UNITED STATES | |||
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION | |||
Washington, D.C. 20549 | |||
FORM N-CSR | |||
CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED | |||
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES | |||
Investment Company Act file number: (811- 05740) | |||
Exact name of registrant as specified in charter: | Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust | ||
Address of principal executive offices: One Post Office Square, Boston, Massachusetts 02109 | |||
Name and address of agent for service: | Beth S. Mazor, Vice President | ||
One Post Office Square | |||
Boston, Massachusetts 02109 | |||
Copy to: | John W. Gerstmayr, Esq. | ||
Ropes & Gray LLP | |||
800 Boylston Street | |||
Boston, Massachusetts 02199-3600 | |||
Registrants telephone number, including area code: | (617) 292-1000 | ||
Date of fiscal year end: October 31, 2011 | |||
Date of reporting period November 1, 2010 April 30 2011 |
Item 1. Report to Stockholders:
The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940:
Putnam
Managed Municipal
Income Trust
Semiannual report
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Message from the Trustees | 1 | |
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About the fund | 2 | |
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Performance snapshot | 4 | |
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Interview with your funds portfolio manager | 5 | |
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Your funds performance | 11 | |
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Terms and definitions | 13 | |
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Other information for shareholders | 14 | |
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Financial statements | 15 | |
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Message from the Trustees
Dear Fellow Shareholder:
Financial markets and economies around the world continue to show improvement and resilience in the face of many headwinds. While energy and commodity prices have been volatile, suggesting inflationary pressures, corporate profits are strong, merger-and-acquisition activity is recovering, and stock values and dividends are rising.
Putnam believes that markets will remain unsettled over the next several months, roiled by civil unrest in the Middle East and North Africa, sovereign debt issues in Europe, and the lingering economic impact of the disasters in Japan.
Putnams active, research-intensive investment approach is well suited to uncovering opportunities in this environment. We also believe this is an important time to talk to your financial advisor to determine if your investments are in line with your individual goals and appetite for risk.
In developments affecting oversight of your fund, we wish to thank Richard B. Worley and Myra R. Drucker, who have retired from the Board of Trustees, for their many years of dedicated and thoughtful leadership.
Lastly, we would like to take this opportunity to welcome new shareholders to the fund and to thank all of our investors for your continued confidence in Putnam.
About the fund
Potential for income exempt from federal income tax
Municipal bonds can help investors keep more of their investment income while also financing important public projects such as schools, roads, and hospitals. The bonds are typically issued by states and local municipalities to raise funds for building and maintaining public facilities, and they offer income that is generally exempt from federal, state, and local income tax.
Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust has the flexibility to invest in municipal bonds issued by any state in the country. The bonds are backed by the issuing city or town or by revenues collected from usage fees, and have varying degrees of credit risk the risk that the issuer would not be able to repay the bond.
The fund also combines bonds of differing credit quality. In addition to investing in high-quality bonds, the funds managers allocate a portion of the portfolio to lower-rated bonds, which may offer higher income in return for more risk. When deciding whether to invest in a bond, the managers consider factors such as credit risk, interest-rate risk, and the risk that the bond will be prepaid.
The managers are backed by Putnams fixed-income organization, where municipal bond analysts are grouped into sector teams and conduct ongoing research. Once a bond has been purchased, the managers continue to monitor developments that affect the bond market, the sector, and the issuer of the bond.
The goal of this research and active management is to stay a step ahead of the industry and pinpoint opportunities for investors.
Consider these risks before investing: Lower-rated bonds may offer higher yields in return for more risk. Funds that invest in bonds are subject to certain risks including interest-rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds fall. Long-term bonds are more exposed to interest-rate risk than short-term bonds. Unlike bonds, bond funds have ongoing fees and expenses. The fund uses leverage, which involves risk and may increase the volatility of the funds net asset value. The funds shares trade on a stock exchange at market prices, which may be lower than the funds net asset value.
How do closed-end funds differ from open-end funds?
More assets at work While open-end funds need to maintain a cash position to meet redemptions, closed-end funds are not subject to redemptions and can keep more of their assets invested in the market.
Traded like stocks Closed-end fund shares are traded on stock exchanges, and their market prices fluctuate in response to supply and demand, among other factors.
Net asset value vs. market price Like an open-end funds net asset value (NAV) per share, the NAV of a closed-end fund share is equal to the current value of the funds assets, minus its liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding. However, when buying or selling closed-end fund shares, the price you pay or receive is the market price. Market price reflects current market supply and demand and may be higher or lower than the NAV.
2 | 3 |
Data are historical. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return and net asset value will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes. Fund returns in the bar chart are at NAV. See pages 5 and 1112 for additional performance information, including fund returns at market price. Index and Lipper results should be compared with fund performance at NAV. Lipper calculates performance differently than the closed-end funds it ranks, due to varying methods for determining a funds monthly reinvestment NAV.
* Returns for the six-month period are not annualized, but cumulative.
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Interview with your funds portfolio manager
Paul M. Drury, CFA
The final months of 2010 were an unusually turbulent period for the bond markets. How did that volatility affect Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trusts performance over the first half of its fiscal year?
It was a volatile period for the fixed-income markets, especially for municipal bonds. In early November, the Federal Reserve announced it would purchase $600 billion in Treasury bonds over the next several months in a second round of quantitative easing measures, designed in part to keep yields low and encourage investor risk taking. Around this time, data also began to suggest that the U.S. economic recovery was gathering strength. Treasury market yields jumped higher, which in turn put pressure on interest rates in the municipal bond market.
In addition, the medias coverage of state budget challenges took on a more dire tone during the final months of 2010, with predictions of widespread defaults becoming increasingly common. As a result, sentiment turned sharply negative, and investors pulled money out of municipal bond holdings at a rapid pace. In the first quarter of 2011, the municipal bond market was far more stable, but there was still a significant amount of investor uncertainty surrounding a number of issues from interest rates to the potential for tax reform.
Although the fund trailed its benchmark during this period, I am pleased to report that it did outperform the average return of its Lipper peer group for the six months ended April 30, 2011.
You mentioned the recent increase in Treasury rates. How has that affected the municipal bond market?
By way of background, when interest rates increase, the prices of existing bonds
This comparison shows your funds performance in the context of broad market indexes for the six months ended 4/30/11. See pages 4 and 1112 for additional fund performance information. Index descriptions can be found on page 13.
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generally decline as the fixed interest rates they offer become less attractive to investors. So when interest rates in the Treasury market change, the rest of the taxable fixed-income market generally moves with them.
Municipal bonds relation to Treasuries is a little more complex. Because municipal bonds offer tax-exempt income, their yields generally are lower than those of comparable Treasuries, whose interest is taxed as ordinary income. Over the long term, municipal bonds have offered yields between 85% and 100% of comparable Treasuries, broadly speaking. Since 2008, however, amid forced selling and some unusual supply-and-demand characteristics, yields in the municipal market have often been at 100% or more of Treasuries. That ratio continues to hover at or above the 100% threshold today for 30-year maturities. We believe that if interest rates continue to rise, municipal bonds wont necessarily decline to the same degree as taxable bonds given the positive supply technicals in the municipal market.
What effect has recent legislation both enacted and proposed had on the tax-exempt bond market?
It has been a very busy period from a policy perspective. First, at the end of 2010, the popular Build America Bonds or BABs program expired. The program was authorized by the 2009 stimulus bill that allowed states and municipalities to issue bonds in the taxable market by offering an accompanying subsidy payment to the municipal issuer from the federal government. Issuers in all 50 states participated in the BABs program, and, despite some speculation that the program might be extended, it was allowed to expire on December 31, 2010.
The expiration of the BABs program caused a significant spike in supply at the end of 2010. To lock in the federal subsidy BABs offered,
Credit qualities are shown as a percentage of portfolio value as of 4/30/11. A bond rated Baa or higher (MIG3/VMIG3 or higher, for short-term debt) is considered investment grade. The chart reflects Moodys ratings; percentages may include bonds or derivatives not rated by Moodys but rated by Standard & Poors or, if unrated by S&P, by Fitch, and then included in the closest equivalent Moodys rating. Ratings will vary over time. Credit qualities are included for portfolio securities and are not included for derivative instruments and cash. The fund itself has not been rated by an independent rating agency.
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many states pushed up new issuance into the fourth quarter of 2010 issuance that was originally slated for 2011. Because excess supply can lead to lower prices when demand fails to keep pace, some investors worried that the expiration of BABs would translate into significantly higher tax-free issuance in 2011, undermining price stability. We believed the first few months of 2011 would bring lighter issuance, and, in fact, issuance year to date has been even lower than expected, which has helped price stability recently.
Speculation about changes to tax policy also has affected the market. Given the ongoing struggle to reduce the federal deficit, a number of proposals are now on the table. Simplification of the tax code is one possibility, with changes to a number of the existing marginal rates. In a market dominated by individual investors, the relative attractiveness of municipal bonds is driven in large part by income tax rates, and any changes to those rates could affect investors decisions as they reexamine their portfolios.
Investors also should be aware that there are a number of proposals under consideration in Washington, D.C., that could affect the way that municipal bonds are issued in the future. For example, one proposal suggests replacing traditional tax-exempt bonds with tax credit bonds. It is very important to note that no current proposal would affect the tax-exempt nature of currently outstanding bonds, which is to say they would be grandfathered. It is
Top ten state allocations are shown as a percentage of the funds portfolio value as of 4/30/11. Investments in Puerto Rico represented 2.2% of portfolio value. Holdings will vary over time. State concentrations listed after the portfolio schedule in the Financial Statements section of this shareholder report are inclusive of tender option bonds and exclusive of insured status and any interest accruals and may differ from the summary information above.
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difficult to say how these proposals will fare as part of the overall attempts to reduce the federal deficit, but the debate could add to investor uncertainty.
How did you position the portfolio during the past six months?
Adhering to a strategy we have held for some time, we continued to position the portfolio to benefit from improving fundamentals in the municipal bond market. We believed that lower-rated bonds generally appeared undervalued, and we held an overweight position in Baa- and Ba-rated securities relative to the funds benchmark and peer group. This detracted from performance relative to the benchmark, as the higher-yielding segments of the municipal bond market were among the harder hit in the downturn at the end of 2010.
From a sector perspective, our positions in airlines and industrials contributed to our performance relative to other high-yield municipal bond funds, as did our underweight position in non-rated bonds. We reduced the funds exposure to tobacco bonds during the reporting period, a sector which ultimately detracted from total returns.
Lastly, I should also note that we have been maintaining a modestly larger cash position than is usual. We believe that given the heightened uncertainty in the market and the potential for ongoing volatility, adopting a slightly more defensive stance is prudent. This positioning also gives us greater flexibility to purchase attractive bonds without necessarily having to sell an existing position to raise cash.
How does the fund use leverage?
Leverage generally involves borrowing funds and investing the proceeds with the expectation of producing a return that exceeds the cost of borrowing. Unlike open-end funds, closed-end funds are permitted to engage
This chart shows how the funds top weightings have changed over the past six months. Weightings are shown as a percentage of net assets. Summary information may differ from the portfolio schedule included in the financial statements due to the inclusion of derivative securities and the exclusion of as-of trades, if any, and the use of different classifications of securities for presentation purposes. Holdings will vary over time. Sector concentrations listed after the portfolio schedule in the Financial Statements section of this shareholder report are exclusive of insured status and any interest accruals, and may differ from the summary information above.
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in investment leverage by issuing preferred shares. We employ this form of investment leverage, which offers opportunities for increased investment yield and also effectively amplifies common shareholders exposure to the effects of investment gains and losses.
What is your outlook for the municipal bond market?
We believe that while the financial challenges faced by many states remain significant, the likelihood of a default at the state level is quite remote. Debt service for states is normally a small part of their budgets. Nonetheless, debt service payments generally are one of the first expenses states pay. For example, debt service payments in California are second only to education expenses. While some states will continue to wrestle with large pension deficits, we believe that the fiscal condition of most state governments gradually will continue to improve along with the broader U.S. economy.
Still, various factors will continue to affect the municipal bond markets supply-and-demand balance. Although we expect overall supply to contract in 2011 compared with last year and although it has been lighter than expected year to date an uptick in issuance could put pressure on yield levels.
Moreover, there is increased uncertainty surrounding the future of tax rates. Although the Bush-era tax rates were extended in December 2010 for another two years, legislators are now discussing a tax code overhaul, and its unclear what future rates will be, particularly for top income earners. In addition to the uncertainty at the federal level, state budget shortfalls and pension liabilities could increase pressure to raise state income taxes. Additionally, government policymakers are showing increased interest in states financial conditions, which could spur more media attention and add volatility to the municipal bond market.
All in all, we anticipate that price volatility in the municipal bond market could continue over the short term, but for investors with longer time horizons, we believe that our actively managed approach remains a prudent way to generate attractive total returns in the tax-free bond market.
Thank you, Paul, for your time and insights today.
The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Putnam Management. They are not meant as investment advice.
Please note that the holdings discussed in this report may not have been held by the fund for the entire period. Portfolio composition is subject to review in accordance with the funds investment strategy and may vary in the future. Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk.
Portfolio Manager Paul M. Drury is a Tax Exempt Specialist at Putnam. He has a B.A. from Suffolk University. A CFA charterholder, Paul has been in the investment industry since he joined Putnam in 1989.
In addition to Paul, your fund is managed by Susan McCormack and Thalia Meehan.
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IN THE NEWS
Citing the United Statess burgeoning federal deficit, Standard & Poors (S&P) recently lowered its long-term outlook for U.S. Treasuries from stable to negative. While maintaining its AAA rating for U.S. debt, S&P said the change to a negative outlook means that there is a one-in-three chance for a ratings downgrade over the next 24 months. If a downgrade were to take place, it could raise borrowing costs for both the U.S. government and American consumers. S&Ps negative outlook will likely put increased pressure on Washington lawmakers to reach a bipartisan solution to reduce the federal deficit and restore fiscal discipline. While the U.S. downgrade is unprecedented, it is important to note that S&P downgraded the outlook for the United Kingdom, another AAA-rated country, to negative in May 2009, and restored the stable outlook in 2010 once the country addressed its deficit.
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Your funds performance
This section shows your funds performance, price, and distribution information for periods ended April 30, 2011, the end of the first half of its current fiscal year. In accordance with regulatory requirements for mutual funds, we also include performance as of the most recent calendar quarter-end. Performance should always be considered in light of a funds investment strategy. Data represent past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares.
Fund performance Total return for periods ended 4/30/11
Lipper High Yield | ||||
Barclays Capital | Municipal Debt | |||
Municipal | Funds (closed-end) | |||
NAV | Market price | Bond Index | category average* | |
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Annual average | ||||
Life of fund (since 2/24/89) | 6.16% | 5.72% | 6.35% | 5.18% |
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10 years | 61.21 | 57.10 | 62.23 | 58.69 |
Annual average | 4.89 | 4.62 | 4.96 | 4.66 |
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5 years | 18.40 | 32.14 | 24.72 | 13.41 |
Annual average | 3.44 | 5.73 | 4.52 | 2.49 |
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3 years | 14.44 | 22.44 | 14.71 | 10.36 |
Annual average | 4.60 | 6.98 | 4.68 | 3.30 |
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1 year | 2.45 | 1.10 | 2.20 | 1.40 |
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6 months | 4.46 | 7.57 | 1.68 | 5.21 |
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Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes.
Index and Lipper results should be compared to fund performance at net asset value. Lipper calculates performance differently than the closed-end funds it ranks, due to varying methods for determining a funds monthly reinvestment NAV.
* Over the 6-month, 1-year, 3-year, 5-year, 10-year, and life-of-fund periods ended 4/30/11, there were 14, 14, 14, 13, 10, and 6 funds, respectively, in this Lipper category.
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Fund price and distribution information For the six-month period ended 4/30/11
Distributions | ||
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Number | 6 | |
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Income 1 | $0.264 | |
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Capital gains 2 | | |
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Total | $0.264 | |
Series A | Series C | |
Distributions Preferred shares* | (245 shares) | (1,980 shares) |
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Income 1 | $118.07 | $58.40 |
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Capital gains 2 | | |
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Total | $118.07 | $58.40 |
Share value | NAV | Market price |
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10/31/10 | $7.62 | $7.73 |
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4/30/11 | 7.01 | 6.88 |
Current yield (end of period) | ||
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Current dividend rate 3 | 7.53% | 7.67% |
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Taxable equivalent 4 | 11.58% | 11.80% |
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The classification of distributions, if any, is an estimate. Final distribution information will appear on your year-end tax forms.
* For further information on the preferred shares outstanding during the period, please refer to Note 4: Preferred shares on page 42.
1 For some investors, investment income may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax. Income from federally exempt funds may be subject to state and local taxes.
2 Capital gains, if any, are taxable for federal and, in most cases, state purposes.
3 Most recent distribution, excluding capital gains, annualized and divided by NAV or market price at end of period.
4 Assumes maximum 35% federal tax rate for 2011. Results for investors subject to lower tax rates would not be as advantageous.
Fund performance as of most recent calendar quarter
Total return for periods ended 3/31/11
NAV | Market price | |
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Annual average | ||
Life of fund (since 2/24/89) | 6.11% | 5.73% |
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10 years | 56.75 | 57.82 |
Annual average | 4.60 | 4.67 |
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5 years | 16.92 | 29.27 |
Annual average | 3.18 | 5.27 |
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3 years | 13.90 | 22.98 |
Annual average | 4.43 | 7.14 |
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1 year | 2.80 | 3.05 |
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6 months | 5.33 | 8.18 |
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Terms and definitions
Important terms
Total return shows how the value of the funds shares changed over time, assuming you held the shares through the entire period and reinvested all distributions in the fund.
Net asset value (NAV) is the value of all your funds assets, minus any liabilities and the net assets allocated to any outstanding preferred shares, divided by the number of outstanding common shares.
Market price is the current trading price of one share of the fund. Market prices are set by transactions between buyers and sellers on exchanges such as the New York Stock Exchange.
Current yield is the annual rate of return earned from dividends or interest of an investment. Current yield is expressed as a percentage of the price of a security, fund share, or principal investment.
Comparative indexes
Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. investment-grade fixed-income securities.
Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index is an unmanaged index of long-term fixed-rate investment-grade tax-exempt bonds.
BofA (Bank of America) Merrill Lynch U.S. 3-Month Treasury Bill Index is an unmanaged index that seeks to measure the performance of U.S. Treasury bills available in the marketplace.
S&P 500 Index is an unmanaged index of common stock performance.
Indexes assume reinvestment of all distributions and do not account for fees. Securities and performance of a fund and an index will differ. You cannot invest directly in an index.
Lipper is a third-party industry-ranking entity that ranks mutual funds. Its rankings do not reflect sales charges. Lipper rankings are based on total return at net asset value relative to other funds that have similar current investment styles or objectives as determined by Lipper. Lipper may change a funds category assignment at its discretion. Lipper category averages reflect performance trends for funds within a category.
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Other information for shareholders
Important notice regarding share repurchase program
In September 2010, the Trustees of your fund approved the renewal of a share repurchase program that had been in effect since 2005. This renewal will allow your fund to repurchase, in the 12 months beginning October 8, 2010, up to 10% of the funds common shares outstanding as of October 7, 2010.
Important notice regarding delivery of shareholder documents
In accordance with SEC regulations, Putnam sends a single copy of annual and semiannual shareholder reports, prospectuses, and proxy statements to Putnam shareholders who share the same address, unless a shareholder requests otherwise. If you prefer to receive your own copy of these documents, please call Putnam at 1-800-225-1581, and Putnam will begin sending individual copies within 30 days.
Proxy voting
Putnam is committed to managing our mutual funds in the best interests of our shareholders. The Putnam funds proxy voting guidelines and procedures, as well as information regarding how your fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the 12-month period ended June 30, 2010, are available in the Individual Investors section of putnam.com, and on the SECs website, www.sec.gov. If you have questions about finding forms on the SECs website, you may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain the Putnam funds proxy voting guidelines and procedures at no charge by calling Putnams Shareholder Services at 1-800-225-1581.
Fund portfolio holdings
The fund will file a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Shareholders may obtain the funds Forms N-Q on the SECs website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the funds Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for information about the SECs website or the operation of the Public Reference Room.
Trustee and employee fund ownership
Putnam employees and members of the Board of Trustees place their faith, confidence, and, most importantly, investment dollars in Putnam mutual funds. As of April 30, 2011, Putnam employees had approximately $382,000,000 and the Trustees had approximately $71,000,000 invested in Putnam mutual funds. These amounts include investments by the Trustees and employees immediate family members as well as investments through retirement and deferred compensation plans.
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Financial statements
A guide to financial statements
These sections of the report, as well as the accompanying Notes, constitute the funds financial statements.
The funds portfolio lists all the funds investments and their values as of the last day of the reporting period. Holdings are organized by asset type and industry sector, country, or state to show areas of concentration and diversification.
Statement of assets and liabilities shows how the funds net assets and share price are determined. All investment and non-investment assets are added together. Any unpaid expenses and other liabilities are subtracted from this total. The result is divided by the number of shares to determine the net asset value per share. (For funds with preferred shares, the amount subtracted from total assets includes the liquidation preference of preferred shares.)
Statement of operations shows the funds net investment gain or loss. This is done by first adding up all the funds earnings from dividends and interest income and subtracting its operating expenses to determine net investment income (or loss). Then, any net gain or loss the fund realized on the sales of its holdings as well as any unrealized gains or losses over the period is added to or subtracted from the net investment result to determine the funds net gain or loss for the fiscal period.
Statement of changes in net assets shows how the funds net assets were affected by the funds net investment gain or loss, by distributions to shareholders, and by changes in the number of the funds shares. It lists distributions and their sources (net investment income or realized capital gains) over the current reporting period and the most recent fiscal year-end. The distributions listed here may not match the sources listed in the Statement of operations because the distributions are determined on a tax basis and may be paid in a different period from the one in which they were earned. Dividend sources are estimated at the time of declaration. Actual results may vary. Any non-taxable return of capital cannot be determined until final tax calculations are completed after the end of the funds fiscal year.
Financial highlights provide an overview of the funds investment results, per-share distributions, expense ratios, net investment income ratios, and portfolio turnover in one summary table, reflecting the five most recent reporting periods. In a semiannual report, the highlights table also includes the current reporting period.
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The funds portfolio 4/30/11 (Unaudited) | ||
Key to holdings abbreviations | ||
AGM Assured Guaranty Municipal Corporation | FRB Floating Rate Bonds | |
AMBAC AMBAC Indemnity Corporation | G.O. Bonds General Obligation Bonds | |
COP Certificates of Participation | GNMA Coll. Government National Mortgage | |
Association Collateralized | ||
FGIC Financial Guaranty Insurance Company | ||
NATL National Public Finance Guarantee Corp. | ||
FHLMC Coll. Federal Home Loan Mortgage | ||
Corporation Collateralized | Radian Insd. Radian Group Insured | |
FNMA Coll. Federal National Mortgage | U.S. Govt. Coll. U.S. Government Collateralized | |
Association Collateralized | ||
VRDN Variable Rate Demand Notes |
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
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Alabama (1.9%) | |||
Butler, Indl. Dev. Board Solid Waste Disp. Rev. | |||
Bonds (GA. Pacific Corp.), 5 3/4s, 9/1/28 | BBB | $1,500,000 | $1,404,600 |
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Courtland, Indl. Dev. Board Env. Impt. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Intl. Paper Co.), Ser. A, 5s, 11/1/13 | BBB | 1,500,000 | 1,593,030 |
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Cullman Cnty., Hlth. Care Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Cullman Regl. Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, 6 3/4s, 2/1/29 | Ba1 | 3,000,000 | 2,772,510 |
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Selma, Indl. Dev. Board Rev. Bonds (Gulf | |||
Opportunity Zone Intl. Paper Co.), Ser. A, | |||
6 1/4s, 11/1/33 | BBB | 1,000,000 | 1,015,110 |
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Sylacauga, Hlth. Care Auth. Rev. Bonds (Coosa | |||
Valley Med. Ctr.), Ser. A | |||
6s, 8/1/35 | B/P | 250,000 | 204,078 |
6s, 8/1/25 | B/P | 650,000 | 570,109 |
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7,559,437 | |||
Arizona (3.9%) | |||
Apache Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Control Rev. | |||
Bonds (Tucson Elec. Pwr. Co.) | |||
Ser. B, 5 7/8s, 3/1/33 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 999,930 |
Ser. A, 5.85s, 3/1/28 | Baa3 | 250,000 | 250,023 |
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Calhoun Cnty., Sales & Use Tax Rev. Bonds | |||
(Georgia-Pacific Corp.), 6 3/8s, 11/1/26 | Ba2 | 830,000 | 830,166 |
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Casa Grande, Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Casa | |||
Grande Regl. Med. Ctr.), Ser. A | |||
7 5/8s, 12/1/29 | BB/P | 1,800,000 | 1,697,076 |
7 1/4s, 12/1/19 | BB/P | 1,000,000 | 984,310 |
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Cochise Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Sierra | |||
Vista Regl. Hlth. Ctr.), Ser. A, 6.2s, 12/1/21 | BBB+/P | 425,000 | 433,895 |
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Coconino Cnty., Poll. Control Rev. Bonds (Tucson | |||
Elec. Pwr. Co. Navajo), Ser. A, 5 1/8s, 10/1/32 | Baa3 | 2,000,000 | 1,801,620 |
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Maricopa Cnty., Poll. Control Rev. Bonds (El Paso | |||
Elec. Co.), Ser. A, 7 1/4s, 2/1/40 | Baa2 | 2,200,000 | 2,385,020 |
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Navajo Cnty., Poll. Control Corp. Mandatory Put | |||
Bonds (6/1/16), Ser. E, 5 3/4s, 6/1/34 | Baa2 | 1,950,000 | 2,094,164 |
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Phoenix, Indl. Dev. Auth. Ed. Rev. Bonds (Career | |||
Success Schools), 7 1/8s, 1/1/45 | BB+ | 500,000 | 454,490 |
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MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Arizona cont. | |||
Pima Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Tucson Elec. Pwr.), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, 9/1/29 | Baa3 | $500,000 | $505,895 |
(Horizon Cmnty. Learning Ctr.), 5.05s, 6/1/25 | BBB | 1,140,000 | 959,195 |
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Salt Verde, Fin. Corp. Gas Rev. Bonds, 5 1/2s, | |||
12/1/29 | A | 2,000,000 | 1,874,120 |
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Tempe, Indl. Dev. Auth. Sr. Living Rev. Bonds | |||
(Friendship Village), Ser. A, 5 3/8s, 12/1/13 | BB/P | 393,000 | 389,192 |
| |||
15,659,096 | |||
Arkansas (0.2%) | |||
Arkadelphia, Pub. Ed. Fac. Board Rev. Bonds | |||
(Ouachita Baptist U.), 6s, 3/1/33 | BBB/P | 840,000 | 815,086 |
| |||
815,086 | |||
California (10.9%) | |||
CA Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds (U. of La Verne), | |||
Ser. A, 5s, 6/1/35 | Baa2 | 500,000 | 405,175 |
| |||
CA Hlth. Fac. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds, AMBAC, | |||
5.293s, 7/1/17 | A2 | 3,400,000 | 3,407,276 |
| |||
CA Muni. Fin. Auth. COP (Cmnty. Hosp. Central CA), | |||
5 1/4s, 2/1/37 | Baa2 | 1,105,000 | 884,497 |
| |||
CA Muni. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (U. of La Verne), | |||
Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 6/1/30 | Baa2 | 1,000,000 | 980,670 |
| |||
CA Poll. Control Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Pacific Gas & | |||
Electric Corp.), Class D, FGIC, 4 3/4s, 12/1/23 | A3 | 2,500,000 | 2,497,575 |
| |||
CA Poll. Control Fin. Auth. Solid Waste Disp. FRB | |||
(Waste Management, Inc.), Ser. C, 5 1/8s, 11/1/23 | A2 | 2,150,000 | 2,125,597 |
| |||
CA Poll. Control Fin. Auth. Solid Waste Disp. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Waste Management, Inc.), Ser. A-2, | |||
5.4s, 4/1/25 | BBB | 1,760,000 | 1,760,651 |
| |||
CA State G.O. Bonds, 6 1/2s, 4/1/33 | A1 | 5,000,000 | 5,488,100 |
| |||
CA State Pub. Wks. Board Rev. Bonds, Ser. I-1, | |||
6 5/8s, 11/1/34 | A2 | 5,595,000 | 5,935,680 |
| |||
CA Statewide Cmnty. Dev. Auth. COP (The Internext | |||
Group), 5 3/8s, 4/1/30 | BBB | 3,950,000 | 3,318,790 |
| |||
CA Statewide Cmnty. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Thomas Jefferson School of Law), Ser. A, | |||
7 1/4s, 10/1/38 | BB+ | 560,000 | 564,402 |
(American Baptist Homes West), 5 3/4s, 10/1/25 | BBB | 3,000,000 | 2,845,050 |
| |||
Cathedral City, Impt. Board Act of 1915 Special | |||
Assmt. Bonds (Cove Impt. Dist.), Ser. 04-02 | |||
5.05s, 9/2/35 | BBB/P | 1,015,000 | 819,379 |
5s, 9/2/30 | BBB/P | 245,000 | 208,693 |
| |||
Chula Vista, Cmnty. Fac. Dist. Special Tax Rev. Bonds | |||
(No. 06-1 Eastlake Woods Area), 6.1s, 9/1/21 | BBB/P | 1,000,000 | 1,022,240 |
(No. 07-1 Otay Ranch Village Eleven), 5.8s, 9/1/28 | BB+/P | 275,000 | 260,876 |
| |||
Foothill/Eastern Corridor Agcy. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Toll Road), 5.85s, 1/15/23 | Baa3 | 500,000 | 474,390 |
(CA Toll Roads), 5 3/4s, 1/15/40 | Baa3 | 2,745,000 | 2,293,227 |
| |||
M-S-R Energy Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, 6 1/2s, | |||
11/1/39 | A | 750,000 | 766,725 |
|
17
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
California cont. | |||
Orange Cnty., Cmnty. Fac. Dist. Special Tax Rev. | |||
Bonds (Ladera Ranch No. 02-1), Ser. A, 5.55s, | |||
8/15/33 | BBB/P | $900,000 | $823,680 |
| |||
Poway, Unified School Dist. Cmnty. Facs. Special | |||
Tax Bonds (Dist. No. 14- Area A), 5 1/8s, 9/1/26 | B+/P | 850,000 | 712,827 |
| |||
Sacramento, Special Tax (North Natomas Cmnty. | |||
Fac.), Ser. 4-C, 6s, 9/1/33 | BBB/P | 1,245,000 | 1,180,472 |
| |||
San Francisco, City & Cnty. Redev. Fin. Auth. Tax | |||
Alloc. Bonds (Mission Bay South), Ser. D, | |||
6 5/8s, 8/1/39 | BBB | 250,000 | 240,568 |
| |||
Santaluz, Cmnty. Facs. Dist. No. 2 Special Tax | |||
Rev. Bonds (Impt. Area No. 1), Ser. B, 6 3/8s, | |||
9/1/30 | BBB/P | 2,810,000 | 2,810,590 |
| |||
Sunnyvale, Special Tax Rev. Bonds (Cmnty. Fac. | |||
Dist. No. 1), 7 3/4s, 8/1/32 | B+/P | 835,000 | 788,073 |
| |||
Thousand Oaks, Cmnty. Fac. Dist. Special Tax Rev. | |||
Bonds (Marketplace 94-1), zero %, 9/1/14 | B+/P | 1,720,000 | 1,330,436 |
| |||
43,945,639 | |||
Colorado (2.0%) | |||
CO Hlth. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Christian Living Cmntys.), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 1/1/26 | BB/P | 425,000 | 383,227 |
(Christian Living Cmntys.), Ser. A, 8 1/4s, 1/1/24 | BB/P | 375,000 | 394,928 |
(Evangelical Lutheran), Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 6/1/38 | A3 | 2,045,000 | 1,952,771 |
(Total Longterm Care National), Ser. A, 6 1/4s, | |||
11/15/40 | BBB/F | 300,000 | 280,173 |
(Valley View Assn.), 5 1/4s, 5/15/42 | BBB | 3,495,000 | 2,832,557 |
| |||
CO Pub. Hwy. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(E-470), Ser. C1, NATL, 5 1/2s, 9/1/24 | Baa1 | 1,000,000 | 944,840 |
(E-470), Ser. C, 5 3/8s, 9/1/26 | Baa2 | 500,000 | 456,290 |
| |||
Denver, City & Cnty. Special Fac. Arpt. Rev. | |||
Bonds (United Airlines), Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 10/1/32 | B | 325,000 | 269,552 |
| |||
Regl. Trans. Dist. Rev. Bonds (Denver Trans. | |||
Partners), 6s, 1/15/41 | Baa3 | 750,000 | 682,620 |
| |||
8,196,958 | |||
Connecticut (0.4%) | |||
CT State Dev. Auth. 1st. Mtg. Gross Rev. Hlth. | |||
Care Rev. Bonds (Elim Street Park | |||
Baptist, Inc.), 5.85s, 12/1/33 | BBB+ | 650,000 | 595,992 |
| |||
Hamden, Fac. Rev. Bonds (Whitney Ctr.), Ser. A, | |||
7 3/4s, 1/1/43 | BB/P | 1,050,000 | 1,066,748 |
| |||
1,662,740 | |||
Delaware (0.7%) | |||
DE St. Econ. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Delmarva Pwr.), 5.4s, 2/1/31 | BBB+ | 500,000 | 491,025 |
(Indian River Pwr.), 5 3/8s, 10/1/45 | Baa3 | 2,600,000 | 2,240,653 |
| |||
2,731,678 | |||
District of Columbia (1.1%) | |||
DC Rev. Bonds (Howard U.), Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 10/1/41 | A3 | 2,500,000 | 2,480,150 |
| |||
DC Tobacco Settlement Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. A, zero %, 6/15/46 | BB/F | 17,500,000 | 610,225 |
| |||
Metro. Washington, Arpt. Auth. Dulles Toll Rd. | |||
Rev. Bonds (2nd Sr. Lien), Ser. B, zero %, | |||
10/1/40 | Baa1 | 10,000,000 | 1,299,700 |
| |||
4,390,075 |
18
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Florida (6.5%) | |||
Double Branch Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. A, 6.7s, 5/1/34 Δ | A | $915,000 | $926,072 |
| |||
Escambia Cnty., Env. Impt. Rev. Bonds (Intl. | |||
Paper Co.), Ser. A, 5s, 8/1/26 | BBB | 2,000,000 | 1,770,760 |
| |||
Fishhawk, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. II Rev. Bonds | |||
Ser. B, 7.04s, 11/1/14 Δ | B/P | 20,000 | 19,555 |
Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 5/1/34 Δ | B/P | 435,000 | 409,257 |
| |||
FL Hsg. Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. G, GNMA | |||
Coll., FNMA Coll., FHLMC Coll., 5 3/4s, 1/1/37 | Aa1 | 890,000 | 931,376 |
| |||
Halifax, Hosp. Med. Ctr. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||
5 3/8s, 6/1/46 | A | 4,380,000 | 3,815,198 |
| |||
Heritage Harbour Marketplace Cmnty., Dev. Dist. | |||
Special Assmt. Bonds, 5.6s, 5/1/36 Δ | B/P | 370,000 | 279,102 |
| |||
Heritage Harbour, South Cmnty. Dev. Distr. Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 5/1/34 Δ | BB+/P | 450,000 | 432,392 |
| |||
Hillsborough Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. | |||
Control Mandatory Put Bonds (9/1/13) (Tampa | |||
Elec. Co.), Ser. B, 5.15s, 9/1/25 | Baa1 | 400,000 | 424,624 |
| |||
Jacksonville, Econ. Dev. Comm. Hlth. Care Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Proton Therapy Inst.), Class A, | |||
6s, 9/1/17 | B/P | 450,000 | 453,245 |
| |||
Jacksonville, Econ. Dev. Comm. Indl. Dev. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Gerdau Ameristeel US, Inc.), 5.3s, 5/1/37 | BBB | 2,450,000 | 2,009,711 |
| |||
Lakeland, Retirement Cmnty. Rev. Bonds | |||
(1st Mtge. Carpenters), 6 3/8s, 1/1/43 | BBB/F | 840,000 | 722,568 |
| |||
Lee Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Cypress Cove Hlth. Pk.), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, 10/1/25 | BB/P | 1,100,000 | 854,535 |
(Shell Pt./Alliance Oblig. Group), 5 1/8s, 11/15/36 | BB | 1,075,000 | 831,502 |
(Shell Pt./Alliance Cmnty.), 5s, 11/15/22 | BB | 1,500,000 | 1,329,420 |
| |||
Miami Beach, Hlth. Fac. Auth. Hosp. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Mount Sinai Med. Ctr.), Ser. A | |||
6.8s, 11/15/31 | Ba1 | 500,000 | 487,585 |
6.7s, 11/15/19 | Ba1 | 1,335,000 | 1,350,379 |
| |||
Palm Beach Cnty., Hlth. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Acts Retirement-Life Cmnty.), 5 1/2s, 11/15/33 | BBB+ | 2,000,000 | 1,778,020 |
| |||
Palm Coast Pk. Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. | |||
Bonds, 5.7s, 5/1/37 Δ | B+/P | 945,000 | 551,247 |
| |||
Reunion West, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. | |||
Bonds, 1 7/8s, 5/1/36 | D/P | 1,670,000 | 868,400 |
| |||
Six Mile Creek, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Rev. Bonds, | |||
5.65s, 5/1/22 | CCC/P | 1,240,000 | 384,400 |
| |||
South Lake Hosp. Dist. (South Lake Hosp.), | |||
Ser. A, 6s, 4/1/29 | Baa2 | 1,000,000 | 959,710 |
| |||
Tampa Bay, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(New Port), Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 5/1/38 (In default) | D/P | 655,000 | 209,600 |
| |||
Tolomato, Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(Split Pine Cmnty. Dev. Dist.), Ser. A, 5 1/4s, | |||
5/1/39 Δ | B/P | 1,790,000 | 1,149,914 |
6.55s, 5/1/27 | B/P | 700,000 | 481,131 |
5.4s, 5/1/37 Δ | BB/P | 1,385,000 | 1,025,662 |
|
19
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Florida cont. | |||
Verandah, West Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Rev. Bonds (Cap. | |||
Impt.), Ser. A, 6 5/8s, 5/1/33 Δ | BB/P | $445,000 | $407,371 |
| |||
Verano Ctr. Cmnty. Dev. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(Cmnty. Infrastructure) | |||
Ser. A, 5 3/8s, 5/1/37 Δ | B/P | 980,000 | 577,818 |
Ser. B, 5s, 11/1/13 Δ | B/P | 595,000 | 460,667 |
| |||
Village Cmnty. Dev. Dist. No. 8 Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(Dist. No. 8 Phase II), 6 1/8s, 5/1/39 | BB/P | 500,000 | 461,505 |
| |||
26,362,726 | |||
Georgia (2.5%) | |||
Atlanta, Wtr. & Waste Wtr. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||
6 1/4s, 11/1/39 | A1 | 2,500,000 | 2,588,125 |
| |||
Clayton Cnty., Dev. Auth. Special Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Delta Airlines), Ser. A, 8 3/4s, 6/1/29 | CCC+ | 2,000,000 | 2,205,160 |
| |||
Forsyth Cnty., Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Baptist | |||
Hlth. Care Syst.), U.S. Govt. Coll., 6 1/4s, | |||
10/1/18 (Escrowed to maturity) | AAA | 1,690,000 | 1,984,229 |
| |||
Fulton Cnty., Res. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Canterbury Court), Class A, 6 1/8s, 2/15/34 | BB/P | 600,000 | 508,746 |
| |||
Gainesville & Hall Cnty., Devauth Retirement | |||
Cmnty. Rev. Bonds (Acts Retirement-Life Cmnty.), | |||
Ser. A-2, 6 3/8s, 11/15/29 | BBB+ | 700,000 | 701,575 |
| |||
Marietta, Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (U. Fac. Life U., Inc.), | |||
Ser. PJ, 6 1/4s, 6/15/20 | Ba3 | 1,315,0009 | 1,244,173 |
| |||
Med. Ctr. Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Spring Harbor | |||
Green Island), 5 1/4s, 7/1/27 | B+/P | 575,000 | 470,776 |
| |||
Rockdale Cnty., Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Visy Paper), | |||
Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 1/1/34 | B+/P | 600,000 | 525,972 |
| |||
10,228,756 | |||
Hawaii (0.8%) | |||
HI Dept. of Trans. Special Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Continental Airlines, Inc.), 7s, 6/1/20 | B | 1,315,000 | 1,283,953 |
| |||
HI State Dept. Budget & Fin. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Craigside), Ser. A, 9s, 11/15/44 | B/P | 400,000 | 445,016 |
(Hawaiian Elec. Co. Subsidiary), 6 1/2s, 7/1/39 | Baa1 | 1,500,000 | 1,509,255 |
| |||
3,238,224 | |||
Illinois (3.1%) | |||
Du Page Cnty., Special Svc. Area No. 31 Special | |||
Tax Bonds (Monarch Landing) | |||
5 5/8s, 3/1/36 | BB/P | 350,000 | 279,829 |
5.4s, 3/1/16 | BB/P | 165,000 | 160,890 |
| |||
IL Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(American Wtr. Cap. Corp.), 5 1/4s, 10/1/39 | BBB+ | 1,575,000 | 1,490,563 |
(IL Rush U. Med Ctr.), Ser. C, 6 5/8s, 11/1/39 | A2 | 1,075,000 | 1,102,767 |
(Landing At Plymouth Place), Ser. A, 5.35s, 5/15/15 | B+/P | 600,000 | 579,558 |
(Landing At Plymouth Place), Ser. A, 6s, 5/15/25 | B+/P | 200,000 | 170,220 |
(Navistar Intl. Recvy. Zone), 6 1/2s, 10/15/40 | BB | 1,000,000 | 1,009,070 |
(Provena Hlth.), Ser. A, 7 3/4s, 8/15/34 | Baa1 | 1,500,000 | 1,643,520 |
(Roosevelt U.), 6 1/4s, 4/1/29 | Baa2 | 1,500,000 | 1,469,850 |
(Silver Cross Hosp. & Med. Ctr.), 7s, 8/15/44 | BBB | 2,000,000 | 2,002,180 |
(Three Crowns Pk. Plaza), Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 2/15/26 | B+/P | 1,000,000 | 925,000 |
|
20
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Illinois cont. | |||
IL Hlth. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Cmnty. Rehab. Providers Fac.), Ser. A, | |||
7 7/8s, 7/1/20 | CCC/P | $130,697 | $101,801 |
(Elmhurst Memorial Hlth. Care), 5 5/8s, 1/1/28 | Baa1 | 550,000 | 490,127 |
(St. Benedict), Ser. 03A-1, 6.9s, 11/15/33 | |||
(In default) | D/P | 500,000 | 110,000 |
| |||
Railsplitter, Tobacco Settlement Auth. Rev. Bonds, | |||
6s, 6/1/28 | A | 1,050,000 | 1,013,030 |
| |||
12,548,405 | |||
Indiana (2.5%) | |||
IN State Fin. Auth. VRDN | |||
Ser. A-3, 0.26s, 2/1/37 | VMIG1 | 1,200,000 | 1,200,000 |
Ser. A-1, 0 1/4s, 2/1/39 | Aa2 | 1,500,000 | 1,500,000 |
| |||
Indianapolis, Arpt. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Federal | |||
Express Corp.), 5.1s, 1/15/17 | Baa2 | 3,500,000 | 3,783,044 |
| |||
Jasper Cnty., Indl. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||
AMBAC, 5.7s, 7/1/17 | Baa2 | 1,125,000 | 1,218,206 |
NATL, 5.6s, 11/1/16 | Baa1 | 700,000 | 757,953 |
Ser. A, NATL, 5.6s, 11/1/16 | Baa1 | 500,000 | 541,395 |
| |||
Jasper Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Memorial Hosp.), | |||
Radian Insd., 5 1/2s, 11/1/32 | A | 500,000 | 448,375 |
| |||
St. Joseph Cnty., Econ. Dev. Rev. Bonds (Holy | |||
Cross Village Notre Dame), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 5/15/15 | B/P | 455,000 | 456,447 |
| |||
9,905,420 | |||
Iowa (3.0%) | |||
IA Fin. Auth. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Care Initiatives) | |||
9 1/4s, 7/1/25 (Prerefunded 7/1/11) | AAA | 4,180,000 | 4,359,531 |
Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 7/1/17 | BB+ | 1,040,000 | 996,632 |
Ser. A, 5s, 7/1/19 | BB+ | 2,750,000 | 2,456,382 |
Ser. A, 5 1/2s, 7/1/25 | BB+ | 950,000 | 788,063 |
| |||
IA Fin. Auth. Retirement Cmnty. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Friendship Haven), Ser. A | |||
6 1/8s, 11/15/32 | BB/P | 750,000 | 683,730 |
6s, 11/15/24 | BB/P | 200,000 | 195,830 |
| |||
IA State Higher Ed. Loan Auth. Rev. Bonds, 5s, | |||
10/1/22 | BB/F | 800,000 | 689,224 |
| |||
Orange Cnty., Hosp. Rev. Bonds, 5 1/2s, 9/1/27 | BB/P | 1,250,000 | 1,070,212 |
| |||
Tobacco Settlement Auth. of IA Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. C, 5 3/8s, 6/1/38 | BBB | 1,250,000 | 881,488 |
| |||
12,121,092 | |||
Kansas (0.1%) | |||
Lenexa, Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(LakeView Village), 7 1/8s, 5/15/29 | BB/P | 500,000 | 449,820 |
| |||
449,820 | |||
Kentucky (0.6%) | |||
KY Econ. Dev. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (First | |||
Mtge.), Ser. IA, 8s, 1/1/29 | B+/P | 273,000 | 273,268 |
| |||
KY Econ. Dev. Fin. Auth. Hlth. Syst. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Norton Hlth. Care), Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 10/1/20 | A/F | 1,040,000 | 1,052,470 |
|
21
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Kentucky cont. | |||
Louisville/Jefferson Cnty., Metro. Govt. College | |||
Rev. Bonds (Bellarmine U.), Ser. A, 6s, 5/1/28 | Baa3 | $500,000 | $503,964 |
| |||
Owen Cnty., Wtr. Wks. Syst. Rev. Bonds (American | |||
Wtr. Co.), Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 6/1/39 | BBB+ | 700,000 | 717,780 |
| |||
2,547,482 | |||
Louisiana (0.8%) | |||
Rapides, Fin. Auth. FRB (Cleco Pwr.), AMBAC, | |||
4.7s, 11/1/36 | Baa2 | 750,000 | 589,973 |
| |||
Tobacco Settlement Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. 01-B, 5 7/8s, 5/15/39 | A | 2,700,000 | 2,451,383 |
| |||
3,041,356 | |||
Maine (0.6%) | |||
Rumford, Solid Waste Disp. Rev. Bonds (Boise | |||
Cascade Corp.), 6 7/8s, 10/1/26 | B2 | 2,500,000 | 2,367,150 |
| |||
2,367,150 | |||
Maryland (1.6%) | |||
Baltimore Cnty., Rev. Bonds (Oak Crest | |||
Village, Inc. Fac.), Ser. A, 5s, 1/1/37 | BBB+ | 2,000,000 | 1,671,160 |
| |||
MD Econ. Dev. Corp. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||
(Potomac Electric Power Co.), 6.2s, 9/1/22 | A | 550,000 | 631,769 |
| |||
MD State Hlth. & Higher Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Washington Cnty. Hosp.), 5 3/4s, 1/1/38 | BBB | 450,000 | 404,334 |
(King Farm Presbyterian Cmnty.), Ser. A, | |||
5 1/4s, 1/1/27 | B/P | 710,000 | 549,987 |
| |||
MD State Indl. Dev. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Synagro-Baltimore), Ser. A, 5 3/8s, 12/1/14 | BBB+/F | 1,000,000 | 1,034,230 |
| |||
MD State Indl. Dev. Fin. Auth. Econ. Dev. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Our Lady of Good Counsel School), Ser. A, | |||
6s, 5/1/35 | BB/P | 400,000 | 363,272 |
| |||
Westminster, Econ. Dev. Rev. Bonds (Carroll | |||
Lutheran Village), Ser. A | |||
6 1/4s, 5/1/34 | BB/P | 600,000 | 488,220 |
5 7/8s, 5/1/21 | BB/P | 1,600,000 | 1,423,567 |
| |||
6,566,539 | |||
Massachusetts (8.5%) | |||
Boston, Indl. Dev. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Springhouse, Inc.), 6s, 7/1/28 | BB/P | 1,600,000 | 1,357,983 |
| |||
MA Dev. Fin. Agcy. Sr. Living Fac. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. B1, 7 1/4s, 6/1/16 | BB/P | 2,000,000 | 1,993,980 |
| |||
MA Edl. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, 5 1/2s, 1/1/23 | AA | 960,000 | 984,509 |
| |||
MA State Dev. Fin. Agcy. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Boston Biomedical Research), 5 3/4s, 2/1/29 | Ba1 | 1,000,000 | 861,270 |
(First Mtge. Orchard Cove), 5s, 10/1/19 | BB+/P | 550,000 | 491,904 |
(Linden Ponds, Inc.), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 11/15/42 | BB/P | 1,200,000 | 733,260 |
(Linden Ponds, Inc.), Ser. A, 5 1/2s, 11/15/22 | BB/P | 390,000 | 261,534 |
(Linden Ponds, Inc.), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 11/15/35 | BB/P | 755,000 | 461,584 |
(Sabis Intl.), Ser. A, 8s, 4/15/39 | BBB | 690,000 | 741,591 |
(Wheelock College), Ser. C, 5 1/4s, 10/1/29 | BBB | 1,700,000 | 1,593,138 |
| |||
MA State Dev. Fin. Agcy. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Adventcare), Ser. A, 6.65s, 10/15/28 | B/P | 1,050,000 | 948,791 |
| |||
MA State Dev. Fin. Agcy. Solid Waste Disp. | |||
Mandatory Put Bonds (5/1/19) (Dominion Energy | |||
Brayton), Ser. 1, 5 3/4s, 12/1/42 | A | 1,050,000 | 1,132,173 |
|
22
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Massachusetts cont. | |||
MA State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Baystate Med. Ctr.), Ser. F, 5.7s, 7/1/27 | A+ | $1,000,000 | $1,001,800 |
(Baystate Med. Ctr.), Ser. I, 5 3/4s, 7/1/36 | A+ | 1,500,000 | 1,419,885 |
(Civic Investments/HPHC), Ser. A, 9s, 12/15/15 | |||
(Prerefunded 12/15/12) | AAA/P | 1,975,000 | 2,205,285 |
(Emerson Hosp.), Ser. E, Radian Insd., 5s, 8/15/25 | BB/P | 1,500,000 | 1,285,050 |
(Fisher College), Ser. A, 5 1/8s, 4/1/37 | BBB | 250,000 | 199,038 |
(Jordan Hosp.), Ser. E, 6 3/4s, 10/1/33 | BB | 2,550,000 | 2,380,272 |
(Milford Regl. Med.), Ser. E, 5s, 7/15/22 | Baa3 | 2,200,000 | 2,020,590 |
(Norwood Hosp.), Ser. C, 7s, 7/1/14 (Escrowed | |||
to maturity) | BB/P | 1,185,000 | 1,336,727 |
(Quincy Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 1/15/28 | B+/P | 1,700,000 | 1,481,805 |
(Springfield College), 5 1/2s, 10/15/31 | Baa1 | 1,100,000 | 1,051,864 |
(UMass Memorial), Ser. C, 6 1/2s, 7/1/21 | Baa1 | 3,450,000 | 3,456,590 |
(UMass Memorial), Ser. C, 6 5/8s, 7/1/32 | Baa1 | 2,225,000 | 2,225,644 |
| |||
MA State Indl. Fin. Agcy. Rev. Bonds | |||
(1st Mtge. Stone Institute & Newton Home), | |||
7.9s, 1/1/24 | B/P | 750,000 | 696,255 |
(1st Mtge. Berkshire Retirement), Ser. A, | |||
6 5/8s, 7/1/16 | BBB | 1,865,000 | 1,870,968 |
| |||
34,193,490 | |||
Michigan (4.1%) | |||
Detroit, G.O. Bonds (Cap. Impt.), Ser. A-1, 5s, | |||
4/1/15 | BB | 950,000 | 862,857 |
| |||
Detroit, Wtr. Supply Syst. Rev. Bonds, Ser. B, | |||
AGM, 6 1/4s, 7/1/36 | AA+ | 1,660,000 | 1,716,572 |
| |||
Flint, Hosp. Bldg. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Hurley Med. Ctr.), | |||
6s, 7/1/20 | Ba1 | 1,120,000 | 1,085,437 |
| |||
Garden City, Hosp. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Garden | |||
City Hosp.), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 9/1/17 | Ba3 | 450,000 | 435,159 |
| |||
MI State Hosp. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 6/1/39 | A1 | 2,000,000 | 2,019,520 |
(Henry Ford Hlth.), 5 3/4s, 11/15/39 | A1 | 1,600,000 | 1,500,112 |
(Henry Ford Hlth.), Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 11/15/46 | A1 | 2,565,000 | 2,166,091 |
(Chelsea Cmnty. Hosp. Oblig.), 5s, 5/15/25 | |||
(Prerefunded 5/15/15) | AAA | 755,000 | 861,153 |
| |||
MI State Strategic Fund, Ltd. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Worthington Armstrong Venture), U.S. Govt. | |||
Coll., 5 3/4s, 10/1/22 (Escrowed to maturity) | AAA/P | 1,350,000 | 1,571,386 |
| |||
MI Tobacco Settlement Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. A, 6s, 6/1/48 | BB | 4,000,000 | 2,723,400 |
| |||
Monroe Cnty., Hosp. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Mercy | |||
Memorial Hosp.), 5 1/2s, 6/1/20 | Baa3 | 1,480,000 | 1,407,850 |
| |||
16,349,537 | |||
Minnesota (2.2%) | |||
Douglas Cnty., Gross Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Douglas Cnty. Hosp.), Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 7/1/34 | BBB | 3,000,000 | 3,039,360 |
| |||
Duluth, Econ. Dev. Auth. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(BSM Properties, Inc.), Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 12/1/28 | B+/P | 115,000 | 94,482 |
| |||
Inver Grove Heights, Nursing Home Rev. Bonds | |||
(Presbyterian Homes Care), 5 3/8s, 10/1/26 | B/P | 700,000 | 617,183 |
|
23
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Minnesota cont. | |||
North Oaks, Sr. Hsg. Rev. Bonds (Presbyterian | |||
Homes North Oaks), 6 1/8s, 10/1/39 | BB/P | $315,000 | $280,473 |
| |||
Northfield, Hosp. Rev. Bonds, 5 3/8s, 11/1/26 | BBB | 750,000 | 716,228 |
| |||
Rochester, Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds (Olmsted | |||
Med. Ctr.), 5 7/8s, 7/1/30 | BBB/F | 1,000,000 | 940,310 |
| |||
Sauk Rapids Hlth. Care & Hsg. Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Good Shepherd Lutheran Home) | |||
7 1/2s, 1/1/39 | B+/P | 500,000 | 500,700 |
6s, 1/1/34 | B+/P | 400,000 | 338,864 |
| |||
St. Paul, Hsg. & Redev. Auth. Hosp. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Healtheast) | |||
6s, 11/15/35 | Ba1 | 1,350,000 | 1,174,365 |
Ser. B, 5.85s, 11/1/17 | Ba1 | 250,000 | 250,013 |
| |||
St. Paul, Port Auth. Lease Rev. Bonds (Regions | |||
Hosp. Pkg. Ramp), Ser. 1, 5s, 8/1/36 | BBB+/P | 1,125,000 | 885,544 |
| |||
8,837,522 | |||
Mississippi (1.0%) | |||
MS Bus. Fin. Corp. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||
(Syst. Energy Resources, Inc.), 5.9s, 5/1/22 | BBB | 1,630,000 | 1,605,436 |
| |||
MS Home Corp. Rev. Bonds (Single Fam. Mtge.), | |||
Ser. B-2, GNMA Coll., FNMA Coll., 6.45s, 12/1/33 | Aaa | 590,000 | 619,235 |
| |||
Warren Cnty., Gulf Opportunity Zone (Intl. | |||
Paper Co.), Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 9/1/32 | BBB | 1,600,000 | 1,678,544 |
| |||
3,903,215 | |||
Missouri (4.1%) | |||
Cape Girardeau Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Hlth. Care | |||
Fac. Rev. Bonds (St. Francis Med. Ctr.), Ser. A, | |||
5 1/2s, 6/1/16 | A+ | 1,000,000 | 1,045,180 |
| |||
Kansas City, Indl. Dev. Auth. Hlth. Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (First Mtge. Bishop Spencer), Ser. A, | |||
6 1/2s, 1/1/35 | B/P | 2,000,000 | 1,785,840 |
| |||
MO State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. 2003A (St. Lukes Health), 5 1/2s, 11/15/28 T | AA+ | 10,000,000 | 10,342,100 |
| |||
MO State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. VRDN (Washington | |||
U. (The)), Ser. A, 0.29s, 9/1/30 | VMIG1 | 1,600,000 | 1,600,000 |
| |||
MO State Hsg. Dev. Comm. Mtge. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Single Fam. Homeowner Loan), Ser. A-1, GNMA | |||
Coll, FNMA Coll, 7 1/2s, 3/1/31 | AAA | 90,000 | 94,018 |
(Single Fam. Homeowner Loan), Ser. B-1, GNMA | |||
Coll., FNMA Coll., 7.45s, 9/1/31 | AAA | 165,000 | 170,481 |
(Single Fam. Homeowner Loan), Ser. A-1, GNMA | |||
Coll., FNMA Coll., 6 3/4s, 3/1/34 | AAA | 250,000 | 264,058 |
| |||
St. Louis Arpt. Rev. Bonds (Lambert-St. Louis Intl.), | |||
Ser. A-1, 6 5/8s, 7/1/34 | A | 1,000,000 | 1,018,460 |
| |||
16,320,137 | |||
Montana (0.7%) | |||
Forsyth, Poll. Control VRDN (Pacific Corp.), | |||
0.24s, 1/1/18 | P1 | 500,000 | 500,000 |
| |||
MT Fac. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Sr. Living St. | |||
Johns Lutheran), Ser. A, 6s, 5/15/25 | B+/P | 500,000 | 444,710 |
| |||
MT Fac. Fin. Auth. VRDN (Sisters of Charity), | |||
Ser. A, 0.27s, 12/1/25 | VMIG1 | 1,945,000 | 1,945,000 |
| |||
2,889,710 |
24
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Nebraska (0.6%) | |||
Central Plains, Energy Rev. Bonds (NE Gas No. 1), | |||
Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 12/1/18 | Ba3 | $1,500,000 | $1,476,045 |
| |||
Lancaster Cnty., Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Immanuel | |||
Oblig. Group), 5 1/2s, 1/1/30 | A/F | 1,000,000 | 977,120 |
| |||
2,453,165 | |||
Nevada (2.5%) | |||
Clark Cnty., Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(Summerlin No. 151), 5s, 8/1/16 | BB/P | 990,000 | 867,804 |
(Summerlin No. 142), 6 3/8s, 8/1/23 | BB/P | 930,000 | 933,776 |
(Summerlin No. 151), 5s, 8/1/20 | BB/P | 420,000 | 324,425 |
| |||
Clark Cnty., Indl. Dev. Rev. Bonds (Southwest | |||
Gas Corp.), Ser. C, AMBAC, 5.95s, 12/1/38 | Baa2 | 5,000,000 | 4,841,950 |
| |||
Clark Cnty., Local Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. | |||
Bonds (No. 142), 6.1s, 8/1/18 | BB/P | 240,000 | 247,459 |
| |||
Henderson, Local Impt. Dist. Special Assmt. Bonds | |||
(No. T-17), 5s, 9/1/18 | BB+/P | 370,000 | 336,415 |
(No. T-18), 5s, 9/1/16 | B/P | 1,920,000 | 1,364,870 |
| |||
Las Vegas, Local Impt. Board Special Assmt. | |||
(Dist. No. 607), 5.9s, 6/1/18 | BB/P | 1,165,000 | 1,088,832 |
| |||
10,005,531 | |||
New Hampshire (1.0%) | |||
NH Hlth. & Ed. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Huntington at Nashua), Ser. A, 6 7/8s, 5/1/33 | BB/P | 600,000 | 583,134 |
(Kendal at Hanover), Ser. A, 5s, 10/1/18 | BBB+ | 1,875,000 | 1,911,956 |
| |||
NH State Bus. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Elliot Hosp. | |||
Oblig. Group), Ser. A, 6s, 10/1/27 | Baa1 | 1,700,000 | 1,678,954 |
| |||
4,174,044 | |||
New Jersey (6.9%) | |||
Burlington Cnty., Bridge Comm. Econ. Dev. Rev. | |||
Bonds (The Evergreens), 5 5/8s, 1/1/38 | BB+/P | 1,000,000 | 824,490 |
| |||
NJ Econ. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Cedar Crest Village, Inc.), Ser. A, U.S. Govt. | |||
Coll., 7 1/4s, 11/15/31 (Prerefunded 11/15/11) | AAA/F | 1,250,000 | 1,308,500 |
(Cigarette Tax), 5 1/2s, 6/15/24 | BBB | 4,000,000 | 3,724,040 |
(Cigarette Tax), 5 3/4s, 6/15/29 | BBB | 1,000,000 | 904,110 |
(First Mtge. Lions Gate), Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 1/1/37 | B/P | 430,000 | 351,284 |
(First Mtge. Presbyterian Home), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, | |||
11/1/31 | BB/P | 500,000 | 405,940 |
(MSU Student Hsg. Provident Group | |||
Montclair LLC), 5 3/8s, 6/1/25 | Baa3 | 2,000,000 | 1,891,300 |
(Newark Arpt. Marriott Hotel), 7s, 10/1/14 | Ba1 | 2,400,000 | 2,405,496 |
(United Methodist Homes), Ser. A-1, 6 1/4s, 7/1/33 | BB+ | 1,000,000 | 902,590 |
| |||
NJ Econ. Dev. Auth. Retirement Cmnty. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Seabrook Village, Inc.), 5 1/4s, 11/15/36 | BB/P | 860,000 | 687,243 |
| |||
NJ Econ. Dev. Auth. Solid Waste Mandatory Put | |||
Bonds (6/1/14) (Disp. Waste Mgt.), 5.3s, 6/1/15 | BBB | 1,750,000 | 1,888,740 |
| |||
NJ Econ. Dev. Auth. Wtr. Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(American Wtr. Co.) | |||
Ser. A, 5.7s, 10/1/39 | A2 | 2,600,000 | 2,525,120 |
Ser. D, 4 7/8s, 11/1/29 | A2 | 700,000 | 667,583 |
|
25
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
New Jersey cont. | |||
NJ Hlth. Care Fac. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Atlantic City Med.), 5 3/4s, 7/1/25 | A1 | $695,000 | $708,511 |
(Holy Name Hosp.), 5s, 7/1/36 | Baa2 | 2,500,000 | 1,988,850 |
(St. Joseph Hlth. Care Syst.), 6 5/8s, 7/1/38 | BBB | 2,250,000 | 2,190,398 |
(St. Peters U. Hosp.), 5 3/4s, 7/1/37 | Baa3 | 2,665,000 | 2,281,613 |
(United Methodist Homes), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, 7/1/29 | BB+ | 2,250,000 | 1,950,705 |
| |||
27,606,513 | |||
New Mexico (1.5%) | |||
Farmington, Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||
(AZ Pub. Svc. Co.), Ser. B, 4.7s, 9/1/24 | Baa2 | 2,000,000 | 1,878,920 |
(Public Service Co. of NM San Juan), Ser. D, | |||
5.9s, 6/1/40 | Baa3 | 500,000 | 466,540 |
(San Juan), Ser. B, 4 7/8s, 4/1/33 | Baa3 | 4,500,000 | 3,734,100 |
| |||
6,079,560 | |||
New York (7.4%) | |||
Broome Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Continuing Care | |||
Retirement Rev. Bonds (Good Shepard Village), | |||
Ser. A, 6 3/4s, 7/1/28 | B/P | 600,000 | 574,698 |
| |||
Huntington, Hsg. Auth. Sr. Hsg. Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Gurwin Jewish Sr. Residence), | |||
Ser. A, 6s, 5/1/29 | B+/P | 750,000 | 681,750 |
Ser. A, 6s, 5/1/39 | B+/P | 500,000 | 427,640 |
| |||
Livingston Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Civic Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Nicholas H. Noyes Memorial Hosp.), | |||
5 3/4s, 7/1/15 | BB | 1,960,000 | 1,927,072 |
| |||
Nassau Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Keyspan-Glenwood), 5 1/4s, 6/1/27 | A | 2,775,000 | 2,669,966 |
| |||
Niagara Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Mandatory Put | |||
Bonds (11/15/12) (Solid Waste Disp.), Ser. A, | |||
5.45s, 11/15/26 | Baa2 | 500,000 | 508,790 |
| |||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (Liberty-7 | |||
World Trade Ctr.) | |||
Ser. B, 6 3/4s, 3/1/15 | BB/P | 200,000 | 202,232 |
Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 3/1/15 | BB/P | 2,775,000 | 2,803,583 |
| |||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Civic Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Staten Island U. Hosp.), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, 7/1/31 | Baa3 | 760,000 | 754,384 |
| |||
NY City, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Special Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Airis JFK I, LLC), Ser. A, 5 1/2s, 7/1/28 | BBB | 1,300,000 | 1,103,401 |
(American Airlines JFK Intl. Arpt.), 7 1/2s, | |||
8/1/16 | B | 5,975,000 | 6,118,998 |
(British Airways PLC), 5 1/4s, 12/1/32 | BB | 3,425,000 | 2,525,595 |
(Jetblue Airways Corp.), 5s, 5/15/20 | B | 325,000 | 278,307 |
| |||
NY State Dorm. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Winthrop-U. | |||
Hosp. Assn.), Ser. A, 5 1/2s, 7/1/32 | Baa1 | 900,000 | 876,879 |
| |||
NY State Dorm. Auth. Non-State Supported Debt | |||
Rev. Bonds (Orange Regl. Med. Ctr.), 6 1/4s, | |||
12/1/37 | Ba1 | 725,000 | 669,567 |
| |||
NY State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Gas Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Brooklyn Union Gas), 6.952s, 7/1/26 | A3 | 3,800,000 | 3,807,334 |
|
26
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
New York cont. | |||
Port Auth. NY & NJ Special Oblig. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Kennedy Intl. Arpt. 5th Installment), 6 3/4s, | |||
10/1/19 | BB+/P | $200,000 | $189,560 |
(Kennedy Intl. Arpt. 4th Installment), 6 3/4s, | |||
10/1/11 | BB+/P | 200,000 | 200,650 |
(JFK Intl. Air Term.), 6s, 12/1/42 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 964,340 |
| |||
Seneca Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Solid Waste Disp. | |||
Mandatory Put Bonds (10/1/13) (Seneca | |||
Meadows, Inc.), 6 5/8s, 10/1/35 | BB | 670,000 | 669,082 |
| |||
Suffolk Cnty., Indl. Dev. Agcy. Civic Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Southampton Hosp. Assn.), Ser. A, 7 1/4s, | |||
1/1/30 | B/P | 1,250,000 | 1,205,363 |
| |||
Syracuse, Indl. Dev. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (1st Mtge. | |||
Jewish Home), Ser. A, 7 3/8s, 3/1/21 | B+/P | 800,000 | 742,216 |
| |||
29,901,407 | |||
North Carolina (1.9%) | |||
NC Eastern Muni. Pwr. Agcy. Syst. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. C, 6 3/4s, 1/1/24 | A | 750,000 | 857,715 |
| |||
NC Hsg. Fin. Agcy. FRB (Homeownership), Ser. 26, | |||
Class A, 5 1/2s, 1/1/38 | Aa2 | 600,000 | 615,414 |
| |||
NC Med. Care Cmnty. Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Presbyterian Homes), 5.4s, 10/1/27 | BB/P | 2,000,000 | 1,787,320 |
(First Mtge. Presbyterian Homes), 5 3/8s, | |||
10/1/22 | BB/P | 1,110,000 | 1,065,600 |
| |||
NC Med. Care Comm. Retirement Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Carolina Village), 6s, 4/1/38 | BB/P | 500,000 | 423,340 |
(First Mtge.), Ser. A-05, 5 1/2s, 10/1/35 | BB+/P | 1,730,000 | 1,400,816 |
(First Mtge.), Ser. A-05, 5 1/4s, 10/1/25 | BB+/P | 700,000 | 610,008 |
(Forest at Duke), 5 1/8s, 9/1/27 | BBB+/F | 1,000,000 | 938,330 |
| |||
7,698,543 | |||
Ohio (6.9%) | |||
American Muni. Pwr. Ohio, Inc. Rev. Bonds, | |||
5 1/4s, 2/15/33 T | AA+ | 10,000,000 | 10,079,028 |
| |||
Buckeye, Tobacco Settlement Fin. Auth. Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. A-2 | |||
5 7/8s, 6/1/30 | Baa3 | 3,340,000 | 2,415,354 |
5 3/4s, 6/1/34 | Baa3 | 3,500,000 | 2,414,265 |
5 1/8s, 6/1/24 | Baa3 | 990,000 | 755,073 |
| |||
Erie Cnty., OH Hosp. Fac. Rev. Bonds (Firelands | |||
Regl. Med. Ctr.), 5 5/8s, 8/15/32 | A | 2,825,000 | 2,500,408 |
| |||
Franklin Cnty., Hlth. Care Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Presbyterian Svcs.), Ser. A, 5 5/8s, 7/1/26 | BBB | 2,750,000 | 2,585,495 |
| |||
Hickory Chase, Cmnty. Auth. Infrastructure Impt. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Hickory Chase), 7s, 12/1/38 | BB/P | 700,000 | 460,082 |
| |||
Lake Cnty., Hosp. Fac. Rev. Bonds (Lake Hosp. | |||
Syst.), Ser. C, 5 5/8s, 8/15/29 | Baa1 | 1,530,000 | 1,436,012 |
| |||
Lorain Cnty., Port Auth. Recovery Zone Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (U.S. Steel Corp.), 6 3/4s, 12/1/40 | Ba2 | 1,000,000 | 1,028,300 |
| |||
OH State Air Quality Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Valley Elec. Corp.), Ser. E, 5 5/8s, 10/1/19 | Baa3 | 1,300,000 | 1,331,837 |
|
27
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Ohio cont. | |||
OH State Higher Edl. Fac. Commn. Rev. Bonds | |||
(U. Hosp. Hlth. Syst.), Ser. 09-A, 6 3/4s, 1/15/39 | A2 | $2,000,000 | $2,068,900 |
| |||
Toledo-Lucas Cnty., Port Auth. Rev. Bonds (CSX | |||
Transn, Inc.), 6.45s, 12/15/21 | Baa3 | 500,000 | 551,315 |
| |||
27,626,069 | |||
Oklahoma (1.3%) | |||
OK Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Single Family Mtge. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Homeownership Loan), | |||
Ser. B, 5.35s, 3/1/35 | Aaa | 1,805,000 | 1,884,601 |
Ser. C, GNMA Coll., FNMA Coll., 5.95s, 3/1/37 | Aaa | 1,625,000 | 1,718,291 |
| |||
Tulsa Cnty., Indl. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Sr. Living | |||
Cmnty. Montereau, Inc.), Ser. A | |||
7 1/8s, 11/1/30 | BB/P | 1,250,000 | 1,252,038 |
6 7/8s, 11/1/23 | BB/P | 500,000 | 503,885 |
| |||
5,358,815 | |||
Oregon (0.9%) | |||
Multnomah Cnty., Hosp. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Terwilliger Plaza), 6 1/2s, 12/1/29 | BB/P | 3,100,000 | 3,106,169 |
| |||
Warm Springs Reservation, Confederated Tribes | |||
Rev. Bonds (Pelton Round Butte Tribal), Ser. B, | |||
6 3/8s, 11/1/33 | A3 | 700,000 | 702,947 |
| |||
3,809,116 | |||
Pennsylvania (6.6%) | |||
Allegheny Cnty., Higher Ed. Bldg. Auth. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Robert Morris U.), Ser. A, 5 1/2s, | |||
10/15/30 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 947,410 |
| |||
Allegheny Cnty., Hosp. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Hlth. Syst.-West PA), Ser. A, 5 3/8s, 11/15/40 | BB | 2,905,000 | 2,191,881 |
| |||
Allegheny Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(U.S. Steel Corp.), 6 3/4s, 11/1/24 | Ba2 | 2,000,000 | 2,143,980 |
| |||
Bucks Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Retirement Cmnty. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Anns Choice, Inc.), Ser. A | |||
6 1/8s, 1/1/25 | BB/P | 1,160,000 | 1,090,922 |
5.3s, 1/1/14 | BB/P | 690,000 | 695,727 |
5.2s, 1/1/13 | BB/P | 1,000,000 | 1,010,840 |
5.1s, 1/1/12 | BB/P | 400,000 | 402,524 |
| |||
Cumberland Cnty., Muni. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Presbyterian Homes Oblig.), Ser. A, 5.45s, 1/1/21 | BBB+ | 550,000 | 548,323 |
(Presbyterian Homes), Ser. A, 5.35s, 1/1/20 | BBB+ | 515,000 | 511,792 |
| |||
Delaware Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Resource Recvy. | |||
Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, 6.1s, 7/1/13 | Ba1 | 335,000 | 335,241 |
| |||
Lancaster Cnty., Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Brethren Village), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, 7/1/30 | BB/P | 625,000 | 601,238 |
| |||
Lebanon Cnty., Hlth. Facs. Rev. Bonds (Pleasant | |||
View Retirement), Ser. A, 5.3s, 12/15/26 | BB/P | 1,800,000 | 1,547,226 |
| |||
Lycoming Cnty., Auth. Hlth. Syst. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Susquehanna Hlth. Syst.), Ser. A, 5 3/4s, | |||
7/1/39 | BBB+ | 3,000,000 | 2,671,920 |
| |||
Montgomery Cnty., Indl. Auth. Resource Recvy. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Whitemarsh Cont. Care), 6 1/4s, | |||
2/1/35 | B/P | 1,100,000 | 881,870 |
|
28
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Pennsylvania cont. | |||
Northampton Cnty., Hosp. Auth. Mandatory Put | |||
Bonds (8/15/16) (Saint Lukes Hosp.), Ser. C, | |||
4 1/2s, 8/15/32 | A3 | $1,500,000 | $1,533,225 |
| |||
PA Econ. Dev. Fin. Auth. Exempt Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Allegheny Energy Supply Co.), 7s, 7/15/39 | Baa3 | 2,000,000 | 2,100,060 |
(Reliant Energy), Ser. B, 6 3/4s, 12/1/36 | |||
(Prerefunded 6/1/11) | B1 | 650,000 | 672,276 |
| |||
PA State Econ. Dev. Fin. Auth. Resource Recvy. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Colver), Ser. F, AMBAC, 5s, 12/1/15 | BBB | 1,650,000 | 1,629,392 |
| |||
PA State Higher Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Edinboro U. Foundation), 5.8s, 7/1/30 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 965,190 |
(Widener U.), 5.4s, 7/15/36 | BBB+ | 1,000,000 | 956,190 |
| |||
Philadelphia, Gas Wks. Rev. Bonds, Ser. 9, 5s, 8/1/30 | BBB+ | 1,000,000 | 946,690 |
| |||
Philadelphia, Hosp. & Higher Ed. Fac. Auth. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Graduate Hlth. Syst.), 7 1/4s, 7/1/11 | |||
(In default) | D/P | 2,707,789 | 271 |
| |||
Philadelphia, Hosp. & Higher Ed. Fac. Auth. VRDN | |||
(Childrens Hosp. of Philadelphia), Ser. C, | |||
0 1/4s, 7/1/32 | VMIG1 | 250,000 | 250,000 |
| |||
Scranton, G.O. Bonds, Ser. C, 7.1s, 9/1/31 | |||
(Prerefunded 9/1/11) | AAA/P | 750,000 | 766,553 |
| |||
Susquehanna, Area Regl. Arpt. Syst. Auth. Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 1/1/38 | Baa3 | 500,000 | 473,385 |
| |||
Wilkes-Barre, Fin. Auth. (Wilkes U.), 5s, 3/1/22 | BBB | 560,000 | 561,081 |
| |||
26,435,207 | |||
Puerto Rico (2.8%) | |||
Cmnwlth. of PR, G.O. Bonds | |||
Ser. C, 6 1/2s, 7/1/40 | A3 | 2,000,000 | 2,044,520 |
Ser. A, FGIC, 5 1/2s, 7/1/21 | A3 | 1,000,000 | 1,033,740 |
(Pub. Impt.), Ser. A, NATL, 5 1/2s, 7/1/20 | A3 | 1,000,000 | 1,034,820 |
| |||
Cmnwlth. of PR, Aqueduct & Swr. Auth. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. A | |||
6s, 7/1/44 | Baa1 | 1,200,000 | 1,126,355 |
6s, 7/1/38 | Baa1 | 1,000,000 | 956,120 |
| |||
Cmnwlth. of PR, Hwy. & Trans. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
Ser. N, 5 1/2s, 7/1/25 | A3 | 1,000,000 | 1,002,850 |
Ser. L, AMBAC, 5 1/4s, 7/1/38 | A3 | 1,845,000 | 1,626,958 |
| |||
Cmnwlth. of PR, Indl. Tourist Edl. Med. & Env. | |||
Control Facs. Rev. Bonds (Cogen. Fac.-AES), | |||
6 5/8s, 6/1/26 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,920 |
| |||
Cmnwlth. of PR, Sales Tax Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, | |||
Ser. A, zero %, 8/1/30 | A1 | 5,000,000 | 1,501,700 |
| |||
11,327,983 | |||
Rhode Island (0.4%) | |||
Tobacco Settlement Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||
6 1/8s, 6/1/32 | BBB | 1,490,000 | 1,424,634 |
| |||
1,424,634 | |||
South Carolina (1.5%) | |||
Georgetown Cnty., Env. Impt. Rev. Bonds (Intl. | |||
Paper Co.), Ser. A, 5s, 8/1/30 | BBB | 1,135,000 | 984,215 |
| |||
Orangeburg Cnty., Solid Waste Disp. Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (SC Elec. & Gas), AMBAC, 5.7s, 11/1/24 | A | 2,500,000 | 2,505,924 |
|
29
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
South Carolina cont. | |||
SC Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Med. U.), Ser. A, | |||
6 1/2s, 8/15/32 (Prerefunded 8/15/12) | AAA | $1,250,000 | $1,348,300 |
| |||
SC Jobs Econ. Dev. Auth. Hosp. Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Palmetto Hlth.), Ser. C | |||
6s, 8/1/20 (Prerefunded 8/1/13) | Baa1 | 890,000 | 990,917 |
U.S. Govt. Coll., 6s, 8/1/20 (Prerefunded 8/1/13) | Baa1 | 110,000 | 122,473 |
| |||
5,951,829 | |||
South Dakota (0.5%) | |||
SD Edl. Enhancement Funding Corp. SD Tobacco Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. B, 6 1/2s, 6/1/32 | BBB | 2,000,000 | 1,950,640 |
| |||
1,950,640 | |||
Tennessee (0.5%) | |||
Johnson City, Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Board Hosp. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Mountain States Hlth. Alliance), 6s, 7/1/38 | Baa1 | 1,450,000 | 1,323,646 |
| |||
Johnson City, Hlth. & Edl. Facs. Board Retirement | |||
Fac. Rev. Bonds (Appalachian Christian Village), | |||
Ser. A, 6 1/4s, 2/15/32 | BB/P | 1,000,000 | 869,280 |
| |||
2,192,926 | |||
Texas (12.2%) | |||
Abilene, Hlth. Fac. Dev. Corp. Rev. Bonds (Sears | |||
Methodist Retirement) | |||
6s, 11/15/29 | B+/P | 1,450,000 | 1,120,241 |
5 7/8s, 11/15/18 | B+/P | 915,000 | 835,505 |
Ser. A, 5 7/8s, 11/15/18 | B+/P | 18,000 | 16,436 |
Ser. A, 7s, 11/15/33 | B+/P | 600,000 | 504,054 |
| |||
Alliance, Arpt. Auth. Rev. Bonds (American | |||
Airlines, Inc.), 5 1/4s, 12/1/29 | CCC+ | 850,000 | 560,295 |
| |||
Brazos River, Auth. Poll. Control Rev. Bonds (TXU | |||
Energy Co., LLC) | |||
Ser. D-1, 8 1/4s, 5/1/33 | Ca | 1,000,000 | 410,000 |
5s, 3/1/41 | Ca | 1,500,000 | 474,090 |
| |||
Brazos, Harbor Indl. Dev. Corp. Env. Fac. | |||
Mandatory Put Bonds (5/1/28) (Dow Chemical), | |||
5.9s, 5/1/38 | BBB | 2,200,000 | 2,165,240 |
| |||
Dallas-Fort Worth, Intl. Arpt. Fac. Impt. Rev. | |||
Bonds (American Airlines, Inc.) | |||
6 3/8s, 5/1/35 | CCC+ | 1,000,000 | 743,610 |
5 1/2s, 11/1/30 | CCC+ | 500,000 | 343,975 |
| |||
Gulf Coast, Waste Disp. Auth. Rev. Bonds, Ser. A, | |||
6.1s, 8/1/24 | BBB | 450,000 | 450,905 |
| |||
Houston, Arpt. Syst. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Continental Airlines, Inc.), Ser. C, 5.7s, 7/15/29 | B3 | 6,185,000 | 5,329,924 |
(Continental Airlines, Inc.), Ser. E, 6 3/4s, 7/1/29 | B3 | 4,790,000 | 4,653,005 |
(Continental Airlines, Inc.), Ser. E, 7s, 7/1/29 | B3 | 500,000 | 498,410 |
(Special Fac. Continental Airlines, Inc.), Ser. E, | |||
6 3/4s, 7/1/21 | B3 | 1,600,000 | 1,592,848 |
| |||
La Vernia, Higher Ed. Fin. Corp. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Kipp Inc.), Ser. A, 6 3/8s, 8/15/44 | BBB | 1,100,000 | 1,103,718 |
| |||
Love Field, Arpt. Modernization Corp. Special | |||
Fac. Rev. Bonds (Southwest Airlines Co.), | |||
5 1/4s, 11/1/40 | BBB | 3,500,000 | 3,065,055 |
|
30
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Texas cont. | |||
Matagorda Cnty., Poll. Control Rev. Bonds | |||
(Cent Pwr. & Light Co.), Ser. A, 6.3s, 11/1/29 | Baa2 | $1,000,000 | $1,015,630 |
(Dist. No. 1), Ser. A, AMBAC, 4.4s, 5/1/30 | Baa2 | 1,250,000 | 1,113,575 |
| |||
Mission, Econ. Dev. Corp. Solid Waste Disp. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Allied Waste N.A. Inc.), Ser. A, 5.2s, 4/1/18 | BBB | 900,000 | 918,315 |
| |||
North TX, Thruway Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
Ser. A, 6s, 1/1/25 | A2 | 1,000,000 | 1,069,390 |
(Toll 2nd Tier), Ser. F, 5 3/4s, 1/1/38 | A3 | 1,750,000 | 1,689,747 |
| |||
North TX, Thruway Auth. stepped-coupon Rev. | |||
Bonds, zero %, (6.5s, 1/1/15) 2043 | A2 | 3,000,000 | 2,328,060 |
| |||
Sam Rayburn Muni. Pwr. Agcy. Rev. Bonds, 6s, | |||
10/1/21 | Baa2 | 1,950,000 | 1,976,618 |
| |||
Tarrant Cnty., Cultural Ed. Fac. Fin. Corp. | |||
Retirement Fac. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Sr. Living Ctr.), Ser. A, 8 1/4s, 11/15/39 | B+/P | 4,000,000 | 3,901,440 |
(Buckner Retirement Svcs., Inc.), 5 1/4s, 11/15/37 | A | 900,000 | 776,844 |
(Air Force Village), 5 1/8s, 5/15/27 | BBB/F | 4,000,000 | 3,453,640 |
| |||
Tomball, Hosp. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Tomball Regl. | |||
Hosp.), 6s, 7/1/29 | Baa3 | 1,640,000 | 1,372,352 |
| |||
TX Muni. Gas Acquisition & Supply Corp. I Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. A, 5 1/4s, 12/15/24 | A2 | 2,000,000 | 1,896,820 |
| |||
TX Private Activity Surface Trans. Corp. Rev. | |||
Bonds | |||
(NTE Mobility), 7 1/2s, 12/31/31 | BBB/F | 2,000,000 | 2,137,420 |
(LBJ Infrastructure), 7s, 6/30/40 | Baa3 | 1,000,000 | 1,024,970 |
| |||
TX State Dept. of Hsg. & Cmnty. Affairs Rev. | |||
Bonds, Ser. C, GNMA/FNMA Coll., 6.9s, 7/2/24 | AAA | 550,000 | 583,341 |
| |||
49,125,473 | |||
Utah (0.5%) | |||
Carbon Cnty., Solid Waste Disp. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Laidlaw Env.), Ser. A, 7.45s, 7/1/17 | B+/P | 600,000 | 600,456 |
| |||
Tooele Cnty., Harbor & Term. Dist. Port Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Union Pacific), Ser. A, 5.7s, 11/1/26 | BBB+ | 1,500,000 | 1,501,110 |
| |||
2,101,566 | |||
Vermont (0.1%) | |||
VT Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Rev. Bonds (Single Fam.), | |||
Ser. 23, AGM, 5s, 5/1/34 Δ | AA+ | 310,000 | 314,325 |
| |||
314,325 | |||
Virginia (1.9%) | |||
Albemarle Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Res. Care Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Westminster-Canterbury), 5s, 1/1/24 | B+/P | 600,000 | 560,388 |
| |||
Henrico Cnty., Econ. Dev. Auth. Res. Care Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds | |||
(United Methodist), Ser. A, 6.7s, 6/1/27 | BB+/P | 295,000 | 291,838 |
(United Methodist), Ser. A, 6.7s, 6/1/27 | |||
(Prerefunded 6/1/12) | BB+/P | 105,000 | 111,746 |
(United Methodist), Ser. A, 6 1/2s, 6/1/22 | BB+/P | 600,000 | 601,128 |
(Westminster-Canterbury), 5s, 10/1/22 | BBB | 1,000,000 | 976,180 |
| |||
James Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Williamsburg), Ser. A, 6 1/8s, 3/1/32 | BB/P | 1,500,000 | 1,377,000 |
|
31
MUNICIPAL BONDS AND NOTES (128.5%)* cont. | Rating** | Principal amount | Value |
| |||
Virginia cont. | |||
Lynchburg, Indl. Dev. Auth. Res. Care Fac. Rev. | |||
Bonds (Westminster-Canterbury) | |||
5s, 7/1/31 | BB/P | $1,250,000 | $1,042,113 |
4 7/8s, 7/1/21 | BB/P | 1,000,000 | 923,870 |
| |||
Washington Cnty., Indl. Dev. Auth. Hosp. Fac. | |||
Rev. Bonds (Mountain States Hlth. Alliance), Ser. C, | |||
7 3/4s, 7/1/38 | Baa1 | 1,700,000 | 1,849,889 |
| |||
7,734,152 | |||
Washington (1.9%) | |||
Skagit Cnty., Pub. Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Dist. No. 001), | |||
5 3/4s, 12/1/35 | Baa2 | 2,500,000 | 2,226,525 |
| |||
Tobacco Settlement Auth. of WA Rev. Bonds | |||
6 5/8s, 6/1/32 | BBB | 2,385,000 | 2,341,067 |
6 1/2s, 6/1/26 | BBB | 465,000 | 468,543 |
| |||
WA State Higher Ed. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(Whitworth U.), 5 5/8s, 10/1/40 | Baa1 | 400,000 | 365,024 |
| |||
WA State Hlth. Care Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(WA Hlth. Svcs.), 7s, 7/1/39 | Baa2 | 1,000,000 | 1,006,030 |
(Kadlec Med. Ctr.), 5 1/2s, 12/1/39 | Baa2 | 1,500,000 | 1,242,585 |
| |||
7,649,774 | |||
West Virginia (1.0%) | |||
Mason Cnty., Poll. Control (Appalachian Pwr. Co. | |||
Project), Ser. L, 5 1/2s, 10/1/11 | Baa2 | 725,000 | 725,673 |
| |||
Princeton, Hosp. Rev. Bonds (Cmnty. Hosp. | |||
Assn., Inc.), 6.1s, 5/1/29 | BB | 3,075,000 | 2,736,781 |
| |||
WV State Hosp. Fin. Auth. Rev. Bonds (Thomas | |||
Hlth. Syst.), 6 3/4s, 10/1/43 | B/P | 735,000 | 678,185 |
| |||
4,140,639 | |||
Wisconsin (3.9%) | |||
Badger, Tobacco Settlement Asset | |||
Securitization Corp. Rev. Bonds | |||
7s, 6/1/28 (Prerefunded 6/1/12) | Aaa | 3,000,000 | 3,209,130 |
6 3/8s, 6/1/32 (Prerefunded 6/1/12) | Aaa | 5,500,000 | 5,846,610 |
| |||
U. of WI Hosp. & Clinic Auth. VRDN, Ser. B, | |||
0.26s, 4/1/34 | VMIG1 | 4,000,000 | 4,000,000 |
| |||
WI State Hlth. & Edl. Fac. Auth. Rev. Bonds | |||
(St. Johns Cmntys. Inc.), Ser. A, 7 5/8s, 9/15/39 | BB/P | 1,150,000 | 1,133,428 |
(Prohealth Care, Inc.), 6 5/8s, 2/15/39 | A1 | 1,250,000 | 1,305,750 |
| |||
15,494,918 | |||
Total municipal bonds and notes (cost $534,172,701) | $517,388,119 | ||
PREFERRED STOCKS (1.3%)* | Shares | Value | |
| |||
MuniMae Tax Exempt Bond Subsidiary, LLC 144A | |||
Ser. A-3, $4.95 | 2,000,000 | $1,643,000 | |
| |||
MuniMae Tax Exempt Bond Subsidiary, LLC 144A | |||
Ser. A, 7.50% cum. pfd. | 3,659,046 | 3,407,450 | |
| |||
Total preferred stocks (cost $5,659,046) | $5,050,450 |
32
COMMON STOCKS (%)* | Shares | Value | ||
| ||||
Tembec, Inc. (Canada) | 1,750 | $9,971 | ||
| ||||
Total common stocks (cost $1,273,945) | $9,971 | |||
WARRANTS (%)* | Expiration | Strike | ||
date | price | Warrants | Value | |
| ||||
Tembec, Inc. (Canada) | 3/03/12 | CAD0.00001 | 3,889 | $1,480 |
| ||||
Total warrants (cost $154,422) | $1,480 | |||
TOTAL INVESTMENTS | ||||
| ||||
Total investments (cost $541,260,114) | $522,450,020 |
Key to holdings currency abbreviations | |
CAD | Canadian Dollar |
Notes to the funds portfolio
Unless noted otherwise, the notes to the funds portfolio are for the close of the funds reporting period, which ran from November 1, 2010 through April 30, 2011 (the reporting period).
* Percentages indicated are based on net assets of $402,658,962.
** The Moodys, Standard & Poors or Fitch ratings indicated are believed to be the most recent ratings available at the close of the reporting period for the securities listed. Ratings are generally ascribed to securities at the time of issuance. While the agencies may from time to time revise such ratings, they undertake no obligation to do so, and the ratings do not necessarily represent what the agencies would ascribe to these securities at the close of the reporting period. Securities rated by Putnam are indicated by /P. Securities rated by Fitch are indicated by /F. The rating of an insured security represents what is believed to be the most recent rating of the insurers claims-paying ability available at the close of the reporting period and does not reflect any subsequent changes.
Non-income-producing security.
Δ Forward commitments, in part or in entirety (Note 1).
The interest rate and date shown parenthetically represent the new interest rate to be paid and the date the fund will begin accruing interest at this rate.
T Underlying security in a tender option bond transaction. The security has been segregated as collateral for financing transactions.
Debt obligations are considered secured unless otherwise indicated.
144A after the name of an issuer represents securities exempt from registration under Rule 144A under the Securi ties Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers.
The rates shown on FRB, Mandatory Put Bonds and VRDN are the current interest rates at the close of the reporting period.
The dates shown parenthetically on Mandatory Put Bonds represent the next mandatory put dates.
The dates shown parenthetically on prerefunded bonds represent the next prerefunding dates.
The dates shown on debt obligations are the original maturity dates.
The fund had the following sector concentrations greater than 10% at the close of the reporting period (as a percentage of net assets):
Health care | 51.3% |
Utilities | 18.2 |
Transportation | 13.7 |
33
Accounting Standards Codification ASC 820 Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (ASC 820) establishes a three-level hierarchy for disclosure of fair value measurements. The valuation hierarchy is based upon the transparency of inputs to the valuation of the funds investments. The three levels are defined as follows:
Level 1 Valuations based on quoted prices for identical securities in active markets.
Level 2 Valuations based on quoted prices in markets that are not active or for which all significant inputs are observable, either directly or indirectly.
Level 3 Valuations based on inputs that are unobservable and significant to the fair value measurement.
The following is a summary of the inputs used to value the funds net assets as of the close of the reporting period:
Valuation inputs | |||
| |||
Investments in securities: | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
| |||
Common stocks: | |||
| |||
Basic materials | $9,971 | $ | $ |
| |||
Total common stocks | 9,971 | | |
Municipal bonds and notes | | 517,388,119 | |
| |||
Preferred stocks | | 5,050,450 | |
| |||
Warrants | 1,480 | | |
| |||
Totals by level | $11,451 | $522,438,569 | $ |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
34
Statement of assets and liabilities 4/30/11 (Unaudited) | |
ASSETS | |
| |
Investment in securities, at value (Note 1): | |
Unaffiliated issuers (identified cost $541,260,114) | $522,450,020 |
| |
Cash | 251,501 |
| |
Interest and other receivables | 10,236,562 |
| |
Receivable for investments sold | 6,662,938 |
| |
Receivable for sales of delayed delivery securities (Notes 1) | 1,324,271 |
| |
Total assets | 540,925,292 |
LIABILITIES | |
| |
Preferred share remarketing agent fees | 38,594 |
| |
Distributions payable to shareholders | 2,526,603 |
| |
Distributions payable to preferred shareholders (Note 1) | 3,810 |
| |
Payable for investments purchased | 1,140,255 |
| |
Payable for compensation of Manager (Note 2) | 708,383 |
| |
Payable for investor servicing fees (Note 2) | 16,700 |
| |
Payable for custodian fees (Note 2) | 4,825 |
| |
Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2) | 154,447 |
| |
Payable for administrative services (Note 2) | 1,465 |
| |
Payable for floating rate notes issued (Note 1) | 10,000,428 |
| |
Other accrued expenses | 170,820 |
| |
Total liabilities | 14,766,330 |
Series A remarketed preferred shares: (245 shares | |
authorized and issued at $100,000 per share) (Note 4) | 24,500,000 |
| |
Series C remarketed preferred shares: (1,980 shares | |
authorized and issued at $50,000 per share) (Note 4) | 99,000,000 |
| |
Net assets | $402,658,962 |
REPRESENTED BY | |
| |
Paid-in capital common shares (Unlimited shares authorized) (Notes 5) | $508,561,515 |
| |
Undistributed net investment income (Note 1) | 149,640 |
| |
Accumulated net realized loss on investments (Note 1) | (87,242,099) |
| |
Net unrealized depreciation of investments | (18,810,094) |
| |
Total Representing net assets applicable to common shares outstanding | $402,658,962 |
COMPUTATION OF NET ASSET VALUE | |
| |
Net asset value per common share ($402,658,962 divided by 57,422,791 shares) | $7.01 |
|
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
35
Statement of operations Six months ended 4/30/11 (Unaudited) | |
INTEREST INCOME | $17,102,301 |
| |
EXPENSES | |
| |
Compensation of Manager (Note 2) | $1,443,906 |
| |
Investor servicing fees (Note 2) | 101,851 |
| |
Custodian fees (Note 2) | 5,345 |
| |
Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2) | 22,748 |
| |
Administrative services (Note 2) | 6,540 |
| |
Legal | 217,017 |
| |
Interest and fee expense (Note 2) | 38,512 |
| |
Preferred share remarketing agent fees | 155,235 |
| |
Other | 111,767 |
| |
Total expenses | 2,102,921 |
Expense reduction (Note 2) | (514) |
| |
Net expenses | 2,102,407 |
Net investment income | 14,999,894 |
| |
Net realized loss on investments (Notes 1 and 3) | (4,284,535) |
| |
Net unrealized depreciation of investments during the period | (30,524,986) |
| |
Net loss on investments | (34,809,521) |
Net decrease in net assets resulting from operations | $(19,809,627) |
| |
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SERIES A AND C REMARKETED PREFERRED SHAREHOLDERS (NOTE 1): | |
| |
From ordinary income | (346) |
From tax exempt net investment income | (144,221) |
| |
Net decrease in net assets resulting from operations | |
(applicable to common shareholders) | $(19,954,194) |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
36
Statement of changes in net assets | |||
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS | Six months ended 4/30/11* | Year ended 10/31/10 | |
| |||
Operations: | |||
Net investment income | $14,999,894 | $29,929,555 | |
| |||
Net realized loss on investments | (4,284,535) | (3,385,022) | |
| |||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments | (30,524,986) | 29,416,794 | |
| |||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (19,809,627) | 55,961,327 | |
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SERIES A AND C REMARKETED PREFERRED SHAREHOLDERS (NOTE 1): | |||
| |||
From ordinary income | |||
Taxable net investment income | (346) | (424) | |
| |||
From tax exempt net investment income | (144,221) | (308,928) | |
| |||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | |||
(applicable to common shareholders) | (19,954,194) | 55,651,975 | |
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON SHAREHOLDERS: (NOTE 1) | |||
| |||
From ordinary income | |||
Taxable net investment income | (30,748) | (13,090) | |
| |||
From tax exempt net investment income | (15,119,788) | (29,596,065) | |
| |||
Increase from issuance of common shares in connection with | |||
reinvestment of distributions | 369,623 | 618,532 | |
| |||
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | (34,735,107) | 26,661,352 | |
NET ASSETS | |||
| |||
Beginning of period | 437,394,069 | 410,732,717 | |
| |||
End of period (including undistributed net investment | |||
income of $149,640 and $444,849, respectively) | $402,658,962 | $437,394,069 | |
NUMBER OF FUND SHARES | |||
| |||
Common shares outstanding at beginning of period | 57,371,319 | 57,288,363 | |
| |||
Shares issued in connection with dividend reinvestment plan | 51,472 | 82,956 | |
| |||
Common shares outstanding at end of period | 57,422,791 | 57,371,319 | |
| |||
Remarketed preferred shares outstanding at beginning and end of period 2,225 | 2,225 | ||
| |||
* Unaudited |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
37
Financial highlights (For a common share outstanding throughout the period)
PER-SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE | ||||||
Six months ended** | Year ended | |||||
| ||||||
4/30/11 | 10/31/10 | 10/31/09 | 10/31/08 | 10/31/07 | 10/31/06 | |
| ||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period | ||||||
(common shares) | $7.62 | $7.17 | $6.23 | $8.04 | $8.37 | $8.20 |
Investment operations: | ||||||
| ||||||
Net investment income a | .26 | .52 | .50 | .56 | .55 | .53 |
| ||||||
Net realized and unrealized | ||||||
gain (loss) on investments | (.61) | .46 | .92 | (1.84) | (.34) | .13 |
| ||||||
Total from investment operations | (.35) | .98 | 1.42 | (1.28) | .21 | .66 |
Distributions to preferred shareholders: | ||||||
| ||||||
From net investment income | e | (.01) | (.02) | (.12) | (.15) | (.13) |
| ||||||
Total from investment operations | ||||||
(applicable to common shareholders) | (.35) | .97 | 1.40 | (1.40) | .06 | .53 |
Distributions to common shareholders: | ||||||
| ||||||
From net investment income | (.26) | (.52) | (.46) | (.42) | (.41) | (.41) |
| ||||||
Total distributions | (.26) | (.52) | (.46) | (.42) | (.41) | (.41) |
| ||||||
Increase from shares repurchased | | | .01 | .02 | .05 | |
| ||||||
Net asset value, end of period | ||||||
(common shares) | $7.01 | $7.62 | $7.17 | $6.23 | $8.04 | $8.37 |
| ||||||
Market price, end of period | ||||||
(common shares) | $6.88 | $7.73 | $6.59 | $5.70 | $7.18 | $7.58 |
| ||||||
Total return at market price (%) | ||||||
(common shares) b | (7.57) * | 25.94 | 24.96 | (15.69) | (.14) | 12.07 |
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA | ||||||
| ||||||
Net assets, end of period | ||||||
(common shares) (in thousands) | $402,659 | $437,394 | $410,733 | $356,857 | $322,047 | $373,773 |
| ||||||
Ratio of expenses to average | ||||||
net assets (excluding interest | ||||||
expense) (%) c,d | .51 * | .92 | .98 | 1.24 | 1.21 | 1.14 |
| ||||||
Ratio of expenses to average | ||||||
net assets ( including interest | ||||||
expense) (%) c,d | .52 *f | .94 f | 1.03 f | 1.28 f | 1.21 | 1.14 |
| ||||||
Ratio of net investment income | ||||||
to average net assets (%) c | 3.66 * | 7.03 | 7.66 | 5.87 | 4.79 | 4.83 |
| ||||||
Portfolio turnover (%) | 5 * | 17 | 25 | 41 | 15 | 23 |
|
* Not annualized.
** Unaudited.
a Per share net investment income has been determined on the basis of the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period.
b Total return assumes dividend reinvestment.
c Ratios reflect net assets available to common shares only; net investment income ratio also reflects reduction for dividend payments to preferred shareholders.
d Includes amounts paid through expense offset arrangements (Note 2).
e Amount represents less than $0.01 per share.
f Includes interest and fee expense associated with borrowings which amounted to 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.05% and 0.04% of the average net assets for the periods ended April 30, 2011, October 31, 2010, October 31, 2009 and October 31, 2008, respectively (Note 1).
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
38
Notes to financial statements 4/30/11 (Unaudited)
Note 1: Significant accounting policies
Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust (the fund), a Massachusetts business trust, is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a diversified, closed-end management investment company. The funds investment objective is to seek a high level of current income exempt from federal income tax. The fund intends to achieve its objective by investing in a diversified portfolio of tax-exempt municipal securities which Putnam Investment Management, LLC (Putnam Management), the funds manager, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam Investments, LLC, believes does not involve undue risk to income or principal. Up to 60% of the funds assets may consist of high-yield tax-exempt municipal securities that are below investment grade and involve special risk considerations. The fund also uses leverage by issuing preferred shares in an effort to increase the income to the common shares.
In the normal course of business, the fund enters into contracts that may include agreements to indemnify another party under given circumstances. The funds maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be, but have not yet been, made against the fund. However, the funds management team expects the risk of material loss to be remote.
The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the fund in the preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements is in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Subsequent events after the Statement of assets and liabilities date through the date that the financial statements were issued have been evaluated in the preparation of the financial statements. Unless otherwise noted, the reporting period represents the period from November 1, 2010 through April 30, 2011.
A) Security valuation Tax-exempt bonds and notes are generally valued on the basis of valuations provided by an independent pricing service approved by the Trustees. Such services use information with respect to transactions in bonds, quotations from bond dealers, market transactions in comparable securities and various relationships between securities in determining value. These securities will generally be categorized as Level 2.
Certain investments, including certain restricted and illiquid securities and derivatives, are also valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees. Such valuations and procedures are reviewed periodically by the Trustees. These valuations consider such factors as significant market or specific security events such as interest rate or credit quality changes, various relationships with other securities, discount rates, U.S. Treasury, U.S. swap and credit yields, index levels, convexity exposures and recovery rates. These securities are classified as Level 2 or as Level 3 depending on the priority of the significant inputs. The fair value of securities is generally determined as the amount that the fund could reasonably expect to realize from an orderly disposition of such securities over a reasonable period of time. By its nature, a fair value price is a good faith estimate of the value of a security in a current sale and does not reflect an actual market price, which may be different by a material amount.
B) Security transactions and related investment income Security transactions are recorded on the trade date (the date the order to buy or sell is executed). Gains or losses on securities sold are determined on the identified cost basis. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. All premiums/discounts are amortized/accreted on a yield-to-maturity basis. The premium in excess of the call price, if any, is amortized to the call date; thereafter, any remaining premium is amortized to maturity. Securities purchased or sold on a delayed delivery basis may be settled a month or more after the trade date; interest income is accrued based on the terms of the securities. Losses may arise due to changes in the market value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract.
C) Tender option bond transactions The fund may participate in transactions whereby a fixed-rate bond is transferred to a tender option bond trust (TOB trust) sponsored by a broker. The TOB trust funds the purchase of the fixed rate bonds by issuing floating-rate bonds to third parties and allowing the fund to retain the residual interest in the TOB trusts assets and cash flows, which are in the form of inverse floating rate bonds. The inverse floating rate bonds held by the fund give the fund the right to (1) cause the holders of the floating rate bonds to tender their notes at par, and (2) to have the fixed-rate bond held by the TOB trust transferred to the fund, causing the TOB trust to collapse. The fund accounts for the transfer of the fixed-rate bond to the TOB trust as a secured borrowing by including the fixed-rate bond in the funds portfolio and including the floating rate bond as a liability in the
39
Statement of assets and liabilities. At the close of the reporting period, the funds investments with a value of $20,421,128 were held by the TOB trust and served as collateral for $10,000,428 in floating-rate bonds outstanding. For the reporting period ended, the fund incurred interest expense of $16,445 for these investments based on an average interest rate of 0.35%.
D) Federal taxes It is the policy of the fund to distribute all of its income within the prescribed time period and otherwise comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), applicable to regulated investment companies. It is also the intention of the fund to distribute an amount sufficient to avoid imposition of any excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code. The fund is subject to the provisions of Accounting Standards Codification ASC 740 Income Taxes (ASC 740). ASC 740 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The fund did not have a liability to record for any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. No provision has been made for federal taxes on income, capital gains or unrealized appreciation on securities held nor for excise tax on income and capital gains. Each of the funds federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service.
At October 31, 2010 the fund had a capital loss carryover of $82,396,230 available to the extent allowed by the Code to offset future net capital gain, if any. The amounts of the carryovers and the expiration dates are:
Loss carryover | Expiration | |
| ||
$38,152,374 | October 31, 2011 | |
| ||
12,656,387 | October 31, 2012 | |
| ||
574,057 | October 31, 2013 | |
| ||
3,275,525 | October 31, 2014 | |
| ||
954,441 | October 31, 2015 | |
| ||
11,265,981 | October 31, 2016 | |
| ||
12,490,924 | October 31, 2017 | |
| ||
2,996,741 | October 31, 2018 | |
|
Under the recently enacted Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, the fund will be permitted to carry forward capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after December 22, 2010 for an unlimited period. However, any losses incurred during those future years will be required to be utilized prior to the losses incurred in pre-enactment tax years. As a result of this ordering rule, pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards may be more likely to expire unused. Additionally, post-enactment capital losses that are carried forward will retain their character as either short-term or long-term capital losses rather than being considered all short-term as under previous law.
The aggregate identified cost on a tax basis is $541,286,877, resulting in gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation of $12,226,048 and $31,062,905, respectively, or net unrealized depreciation of $18,836,857.
E) Distributions to shareholders Distributions to common and preferred shareholders from net investment income are recorded by the fund on the ex-dividend date. Distributions from capital gains, if any, are recorded on the ex-dividend date and paid at least annually. Dividends on remarketed preferred shares become payable when, as and if declared by the Trustees. Each dividend period for the remarketed preferred shares Series A is generally a 28 day period. The applicable dividend rate for the remarketed preferred shares Series A on April 30, 2011 was 0.187%. Each dividend period for the remarketed preferred shares Series C is generally a 7 day period. The applicable dividend rate for the remarketed preferred shares Series C on April 30, 2011 was 0.143%. The amount and character of income and gains to be distributed are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. Dividend sources are estimated at the time of declaration. Actual results may vary. Any non-taxable return of capital cannot be determined until final tax calculations are completed after the end of the funds fiscal year. Reclassifications are made to the funds capital accounts to reflect income and gains available for distribution (or available capital loss carryovers) under income tax regulations.
During the reporting period, the fund has experienced unsuccessful remarketings of its remarketed preferred shares. As a result, dividends to the remarketed preferred shares have been paid at the maximum dividend rate, pursuant to the funds by-laws, which, based on the current credit quality of the remarketed preferred shares, equals 110% of the 60-day AA composite commercial paper rate.
40
F) Determination of net asset value Net asset value of the common shares is determined by dividing the value of all assets of the fund, less all liabilities and the liquidation preference of any outstanding remarketed preferred shares, by the total number of common shares outstanding as of period end.
Note 2: Management fee, administrative services and other transactions
The fund pays Putnam Management for management and investment advisory services quarterly based on the average net assets of the fund including assets attributable to preferred shares. The fee is based on the following annual rates:
The lesser of (i) 0.55% of average weekly net assets attributable to common and preferred shares outstanding, or (ii) the following rates:
0.65% | of the first $500 million of average net assets, |
0.55% | of the next $500 million of average net assets, |
0.50% | of the next $500 million of average net assets, |
0.45% | of the next $5 billion of average net assets, |
0.425% | of the next $5 billion of average net assets, |
0.405% | of the next $5 billion of average net assets, |
0.39% | of the next $5 billion of average net assets, |
0.38% | of any excess thereafter. |
Putnam Investments Limited (PIL), an affiliate of Putnam Management, is authorized by the Trustees to manage a separate portion of the assets of the fund as determined by Putnam Management from time to time. Putnam Management pays a quarterly sub-management fee to PIL for its services at an annual rate of 0.40% of the average net assets of the portion of the fund managed by PIL.
If dividends payable on remarketed preferred shares during any dividend payment period plus any expenses attributable to remarketed preferred shares for that period exceed the funds gross income attributable to the proceeds of the remarketed preferred shares during that period, then the fee payable to Putnam Management for that period will be reduced by the amount of the excess (but not more than the effective management and administrative service fees rate under the contracts multiplied by the liquidation preference of the remarketed preferred shares outstanding during the period).
The fund reimburses Putnam Management an allocated amount for the compensation and related expenses of certain officers of the fund and their staff who provide administrative services to the fund. The aggregate amount of all such reimbursements is determined annually by the Trustees.
Custodial functions for the funds assets are provided by State Street Bank and Trust Company (State Street). Custody fees are based on the funds asset level, the number of its security holdings and transaction volumes.
Putnam Investor Services, a division of Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company (PFTC), which is an affiliate of Putnam Management, provided investor servicing agent functions to the fund through December 31, 2010. Subsequent to December 31, 2010 these services were provided by Putnam Investor Services, Inc., an affiliate of Putnam Management. Both Putnam Investor Services and Putnam Investor Services, Inc. were paid a monthly fee for investor servicing at an annual rate of 0.05% of the funds average net assets. The amounts incurred for investor servicing agent functions during the reporting period are included in Investor servicing fees in the Statement of operations.
The fund has entered into expense offset arrangements with PFTC and State Street whereby PFTCs and State Streets fees are reduced by credits allowed on cash balances. For the reporting period, the funds expenses were reduced by $514 under the expense offset arrangements.
Each independent Trustee of the fund receives an annual Trustee fee, of which $223, as a quarterly retainer, has been allocated to the fund, and an additional fee for each Trustees meeting attended. Trustees also are reimbursed for expenses they incur relating to their services as Trustees.
The fund has adopted a Trustee Fee Deferral Plan (the Deferral Plan) which allows the Trustees to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Trustees fees payable on or after July 1, 1995. The deferred fees remain invested in certain Putnam funds until distribution in accordance with the Deferral Plan.
The fund has adopted an unfunded noncontributory defined benefit pension plan (the Pension Plan) covering all Trustees of the fund who have served as a Trustee for at least five years and were first elected prior to 2004. Benefits under the Pension Plan are equal to 50% of the Trustees average annual attendance and retainer fees for the three years ended December 31, 2005. The retirement benefit is payable during a Trustees lifetime, beginning
41
the year following retirement, for the number of years of service through December 31, 2006. Pension expense for the fund is included in Trustee compensation and expenses in the Statement of operations. Accrued pension liability is included in Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses in the Statement of assets and liabilities. The Trustees have terminated the Pension Plan with respect to any Trustee first elected after 2003.
Note 3: Purchases and sales of securities
During the reporting period, cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities other than short-term investments aggregated $25,990,999 and $40,485,363, respectively. There were no purchases or proceeds from sales of long-term U.S. government securities.
Note 4: Preferred shares
The Series A (245) and C (1,980) Remarketed Preferred shares are redeemable at the option of the fund on any dividend payment date at a redemption price of $100,000 per Series A remarketed preferred share, and at $50,000 per Series C remarketed preferred share plus an amount equal to any dividends accumulated on a daily basis but unpaid through the redemption date (whether or not such dividends have been declared) and, in certain circumstances, a call premium.
It is anticipated that dividends paid to holders of remarketed preferred shares will be considered tax-exempt dividends under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. To the extent that the fund earns taxable income and capital gains by the conclusion of a fiscal year, it may be required to apportion to the holders of the remarketed preferred shares throughout that year additional dividends as necessary to result in an after-tax equivalent to the applicable dividend rate for the period.
Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the fund is required to maintain asset coverage of at least 200% with respect to the remarketed preferred shares. Additionally, the funds bylaws impose more stringent asset coverage requirements and restrictions relating to the rating of the remarketed preferred shares by the shares rating agencies. Should these requirements not be met, or should dividends accrued on the remarketed preferred shares not be paid, the fund may be restricted in its ability to declare dividends to common shareholders or may be required to redeem certain of the remarketed preferred shares. At April 30, 2011, no such restrictions have been placed on the fund.
Note 5: Shares repurchased
In September 2010, the Trustees approved the renewal of the repurchase program to allow the fund to repurchase up to 10% of its outstanding common shares over the 12-month period ending October 7, 2011 (based on shares outstanding as of October 7, 2010). Prior to this renewal, the Trustees had approved a repurchase program to allow the fund to repurchase up to 10% of its outstanding common shares over the 12-month period ending October 7, 2010 (based on shares outstanding as of October 7, 2009). Repurchases are made when the funds shares are trading at less than net asset value and in accordance with procedures approved by the funds Trustees. For the reporting period, the fund has not repurchased any common shares.
Note 6: Summary of derivative activity
The following is a summary of the market values of derivative instruments as of the close of the reporting period:
Asset derivatives | Liability derivatives | |||
| ||||
Derivatives not | ||||
accounted for as | Statement of | Statement of | ||
hedging instruments | assets and | assets and | ||
under ASC 815 | liabilities location | Market value | liabilities location | Market value |
| ||||
Equity contracts | Investments | $1,480 | $ | |
| ||||
Total | $1,480 | $ | ||
|
42
Change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) on derivatives recognized in net gain or (loss) on investments
Derivatives not accounted for as hedging | ||
instruments under ASC 815 | Warrants | Total |
| ||
Equity contracts | $(235) | $(235) |
| ||
Total | $(235) | $(235) |
|
Note 7: Regulatory matters and litigation
In late 2003 and 2004, Putnam Management settled charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) and the Massachusetts Securities Division in connection with excessive short-term trading in Putnam funds. Distribution of payments from Putnam Management to certain open-end Putnam funds and their shareholders is expected to be completed in the next several months. These allegations and related matters have served as the general basis for certain lawsuits, including purported class action lawsuits against Putnam Management and, in a limited number of cases, some Putnam funds. Putnam Management believes that these lawsuits will have no material adverse effect on the funds or on Putnam Managements ability to provide investment management services. In addition, Putnam Management has agreed to bear any costs incurred by the Putnam funds as a result of these matters.
Note 8: Market and credit risk
In the normal course of business, the fund trades financial instruments and enters into financial transactions where risk of potential loss exists due to changes in the market (market risk) or failure of the contracting party to the transaction to perform (credit risk). The fund may be exposed to additional credit risk that an institution or other entity with which the fund has unsettled or open transactions will default.
43
Services for shareholders
Investor services
Systematic investment plan Tell us how much you wish to invest regularly weekly, semimonthly, or monthly and the amount you choose will be transferred automatically from your checking or savings account. Theres no additional fee for this service, and you can suspend it at any time. This plan may be a great way to save for college expenses or to plan for your retirement.
Please note that regular investing does not guarantee a profit or protect against loss in a declining market. Before arranging a systematic investment plan, consider your financial ability to continue making purchases in periods when prices are low.
Systematic exchange You can make regular transfers from one Putnam fund to another Putnam fund. There are no additional fees for this service, and you can cancel or change your options at any time.
Dividends PLUS You can choose to have the dividend distributions from one of your Putnam funds automatically reinvested in another Putnam fund at no additional charge.
Free exchange privilege You can exchange money between Putnam funds free of charge, as long as they are the same class of shares. A signature guarantee is required if you are exchanging more than $500,000. The fund reserves the right to revise or terminate the exchange privilege.
Reinstatement privilege If youve sold Putnam shares or received a check for a dividend or capital gain, you may reinvest the proceeds with Putnam within 90 days of the transaction and they will be reinvested at the funds current net asset value with no sales charge. However, reinstatement of class B shares may have special tax consequences. Ask your financial or tax representative for details.
Check-writing service You have ready access to many Putnam accounts. Its as simple as writing a check, and there are no special fees or service charges. For more information about the check-writing service, call Putnam or visit our website.
Dollar cost averaging When youre investing for long-term goals, its time, not timing, that counts. Investing on a systematic basis is a better strategy than trying to figure out when the markets will go up or down. This means investing the same amount of money regularly over a long period. This method of investing is called dollar cost averaging. When a funds share price declines, your investment dollars buy more shares at lower prices. When it increases, they buy fewer shares. Over time, you will pay a lower average price per share.
For more information
Visit the Individual Investors section at putnam.com A secure section of our website contains complete information on your account, including balances and transactions, updated daily. You may also conduct transactions, such as exchanges, additional investments, and address changes. Log on today to get your password.
Call us toll free at 1-800-225-1581 Ask a helpful Putnam representative or your financial advisor for details about any of these or other services, or see your prospectus.
44
Fund information
About Putnam Investments
Founded over 70 years ago, Putnam Investments was built around the concept that a balance between risk and reward is the hallmark of a well-rounded financial program. We manage over 100 funds across income, value, blend, growth, asset allocation, absolute return, and global sector categories.
Investment Manager | Robert J. Darretta | Robert R. Leveille |
Putnam Investment | Paul L. Joskow | Vice President and |
Management, LLC | Kenneth R. Leibler | Chief Compliance Officer |
One Post Office Square | Robert E. Patterson | |
Boston, MA 02109 | George Putnam, III | Mark C. Trenchard |
Robert L. Reynolds | Vice President and | |
Investment Sub-Manager | W. Thomas Stephens | BSA Compliance Officer |
Putnam Investments Limited | ||
5759 St Jamess Street | Officers | Robert T. Burns |
London, England SW1A 1LD | Robert L. Reynolds | Vice President and |
President | Chief Legal Officer | |
Marketing Services | ||
Putnam Retail Management | Jonathan S. Horwitz | James P. Pappas |
One Post Office Square | Executive Vice President, | Vice President |
Boston, MA 02109 | Principal Executive | |
Officer, Treasurer and | Judith Cohen | |
Custodian | Compliance Liaison | Vice President, Clerk and |
State Street Bank | Assistant Treasurer | |
and Trust Company | Steven D. Krichmar | |
Vice President and | Michael Higgins | |
Legal Counsel | Principal Financial Officer | Vice President, Senior Associate |
Ropes & Gray LLP | Treasurer and Assistant Clerk | |
Janet C. Smith | ||
Trustees | Vice President, Assistant | Nancy E. Florek |
John A. Hill, Chairman | Treasurer and Principal | Vice President, Assistant Clerk, |
Jameson A. Baxter, | Accounting Officer | Assistant Treasurer and |
Vice Chairman | Proxy Manager | |
Ravi Akhoury | Beth S. Mazor | |
Barbara M. Baumann | Vice President | Susan G. Malloy |
Charles B. Curtis | Vice President and | |
Assistant Treasurer | ||
Call 1-800-225-1581 Monday through Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time, or visit putnam.com anytime for up-to-date information about the funds NAV.
Item 2. Code of Ethics:
Not Applicable
Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert:
Not Applicable
Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services:
Not Applicable
Item 5. Audit Committee
Not Applicable
Item 6. Schedule of Investments:
The registrants schedule of investments in unaffiliated issuers is included in the report to shareholders in Item 1 above.
Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures For Closed-End Management Investment Companies:
Not applicable
Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies
(a) Not applicable
(b) There have been no changes to the list of the registrants identified portfolio managers included in the registrants report on Form N-CSR for the most recent completed fiscal year.
Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Companies and Affiliated Purchasers:
Registrant Purchase of Equity Securities | ||||
Total Number | Number (or | |||
of Shares | Approximate | |||
Purchased | Dollar Value) | |||
as Part | of Shares | |||
of Publicly | that May Yet Be | |||
Total Number | Average | Announced | Purchased | |
of Shares | Price Paid | Plans or | under the Plans | |
Period | Purchased | per Share | Programs* | or Programs |
November 1 - | ||||
November 30, | ||||
2010 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
December 1 - | ||||
December 31, | ||||
2010 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
January 1 - | ||||
January 31, | ||||
2011 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
February 1 - | ||||
February 28, | ||||
2011 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
March 1 - | ||||
March 31, 2011 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
April 1 - April | ||||
30, 2011 | - | - | - | 5,735,496 |
* In October 2005, the Board of Trustees of the Putnam Funds initiated the closed-end fund share repurchase program, which, as subsequently amended, authorized the repurchase of up to 10% of the fund's outstanding common shares over the two-years ending October 5, 2007. The Trustees subsequently renewed the program on four occasions, to permit the repurchase of an additional 10% of the fund's outstanding common shares over each of the twelve-month periods beginning on October 8, 2007, October 8, 2008 ,October 8, 2009 and October 8, 2010.
The October 8, 2008 - October 7, 2009 program, which was announced in September 2008, allowed repurchases up to a total of 5,728,836 shares of the fund.
The October 8, 2009 - October 7, 2010 program, which was announced in September 2009, allows repurchases up to a total of 5,726,836 shares of the fund.
The October 8, 2010 - October 7, 2011 program, which was announced in September 2010, allows repurchases up to a total of 5,735,496 shares of the fund.
Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders:
Not applicable
Item 11. Controls and Procedures:
(a) The registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded, based on their evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report, that the design and operation of such procedures are generally effective to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed by the registrant in this report is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Commission's rules and forms.
(b) Changes in internal control over financial reporting: Not applicable
Item 12. Exhibits:
(a)(1) Not applicable
(a)(2) Separate certifications for the principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, are filed herewith.
(b) The certifications required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, are filed herewith.
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.
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.
Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust
By (Signature and Title):
/s/Janet C. Smith
Janet C. Smith
Principal Accounting Officer
Date: June 28, 2011
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 (Signature and Title):
/s/Jonathan S. Horwitz
Jonathan S. Horwitz
Principal Executive Officer
Date: June 28, 2011
By (Signature and Title):
/s/Steven D. Krichmar
Steven D. Krichmar
Principal Financial Officer
Date: June 28, 2011