581,807 | (490,466 | ) | ||||||||||||||
111,200 | S&P 500® Index | 10/02/06 | 1,303.82 USD | 2,087,780 | (2,383,795 | ) | ||||||||||||||
357,000 | Total Premiums Received: $3,974,598 | $ | 3,974,597 | $ | (4,705,747 | ) | ||||||||||||||
Total Liabilities for Call Options Written: $4,705,747 |
At August 31, 2006 the following forward foreign currency contracts were outstanding for the Fund:
Unrealized | ||||||||||||||||||||
Settlement | In Exchange | Appreciation/ | ||||||||||||||||||
Currency | Buy/Sell | Date | For (USD) | Value | (Depreciation) | |||||||||||||||
Australian Dollars | ||||||||||||||||||||
AUD 10,699,000
|
Sell | 12/07/06 | $ | 8,152,638 | $ | 8,152,267 | $ | 371 | ||||||||||||
Swiss Francs
|
||||||||||||||||||||
CHF 13,225,000
|
Sell | 12/07/06 | 10,810,038 | 10,852,382 | (42,344 | ) | ||||||||||||||
EURO
|
||||||||||||||||||||
EUR 44,840,000
|
Sell | 12/07/06 | 57,641,820 | 57,771,516 | (129,696 | ) | ||||||||||||||
Great British Pound Sterling
|
||||||||||||||||||||
GBP 19,552,000
|
Sell | 12/07/06 | 36,998,250 | 37,275,482 | (277,232 | ) | ||||||||||||||
Japanese Yen
|
||||||||||||||||||||
JPY 4,275,000,000
|
Sell | 12/07/06 | 37,232,190 | 36,914,091 | 318,099 | |||||||||||||||
$ | 150,834,936 | $ | 150,965,738 | $ | (130,802 | ) | ||||||||||||||
25
Information concerning open futures contracts at August 31, 2006 is shown below:
No. of | Notional | Expiration | Unrealized | |||||||||||||
Long Contracts | Contracts | Market Value | Date | Gain (Loss) | ||||||||||||
S&P 500 Future | 2 | 652,800 | 09/15/06 | 1,941 | ||||||||||||
$ | 652,800 | $ | 1,941 | |||||||||||||
26
Supplemental Option Information
Supplemental Call Option Statistics as of
August 31, 2006
|
||
% of Total Net Assets against which calls written
|
67% | |
Average Days to Expiration
|
24 days | |
Average Call Moneyness* at time written
|
ATM | |
Premium received for calls
|
$3,974,598 | |
Value of calls
|
$4,705,747 |
* | Moneyness is the term used to describe the relationship between the price of the underlying asset and the options exercise or strike price. For example, a call (buy) option is considered in-the-money when the value of the underlying asset exceeds the strike price. Conversely, a put (sell) option is considered in-the-money when its strike price exceeds the value of the underlying asset. Options are characterized for the purpose of Moneyness as, in-the-money (ITM), out-of-the-money (OTM) or at-the-money (ATM), where the underlying asset value equals the strike price. |
27
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund, Class I, II & III Trustees
1. | To elect twelve members of the Board of Trustees to represent the interests of the holders of Common Shares of the Fund until the election and qualification of their successors. |
Shares voted | ||||||||||||||||||||
Shares | against or | Shares | Total | |||||||||||||||||
Proposal | voted for | withheld | abstained | Shares Voted | ||||||||||||||||
Class I Trustees
|
R. Barbara Gitenstein | 16,246,067.000 | 159,396.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | |||||||||||||||
Jock Patton | 16,248,211.000 | 157,252.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
David W.C. Putnam | 16,248,720.000 | 156,743.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
John G. Turner | 16,245,620.000 | 159,843.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Class II Trustees
|
John V. Boyer | 16,248,852.000 | 156,611.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | |||||||||||||||
Patricia W. Chadwick | 16,246,102.000 | 159,361.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Walter H. May | 16,248,720.000 | 156,743.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Sheryl K. Pressler | 16,247,752.000 | 157,711.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Class III Trustees
|
J. Michael Earley | 16,250,243.000 | 155,220.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | |||||||||||||||
Patrick W. Kenny | 16,251,102.000 | 154,361.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Shaun P. Mathews | 16,250,492.000 | 154,971.000 | | 16,405,463.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Roger B. Vincent | 16,252,102.000 | 153,361.000 | | 16,405,463.000 |
28
During the period, there were no material changes in the Funds investment objective or policies that were not approved by the shareholders or the Funds charter or by-laws or in the principal risk factors associated with investment in the Fund. There have been no changes in the persons who are primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Funds portfolio.
Dividend Reinvestment Plan
Unless the registered owner of Common Shares elects to receive cash by contacting The Bank of New York (the Plan Agent), all dividends declared on Common Shares of the Fund will be automatically reinvested by the Plan Agent for shareholders in additional Common Shares of the Fund through the Funds Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the Plan). Shareholders who elect not to participate in the Plan will receive all dividends and other distributions in cash paid by check mailed directly to the shareholder of record (or, if the Common Shares are held in street or other nominee name, then to such nominee) by the Plan Agent. Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary and may be terminated or resumed at any time without penalty by notice if received and processed by the Plan Agent prior to the dividend record date; otherwise such termination or resumption will be effective with respect to any subsequently declared dividend or other distribution. Some brokers may automatically elect to receive cash on your behalf and may re-invest that cash in additional Common Shares of the Fund for you. If you wish for all dividends declared on your Common Shares of the Fund to be automatically reinvested pursuant to the Plan, please contact your broker.
The Plan Agent will open an account for each Common Shareholder under the Plan in the same name in which such Common Shareholders Common Shares are registered. Whenever the Fund declares a dividend or other distribution (together, a Dividend) payable in cash, non-participants in the Plan will receive cash and participants in the Plan will receive the equivalent in Common Shares. The Common Shares will be acquired by the Plan Agent for the participants accounts, depending upon the circumstances described below, either (i) through receipt of additional unissued but authorized Common Shares from the Fund (Newly Issued Common Shares) or (ii) by purchase of outstanding Common Shares on the open market (Open-Market Purchases) on the NYSE or elsewhere. Open-market purchases and sales are usually made through a broker affiliated with the Plan Agent. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the closing market price plus estimated brokerage commissions per Common Share is equal to or greater than the net asset value per Common Share, the Plan Agent will invest the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares on behalf of the participants. The number of Newly Issued Common Shares to be credited to each participants account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the Dividend by the net asset value per Common Share on the payment date; provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the closing market value on the payment date, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the closing market price per Common Share on the payment date. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the net asset value per Common Share is greater than the closing market value plus estimated brokerage commissions, the Plan Agent will invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired on behalf of the participants in Open-Market Purchases. In the event of a market discount on the payment date for any Dividend, the Plan Agent will have until the last business day before the next date on which the Common Shares trade on an ex-dividend basis or 30 days after the payment date for such Dividend, whichever is sooner (the Last Purchase Date), to invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired in Open-Market Purchases. It is contemplated that the Fund will pay monthly income Dividends. Therefore, the period during which Open-Market Purchases can be made will exist only from the payment date of each Dividend through the date before the next ex-dividend date, which typically will be approximately ten days. If, before the Plan Agent has completed its Open-Market Purchases, the market price per common share exceeds the net asset value per Common Share, the average per Common Share purchase price paid by the Plan Administrator may exceed the net asset value of the Common Shares, resulting in the acquisition of fewer Common Shares than if the Dividend had been paid in Newly Issued Common Shares on the Dividend payment date. Because of the foregoing difficulty with respect to Open-Market Purchases, the Plan provides that if the Plan Agent is unable to invest the full Dividend amount in Open-Market Purchases during the purchase period or if the market discount shifts to a market premium during the purchase period, the Plan Agent will cease making Open-Market Purchases and will invest the un-invested
29
portion of the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares at the net asset value per common share at the close of business on the Last Purchase Date provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the then current market price per Common Share, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price on the payment date.
The Plan Agent maintains all shareholders accounts in the Plan and furnishes written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information needed by shareholders for tax records. Common Shares in the account of each Plan participant will be held by the Plan Agent on behalf of the Plan participant, and each shareholder proxy will include those shares purchased or received pursuant to the Plan. The Plan Agent will forward all proxy solicitation materials to participants and vote proxies for shares held under the Plan in accordance with the instructions of the participants.
In the case of shareholders such as banks, brokers or nominees which hold shares for others who are the beneficial owners, the Plan Agent will administer the Plan on the basis of the number of Common Shares certified from time to time by the record shareholders name and held for the account of beneficial owners who participate in the Plan.
There will be no brokerage charges with respect to Common Shares issued directly by the Fund. However, each participant will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred in connection with Open-Market Purchases. The automatic reinvestment of Dividends will not relieve participants of any federal, state or local income tax that may be payable (or required to be withheld) on such Dividends. Participants that request a partial or full sale of shares through the Plan Agent are subject to a $15.00 sales fee and a $0.10 per share brokerage commission on purchases or sales, and may be subject to certain other service charges.
The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan. There is no direct service charge to participants with regard to purchases in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants.
All questions concerning the Plan should be directed to the Funds Shareholder Service Department at 1-800-992-0180.
KEY FINANCIAL DATES CALENDAR 2006 DIVIDENDS:
DECLARATION DATE | EX-DIVIDEND DATE | PAYABLE DATE | ||
March 22
|
March 29 | April 17 | ||
June 21
|
July 3 | July 17 | ||
September 20
|
October 2 | October 16 | ||
December 20
|
December 27 | January 15 |
Record date will be two business days after each Ex-Dividend Date. These dates are subject to change.
Stock Data
The Funds common shares are traded on the NYSE (Symbol: IGA).
Repurchase of Securities by Closed-End Companies
In accordance with Section 23(c) of the 1940 Act, and Rule 23c-1 under the 1940 Act the Fund may from time to time purchase shares of beneficial interest of the Fund in the open market, in privately negotiated transactions and/or purchase shares to correct erroneous transactions.
Number of Shareholders
The approximate number of record holders of Common Stock as of August 31, 2006 was 15, which does not include beneficial owners of shares held in the name of brokers of other nominees.
Proxy Voting Information
A description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies related to portfolio securities is available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling Shareholder Services toll-free at 1-800-992-0180; (2) on the Funds website at www.ingfunds.com and (3) on the SECs website at www.sec.gov. Information regarding how the Fund voted proxies related to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available without charge on the Funds website at www.ingfunds.com and on the SECs website at www.sec.gov.
Quarterly Portfolio Holdings
The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Funds Forms N-Q are available on the SECs website at www.sec.gov. The Funds Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the Commissions Public Reference Room in
30
Washington, DC, and information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330; and is available upon request from the Fund by calling Shareholder Services toll-free at 1-800-992-0180.
Certifications
In accordance with Section 303A.12 (a) of the New York Stock Exchange Listed Company Manual, the Fund submitted the Annual CEO Certification on June 19, 2006 certifying that he was not aware, as of that date, of any violation by the Fund of the NYSEs Corporate governance listing standards. In addition, as required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and related SEC rules, the Funds principal executive and financial officers have made quarterly certifications, included in filings with the SEC on Forms N-CSR and N-Q, relating to, among other things, the Funds disclosure controls and procedures and internal controls over financial reporting.
31
Administrator
Distributor
Transfer Agent
Custodian
Legal Counsel
Toll-Free Shareholder Information
PRSAR-UIGA (0806-102606) |
Item 2. Code of Ethics.
Not required for semi-annual filing.
Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.
Not required for semi-annual filing.
Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.
Not required for semi-annual filing.
Item 5. Audit Committee Of Listed Registrants.
Not required for semi-annual filing.
Item 6. Schedule of Investments.
Schedule is included as part of the report to shareholders filed under Item 1 of this Form.
Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-end Management Investment Companies.
Not required for semi-annual filing.
Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-end Management Investment Companies.
Not applicable.
Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-end Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.
None.
Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.
The Board has a Nominating Committee for the purpose of considering and presenting to the Board candidates it proposes for nomination to fill Independent Trustee vacancies on the Board. The Committee currently consists of all Independent Trustees of the Board. (6 individuals). The Nominating Committee operates pursuant to a Charter approved by the Board. The primary purpose of the Nominating Committee is to consider and present to the Board the candidates it proposes for nomination to fill vacancies on the Board. In evaluating candidates, the Nominating Committee may consider a variety of factors, but it has not at this time set any specific minium qualifications that must be met. Specific qualifications of candidates for Board membership will be based on the needs of the Board at the time of nomination.
The Nominating Committee is willing to consider nominations received from shareholders and shall assess shareholder nominees in the same manner as it reviews its own nominees. A shareholder nominee for director should be submitted in writing to the Funds Secretary. Any such shareholder nomination should include at a minimum the following information as to each individual proposed for nomination as trustee: such individuals written consent to be named in the proxy statement as a nominee (if nominated) and to serve as a trustee (if elected), and all information relating to such individual that is required to be disclosed in the solicitation of proxies for election of trustees, or is otherwise required, in each case under applicable federal securities laws, rules and regulations.
The secretary shall submit all nominations received in a timely manner to the Nominating Committee. To be timely, any such submission must be delivered to the Funds Secretary not earlier than the 90th day prior to such meeting and not later than the close of business on the later of the 60th day prior to such meeting or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement of the date of the meeting is first made, by either disclosure in a press release or in a document publicly filed by the Fund with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Item 11. Controls and Procedures.
(a) | Based on our evaluation conducted within 90 days of the filing date, hereof, the design and operation of the registrants disclosure controls and procedures are effective to ensure that material information relating to the registrant is made known to the certifying officers by others within the appropriate entities, particularly during the period in which Forms N-CSR are being prepared, and the registrants disclosure controls and procedures allow timely preparation and review of the information for the registrants Form N-CSR and the officer certifications of such Form N-CSR. | |||
(b) | There were no significant changes in the registrants internal controls that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrants internal control over financial reporting. |
Item 12. Exhibits.
(a)(1) | The Code of Ethics is not required for the semi-annual filing. | |||
(a)(2) | A separate certification for each principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2 under the Act (17 CFR 270.30a-2) is attached hereto as EX-99.CERT. | |||
(a)(3) | Not required for semi-annual filing. | |||
(b) | The officer certifications required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached hereto as EX-99.906CERT. |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
(Registrant): ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund
By |
/s/ James M. Hennessy | |||
James M. Hennessy President and Chief Executive Officer |
||||
Date: |
November 6, 2006 | |||
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
By |
/s/ James M. Hennessy | |||
James M. Hennessy President and Chief Executive Officer |
||||
Date: |
November 6, 2006 | |||
By |
/s/ Todd Modic | |||
Todd Modic Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer |
||||
Date: |
November 6, 2006 | |||