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- 05452 ) 
 
Exact name of registrant as specified in charter:  Putnam Premier 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 
  One International Place 
  Boston, Massachusetts 02110 
 
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code:  (617) 292-1000 

Date of fiscal year end: July 31, 2007

Date of reporting period: August 1, 2006— January 31, 2007

Item 1. Report to Stockholders:

The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940:




What makes Putnam different?


In 1830, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Justice Samuel Putnam established The Prudent Man Rule, a legal foundation for responsible money management.

THE PRUDENT MAN RULE

All that can be required of a trustee to invest is that he shall conduct himself faithfully and exercise a sound discretion. He is to observe how men of prudence, discretion, and intelligence manage their own affairs, not in regard to speculation, but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable income, as well as the probable safety of the capital to be invested.


A time-honored tradition
in money management

Since 1937, our values have been rooted in a profound sense of responsibility for the money entrusted to us.

A prudent approach to investing

We use a research-driven team approach to seek consistent, dependable, superior investment results over time, although there is no guarantee a fund will meet its objectives.

Funds for every investment goal

We offer a broad range of mutual funds and other financial products so investors and their financial representatives can build diversified portfolios.

A commitment to doing
what’s right for investors

We have stringent investor protections and provide a wealth of information about the Putnam funds.

Industry-leading service

We help investors, along with their financial representatives, make informed investment decisions with confidence.


Putnam
Premier Income
Trust

1| 31| 07
Semiannual Report

Message from the Trustees  2 
About the fund  4 
Report from the fund managers  7 
Performance  13 
Your fund’s management  16 
Terms and definitions  19 
Trustee approval of management contract  20 
Other information for shareholders  25 
Financial statements  26 
Shareholder meeting results  76 

Cover photograph: © Richard H. Johnson


Message from the Trustees

Dear Fellow Shareholder

Although the global economy continues to move forward, it has become apparent over the past few months that certain sectors of the U.S. economy may have slowed somewhat. We consequently consider slower job growth and perhaps a rise in the unemployment rate as possible developments for 2007. On the other hand, since the Federal Reserve (the Fed) stopped raising interest rates, stock prices have moved higher, bond yields have remained relatively low, and the weaker dollar appears to be making U.S. exports more competitive. With the benefit of this financial cushion, we believe 2007 may hold the potential for a renewed economic expansion.

As you may have heard, on February 1, 2007, Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. announced that it had signed a definitive agreement to sell its ownership interest in Putnam Investments Trust, the parent company of Putnam Management and its affiliates, to Great-West Lifeco Inc. Great-West Lifeco Inc. is a financial services holding company with operations in Canada, the United States, and Europe and is a member of the Power Financial Corporation group of companies. This transaction is subject to regulatory approvals and other conditions, including the approval of new management contracts by shareholders of a substantial number of Putnam funds at shareholder meetings expected to be held in May 2007. Proxy solicitation materials related to these meetings, which provide detailed information regarding the proposed transaction, were recently mailed. The transaction is currently expected to be completed by the middle of 2007.

Putnam’s team of investment and business professionals will continue to be led by Putnam President and Chief Executive Officer Ed Haldeman. Your Trustees have been actively involved through every step of the discussions, and we will continue in our role of overseeing the Putnam funds on your behalf.

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We would like to take this opportunity to announce that a new independent Trustee, Kenneth R. Leibler, has joined your fund’s Board of Trustees. Mr. Leibler has had a distinguished career as a leader in the investment management industry. He is the founding Chairman of the Boston Options Exchange and currently serves as a Trustee of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Boston; a lead director of Ruder Finn Group, a global communications and advertising firm; and a director of Northeast Utilities.

In the following pages, members of your fund’s management team discuss the fund’s performance and strategies for the fiscal period ended January 31, 2007, and provide their outlook for the months ahead. As always, we thank you for your support of the Putnam funds.



Putnam Premier Income Trust: seeking broad
diversification across global bond markets


When Putnam Premier Income Trust was launched in 1988, its three-pronged focus on U.S. investment-grade bonds, high-yield corporate bonds, and non-U.S. bonds was considered innovative. Lower-rated, higher-yielding corporate bonds were relatively new, having just been established in the late 1970s. And, at the time of the fund’s launch, few investors were venturing outside the United States for fixed-income opportunities.

The bond investment landscape has undergone a transformation in the nearly two decades since the fund’s launch. New sectors such as mortgage- and asset-backed securities now make up over one third of the U.S. investment-grade market. The high-yield corporate bond sector has also grown significantly. Outside the United States, the advent of the euro has resulted in a large market of European bonds. And there are also growing opportunities to invest in the debt of emerging-market countries.

The fund’s original investment focus has been enhanced to keep pace with this market expansion. To process the market’s increasing complexity, Putnam’s 100-member fixed-income group aligns teams of specialists with the varied investment opportunities. Each team identifies what it considers to be compelling strategies within its area of expertise. Your fund’s management team selects from among these strategies, systematically building a diversified portfolio that seeks to carefully balance risk and return.

We believe the fund’s multi-strategy approach is well suited to the expanding opportunities of today’s global bond marketplace. As different factors drive the performance of the various fixed-income sectors, the fund’s diversified strategy can take advantage of changing market leadership in pursuit of high current income.

International investing involves certain risks, such as currency fluctuations, economic instability, and political developments. Additional risks may be associated with emerging-market securities, including illiquidity and volatility. Lower-rated bonds may offer higher yields in return for more risk. Mutual funds that invest in government securities are not guaranteed. Mortgage-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk. Mutual funds that invest in bonds are subject to certain risks, including interest-rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds fall. Long-term bonds are more exposed to interest-rate risk than short-term bonds. Unlike bonds, bond funds have ongoing fees and expenses. While diversification can help protect returns from excessive volatility, it cannot ensure protection against a market loss. The fund’s shares trade on a stock exchange at market prices, which may be higher or lower than the fund’s NAV.

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.

Market price vs. net asset value Like an open-end fund’s net asset value (NAV) per share, the NAV of a closed-end fund share is equal to the current value of the fund’s 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.

Optimizing the risk/return trade-off across multiple sectors

Putnam believes that building a diversified portfolio with multiple income-generating strategies is the best way to pursue your fund’s objectives. The fund’s portfolio is composed of a broad spectrum of government, credit, and securitized debt instruments.



Putnam Premier Income Trust seeks high current income consistent with the preservation of capital by investing in U.S government and agency, high-yield corporate, and international fixed-income securities. Fund holdings and sector classifications reflect the diversification of the fixed-income market. The fund is designed for investors seeking a higher level of income who can accept a moderately higher level of risk.

Highlights

For the six months ended January 31, 2007, Putnam Premier Income Trust posted a total return at net asset value (NAV) of 5.06% . The fund’s return at market price was 10.38% .

The fund’s primary benchmark, the Lehman Government Bond Index, returned 3.05% for the period.

The average return of the fund’s Lipper category, Flexible Income Funds (closed-end), was 5.94% .

Additional fund performance, comparative performance, and Lipper data can be found in the performance section beginning on page 13.

Performance

It is important to note that a fund’s performance at market price usually differs from its results at NAV. Although market price performance generally reflects investment results, it may also be influenced by several other factors, including changes in investor perceptions of the fund or its investment manager, market conditions, fluctuations in supply and demand for the fund’s shares, and changes in fund distributions.

Putnam Premier Income Trust (NYSE ticker: PPT), total return for periods ended 1/31/07

Since the fund’s inception (2/29/88), average annual return is 8.25% at NAV and 7.24% at market price.

  Average annual return                      Cumulative return             
  NAV   Market price   NAV  Market price 

10 years  6.36%   6.28%   85.25%  83.81% 

5 years  9.48   7.92   57.25  46.38 

3 years  6.65   5.55   21.29  17.58 

1 year  7.27   10.19   7.27  10.19 

6 months     —         —    5.06  10.38 


Data is historical. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes.

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Report from the fund managers

The period in review

The six-month period ended January 31, 2007, was favorable for most sectors of the fixed-income market, especially those associated with higher credit risk, such as emerging-market and high-yield bonds. As global economic growth continued to be surprisingly strong, investor demand for the higher yields available in these sectors boosted bond prices. Because your fund invests in a variety of fixed-income investments, its results at NAV outperformed those of its benchmark index, which includes only U.S. government securities. In addition, the fund’s relatively defensive duration posture helped performance relative to the benchmark in December, when the bond market reacted unfavorably to prevailing sentiment that the Fed would not cut short-term interest rates for some time to come. However, the fund underperformed the average for its Lipper peer group, which included funds that were positioned more aggressively in terms of credit quality during the period. The fund continued to benefit from its holdings in securitized bonds, and its currency strategy had a modestly positive effect on performance over the course of the semiannual period.

Market overview

Toward the end of the period under review, investor concerns over the possibility of a recession dissipated. Businesses appeared to be working off extra inventory and the housing market avoided further retrenchment. Investors were also encouraged by the fact that during the last three months of 2006, the contribution to U.S. economic growth from trade was one of the largest in many years. At the close of the period, U.S. Treasury yields were slightly lower, responding to a gradual decline in energy prices and a lessening of inflation concerns. Because bond prices move in the opposite direction of their yields, this trend led to higher prices for most government bonds.

As solidly as U.S. government bonds performed, other segments of the

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fixed-income market — such as emerging-market and high-yield bonds — generally posted even stronger returns. Healthy corporate profits and generally low inflation provided a constructive environment for these market sectors. By the close of the period, the “spread,” or difference in yield, between high-yield and emerging-market bonds, on the one hand, and Treasury bonds of similar maturity on the other hand, was extremely narrow in historical terms. In other words, there was relatively little additional yield available for those willing to take on the higher risk of investing in a high-yield or emerging-market bond. Yet despite this shrinking yield advantage for high-yield and emerging-market bonds over Treasuries, investors continued to demonstrate their confidence in these sectors.

The rally in bonds was interrupted by a brief sell-off in December, when investors reacted to stronger-than-expected economic statistics and concluded that the Fed was less likely to be cutting rates in the near term. Since August 2006, the Fed had not raised short-term interest rates, while retaining its watchful attitude toward inflation. As of January 31, 2007, the federal funds rate — the overnight lending rate that banks charge each other, which the Fed controls and which guides other short-term rates —remained at 5.25% . Yields of 10-year

Market sector performance

These indexes provide an overview of performance in different market sectors for the six months ended 1/31/07.

Bonds   

Lehman Government Bond Index (U.S. Treasury and agency securities)  3.05% 

Citigroup Non-U.S. World Government Bond Index (international government bonds)  0.59% 

JPMorgan Global High Yield Index (global high-yield corporate bonds)  8.32% 

JPMorgan Global Diversified Emerging Markets Index (global emerging-market bonds)  6.94% 

Equities   

S&P 500 Index (broad stock market)  13.75% 

MSCI EAFE Index (international stocks)  14.33% 

Russell 2000 Index (small-company stocks)  14.95% 


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Treasury bonds, which had begun the period at 4.99%, were 4.83% at its close.

Strategy overview

We believe that using multiple income-generating strategies to build a diversified portfolio is the best way to pursue the fund’s objectives. Reflecting this belief, the fund’s portfolio includes a broad spectrum of government, credit, and securitized debt instruments. Putnam’s fixed-income group aligns teams of specialists with these varied investment opportunities. Each team identifies what it considers to be the most compelling strategies within its area of expertise. The fund’s management team then selects from among these strategies, systematically building an array of investments intended to carefully balance risk and return.

During the period, we continued to maintain a conservative posture regarding your fund’s duration — a measure of its interest-rate sensitivity —and the portfolio’s level of credit risk. Although interest rates in the United States were relatively stable over the period, the global trend in monetary policy has been toward higher rates, in reaction to robust global growth. Therefore, we have kept the fund’s duration “short” in order to make the portfolio less vulnerable to the negative impact of rising rates. With regard to credit risk, despite our expectation of continued global economic growth, we believe that the yield advantage offered

Comparison of top sector weightings

This chart shows how the fund’s top weightings have changed over the last six months.
Weightings are shown as a percentage of net assets. Holdings will vary over time.


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by bonds from non-government entities (in particular, investment-grade corporate issuers) over government securities is typically too small to compensate investors adequately for the additional risk such bonds carry.

For defensive purposes, we continued to maintain a higher level of credit quality than we have in past years. We kept the fund’s exposure to high-yield bonds relatively low and maintained significant exposure to structured/securitized instruments with short maturities. International holdings, especially emerging-market debt, further diversified the fund’s sources of return. We have also maintained a substantial position in bank loans. These securities offer floating interest rates that, like an adjustable-rate home mortgage, move in tandem with market rates and can therefore help to provide some protection from interest-rate risk.

Your fund’s holdings

During its most recent semiannual period, the fund’s position in securitized bonds, or structured securities, contributed positively to returns. These securities currently offer higher income than corporate bonds of comparable credit quality. They also carry short maturities, which provides us with the flexibility to shift to other fixed-income securities, should interest rates rise sharply. The most common types of securitized bonds are mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) issued by the Federal

Top holdings

This table shows the fund’s top holdings, and the percentage of the fund’s net assets that each represented, as of 1/31/07. The fund’s holdings will change over time.

Holding (percent of fund’s net assets)  Coupon (%) and maturity date 
Securitized sector   

Federal National Mortgage Association 15 Yr Conventional (1.1%)  6.00%, 2021 

Federal National Mortgage Association 15 Yr Conventional (1.1%)  4.50%, 2020 

Green Tree Financial Corp. (0.7%)  7.86%, 2030 

Credit sector   

Pemex Project Funding Master Trust (0.6%)  5.75%, 2015 

L-3 Communications Corp. (0.4%)  6.125%, 2013 

Echostar DBS Corp. (0.3%)  6.625%, 2014 

Government sector   

Germany (Federal Republic of) bonds (5.5%)  3.25%, 2015 

U.S Treasury bonds (4.2%)  6.25%, 2030 

U.S Treasury bonds (2.5%)  7.50%, 2016 


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National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae). Other types of securitized bonds include asset-backed securities (ABSs), which are typically backed by car loans and credit card payments, and commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBSs), which are backed by loans on large commercial real estate projects, such as office parks or shopping malls.

Fund performance has also benefited from our exposure to the U.K. and Australian interest-rate markets during the period. The United Kingdom and Australia have been on the leading edge of the global economic cycle, and their central banks of each country have not hesitated to raise short-term rates when it appeared necessary to restrain inflation. This decisiveness has boosted investor confidence and helped the performance of each country’s government bonds. Fund performance also benefited from holdings in government bonds from Germany and Ireland, where governments are running a disciplined budget process and operating smoothly under the European economic regimen. In contrast, we have avoided bonds from Italy, Portugal, and Greece because of inflation and budgetary problems in these countries.

While the fund has gradually deemphasized emerging-market securities over the past three years, our holdings in this area nevertheless benefited performance during the period. Positive contributors included bonds from Argentina, Indonesia, and Colombia, where high commodity prices and improving fiscal positions drove returns. Countries that contributed to total return but lagged other emerging-market countries included Russia and South Africa, where higher valuations at the start of the period reduced the possibility for capital appreciation.

Additionally, we maintained the fund’s allocation in senior-secured floating-rate bank loans. These loans are issued by banks to corporations. The interest these loans pay “floats,” or adjusts to reflect changes in short-term interest rates. Also, their “senior-secured” status means that they are backed by the assets, such as buildings and equipment, of the company to which the loan is issued. Although the floating-rate feature of these securities does not eliminate interest-rate or inflation risk, investing in floating-rate bank loans has proved an effective strategy for enabling an income-oriented portfolio to weather the ups and downs of a full interest-rate cycle.

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 fund’s investment strategy and may vary in the future.

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The outlook for your fund

The following commentary reflects anticipated developments that could affect your fund over the next six months, as well as your management team’s plans for responding to them.

As the semiannual period came to an end, we believed that the U.S. economy was at a crossroads. A plausible case could be made for either an economic slowdown and subsequent easing of short-term rates by the Fed or a continuation of acceleration in global economic growth that could lead to significantly higher interest rates worldwide. Investors have been growing more cautious because of the gathering uncertainty, and with this in mind, we are continuing to position the fund defensively with regard to both duration and credit risk. As part of this defensive posture, we are maintaining an emphasis on structured securities, which tend to have shorter maturities and are of higher quality than many other fixed-income investments. Going forward, we will remain vigilant regarding any possible disruptions to the global economy and fixed-income markets. Our efforts to keep the fund positioned defensively will continue as we work to diversify the portfolio across a broad range of fixed-income sectors and securities.

The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Putnam Management. They are not meant as investment advice.

International investing involves certain risks, such as currency fluctuations, economic instability, and political developments. Additional risks may be associated with emerging-market securities, including illiquidity and volatility. Lower-rated bonds may offer higher yields in return for more risk. Mutual funds that invest in government securities are not guaranteed. Mortgage-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk. Mutual funds that invest in bonds are subject to certain risks, including interest-rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. As interest rates rise, the prices of bonds fall. Long-term bonds are more exposed to interest-rate risk than short-term bonds. Unlike bonds, bond funds have ongoing fees and expenses. While diversification can help protect returns from excessive volatility, it cannot ensure protection against a market loss. The fund’s shares trade on a stock exchange at market prices, which may be higher or lower than the fund’s NAV.

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Your fund’s performance

This section shows your fund’s performance for periods ended January 31, 2007, 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 fund’s investment strategy. Data represents past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares.

Fund performance

Total return for periods ended 1/31/07

  NAV  Market price 

Annual average     
Life of fund (since 2/29/88)      8.25%    7.24% 

10 years  85.25   83.81  
Annual average  6.36  6.28 

5 years  57.25   46.38  
Annual average  9.48  7.92 

3 years  21.29   17.58  
Annual average  6.65  5.55 

1 year  7.27  10.19   

6 months  5.06  10.38   


Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes.

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Comparative index returns

For periods ended 1/31/07

            Lipper 
      Citigroup    JPMorgan      Flexible  
    Lehman    Non-U.S. World    Global         Income Funds   
  Government    Government    High Yield      (closed-end)  
  Bond Index    Bond Index                                            Index   category average†   

Annual average         
Life of fund         
(since 2/29/88)         7.11% 6.65%     —*            7.45% 

10 years  78.85  62.24  95.08%          69.62  
Annual average  5.99  4.96  6.91            5.36 

5 years  24.47  59.07  67.51          51.42  
Annual average  4.48  9.73  10.87            8.49 

3 years  8.88  6.94  27.23          20.39 
Annual average  2.88  2.26  8.36            6.34 

1 year  3.53  3.39  11.30            7.21 

6 months  3.05  0.59  8.32            5.94 


Index and Lipper results should be compared to fund performance at net asset value. Lipper calculations for reinvested dividends may differ from actual performance.

* The inception date of the JPMorgan Global High Yield Index was 12/31/93.

† Over the 6-month and 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods ended 1/31/07, there were 8, 7, 7, 7, and 7 funds, respectively, in this Lipper category.

Fund price and distribution information

For the six-month period ended 1/31/07

Distributions*     

Number  6   

Income  $0.180   

Capital gains     

Total  $0.180   

Share value:  NAV  Market price 

7/31/06  $7.02   $6.02            

1/31/07  7.17  6.46         

Current yield (end of period)     
Current dividend rate1  5.02%  5.57%     


* Dividend sources are estimated and may vary based on final tax calculations after the fund's fiscal year-end.

1 Most recent distribution, excluding capital gains, annualized and divided by NAV or market price at end of period.

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Fund performance as of most recent calendar quarter

Total return for periods ended 12/31/06

  NAV  Market price 

Annual average     
Life of fund (since 2/29/88)     8.29%      7.22% 

10 years  86.28  92.38 
Annual average  6.42    6.76 

5 years  58.52  53.60 
Annual average    9.65    8.96 

3 years  23.48  19.31 
Annual average    7.28    6.06 

1 year   7.90  12.23 

6 months   6.44  10.09 

.     

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Your fund’s management

Your fund is managed by the members of the Putnam Core Fixed-Income and Core Fixed-Income High Yield teams. D. William Kohli is the Portfolio Leader, and Rob Bloemker, Jeffrey Kaufman, Paul Scanlon, and David Waldman are Portfolio Members of your fund. The Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members coordinate the teams’ management of the fund.

For a complete listing of the members of the Putnam Core Fixed-Income and Core Fixed-Income High-Yield teams, including those who are not Portfolio Leaders or Portfolio Members of your fund, visit Putnam’s Individual Investor Web site at www.putnam.com.

Investment team fund ownership

The table below shows how much the fund’s current Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members have invested in the fund and in all Putnam mutual funds (in dollar ranges). Information shown is as of January 31, 2007, and January 31, 2006.


Trustee and Putnam employee fund ownership

As of January 31, 2007, all of the Trustees of the Putnam funds owned fund shares. The table below shows the approximate value of investments in the fund and all Putnam funds as of that date by the Trustees and Putnam employees. These amounts include investments by the Trustees’ and employees’ immediate family members and investments through retirement and deferred compensation plans.

    Total assets in 
  Assets in the fund  all Putnam funds 

Trustees  $64,000  $101,000,000 

Putnam employees  $15,000  $454,000,000 


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Fund manager compensation

The total 2006 fund manager compensation that is attributable to your fund is approximately $1,400,000. This amount includes a portion of 2006 compensation paid by Putnam Management to the fund managers listed in this section for their portfolio management responsibilities, calculated based on the fund assets they manage taken as a percentage of the total assets they manage. The compensation amount also includes a portion of the 2006 compensation paid to the Chief Investment Officer of the team and the Group Chief Investment Officer of the fund’s broader investment category for their oversight responsibilities, calculated based on the fund assets they oversee taken as a percentage of the total assets they oversee. This amount does not include compensation of other personnel involved in research, trading, administration, systems, compliance, or fund operations; nor does it include non-compensation costs. These percentages are determined as of the fund’s fiscal period-end. For personnel who joined Putnam Management during or after 2006, the calculation reflects annualized 2006 compensation or an estimate of 2007 compensation, as applicable.

Other Putnam funds managed by the Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members

D. William Kohli is also a Portfolio Leader of Putnam Diversified Income Trust and Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust, and a Portfolio Member of Putnam Global Income Trust.

Rob Bloemker is also a Portfolio Member of Putnam American Government Income Fund, Putnam Diversified Income Trust, Putnam Income Fund, Putnam Limited Duration Government Income Fund, Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust, and Putnam U.S. Government Income Trust.

Jeffrey Kaufman is also a Portfolio Member of Putnam Diversified Income Trust and Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust.

Paul Scanlon is also a Portfolio Leader of Putnam Floating Rate Income Fund, Putnam High Yield Advantage Fund, and Putnam High Yield Trust, and a Portfolio Member of Putnam Diversified Income Trust and Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust.

David Waldman is also a Portfolio Member of Putnam Diversified Income Trust and Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust.

D. William Kohli, Rob Bloemker, Jeffrey Kaufman, Paul Scanlon, and David Waldman may also manage other accounts and variable trust funds advised by Putnam Management or an affiliate.

Changes in your fund’s Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members

Your fund’s Portfolio Leader and Portfolio Members did not change during the year ended January 31, 2007.

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Putnam fund ownership by Putnam’s Executive Board

The table below shows how much the members of Putnam’s Executive Board have invested in all Putnam mutual funds (in dollar ranges). Information shown is as of January 31, 2007, and January 31, 2006.

    $1 –  $10,001 –  $50,001 –  $100,001 –  $500,001 –  $1,000,001 
  Year    $0 $10,000  $50,000  $100,000  $500,000  $1,000,000  and over 

Philippe Bibi  2007            

Chief Technology Officer  2006             

Joshua Brooks  2007             

Deputy Head of Investments  2006             

William Connolly  2007             

Head of Retail Management  2006             

Kevin Cronin  2007             

Head of Investments  2006             

Charles Haldeman, Jr.  2007             

President and CEO  2006             

Amrit Kanwal  2007             

Chief Financial Officer  2006             

Steven Krichmar  2007             

Chief of Operations  2006             

Francis McNamara, III  2007             

General Counsel  2006             

Jeffrey Peters  2007             

Head of International Business  N/A           

Richard Robie, III  2007             

Chief Administrative Officer  2006             

Edward Shadek  2007             

Deputy Head of Investments  2006            

Sandra Whiston  2007             

Head of Institutional Management  2006             

 
N/A indicates the individual was not a member of Putnam’s Executive Board as of 1/31/06.     

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Terms and definitions

Important terms

Total return shows how the value of the fund’s 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 fund’s assets, minus any liabilities, divided by the number of outstanding 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 and the American Stock Exchange.

Comparative indexes

Citigroup Non-U.S. World Government Bond Index is an unmanaged index of international investment-grade fixed-income securities, excluding the United States.

JPMorgan Global Diversified Emerging Markets Bond Index is an unmanaged index of global emerging-market fixed-income securities.

JPMorgan Global High Yield Index is an unmanaged index of global high-yield fixed-income securities.

Lehman Government Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. Treasury and agency securities.

Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) EAFE Index is an unmanaged index of equity securities from developed countries in Western Europe, the Far East, and Australasia.

Russell 2000 Index is an unmanaged index of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000 Index.

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 fund’s category assignment at its discretion. Lipper category averages reflect performance trends for funds within a category.

19


Trustee approval of
management contract

General conclusions

The Board of Trustees of the Putnam funds oversees the management of each fund and, as required by law, determines annually whether to approve the continuance of your fund’s management contract with Putnam Management and the sub-management contract between Putnam Management’s affiliate, Putnam Investments Limited (“PIL”), and Putnam Management. In this regard, the Board of Trustees, with the assistance of its Contract Committee consisting solely of Trustees who are not “interested persons” (as such term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended) of the Putnam funds (the “Independent Trustees”), requests and evaluates all information it deems reasonably necessary under the circumstances. Over the course of several months ending in June 2006, the Contract Committee met four times to consider the information provided by Putnam Management and other information developed with the assistance of the Board’s independent counsel and independent staff. The Contract Committee reviewed and discussed key aspects of this information with all of the Independent Trustees. Upon completion of this review, the Contract Committee recommended, and the Independent Trustees approved, the continuance of your fund’s management contract and sub-management contract, effective July 1, 2006. (Because PIL is an affiliate of Putnam Management and Putnam Management remain fully responsible for all services provided by PIL, the Trustees have not evaluated PIL as a separate entity, and all subsequent references to Putnam Management below include reference to PIL as necessary or appropriate in the context.)

This approval was based on the following conclusions:

That the fee schedule in effect for your fund represented reasonable compensation in light of the nature and quality of the services being provided to the fund, the fees paid by competitive funds and the costs incurred by Putnam Management in providing such services, and

That such fee schedule represented an appropriate sharing between fund shareholders and Putnam Management of such economies of scale as may exist in the management of the fund at current asset levels.

These conclusions were based on a comprehensive consideration of all information provided to the Trustees and were not the result of any single factor. Some of the factors that figured particularly in the Trustees’ deliberations and how the Trustees considered these factors are described below, although individual Trustees may have evaluated the information presented differently, giving different weights to various factors. It is also important to recognize that the fee arrangements for your fund and the other Putnam funds are the result of many years of review and discussion between the Independent Trustees and Putnam Management, that certain aspects of such arrangements may receive greater scrutiny in some years than others, and that the Trustees’ conclusions may be based, in part, on their consideration of these same arrangements in prior years.

20


Management fee schedules and categories; total expenses

The Trustees reviewed the management fee schedules in effect for all Putnam funds, including fee levels and breakpoints, and the assignment of funds to particular fee categories. In reviewing fees and expenses, the Trustees generally focused their attention on material changes in circumstances — for example, changes in a fund’s size or investment style, changes in Putnam Management’s operating costs, or changes in competitive practices in the mutual fund industry — that suggest that consideration of fee changes might be warranted. The Trustees concluded that the circumstances did not warrant changes to the management fee structure of your fund, which had been carefully developed over the years, re-examined on many occasions and adjusted where appropriate. The Trustees focused on two areas of particular interest, as discussed further below:

Competitiveness. The Trustees reviewed comparative fee and expense information for competitive funds, which indicated that, in a custom peer group of competitive funds selected by Lipper Inc., your fund ranked in the 67th percentile in management fees and in the 67th percentile in total expenses as of December 31, 2005 (the first percentile being the least expensive funds and the 100th percentile being the most expensive funds). The Trustees expressed their intention to monitor this information closely to ensure that fees and expenses of your fund continue to meet evolving competitive standards.

Economies of scale. Your fund currently has the benefit of breakpoints in its management fee that provide shareholders with significant economies of scale, which means that the effective management fee rate of a fund (as a percentage of fund assets) declines as a fund grows in size and crosses specified asset thresholds. Conversely, as a fund shrinks in size — as has been the case for many Putnam funds in recent years — these breakpoints result in increasing fee levels. In recent years, the Trustees have examined the operation of the existing breakpoint structure during periods of both growth and decline in asset levels. The Trustees concluded that the fee schedules in effect for the funds represented an appropriate sharing of economies of scale at current asset levels. In reaching this conclusion, the Trustees considered the Contract Committee’s stated intent to continue to work with Putnam Management to plan for an eventual resumption in the growth of assets, including a study of potential economies that might be produced under various growth assumptions.

In connection with their review of the management fees and total expenses of the Putnam funds, the Trustees also reviewed the costs of the services to be provided and profits to be realized by Putnam Management and its affiliates from the relationship with the funds. This information included trends in revenues, expenses and profitability of Putnam Management and its affiliates relating to the investment management and distribution services provided to the funds. In this regard, the Trustees also reviewed an analysis of Putnam Management’s revenues, expenses and profitability with respect to the funds’ management contracts, allocated on a fund-by-fund basis. Because many of the costs incurred by Putnam Management in managing the funds are not readily identifiable to particular funds, the Trustees observed that the methodology for allocating

21


costs is an important factor in evaluating Putnam Management’s costs and profitability, both as to the Putnam funds in the aggregate and as to individual funds. The Trustees reviewed Putnam Management’s cost allocation methodology with the assistance of independent consultants and concluded that this methodology was reasonable and well-considered.

Investment performance

The quality of the investment process provided by Putnam Management represented a major factor in the Trustees’ evaluation of the quality of services provided by Putnam Management under your fund’s management contract. The Trustees were assisted in their review of the Putnam funds’ investment process and performance by the work of the Investment Process Committee of the Trustees and the Investment Oversight Committees of the Trustees, which meet on a regular monthly basis with the funds’ portfolio teams throughout the year. The Trustees concluded that Putnam Management generally provides a high-quality investment process — as measured by the experience and skills of the individuals assigned to the management of fund portfolios, the resources made available to such personnel, and in general the ability of Putnam Management to attract and retain high-quality personnel — but also recognize that this does not guarantee favorable investment results for every fund in every time period. The Trustees considered the investment performance of each fund over multiple time periods and considered information comparing each fund’s performance with various benchmarks and with the performance of competitive funds.

The Trustees noted the satisfactory investment performance of many Putnam funds. They also noted the disappointing investment performance of certain funds in recent years and discussed with senior management of Putnam Management the factors contributing to such underperformance and actions being taken to improve performance. The Trustees recognized that, in recent years, Putnam Management has made significant changes in its investment personnel and processes and in the fund product line to address areas of underperformance. In particular, they noted the important contributions of Putnam Management’s leadership in attracting, retaining and supporting high-quality investment professionals and in systematically implementing an investment process that seeks to merge the best features of fundamental and quantitative analysis. The Trustees indicated their intention to continue to monitor performance trends to assess the effectiveness of these changes and to evaluate whether additional changes to address areas of underperformance are warranted.

In the case of your fund, the Trustees considered that your fund’s common share cumulative total return performance at net asset value was in the following percentiles of its Lipper Inc. peer group (Lipper Flexible Income Funds (closed-end)) for the one-, three- and five-year periods ended March 31, 2006 (the first percentile being the best performing funds and the 100th percentile being the worst performing funds):

22


One-year period  Three-year period  Five-year period 

56th  34th  34th 

(Because of the passage of time, these performance results may differ from the performance results for more recent periods shown elsewhere in this report. Over the one-, three- and five-year periods ended March 31, 2006, there were 8 funds in your fund’s Lipper peer group.* Past performance is no guarantee of future performance.)

As a general matter, the Trustees concluded that cooperative efforts between the Trustees and Putnam Management represent the most effective way to address investment performance problems. The Trustees noted that investors in the Putnam funds have, in effect, placed their trust in the Putnam organization, under the oversight of the funds’ Trustees, to make appropriate decisions regarding the management of the funds. Based on the responsiveness of Putnam Management in the recent past to Trustee concerns about investment performance, the Trustees concluded that it is preferable to seek change within Putnam Management to address performance shortcomings. In the Trustees’ view, the alternative of terminating a management contract and engaging a new investment adviser for an underperforming fund would entail significant disruptions and would not provide any greater assurance of improved investment performance.

Brokerage and soft-dollar allocations; other benefits

The Trustees considered various potential benefits that Putnam Management may receive in connection with the services it provides under the management contract with your fund. These include benefits related to brokerage and soft-dollar allocations, whereby a portion of the commissions paid by a fund for brokerage may be used to acquire research services that may be useful to Putnam Management in managing the assets of the fund and of other clients. The Trustees indicated their continued intent to monitor the potential benefits associated with the allocation of fund brokerage to ensure that the principle of seeking “best price and execution” remains paramount in the portfolio trading process.

The Trustees’ annual review of your fund’s management contract also included the review of your fund’s custodian and investor servicing agreements with Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company, which provide benefits to affiliates of Putnam Management.

* The percentile rankings for your fund’s common share annualized total return performance in the Lipper Flexible Income Funds (closed-end) category for the one-, five- and ten-year periods ended December 31, 2006, were 50%, 38%, and 38%, respectively. Over the one-, five- and ten-year periods ended December 31, 2006, the fund ranked 4 out of 7, 3 out of 7, and 3 out of 7 funds, respectively. Note that this more recent information was not available when the Trustees approved the continuance of your fund’s management contract.

23


Comparison of retail and institutional fee schedules

The information examined by the Trustees as part of their annual contract review has included for many years information regarding fees charged by Putnam Management and its affiliates to institutional clients such as defined benefit pension plans, college endowments, etc. This information included comparison of such fees with fees charged to the funds, as well as a detailed assessment of the differences in the services provided to these two types of clients. The Trustees observed, in this regard, that the differences in fee rates between institutional clients and the funds are by no means uniform when examined by individual asset sectors, suggesting that differences in the pricing of investment management services to these types of clients reflect to a substantial degree historical competitive forces operating in separate market places. The Trustees considered the fact that fee rates across all asset sectors are higher on average for funds than for institutional clients, as well as the differences between the services that Putnam Management provides to the Putnam funds and those that it provides to institutional clients of the firm, but did not rely on such comparisons to any significant extent in concluding that the management fees paid by your fund are reasonable.

24


Other information
for shareholders

Important notice regarding share repurchase program

In September 2006, the Trustees of your fund approved an extension of the current share repurchase program being implemented by Putnam Investments on behalf of your fund. The plan, as extended, allows your fund to repurchase, in the 24 months ending October 6, 2007, up to 10% of the common shares outstanding as of October 7, 2005.

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, 2006, are available on the Putnam Individual Investor Web site, www.putnam.com/individual, and on the SEC’s Web site, www.sec.gov. If you have questions about finding forms on the SEC’s Web site, you may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain the Putnam funds’ proxy voting guidelines and procedures at no charge by calling Putnam’s 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 fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s Web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the fund’s Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for information about the SEC’s Web site or the operation of the Public Reference Room.

25


Financial statements

A guide to financial statements

These sections of the report, as well as the accompanying Notes, constitute the fund’s financial statements.

The fund’s portfolio lists all the fund’s 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 fund’s net assets and share price are determined. All investment and noninvestment assets are added together. Any unpaid expenses and other liabilities are subtracted from this total. The result is divided by the number of shares to determine the net asset value per share. (For funds with preferred shares, the amount subtracted from total assets includes the liquidation preference of preferred shares.)

Statement of operations shows the fund’s net investment gain or loss. This is done by first adding up all the fund’s 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 fund’s net gain or loss for the fiscal period.

Statement of changes in net assets shows how the fund’s net assets were affected by the fund’s net investment gain or loss, by distributions to shareholders, and by changes in the number of the fund’s 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 fund’s fiscal year.

Financial highlights provide an overview of the fund’s investment results, per-share distributions, expense ratios, net investment income ratios, and portfolio turnover in one summary table, reflecting the five most recent reporting periods. In a semiannual report, the highlight table also includes the current reporting period.

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The fund’s portfolio 1/31/07 (Unaudited)

FOREIGN GOVERNMENT BONDS AND NOTES (20.8%)*       

    Principal amount  Value 

Argentina (Republic of ) FRB 5.475s, 2012    $ 16,027,500  $ 15,215,440 
Austria (Republic of ) 144A notes Ser. EMTN,       
3.8s, 2013  EUR  8,000,000  10,254,599 
Brazil (Federal Republic of ) bonds 6s, 2017    $ 2,935,000  2,854,288 
Brazil (Federal Republic of ) notes 11s, 2012    2,545,000  3,108,718 
Canada (Government of ) bonds 5 1/2s, 2010  CAD  3,730,000  3,310,795 
Canada (Government of ) bonds Ser. WL43, 5 3/4s, 2029  CAD  1,340,000  1,381,190 
Colombia (Republic of ) notes 10s, 2012 (S)    $ 3,765,000  4,405,050 
Ecuador (Republic of ) regs notes 9 3/8s, 2015    985,000  817,550 
France (Government of ) bonds 5 3/4s, 2032  EUR  2,605,000  4,167,138 
France (Government of ) bonds 5 1/2s, 2010  EUR  6,300,000  8,620,156 
France (Government of ) bonds 4s, 2013  EUR  7,700,000  9,989,327 
France (Government of ) bonds 4s, 2009  EUR  1,520,000  1,980,434 
France (Government of ) bonds Ser. OATe, 3s, 2012  EUR  8,441,862  11,629,346 
Germany (Federal Republic of ) bonds Ser. 05,       
3 1/4s, 2015  EUR  57,100,000  70,149,657 
Germany (Federal Republic of ) bonds Ser. 97, 6s, 2007  EUR  10,560,000  13,874,507 
Ireland (Republic of ) bonds 5s, 2013  EUR  14,800,000  20,257,081 
Japan (Government of ) 30 yr bonds Ser. 23,       
2 1/2s, 2036  JPY  313,000,000  2,653,642 
Japan (Government of ) CPI Linked bonds       
Ser. 8, 1s, 2016  JPY  2,194,086,000  17,767,534 
Mexican (Government of ) bonds Ser. M       
10, 8s, 2015  MXN  34,400,000  3,130,542 
Peru (Republic of ) bonds 7.35s, 2025 (S)    $ 1,300,000  1,425,450 
Russia (Federation of ) unsub. stepped-coupon 5s       
(7 1/2s, 3/31/07), 2030 ††    4,787,000  5,313,570 
Russia (Federation of ) 144A unsub. stepped-coupon 5s       
(7 1/2s, 3/31/07), 2030 ††    5,612,700  6,230,097 
Russia (Ministry of Finance) debs. Ser. V, 3s, 2008    4,040,000  3,903,852 
South Africa (Republic of ) notes 7 3/8s, 2012    2,780,000  2,985,720 
South Africa (Republic of ) notes 6 1/2s, 2014    2,585,000  2,698,740 
Spain (Kingdom of ) bonds 5s, 2012  EUR  4,600,000  6,260,762 
Sweden (Government of ) debs. Ser. 1041, 6 3/4s, 2014  SEK  59,875,000  10,069,820 
Turkey (Republic of ) notes 11s, 2013    $ 2,190,000  2,677,275 
Turkey (Republic of ) notes 7 3/8s, 2025    1,485,000  1,513,215 
Turkey (Republic of ) notes 6 7/8s, 2036    7,760,000  7,333,200 
Ukraine (Government of ) 144A sr. unsub. 6.58s, 2016    2,945,000  2,945,000 
United Mexican States bonds Ser. MTN, 8.3s, 2031    4,545,000  5,703,975 
Venezuela (Republic of ) notes 10 3/4s, 2013    1,975,000  2,363,088 

Total foreign government bonds and notes (cost $258,617,407)    $ 266,990,758 

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U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (4.9%)*   
    Principal amount  Value 

U.S. Government Agency Mortgage Obligations (4.9%)       
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation       
Pass-Through Certificates       
7 1/2s, with due dates from March 1, 2026 to May 1, 2027  $ 19,375  $ 20,115 
6s, with due dates from September 1, 2021 to October 1, 2021  1,019,491  1,031,239 
Federal National Mortgage Association       
Pass-Through Certificates       
8s, July 1, 2024    390  399 
7 1/2s, with due dates from October 1, 2022       
to August 1, 2030    85,031  88,238 
6 1/2s, October 1, 2034    18,890  19,263 
6 1/2s, April 1, 2016    49,670  50,375 
6s, with due dates from June 1, 2020 to January 1, 2022    14,396,928  14,565,000 
6s, TBA, February 1, 2037    1,500,000  1,505,039 
6s, TBA, February 1, 2022    200,000  202,250 
5 1/2s, with due dates from August 1, 2021 to May 1, 2036    51,485  51,124 
5 1/2s, with due dates from December 1, 2011       
to January 1, 2021    1,660,535  1,655,143 
5 1/2s, TBA, February 1, 2037    28,788,000  28,320,195 
5s, July 1, 2021    211,507  206,963 
4 1/2s, with due dates from April 1, 2020 to June 1, 2034    15,314,048  14,558,850 

Total U.S. government and agency mortgage obligations (cost $62,194,235)  $ 62,274,193 
 
 
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (14.4%)*       
    Principal amount  Value 

U.S. Treasury Bonds       
7 1/2s, November 15, 2016  $ 27,040,000  $ 32,549,400 
6 1/4s, May 15, 2030    46,303,000  54,326,439 
6 1/4s, August 15, 2023    18,225,000  20,713,852 
U.S. Treasury Inflation Index Notes 2s,       
January 15, 2016    16,660,745  16,125,415 
U.S. Treasury Notes       
4 1/4s, August 15, 2013    29,883,000  28,958,495 
4s, November 15, 2012    3,000  2,880 
3 1/4s, August 15, 2008    20,856,000  20,334,600 
U.S. Treasury Strip zero %, November 15, 2024    28,450,000  11,644,386 

Total U.S. treasury obligations (cost $181,852,101)      $ 184,655,467 

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CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)*       
    Principal amount  Value 

Basic Materials (1.3%)       
Abitibi-Consolidated, Inc. notes 7 3/4s, 2011 (Canada)  $ 285,000  $ 277,163 
Builders FirstSource, Inc. company guaranty FRB       
9.624s, 2012    285,000  287,850 
Chaparral Steel Co. company guaranty 10s, 2013    950,000  1,059,250 
Cognis Holding GmbH & Co. 144A sr. notes 9 1/2s,       
2014 (Germany)  EUR  286,000  409,488 
Compass Minerals International, Inc. sr. disc.       
notes stepped-coupon Ser. B, zero % (12s, 6/1/08),       
2013 ††  $ 555,000  533,494 
Compass Minerals International, Inc.       
sr. notes stepped-coupon zero % (12 3/4s,       
12/15/07), 2012 ††    1,490,000  1,471,375 
Covalence Specialty Materials Corp. 144A       
sr. sub. notes 10 1/4s, 2016    1,400,000  1,288,000 
Crystal US Holdings, LLC sr. disc.       
notes stepped-coupon Ser. A, zero % (10s, 10/1/09),       
2014 ††    858,000  746,460 
Equistar Chemicals LP/Equistar Funding Corp. company       
guaranty 10 1/8s, 2008    585,000  618,638 
Gerdau Ameristeel Corp. sr. notes 10 3/8s, 2011 (Canada)    691,000  737,643 
Huntsman, LLC company guaranty 11 5/8s, 2010    500,000  545,000 
Jefferson Smurfit Corp. company guaranty 7 1/2s, 2013    490,000  472,850 
JSG Holding PLC 144A sr. notes 11 1/2s, 2015       
(Ireland) ‡‡  EUR  391,603  543,342 
Lyondell Chemical Co. company guaranty 10 1/2s, 2013  $ 300,000  331,125 
MDP Acquisitions PLC sr. notes 9 5/8s, 2012 (Ireland)    452,000  480,250 
MDP Acquisitions PLC sr. notes Ser. EUR, 10 1/8s,       
2012 (Ireland)  EUR  845,000  1,192,238 
Momentive Performance Materials, Inc. 144A       
sr. notes 9 3/4s, 2014  $ 850,000  871,250 
Mosaic Co. (The) 144A sr. notes 7 5/8s, 2016    446,000  456,035 
Mosaic Co. (The) 144A sr. notes 7 3/8s, 2014    269,000  272,363 
Nalco Co. sr. sub. notes 8 7/8s, 2013    1,257,000  1,333,991 
NewPage Corp. sec. notes 10s, 2012    246,000  268,140 
Norske Skog Canada, Ltd. company guaranty Ser. D,       
8 5/8s, 2011 (Canada)    466,000  478,815 
Novelis, Inc. company guaranty 7 1/4s, 2015    436,000  446,900 
PQ Corp. company guaranty 7 1/2s, 2013    124,000  123,380 
Rockwood Specialties Group, Inc. company       
guaranty 7 5/8s, 2014  EUR  610,000  850,735 
Stone Container Corp. sr. notes 9 3/4s, 2011  $ 21,000  21,709 
Stone Container Corp. sr. notes 8 3/8s, 2012    399,000  400,995 
United States Steel Corp. sr. notes 9 3/4s, 2010    635,000  671,513 
      17,189,992 

29


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued       
    Principal amount  Value 

Capital Goods (1.3%)       
Alliant Techsystems, Inc. sr. sub. notes 6 3/4s, 2016  $ 255,000  $ 254,363 
Allied Waste North America, Inc. company       
guaranty Ser. B, 8 1/2s, 2008    1,422,000  1,482,435 
Blount, Inc. sr. sub. notes 8 7/8s, 2012    897,000  923,910 
Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc. sr. notes 6 3/8s, 2008    780,000  780,975 
Crown Americas, LLC/Crown Americas Capital Corp.       
sr. notes 7 5/8s, 2013    420,000  430,500 
Crown Euro Holdings SA company guaranty 6 1/4s,       
2011 (France)  EUR  209,000  283,993 
Decrane Aircraft Holdings Co. company       
guaranty zero %, 2008 (acquired 7/23/04,       
cost $633,705) ‡  $ 1,932,000  1,381,380 
L-3 Communications Corp. company guaranty 6 1/8s, 2013    4,677,000  4,513,305 
L-3 Communications Corp. sr. sub. notes 5 7/8s, 2015    1,509,000  1,429,778 
Legrand SA debs. 8 1/2s, 2025 (France)    1,573,000  1,832,545 
Manitowoc Co., Inc. (The) company guaranty 10 1/2s, 2012    291,000  314,280 
Milacron Escrow Corp. sec. notes 11 1/2s, 2011    242,000  231,110 
Owens-Brockway Glass company guaranty 7 3/4s, 2011    186,000  191,580 
Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc. sr. sec.       
notes 8 3/4s, 2012    1,717,000  1,815,728 
Owens-Illinois, Inc. debs. 7 1/2s, 2010    207,000  210,105 
      16,075,987 

 
Communication Services (0.8%)       
American Cellular Corp. company guaranty 9 1/2s, 2009    375,000  367,969 
Cincinnati Bell, Inc. company guaranty 7s, 2015    1,040,000  1,040,000 
Digicel, Ltd. 144A sr. notes 9 1/4s, 2012 (Jamaica)    429,000  459,030 
Inmarsat Finance PLC company guaranty 7 5/8s, 2012       
(United Kingdom)    433,000  447,073 
Inmarsat Finance PLC company guaranty stepped-coupon       
zero % (10 3/8s, 11/15/08), 2012 (United Kingdom) ††    1,683,000  1,560,983 
iPCS, Inc. sr. notes 11 1/2s, 2012    580,000  640,900 
Qwest Communications International, Inc. company       
guaranty 7 1/2s, 2014    699,000  721,718 
Qwest Corp. debs. 7 1/4s, 2025    382,000  390,595 
Qwest Corp. notes 8 7/8s, 2012    2,424,000  2,690,640 
Qwest Corp. sr. notes 7 5/8s, 2015    797,000  853,786 
Qwest Corp. sr. unsec 7 1/2s, 2014    145,000  153,881 
Rural Cellular Corp. sr. sub. notes 9 3/4s, 2010    290,000  297,975 
      9,624,550 

 
Consumer Cyclicals (2.8%)       
Boyd Gaming Corp. sr. sub. notes 8 3/4s, 2012    1,135,000  1,190,331 
Boyd Gaming Corp. sr. sub. notes 7 3/4s, 2012    315,000  324,056 
Boyd Gaming Corp. sr. sub. notes 6 3/4s, 2014    265,000  259,700 
CanWest Media, Inc. company guaranty 8s, 2012       
(Canada)    663,075  687,940 

30


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Consumer Cyclicals continued     
Dex Media West, LLC/Dex Media Finance Co.     
sr. notes Ser. B, 8 1/2s, 2010  $ 1,150,000  $ 1,200,313 
Dex Media, Inc. notes 8s, 2013  218,000  227,265 
FelCor Lodging LP company guaranty 8 1/2s, 2008 (R)  1,012,000  1,073,985 
Ford Motor Co. notes 7.45s, 2031  953,000  773,121 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. notes 7 7/8s, 2010  480,000  487,048 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. notes 7 3/8s, 2009  382,000  384,420 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. sr. notes 9 7/8s, 2011  1,389,000  1,484,897 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. sr. unsec 8s, 2016  320,000  315,337 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. sr. unsec. FRN 8.11s, 2012  250,000  250,675 
Ford Motor Credit Corp. 144A sr. unsecd.     
notes 9 3/4s, 2010  873,000  931,230 
General Motors Corp. debs. 9.4s, 2021  170,000  169,150 
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (The) sr. notes 9s, 2015  765,000  824,288 
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (The) 144A     
sr. notes 8 5/8s, 2011  475,000  499,938 
Hanesbrands, Inc. 144A sr. notes FRN 8.735s, 2014  170,000  174,675 
Host Marriott LP sr. notes Ser. M, 7s, 2012 (R)  1,460,000  1,474,600 
Jostens IH Corp. company guaranty 7 5/8s, 2012  1,393,000  1,420,860 
Levi Strauss & Co. sr. notes 9 3/4s, 2015  1,275,000  1,377,000 
Levi Strauss & Co. sr. notes 8 7/8s, 2016  560,000  585,200 
Meritage Homes Corp. company guaranty 6 1/4s, 2015 (S)  377,000  350,610 
Meritor Automotive, Inc. notes 6.8s, 2009  135,000  133,650 
MGM Mirage, Inc. company guaranty 8 1/2s, 2010  885,000  949,163 
MGM Mirage, Inc. company guaranty 6s, 2009  1,929,000  1,921,766 
Mirage Resorts, Inc. debs. 7 1/4s, 2017  173,000  171,270 
Movie Gallery, Inc. sr. unsecd. notes 11s, 2012  369,000  301,658 
NTK Holdings, Inc. sr. disc. notes zero %, 2014  239,000  175,665 
Oxford Industries, Inc. sr. notes 8 7/8s, 2011  880,000  910,800 
Park Place Entertainment Corp.     
sr. sub. notes 7 7/8s, 2010  745,000  782,250 
Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. sr. sub. notes 8 1/4s, 2012  475,000  486,281 
PRIMEDIA, Inc. company guaranty 8 7/8s, 2011  283,000  288,660 
PRIMEDIA, Inc. sr. notes 8s, 2013  1,053,000  1,013,513 
R.H. Donnelley Corp. sr. disc. notes Ser. A-2,     
6 7/8s, 2013  129,000  123,518 
R.H. Donnelley Corp. sr. notes 6 7/8s, 2013  521,000  498,858 
Resorts International Hotel and Casino, Inc. company     
guaranty 11 1/2s, 2009  875,000  903,438 
Scientific Games Corp. company guaranty 6 1/4s, 2012  1,226,000  1,201,480 
Sealy Mattress Co. sr. sub. notes 8 1/4s, 2014  1,425,000  1,496,250 
Standard Pacific Corp. sr. notes 7 3/4s, 2013  193,000  190,588 
Station Casinos, Inc. sr. notes 6s, 2012  614,000  580,998 
Tenneco Automotive, Inc. company guaranty 8 5/8s, 2014  136,000  141,100 
Tenneco Automotive, Inc. sec. notes Ser. B, 10 1/4s, 2013  471,000  515,156 
Texas Industries, Inc. sr. unsecd. notes 7 1/4s, 2013  318,000  325,155 
THL Buildco, Inc. (Nortek Holdings, Inc.)     
sr. sub. notes 8 1/2s, 2014  825,000  818,813 

31


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Consumer Cyclicals continued     
Trump Entertainment Resorts, Inc. sec. notes 8 1/2s, 2015  $ 229,000  $ 226,710 
United Auto Group, Inc. 144A sr. sub. notes 7 3/4s, 2016  680,000  683,400 
Vertis, Inc. company guaranty Ser. B, 10 7/8s, 2009  1,305,000  1,331,100 
Vertis, Inc. 144A sub. notes 13 1/2s, 2009  563,000  532,035 
Wimar Opco, LLC. 144A sr. sub. notes 9 5/8s, 2014  1,980,000  1,967,625 
Wynn Las Vegas, LLC/Wynn Las Vegas Capital Corp.     
1st mtge. 6 5/8s, 2014  1,087,000  1,076,130 
    36,213,669 

 
Consumer Staples (2.3%)     
Affinity Group, Inc. sr. sub. notes 9s, 2012  1,055,000  1,057,638 
AMC Entertainment, Inc. sr. sub. notes 8s, 2014  884,000  887,315 
Archibald Candy Corp. company guaranty 10s,     
2007 (In default) (F) †  173,688  9,076 
Avis Budget Car Rental, LLC 144A sr. notes 7 3/4s, 2016  560,000  555,800 
Brand Services, Inc. company guaranty 12s, 2012  1,090,000  1,201,725 
CCH I Holdings, LLC company guaranty stepped-coupon     
12 1/8s (12 1/8s, 1/15/07), 2015 ††  284,000  271,930 
CCH I, LLC/Capital Corp. sec. notes 11s, 2015  2,450,000  2,529,625 
CCH II, LLC/Capital Corp. sr. notes Ser. B, 10 1/4s, 2010  499,000  517,089 
CCH, LLC/Capital Corp. sr. notes 10 1/4s, 2010  166,000  172,433 
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. company guaranty 6s, 2012  865,000  841,213 
Cinemark USA, Inc. sr. sub. notes 9s, 2013  34,000  36,125 
Cinemark, Inc. sr. disc. notes stepped-coupon zero %     
(9 3/4s, 3/15/09), 2014 ††  1,915,000  1,689,988 
Constellation Brands, Inc. sr. sub. notes Ser. B,     
8 1/8s, 2012  805,000  837,200 
CSC Holdings, Inc. debs. 7 5/8s, 2018  382,000  385,820 
CSC Holdings, Inc. sr. notes Ser. B, 7 5/8s, 2011  717,000  738,510 
CSC Holdings, Inc. 144A sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2012  2,008,000  1,987,920 
Dean Foods Co. company guaranty 7s, 2016  522,000  527,220 
Del Monte Corp. company guaranty 6 3/4s, 2015  640,000  628,000 
Del Monte Corp. sr. sub. notes 8 5/8s, 2012  1,085,000  1,144,675 
DirecTV Holdings, LLC company guaranty 6 3/8s, 2015  1,593,000  1,517,333 
Echostar DBS Corp. company guaranty 6 5/8s, 2014  4,144,000  4,061,120 
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. notes 6 1/4s, 2014  233,000  218,438 
Pinnacle Foods Holding Corp. sr. sub. notes 8 1/4s, 2013  1,439,000  1,471,378 
Playtex Products, Inc. company guaranty 9 3/8s, 2011  330,000  342,375 
Playtex Products, Inc. sec. notes 8s, 2011  1,490,000  1,558,913 
Prestige Brands, Inc. sr. sub. notes 9 1/4s, 2012  873,000  890,460 
Rainbow National Services, LLC 144A     
sr. notes 8 3/4s, 2012  922,000  981,930 
Rental Services Corp. 144A bonds 9 1/2s, 2014  140,000  146,300 
Scotts Co. (The) sr. sub. notes 6 5/8s, 2013  495,000  518,819 
United Rentals NA, Inc. sr. sub. notes 7s, 2014  690,000  677,925 
Young Broadcasting, Inc. company guaranty 10s, 2011  844,000  831,340 
Young Broadcasting, Inc. sr. sub. notes 8 3/4s, 2014  570,000  518,700 
    29,754,333 

32


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Energy (2.2%)     
Arch Western Finance, LLC sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2013  $ 2,598,000  $ 2,565,525 
Bluewater Finance, Ltd. company guaranty 10 1/4s,     
2012 (Cayman Islands)  778,000  814,955 
CHC Helicopter Corp. sr. sub. notes 7 3/8s, 2014 (Canada)  1,577,000  1,535,604 
Chesapeake Energy Corp. sr. notes 7 1/2s, 2013  1,991,000  2,040,775 
Complete Production Services, Inc. 144A sr. notes 8s, 2016  1,020,000  1,032,750 
Comstock Resources, Inc. sr. notes 6 7/8s, 2012  995,000  953,956 
EXCO Resources, Inc. company guaranty 7 1/4s, 2011  1,410,000  1,431,150 
Forest Oil Corp. sr. notes 8s, 2011  1,465,000  1,519,938 
Gazprom OAO 144A notes 9 5/8s, 2013 (Germany)  1,480,000  1,739,000 
Harvest Operations Corp. sr. notes 7 7/8s, 2011 (Canada)  1,140,000  1,080,150 
Hornbeck Offshore Services, Inc. sr. notes Ser. B, 6 1/8s, 2014  1,013,000  959,108 
Massey Energy Co. sr. notes 6 5/8s, 2010  1,497,000  1,489,515 
Newfield Exploration Co. sr. notes 7 5/8s, 2011  1,360,000  1,419,500 
Newfield Exploration Co. sr. sub. notes 6 5/8s, 2014  698,000  685,785 
Offshore Logistics, Inc. company guaranty 6 1/8s, 2013  910,000  857,675 
Oslo Seismic Services, Inc. 1st mtge. 8.28s, 2011  814,229  829,044 
Pacific Energy Partners/Pacific Energy Finance Corp.     
sr. notes 7 1/8s, 2014  695,000  718,360 
Peabody Energy Corp. sr. notes 5 7/8s, 2016  1,470,000  1,403,850 
PetroHawk Energy Corp. company guaranty 9 1/8s, 2013  1,697,000  1,756,395 
Pogo Producing Co. sr. sub. notes Ser. B, 8 1/4s, 2011  1,270,000  1,295,400 
Pride International, Inc. sr. notes 7 3/8s, 2014  1,619,000  1,643,285 
    27,771,720 

 
Financial (1.4%)     
Bosphorus Financial Services, Ltd. 144A sec. FRN     
7.174s, 2012 (Cayman Islands)  2,828,000  2,867,097 
Crescent Real Estate Equities LP notes 7 1/2s, 2007 (R)  600,000  603,000 
Finova Group, Inc. notes 7 1/2s, 2009  837,000  251,100 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. FRN 6.324s, 2007  680,000  680,723 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. FRN Ser. MTN,     
6.225s, 2007  1,360,000  1,360,424 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. notes 7 3/4s, 2010  176,000  182,806 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. notes 7s, 2012  185,000  189,746 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. notes 6 7/8s, 2012  404,000  410,581 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. notes 6 3/4s, 2014  1,399,000  1,419,441 
General Motors Acceptance Corp. sr. unsub. notes 5.85s, 2009  209,000  207,822 
Liberty Mutual Insurance 144A notes 7.697s, 2097  1,330,000  1,348,502 
UBS Luxembourg SA for Sberbank unsec.     
sub. notes stepped-coupon 6.23s (7.429s, 2/11/10),     
2015 (Luxembourg) ††  2,730,000  2,753,205 
VTB Capital SA bonds 6 1/4s, 2035 (Luxembourg)  1,724,000  1,736,930 
VTB Capital SA sr. notes 6 1/4s, 2035 (Luxembourg)  1,065,000  1,072,988 
VTB Capital SA 144A notes 7 1/2s, 2011 (Luxembourg)  2,595,000  2,744,732 
    17,829,097 

33


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Government (0.9%)     
Pemex Finance, Ltd. bonds 9.69s, 2009     
(Cayman Islands)  $ 1,080,750  $ 1,126,147 
Pemex Project Funding Master Trust company     
guaranty 9 1/2s, 2027  2,500,000  3,287,500 
Pemex Project Funding Master Trust company     
guaranty 5 3/4s, 2015  7,347,000  7,163,325 
    11,576,972 

 
Health Care (1.1%)     
Community Health Systems, Inc.     
sr. sub. notes 6 1/2s, 2012  355,000  352,338 
DaVita, Inc. company guaranty 6 5/8s, 2013  291,000  289,545 
HCA, Inc. 144A sec. notes 9 1/4s, 2016  1,275,000  1,354,688 
HCA, Inc. 144A sec. sr. notes 9 5/8s, 2016 ‡‡  1,095,000  1,175,756 
MedQuest, Inc. company guaranty Ser. B, 11 7/8s, 2012  1,100,000  973,500 
Omnicare, Inc. sr. sub. notes 6 1/8s, 2013  1,450,000  1,392,000 
Service Corporation International debs. 7 7/8s, 2013  112,000  115,360 
Service Corporation International sr. notes 7s, 2017  333,000  329,670 
Service Corporation International sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2016  1,039,000  1,015,623 
Stewart Enterprises, Inc. sr. notes 6 1/4s, 2013  1,412,000  1,362,580 
Tenet Healthcare Corp. notes 7 3/8s, 2013  750,000  693,750 
Tenet Healthcare Corp. sr. notes 9 7/8s, 2014  598,000  606,223 
Triad Hospitals, Inc. sr. notes 7s, 2012  1,585,000  1,624,625 
US Oncology, Inc. company guaranty 9s, 2012  835,000  885,100 
Vanguard Health Holding Co. II, LLC     
sr. sub. notes 9s, 2014  1,005,000  1,028,869 
Ventas Realty LP/Capital Corp. company guaranty 9s, 2012 (R)  590,000  660,800 
Ventas Realty LP/Capital Corp. company     
guaranty 6 3/4s, 2010 (R)  392,000  398,860 
Ventas Realty LP/Capital Corp. sr. notes 6 5/8s, 2014 (R)  337,000  340,370 
    14,599,657 

 
Technology (0.5%)     
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. sr. notes 7 3/4s, 2012  649,000  663,603 
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 144A sr. notes 9 1/8s, 2014 ‡‡  753,000  748,294 
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 144A sr. notes 8 7/8s, 2014  1,510,000  1,502,450 
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 144A     
sr. sub. notes 10 1/8s, 2016  757,000  753,215 
Iron Mountain, Inc. company guaranty 8 5/8s, 2013  435,000  446,419 
Iron Mountain, Inc. sr. sub. notes 8 1/4s, 2011  770,000  770,963 
New ASAT Finance, Ltd. company guaranty 9 1/4s, 2011     
(Cayman Islands)  25,000  23,063 
SunGard Data Systems, Inc. company guaranty 9 1/8s, 2013  660,000  694,650 
Xerox Corp. sr. notes 7 5/8s, 2013  767,000  797,680 
Xerox Corp. unsec. sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2017  378,000  387,450 
    6,787,787 

34


CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (16.4%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Transportation (0.1%)     
CalAir, LLC/CalAir Capital Corp. company     
guaranty 8 1/8s, 2008  $ 1,490,000  $ 1,488,138 

 
Utilities & Power (1.7%)     
AES Corp. (The) sr. notes 8 7/8s, 2011  107,000  114,758 
AES Corp. (The) 144A sec. notes 9s, 2015  1,113,000  1,190,910 
AES Corp. (The) 144A sec. notes 8 3/4s, 2013  895,000  955,413 
CMS Energy Corp. sr. notes 8.9s, 2008  1,690,000  1,753,375 
CMS Energy Corp. sr. notes 7 3/4s, 2010  350,000  366,188 
Colorado Interstate Gas Co. debs. 6.85s, 2037  615,000  624,507 
Colorado Interstate Gas Co. sr. notes 5.95s, 2015  173,000  170,003 
Edison Mission Energy sr. unsec 7 3/4s, 2016  284,000  300,330 
Edison Mission Energy sr. unsec 7 1/2s, 2013  338,000  350,675 
El Paso Natural Gas Co. debs. 8 5/8s, 2022  370,000  437,548 
El Paso Production Holding Co. company     
guaranty 7 3/4s, 2013  1,939,000  2,006,865 
Ferrellgas LP/Finance sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2014  1,010,000  972,125 
Midwest Generation, LLC sec. sr. notes 8 3/4s, 2034  1,321,000  1,426,680 
Mission Energy Holding Co. sec. notes 13 1/2s, 2008  1,445,000  1,584,081 
NRG Energy, Inc. sr. notes 7 3/8s, 2016  465,000  465,581 
Orion Power Holdings, Inc. sr. notes 12s, 2010  1,115,000  1,279,463 
SEMCO Energy, Inc. sr. notes 7 3/4s, 2013  993,000  1,008,839 
Southern Union Co. jr. sub. FRN 7.2s, 2066  391,000  389,887 
Teco Energy, Inc. notes 7.2s, 2011  350,000  367,063 
Teco Energy, Inc. notes 7s, 2012  550,000  576,125 
Teco Energy, Inc. sr. notes 6 3/4s, 2015  63,000  65,441 
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. debs. 7s, 2028  145,000  150,341 
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. unsec. notes 7 1/2s, 2017  291,000  316,323 
Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Corp. debs. 7 1/4s, 2026  875,000  918,750 
Utilicorp Canada Finance Corp. company     
guaranty 7 3/4s, 2011 (Canada)  1,188,000  1,258,498 
Utilicorp United, Inc. sr. notes 9.95s, 2011  36,000  39,601 
Williams Cos., Inc. (The) notes 8 3/4s, 2032  280,000  318,500 
Williams Cos., Inc. (The) notes 8 1/8s, 2012  290,000  312,113 
Williams Cos., Inc. (The) notes 7 5/8s, 2019  736,000  785,680 
Williams Cos., Inc. (The) 144A notes 6 3/8s, 2010  336,000  337,680 
Williams Partners LP/ Williams Partners     
Finance Corp. 144A bonds 7 1/4s, 2017  280,000  287,700 
York Power Funding 144A notes 12s, 2007     
(Cayman Islands) (In default) (F) †  419,508  47,153 
    21,178,196 

 
Total corporate bonds and notes (cost $207,173,817)    $ 210,090,098 

35


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)*       
    Principal amount  Value 

Amresco Commercial Mortgage Funding I 144A       
Ser. 97-C1, Class G, 7s, 2029  $ 720,000  $ 718,656 
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc. 144A       
Ser. 01-1, Class J, 6 1/8s, 2036    318,946  320,038 
Ser. 01-1, Class K, 6 1/8s, 2036    718,000  597,661 
Banc of America Large Loan 144A       
FRB Ser. 02-FL2A, Class L1, 8.32s, 2014    412,000  411,183 
FRB Ser. 02-FL2A, Class K1, 7.82s, 2014    100,000  99,862 
FRB Ser. 05-MIB1, Class K, 7.32s, 2022    1,187,000  1,186,038 
FRB Ser. 05-ESHA, Class K, 7.12s, 2020    1,396,000  1,396,568 
FRB Ser. 06-LAQ, Class M, 7s, 2021    808,000  809,107 
FRB Ser. 06-LAQ, Class L, 6.87s, 2021    1,013,000  1,015,785 
Banc of America Funding Corp. IFB Ser. 06-4,       
Class A4, IO, 0.18s, 2036    2,080,108  3,500 
Banc of America Mortgage Securities IFB Ser. 06-2,       
Class A4, IO, 0.08s, 2036    1,938,564  9,570 
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust Ser. 07-1, Class A,       
IO (Interest only), 1.211s, 2037    8,269,000  1,086,427 
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities, Inc.       
FRB Ser. 00-WF2, Class F, 8.195s, 2032    481,000  531,958 
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities, Inc.       
144A FRB Ser. 05-LXR1, Class J, 6.97s, 2018    1,229,000  1,229,000 
Broadgate Financing PLC sec. FRB Ser. D, 6.127s,       
2023 (United Kingdom)  GBP  888,000  1,738,532 
Commercial Mortgage Acceptance Corp. Ser. 97-ML1,       
IO, 0.917s, 2017  $ 6,873,414  61,311 
Commercial Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates 144A       
FRB Ser. 05-F10A, Class A1, 5.42s, 2017    2,536,626  2,536,593 
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust       
Ser. 06-OA10, Class XBI, IO, 2.097s, 2046    11,721,292  498,155 
IFB Ser. 06-6CB, Class 1A3, IO, zero %, 2036    15,273,037  21,478 
Countrywide Home Loans Ser. 05-2, Class 2X, IO,       
1.16s, 2035    10,512,743  226,681 
CRESI Finance Limited Partnership 144A       
FRB Ser. 06-A, Class D, 6.12s, 2017    167,000  166,999 
FRB Ser. 06-A, Class C, 5.92s, 2017    495,000  494,997 
Criimi Mae Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A       
Ser. 98-C1, Class B, 7s, 2033    3,957,000  3,888,940 
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp. 144A       
FRB Ser. 05-TFLA, Class L, 7.17s, 2020    1,356,000  1,350,946 
Ser. 1998-C2, Class F, 6 3/4s, 2030    3,176,400  3,343,927 
FRB Ser. 05-TFLA, Class K, 6.62s, 2020    758,000  757,995 
Ser. 98-C1, Class F, 6s, 2040    1,880,000  1,846,528 
Ser. 02-CP5, Class M, 5 1/4s, 2035    691,000  626,759 
Deutsche Mortgage & Asset Receiving Corp.       
Ser. 98-C1, Class X, IO, 0.937s, 2031    47,173,352  541,756 
DLJ Commercial Mortgage Corp. Ser. 98-CF2, Class B4,       
6.04s, 2031    552,708  559,943 
DLJ Commercial Mortgage Corp. 144A Ser. 98-CF2,       
Class B5, 5.95s, 2031    1,771,365  1,707,118 

36


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)* continued     
    Principal amount  Value 

DLJ Mortgage Acceptance Corp. 144A       
Ser. 97-CF1, Class B2, 8.16s, 2030    $ 539,000  $ 509,355 
Ser. 97-CF1, Class B1, 7.91s, 2030    519,000  518,273 
European Loan Conduit 144A FRB Ser. 22A, Class D,       
6.433s, 2014 (Ireland)  GBP  995,000  1,953,683 
European Prime Real Estate PLC 144A FRB Ser. 1-A,       
Class D, 6.441s, 2014 (United Kingdom)  GBP  705,863  1,382,635 
Fannie Mae       
IFB Ser. 06-70, Class BS, 14.69s, 2036    $ 580,882  676,376 
IFB Ser. 06-62, Class PS, 7.98s, 2036    1,538,246  1,673,691 
IFB Ser. 06-76, Class QB, 7.68s, 2036    3,819,364  4,080,613 
Ser. 04-W8, Class 3A, 7 1/2s, 2044    731,625  765,471 
Ser. 04-W2, Class 5A, 7 1/2s, 2044    2,513,929  2,625,945 
Ser. 04-T2, Class 1A4, 7 1/2s, 2043    631,834  660,441 
Ser. 03-W4, Class 4A, 7 1/2s, 2042    195,024  202,469 
Ser. 03-W3, Class 1A3, 7 1/2s, 2042    394,472  410,174 
Ser. 02-T19, Class A3, 7 1/2s, 2042    518,625  539,385 
Ser. 03-W2, Class 1A3, 7 1/2s, 2042    7,911  8,226 
Ser. 02-W1, Class 2A, 7 1/2s, 2042    789,092  817,440 
Ser. 02-14, Class A2, 7 1/2s, 2042    3,738  3,879 
Ser. 01-T10, Class A2, 7 1/2s, 2041    501,603  519,438 
Ser. 02-T4, Class A3, 7 1/2s, 2041    2,190  2,268 
Ser. 01-T8, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2041    5,776  5,966 
Ser. 01-T7, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2041    2,014,050  2,082,138 
Ser. 01-T3, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2040    321,561  332,857 
Ser. 01-T1, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2040    981,854  1,016,209 
Ser. 99-T2, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2039    399,970  418,062 
Ser. 00-T6, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2030    191,574  198,840 
Ser. 02-W7, Class A5, 7 1/2s, 2029    347,806  361,253 
Ser. 01-T4, Class A1, 7 1/2s, 2028    915,900  958,926 
Ser. 02-W3, Class A5, 7 1/2s, 2028    1,733  1,798 
IFB Ser. 06-63, Class SP, 7.38s, 2036    4,143,695  4,391,039 
IFB Ser. 06-60, Class TK, 7.32s, 2036    1,137,546  1,168,117 
Ser. 04-W12, Class 1A3, 7s, 2044    812,314  839,134 
Ser. 01-T10, Class A1, 7s, 2041    1,993,895  2,043,382 
IFB Ser. 05-74, Class CS, 5.39s, 2035    1,266,902  1,251,651 
IFB Ser. 05-74, Class CP, 5.243s, 2035    1,111,287  1,104,921 
IFB Ser. 05-76, Class SA, 5.243s, 2034    1,575,817  1,547,655 
IFB Ser. 06-27, Class SP, 5.06s, 2036    1,553,000  1,533,615 
IFB Ser. 06-8, Class HP, 5.06s, 2036    1,841,959  1,807,725 
IFB Ser. 06-8, Class WK, 5.06s, 2036    2,852,723  2,774,149 
IFB Ser. 05-106, Class US, 5.06s, 2035    2,705,599  2,681,619 
IFB Ser. 05-99, Class SA, 5.06s, 2035    1,328,435  1,300,578 
IFB Ser. 05-114, Class SP, 4.95s, 2036    777,603  737,264 
IFB Ser. 06-60, Class CS, 4.583s, 2036    1,811,825  1,691,740 
IFB Ser. 05-95, Class CP, 4.089s, 2035    207,434  200,326 
IFB Ser. 05-95, Class OP, 3.923s, 2035    704,000  635,111 
IFB Ser. 05-83, Class QP, 3.562s, 2034    432,827  395,370 
IFB Ser. 02-36, Class QH, IO, 2.73s, 2029    187,410  1,146 
IFB Ser. 06-90, Class SE, IO, 2.48s, 2036    5,067,612  439,655 

37


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)* continued     
    Principal amount  Value 

Fannie Mae       
IFB Ser. 03-66, Class SA, IO, 2.33s, 2033  $ 2,302,588  $ 170,898 
IFB Ser. 03-48, Class S, IO, 2.23s, 2033    1,041,529  75,834 
IFB Ser. 05-113, Class AI, IO, 1.91s, 2036    1,675,634  108,688 
IFB Ser. 05-113, Class DI, IO, 1.91s, 2036    1,594,086  89,671 
IFB Ser. 06-60, Class DI, IO, 1 3/4s, 2035    4,958,562  246,209 
IFB Ser. 05-95, Class CI, IO, 1.38s, 2035    2,771,132  158,894 
IFB Ser. 05-84, Class SG, IO, 1.38s, 2035    4,809,532  260,906 
IFB Ser. 05-69, Class AS, IO, 1.38s, 2035    1,233,347  64,365 
IFB Ser. 04-92, Class S, IO, 1.38s, 2034    3,867,023  186,120 
IFB Ser. 05-104, Class SI, IO, 1.38s, 2033    6,579,808  341,945 
IFB Ser. 05-83, Class QI, IO, 1.37s, 2035    718,844  44,466 
IFB Ser. 05-92, Class SC, IO, 1.36s, 2035    6,485,743  350,357 
IFB Ser. 05-83, Class SL, IO, 1.35s, 2035    8,499,145  392,460 
IFB Ser. 06-20, Class IG, IO, 1.33s, 2036    16,624,923  651,643 
IFB Ser. 06-45, Class SM, IO, 1.28s, 2036    4,071,727  153,952 
IFB Ser. 06-20, Class IB, IO, 1.27s, 2036    7,125,429  268,036 
IFB Ser. 05-95, Class OI, IO, 1.27s, 2035    405,740  24,965 
IFB Ser. 06-99, Class AS, IO, 1.26s, 2036    418,234  19,532 
IFB Ser. 06-85, Class TS, IO, 1.24s, 2036    5,661,691  213,683 
IFB Ser. 03-112, Class SA, IO, 1.18s, 2028    2,338,428  62,848 
Ser. 03-W17, Class 12, IO, 1.156s, 2033    5,196,797  207,872 
Ser. 03-W10, Class 1A, IO, 0.966s, 2043    7,531,830  107,909 
Ser. 03-W10, Class 3A, IO, 0.955s, 2043    8,974,849  149,407 
IFB Ser. 05-67, Class BS, IO, 0.83s, 2035    3,120,910  86,800 
IFB Ser. 05-74, Class SE, IO, 0.78s, 2035    6,883,588  169,982 
Ser. 00-T6, IO, 0.764s, 2030    8,172,465  111,998 
IFB Ser. 05-87, Class SE, IO, 0.73s, 2035    18,452,197  493,603 
IFB Ser. 04-54, Class SW, IO, 0.68s, 2033    1,462,401  36,117 
Ser. 02-T18, IO, 0.526s, 2042    14,188,431  176,517 
Ser. 06-84, Class OP, PO (Principal only), zero %, 2036    226,030  218,535 
Ser. 372, Class 1, PO, zero %, 2036    638,564  501,947 
Ser. 371, Class 1, PO, zero %, 2036    1,254,030  1,040,497 
Ser. 05-113, Class DO, PO, zero %, 2036    245,031  195,957 
Ser. 367, Class 1, PO, zero %, 2036    1,567,641  1,163,091 
Ser. 363, Class 1, PO, zero %, 2035    8,082,125  6,002,618 
Ser. 361, Class 1, PO, zero %, 2035    5,604,048  4,487,843 
Ser. 04-38, Class AO, PO, zero %, 2034    1,050,660  760,579 
Ser. 02-82, Class TO, PO, zero %, 2032    413,424  329,255 
Ser. 04-61, Class CO, PO, zero %, 2031    919,000  728,164 
Ser. 99-51, Class N, PO, zero %, 2029    147,726  120,281 
FRB Ser. 05-117, Class GF, zero %, 2036    613,031  567,784 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.       
Structured Pass-Through Securities       
Ser. T-59, Class 1A3, 7 1/2s, 2043    807,601  846,368 
Ser. T-58, Class 4A, 7 1/2s, 2043    11,518  11,997 
Ser. T-41, Class 3A, 7 1/2s, 2032    1,964,111  2,037,691 
Ser. T-60, Class 1A2, 7s, 2044    3,765,441  3,886,496 
Ser. T-57, Class 1AX, IO, 0.005s, 2043    4,630,861  54,737 

38


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

FFCA Secured Lending Corp. 144A Ser. 00-1, Class X,     
IO, 1 3/8s, 2020  $ 10,938,282  $ 593,389 
First Union Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A     
Ser. 99-C1, Class G, 5.35s, 2035  891,000  763,870 
First Union-Lehman Brothers Commercial Mortgage     
Trust II Ser. 97-C2, Class G, 7 1/2s, 2029  1,219,000  1,340,507 
Freddie Mac     
IFB Ser. 3153, Class UK, 7 1/2s, 2036  94,444  102,675 
IFB Ser. 3182, Class PS, 7.32s, 2032  440,383  469,809 
IFB Ser. 3081, Class DC, 5.22s, 2035  1,086,732  1,048,835 
IFB Ser. 3114, Class GK, 5.12s, 2036  721,613  698,276 
IFB Ser. 2979, Class AS, 4.767s, 2034  476,204  458,644 
IFB Ser. 3065, Class DC, 3.9s, 2035  1,638,272  1,479,011 
IFB Ser. 3050, Class SA, 3.575s, 2034  1,185,675  1,069,234 
IFB Ser. 2828, Class TI, IO, 1.73s, 2030  1,542,811  90,399 
IFB Ser. 3033, Class SF, IO, 1.48s, 2035  2,211,828  74,649 
IFB Ser. 3028, Class ES, IO, 1.43s, 2035  7,888,922  482,709 
IFB Ser. 3042, Class SP, IO, 1.43s, 2035  1,848,880  105,016 
IFB Ser. 3045, Class DI, IO, 1.41s, 2035  15,878,802  653,564 
IFB Ser. 3054, Class CS, IO, 1.38s, 2035  1,768,842  70,205 
IFB Ser. 3107, Class DC, IO, 1.38s, 2035  8,358,669  515,775 
IFB Ser. 3066, Class SI, IO, 1.38s, 2035  5,360,169  320,547 
IFB Ser. 3031, Class BI, IO, 1.37s, 2035  1,495,122  96,152 
IFB Ser. 3067, Class SI, IO, 1.33s, 2035  6,298,627  391,542 
IFB Ser. 3114, Class TS, IO, 1.33s, 2030  9,869,040  401,674 
IFB Ser. 3065, Class DI, IO, 1.3s, 2035  1,171,308  69,233 
IFB Ser. 3174, Class BS, IO, 1.2s, 2036  5,288,479  189,370 
IFB Ser. 3152, Class SY, IO, 1.16s, 2036  7,018,438  387,874 
IFB Ser. 3081, Class DI, IO, 1.16s, 2035  1,526,139  74,720 
IFB Ser. 3199, Class S, IO, 1.13s, 2036  6,010,658  281,045 
IFB Ser. 3016, Class SP, IO, 0.79s, 2035  1,502,037  35,358 
IFB Ser. 3016, Class SQ, IO, 0.79s, 2035  3,561,910  87,374 
IFB Ser. 2815, Class S, IO, 0.68s, 2032  3,469,005  81,778 
Ser. 242, PO, zero %, 2036  5,779,263  4,607,479 
Ser. 239, PO, zero %, 2036  1,256,237  983,256 
Ser. 3174, PO, zero %, 2036  281,197  230,726 
Ser. 236, PO, zero %, 2036  1,393,084  1,093,828 
Ser. 3045, Class DO, PO, zero %, 2035  1,214,272  960,430 
Ser. 231, PO, zero %, 2035  6,265,771  4,667,139 
Ser. 3130, Class KO, PO, zero %, 2034  253,260  196,950 
Ser. 215, PO, zero %, 2031  293,855  233,804 
Ser. 2235, PO, zero %, 2030  367,997  289,625 
FRB Ser. 3022, Class TC, zero %, 2035  248,848  261,602 
FRB Ser. 2986, Class XT, zero %, 2035  158,020  155,304 
FRB Ser. 3046, Class WF, zero %, 2035  314,512  300,917 
FRB Ser. 3054, Class XF, zero %, 2034  157,577  153,686 
GE Capital Commercial Mortgage Corp. 144A     
Ser. 00-1, Class F, 7.514s, 2033  251,000  267,239 
Ser. 00-1, Class G, 6.131s, 2033  1,159,000  1,049,301 

39


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)* continued     
    Principal amount  Value 

GMAC Commercial Mortgage Securities, Inc. 144A       
Ser. 99-C3, Class G, 6.974s, 2036  $ 1,022,427  $ 1,048,140 
Government National Mortgage Association       
IFB Ser. 05-66, Class SP, 3.1s, 2035    1,004,429  890,150 
IFB Ser. 05-68, Class SN, IO, 1.88s, 2034    5,035,521  257,265 
IFB Ser. 05-65, Class SI, IO, 1.03s, 2035    3,823,573  141,054 
IFB Ser. 05-68, Class SI, IO, 0.98s, 2035    13,092,961  533,715 
IFB Ser. 06-14, Class S, IO, 0.93s, 2036    3,877,498  129,022 
IFB Ser. 05-51, Class SJ, IO, 0.88s, 2035    3,851,375  146,511 
IFB Ser. 05-68, Class S, IO, 0.88s, 2035    7,482,956  277,322 
Ser. 98-2, Class EA, PO, zero %, 2028    143,237  116,366 
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II 144A FRB       
Ser. 03-FL6A, Class L, 8.57s, 2015    417,000  417,261 
LB Commercial Conduit Mortgage Trust 144A       
Ser. 99-C1, Class G, 6.41s, 2031    492,082  505,232 
Ser. 98-C4, Class J, 5.6s, 2035    965,000  862,623 
Lehman Brothers Floating Rate Commercial Mortgage       
Trust 144A FRB Ser. 03-LLFA, Class L, 9.07s, 2014    1,181,000  1,181,185 
Lehman Mortgage Trust Ser. 06-9, Class 2A2, IO,       
1.3s, 2037    3,958,785  177,478 
Lehman Mortgage Trust       
IFB Ser. 06-5, Class 2A2, IO, 1.83s, 2036    6,346,878  292,614 
IFB Ser. 06-7, Class 2A4, IO, 1.23s, 2036    9,545,732  337,952 
IFB Ser. 06-7, Class 2A5, IO, 1.23s, 2036    8,255,331  400,776 
IFB Ser. 06-6, Class 1A2, IO, 1.18s, 2036    3,541,372  134,880 
IFB Ser. 06-6, Class 1A3, IO, 1.18s, 2036    4,678,619  211,438 
IFB Ser. 06-5, Class 1A3, IO, 0.08s, 2036    1,713,604  6,670 
IFB Ser. 06-4, Class 1A3, IO, 0.08s, 2036    2,368,536  13,807 
IFB Ser. 06-7, Class 1A3, IO, 0.03s, 2036    3,804,727  16,052 
IFB Ser. 06-6, Class 4A2, IO, 0.03s, 2036    3,646,459  6,837 
Mach One Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A       
Ser. 04-1A, Class J, 5.45s, 2040    1,154,000  965,352 
Ser. 04-1A, Class K, 5.45s, 2040    411,000  329,279 
Ser. 04-1A, Class L, 5.45s, 2040    187,000  137,669 
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust Ser. 04-13,       
Class 3A6, 3.786s, 2034    554,000  531,635 
Merrill Lynch Capital Funding Corp. Ser. 06-4,       
Class XC, IO, 0.051s, 2049    111,509,000  1,608,306 
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors, Inc. Ser. 96-C2,       
Class JS, IO, 2.329s, 2028    3,762,139  284,953 
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors, Inc. FRB       
Ser. 05-A9, Class 3A1, 5.291s, 2035    1,019,543  1,010,303 
Mezz Cap Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A Ser. 04-C1,       
Class X, IO, 8.049s, 2037    1,431,828  482,347 
Morgan Stanley Capital I Ser. 98-CF1, Class E,       
7.35s, 2032    2,455,000  2,560,712 
Morgan Stanley Capital I 144A Ser. 04-RR, Class F7,       
6s, 2039    3,360,000  2,421,431 

40


COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (13.0%)* continued     
    Principal amount  Value 

Morgan Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust       
Ser. 05-5AR, Class 2A1, 5.393s, 2035  $ 3,118,767  $ 3,108,834 
IFB Ser. 06-7, Class 4A3, IO, zero %, 2036    1,984,530  5,614 
Mortgage Capital Funding, Inc.       
FRB Ser. 98-MC2, Class E, 7.09s, 2030    459,501  468,427 
Ser. 97-MC2, Class X, IO, 1.393s, 2012    3,935,195  8,455 
Permanent Financing PLC FRB Ser. 8, Class 2C,       
5 3/4s, 2042 (United Kingdom)    1,112,000  1,111,934 
PNC Mortgage Acceptance Corp. 144A Ser. 00-C1,       
Class J, 6 5/8s, 2010    285,000  277,522 
Residential Asset Securitization Trust IFB       
Ser. 06-A7CB, Class 1A6, IO, 0.23s, 2036    900,726  8,444 
SBA CMBS Trust 144A Ser. 05-1A, Class E, 6.706s, 2035    595,000  591,083 
STRIPS 144A       
Ser. 03-1A, Class M, 5s, 2018 (Cayman Islands)    316,000  267,329 
Ser. 03-1A, Class N, 5s, 2018 (Cayman Islands)    376,000  292,781 
Ser. 04-1A, Class M, 5s, 2018 (Cayman Islands)    345,000  295,420 
Ser. 04-1A, Class N, 5s, 2018 (Cayman Islands)    325,000  260,140 
Titan Europe PLC 144A       
FRB Ser. 05-CT1A, Class D, 6.633s, 2014 (Ireland)  GBP  1,200,599  2,359,573 
FRB Ser. 05-CT2A, Class E, 6.177s, 2014 (Ireland)  $ 444,138  872,451 
FRB Ser. 04-2A, Class D, 4.646s, 2014 (Ireland)  EUR  537,623  701,436 
URSUS EPC 144A FRB Ser. 1-A, Class D, 6.05s, 2012       
(Ireland)  GBP  515,949  1,013,066 
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A FRB       
Ser. 05-WL5A, Class L, 8.62s, 2018  $ 917,000  916,963 
Wells Fargo Mortgage Backed Securities Trust       
Ser. 05-AR16, Class 2A1, 4.945s, 2035    35,781  35,456 
Ser. 05-AR13, Class 1A4, IO, 0.742s, 2035    27,542,277  439,084 

Total collateralized mortgage obligations (cost $166,180,392)      $ 166,788,405 

 
 
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (9.9%)*       
    Principal amount  Value 

Ameriquest Finance NIM Trust 144A Ser. 04-RN9,       
Class N2, 10s, 2034 (Cayman Islands)    272,200  $253,146 
Arcap REIT, Inc. 144A       
Ser. 03-1A, Class E, 7.11s, 2038    743,000  765,429 
Ser. 04-1A, Class E, 6.42s, 2039    420,000  412,661 
Asset Backed Funding Certificates 144A FRB       
Ser. 06-OPT3, Class B, 7.82s, 2036    117,000  88,514 
Asset Backed Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust       
144A FRB Ser. 06-HE2, Class M10, 7.82s, 2036    1,001,000  828,510 
Aviation Capital Group Trust 144A FRB Ser. 03-2A,       
Class G1, 6.02s, 2033    540,825  543,107 
Bank One Issuance Trust FRB Ser. 03-C4, Class C4,       
6.35s, 2011    740,000  747,945 

41


ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (9.9%)* continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities, Inc.     
FRB Ser. 04-FR3, Class M6, 8.57s, 2034  $ 507,000  $ 501,930 
FRB Ser. 06-PC1, Class M9, 7.07s, 2035  364,000  305,533 
Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities, Inc. 144A FRB     
Ser. 06-HE2, Class M10, 7.57s, 2036  552,000  466,440 
Bombardier Capital Mortgage Securitization Corp.     
Ser. 00-A, Class A4, 8.29s, 2030  1,628,658  1,153,293 
Ser. 00-A, Class A2, 7.575s, 2030  295,635  214,473 
Ser. 99-B, Class A4, 7.3s, 2016  1,399,711  925,775 
Ser. 99-B, Class A3, 7.18s, 2015  2,392,389  1,552,062 
FRB Ser. 00-A, Class A1, 5.48s, 2030  311,852  177,756 
Broadhollow Funding, LLC 144A FRB Ser. 04-A,     
Class Sub, 6.57s, 2009  1,174,000  1,182,805 
Capital Auto Receivables Asset Trust 144A Ser. 06-1,     
Class D, 7.16s, 2013  500,000  498,027 
CARSSX Finance, Ltd. 144A     
FRB Ser. 04-AA, Class B4, 10.82s, 2011     
(Cayman Islands)  330,105  340,927 
FRB Ser. 04-AA, Class B3, 8.67s, 2011     
(Cayman Islands)  56,179  57,110 
Chase Credit Card Master Trust FRB Ser. 03-3,     
Class C, 6.4s, 2010  860,000  870,838 
CHEC NIM Ltd., 144A Ser. 04-2, Class N3, 8s, 2034     
(Cayman Islands)  14,985  14,509 
Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.     
FRB Ser. 05-HE4, Class M11, 7.82s, 2035  599,000  456,316 
FRB Ser. 05-HE4, Class M12, 7.37s, 2035  899,000  645,981 
Conseco Finance Securitizations Corp.     
Ser. 00-2, Class A5, 8.85s, 2030  2,220,000  2,081,103 
Ser. 00-2, Class A4, 8.48s, 2030  11,283  11,026 
Ser. 00-4, Class A6, 8.31s, 2032  7,133,000  6,126,205 
Ser. 00-5, Class A7, 8.2s, 2032  1,053,000  890,312 
Ser. 00-1, Class A5, 8.06s, 2031  2,190,699  1,924,559 
Ser. 00-4, Class A5, 7.97s, 2032  470,000  418,082 
Ser. 00-5, Class A6, 7.96s, 2032  463,000  398,850 
Ser. 02-1, Class M1F, 7.954s, 2033  85,000  89,029 
Ser. 00-4, Class A4, 7.73s, 2031  362,936  334,773 
Ser. 01-3, Class M2, 7.44s, 2033  208,876  20,888 
Ser. 01-4, Class A4, 7.36s, 2033  515,217  530,894 
Ser. 00-6, Class A5, 7.27s, 2032  182,051  181,078 
FRB Ser. 01-4, Class M1, 7.076s, 2033  573,000  217,740 
Ser. 01-1, Class A5, 6.99s, 2032  1,933,000  1,884,480 
Ser. 01-3, Class A4, 6.91s, 2033  5,996,000  5,755,153 
Ser. 02-1, Class A, 6.681s, 2033  2,490,042  2,511,819 
Ser. 01-3, Class A3, 5.79s, 2033  2,826  2,827 
Consumer Credit Reference IDX Securities 144A FRB     
Ser. 02-1A, Class A, 7.365s, 2007  1,494,000  1,497,063 
Countrywide Asset Backed Certificates 144A     
Ser. 04-6N, Class N1, 6 1/4s, 2035  61,314  60,020 
Ser. 04-BC1N, Class Note, 5 1/2s, 2035  50,081  50,440 

42


ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (9.9%)* continued       
    Principal amount  Value 

Countrywide Home Loans Ser. 06-0A5, Class X, IO,       
2.064s, 2046  $ 8,940,566  $ 366,004 
Countrywide Home Loans 144A IFB Ser. 05-R1,       
Class 1AS, IO, 0.779s, 2035    7,488,068  205,925 
Crest, Ltd. 144A Ser. 03-2A, Class E2, 8s, 2038       
(Cayman Islands)    838,000  833,549 
DB Master Finance, LLC 144A Ser. 06-1, Class M1,       
8.285s, 2031    545,000  555,220 
First Chicago Lennar Trust 144A Ser. 97-CHL1,       
Class E, 7 7/8s, 2039    2,258,744  2,294,037 
First Franklin Mortgage Loan Asset Backed       
Certificates FRB Ser. 04-FF7, Class A4, 5.62s, 2034    1,823,836  1,824,039 
Fremont NIM Trust 144A       
Ser. 04-3, Class B, 7 1/2s, 2034    81,238  11,950 
Ser. 04-3, Class A, 4 1/2s, 2034    3,186  2,842 
Gears Auto Owner Trust 144A Ser. 05-AA, Class E1,       
8.22s, 2012    1,347,000  1,332,972 
Granite Mortgages PLC       
FRB Ser. 03-2, Class 3C, 6.69s, 2043 (United Kingdom)  GBP  2,090,000  4,198,511 
FRB Ser. 02-1, Class 1C, 6.66s, 2042 (United Kingdom)  $ 512,995  513,739 
FRB Ser. 03-2, Class 2C1, 5.2s, 2043 (United Kingdom)  EUR  2,785,000  3,701,590 
Green Tree Financial Corp.       
Ser. 94-6, Class B2, 9s, 2020  $ 1,703,968  1,599,133 
Ser. 94-4, Class B2, 8.6s, 2019    641,075  467,497 
Ser. 93-1, Class B, 8.45s, 2018    1,203,057  1,141,703 
Ser. 99-5, Class A5, 7.86s, 2030    8,925,000  8,768,813 
Ser. 96-8, Class M1, 7.85s, 2027    754,000  748,261 
Ser. 95-8, Class B1, 7.3s, 2026    704,416  697,712 
Ser. 95-4, Class B1, 7.3s, 2025    726,329  740,615 
Ser. 97-6, Class M1, 7.21s, 2029    1,177,000  1,108,189 
Ser. 95-F, Class B2, 7.1s, 2021    105,820  106,019 
Ser. 99-3, Class A7, 6.74s, 2031    1,438,000  1,418,081 
Ser. 99-3, Class A5, 6.16s, 2031    28,242  28,418 
Greenpoint Manufactured Housing       
Ser. 00-3, Class IA, 8.45s, 2031    3,275,838  3,006,449 
Ser. 99-5, Class A4, 7.59s, 2028    91,601  92,760 
GS Auto Loan Trust 144A Ser. 04-1, Class D, 5s, 2011    712,336  704,785 
Guggenheim Structured Real Estate Funding, Ltd. 144A       
FRB Ser. 05-2A, Class E, 7.32s, 2030 (Cayman Islands)    729,000  732,062 
FRB Ser. 05-1A, Class E, 7.12s, 2030 (Cayman Islands)    472,664  473,278 
HASCO NIM Trust 144A Ser. 05-OP1A, Class A, 6 1/4s,       
2035 (Cayman Islands)    485,265  474,169 
LNR CDO, Ltd. 144A       
FRB Ser. 03-1A, Class EFL, 8.32s, 2036       
(Cayman Islands)    1,485,000  1,568,647 
FRB Ser. 02-1A, Class FFL, 8.07s, 2037       
(Cayman Islands)    2,440,000  2,440,000 
Lothian Mortgages PLC 144A FRB Ser. 3A, Class D,       
6.408s, 2039 (United Kingdom)    1,700,000  3,337,950 

43


ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (9.9%)* continued       
    Principal amount  Value 

Madison Avenue Manufactured Housing Contract FRB       
Ser. 02-A, Class B1, 8.57s, 2032  $ 2,025,781  $ 1,580,109 
MASTR Asset Backed Securities NIM Trust 144A       
Ser. 04-HE1A, Class Note, 5.191s, 2034       
(Cayman Islands)    8,174  8,051 
MBNA Credit Card Master Note Trust FRB Ser. 03-C5,       
Class C5, 6 1/2s, 2010    860,000  871,403 
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors, Inc. 144A       
Ser. 04-FM1N, Class N1, 5s, 2035 (Cayman Islands)    19,589  19,295 
Mid-State Trust Ser. 11, Class B, 8.221s, 2038    255,929  251,713 
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I FRB Ser. 04-HE8,       
Class B3, 8.52s, 2034    458,000  461,329 
Morgan Stanley Auto Loan Trust 144A Ser. 04-HB2,       
Class E, 5s, 2012    173,551  171,709 
N-Star Real Estate CDO, Ltd. 144A FRB Ser. 04-2A,       
Class C1, 7.32s, 2039 (Cayman Islands)    500,000  510,000 
Navistar Financial Corp. Owner Trust       
Ser. 05-A, Class C, 4.84s, 2014    399,710  390,287 
Ser. 04-B, Class C, 3.93s, 2012    172,916  167,755 
Oakwood Mortgage Investors, Inc.       
Ser. 99-D, Class A1, 7.84s, 2029    2,069,450  1,819,374 
Ser. 00-A, Class A2, 7.765s, 2017    308,788  238,710 
Ser. 95-B, Class B1, 7.55s, 2021    542,000  357,666 
Ser. 00-D, Class A4, 7.4s, 2030    1,945,000  1,263,357 
Ser. 02-B, Class A4, 7.09s, 2032    851,614  756,561 
Ser. 99-B, Class A4, 6.99s, 2026    2,253,408  1,972,334 
Ser. 01-D, Class A4, 6.93s, 2031    1,517,663  1,186,719 
Ser. 01-E, Class A4, 6.81s, 2031    2,034,831  1,787,746 
Ser. 01-C, Class A2, 5.92s, 2017    2,264,590  1,164,559 
Ser. 02-C, Class A1, 5.41s, 2032    2,715,732  2,348,505 
Ser. 01-D, Class A2, 5.26s, 2019    308,580  214,624 
Ser. 01-E, Class A2, 5.05s, 2019    2,095,765  1,643,027 
Ser. 02-A, Class A2, 5.01s, 2020    631,491  484,726 
Oakwood Mortgage Investors, Inc. 144A Ser. 01-B,       
Class A4, 7.21s, 2030    547,177  486,593 
Ocean Star PLC 144A       
FRB Ser. 04-A, Class E, 11.876s, 2018 (Ireland)    1,695,000  1,757,715 
FRB Ser. 05-A, Class E, 9.976s, 2012 (Ireland)    466,000  474,947 
Option One Mortgage Loan Trust FRB Ser. 05-4,       
Class M11, 7.82s, 2035    783,000  653,316 
Park Place Securities, Inc. FRB Ser. 04-MCW1,       
Class A2, 5.7s, 2034    1,676,230  1,677,802 
Park Place Securities, Inc. 144A FRB Ser. 04-MHQ1,       
Class M10, 7.82s, 2034    300,000  258,000 
People’s Choice Net Interest Margin Note 144A       
Ser. 04-2, Class B, 5s, 2034    20,053  19,662 
Permanent Financing PLC       
FRB Ser. 3, Class 3C, 6 1/2s, 2042 (United Kingdom)    680,000  686,218 
FRB Ser. 6, Class 3C, 5.954s, 2042 (United Kingdom)  GBP  1,731,000  3,409,695 

44


ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (9.9%)* continued       
    Principal amount  Value 

Residential Asset Securities Corp. Ser. 01-KS3,       
Class AII, 5.81s, 2031  $ 4,769,771  $ 4,770,725 
Residential Asset Securities Corp. 144A FRB       
Ser. 05-KS10, Class B, 7.8s, 2035    778,000  673,530 
Residential Mortgage Securities 144A FRB Ser. 20A,       
Class B1A, 5.961s, 2038 (United Kingdom)  GBP  250,000  488,224 
Rural Housing Trust Ser. 87-1, Class D, 6.33s, 2026  $ 166,688  167,072 
SAIL Net Interest Margin Notes 144A       
Ser. 03-3, Class A, 7 3/4s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    33,837  6,429 
Ser. 03-BC2A, Class A, 7 3/4s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    145,799  7,290 
Ser. 03-10A, Class A, 7 1/2s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    96,609  8,695 
Ser. 03-5, Class A, 7.35s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    24,487  2,449 
Ser. 03-8A, Class A, 7s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    14,179  284 
Ser. 03-9A, Class A, 7s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    19,982  200 
Ser. 03-6A, Class A, 7s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    6,641  332 
Ser. 03-7A, Class A, 7s, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    40,481  4,720 
Sasco Net Interest Margin Trust 144A Ser. 03-BC1,       
Class B, zero %, 2033 (Cayman Islands)    530,404  332 
Sharps SP I, LLC Net Interest Margin Trust 144A       
Ser. 04-HS1N, Class Note, 5.92s, 2034    7,936  317 
Soundview Home Equity Loan Trust 144A FRB Ser. 05-4,       
Class M10, 7.82s, 2036    463,000  420,515 
South Coast Funding 144A FRB Ser. 3A, Class A2,       
6.574s, 2038 (Cayman Islands)    200,000  200,880 
Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust 144A FRB       
Ser. 05-HE3, Class M11, 7.82s, 2035    858,000  580,877 
Structured Asset Receivables Trust 144A FRB       
Ser. 05-1, 5.874s, 2015    3,493,968  3,489,600 
TIAA Real Estate CDO, Ltd. Ser. 03-1A, Class E, 8s,       
2038 (Cayman Islands)    904,000  918,186 
TIAA Real Estate CDO, Ltd. 144A Ser. 02-1A,       
Class IV, 6.84s, 2037 (Cayman Islands)    756,000  754,190 
Whinstone Capital Management, Ltd. 144A FRB Ser. 1A,       
Class B3, 6.26s, 2044 (United Kingdom)    1,340,723  1,340,683 
Whole Auto Loan Trust 144A Ser. 04-1, Class D, 5.6s, 2011    146,213  145,798 

Total asset-backed securities (cost $126,406,569)      $ 126,559,182 

 
 
SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c)       
    Principal amount  Value 

Basic Materials (0.6%)       
Celanese Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.114s, 2011  $ 522,872  $ 525,568 
Georgia-Pacific Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,       
7.357s, 2013    1,633,500  1,647,453 
Georgia-Pacific Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B2,       
7.114s, 2012    600,000  605,125 
Hexion Specialty Chemicals, Inc. bank term loan FRN       
7 7/8s, 2013    498,750  500,340 

45


SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c) continued     

  Principal amount  Value 
 
Basic Materials continued     
Innophos, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.57s, 2010  $ 356,459  $ 357,945 
Lyondell Chemical Co. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.121s, 2013  199,500  200,858 
Momentive Performance Materials Corp. bank term loan     
FRN 7 5/8s, 2013  350,000  352,450 
Nalco Co. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.177s, 2010  439,814  442,372 
NewPage Corp. bank term loan FRN 8.446s, 2011  348,529  352,014 
Novelis, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.62s, 2012  305,627  306,064 
Novelis, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.62s, 2012  530,826  531,585 
Rockwood Specialties Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. E, 7.376s, 2012  1,998,721  2,010,338 
Smurfit-Stone Container Corp. bank term loan FRN     
5.222s, 2010  43,665  44,052 
Smurfit-Stone Container Corp. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7 5/8s, 2011  173,464  175,002 
Smurfit-Stone Container Corp. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. C, 7 5/8s, 2011  105,754  106,607 
    8,157,773 

 
Capital Goods (0.2%)     
Graham Packaging Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.634s, 2011  787,940  794,272 
Hexcel Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7 1/8s, 2012  639,131  639,131 
Mueller Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.373s, 2012  627,645  630,979 
Terex Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. D, 7.114s, 2013  99,500  99,624 
Transdigm, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.366s, 2013  450,000  452,138 
    2,616,144 

 
Communication Services (0.6%)     
Consolidated Communications Holdings, Inc. bank term     
loan FRN Ser. D, 7.366s, 2011  297,884  298,815 
Fairpoint Communications, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7 1/8s, 2012  541,884  542,900 
Idearc, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.33s, 2014  1,150,000  1,158,338 
Intelsat, Ltd. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.61s,     
2013 (Bermuda)  1,197,000  1,209,569 
Level 3 Communications, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
8.366s, 2011  318,000  321,578 
Madison River Capital, LLC bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.61s, 2012  1,207,403  1,208,536 
MetroPCS Wireless, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
7 7/8s, 2013  448,875  452,642 
PanAmSat Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.86s, 2013  1,197,000  1,208,304 
Syniverse Holdings, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.12s, 2012  798,608  801,603 
Time Warner Telecom, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.57s, 2013  366,000  368,745 
Windstream Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.11s, 2013  290,000  292,175 
    7,863,205 

46


SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c) continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Consumer Cyclicals (1.3%)     
Boise Cascade Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. D,     
7 1/8s, 2011  $ 1,122,275  $ 1,127,185 
CCM Merger, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.364s, 2012  1,181,018  1,182,495 
Coinmach Service Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B-1,     
7.874s, 2012  547,781  552,231 
Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7 7/8s, 2012  551,588  554,001 
Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. bank term loan FRN Ser. C,     
7 7/8s, 2012  1,175,333  1,180,475 
Custom Building Products bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.614s, 2011  1,175,516  1,176,985 
Dex Media West, LLC bank term loan FRN Ser. B1,     
6.913s, 2010  912,457  912,457 
Dex Media West, LLC/Dex Media Finance Co. bank term     
loan FRN Ser. B, 6.861s, 2010  451,290  450,931 
Landsource, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7 7/8s, 2010  150,000  149,625 
Michaels Stores, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
8 1/8s, 2013  488,359  491,971 
Neiman Marcus Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.602s, 2013  192,236  194,181 
Nortek Holdings, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.355s, 2011  302,965  303,116 
Oriental Trading Co. bank term loan FRN 8.172s, 2013  348,250  349,556 
Penn National Gaming, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.12s, 2012  543,125  546,248 
PRIMEDIA, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.57s, 2013  297,000  295,886 
R.H. Donnelley Finance Corp. bank term loan FRN     
6.865s, 2011  1,985,925  1,982,477 
R.H. Donnelley Finance Corp. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. A-4, 6.614s, 2009  107,353  106,874 
R.H. Donnelley, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. D1,     
6.868s, 2011  739,256  737,660 
Standard-Pacific Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
6.873s, 2013  199,999  198,499 
Sun Media Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.126s,     
2009 (Canada)  276,005  276,350 
Trump Hotel & Casino Resort, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
5.62s, 2012 (U)  168,500  169,922 
Trump Hotel & Casino Resort, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B-1, 7.87s, 2012  167,129  168,539 
TRW Automotive, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
6.938s, 2010  1,040,484  1,039,021 
TRW Automotive, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B2,     
6 7/8s, 2010  233,640  233,056 
Venetian Casino Resort, LLC bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.12s, 2011  1,012,507  1,019,030 

47


SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c) continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Consumer Cyclicals continued     
Venetian Casino Resort, LLC bank term loan FRN     
Ser. DD, 7.12s, 2011  $ 208,764  $ 210,109 
Visant Holding Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. C,     
7.122s, 2010  1,056,773  1,060,736 
    16,669,616 

 
Consumer Staples (1.5%)     
Affiliated Computer Services, Inc. bank term loan     
FRN Ser. B2, 7.36s, 2013  99,500  100,184 
Affinion Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.87s, 2013  1,816,431  1,831,417 
Affinity Group Holdings bank term loan FRN Ser. B2,     
7.85s, 2009  222,761  223,039 
Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp. bank term     
loan FRN Ser. B, 7.62s, 2013  687,750  681,828 
Cablevision Systems Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.12s, 2013  2,133,875  2,139,033 
Cebridge Connections, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.61s, 2013  650,000  653,707 
Century Cable Holdings bank term loan FRN 10 1/4s, 2009  1,220,000  1,189,500 
Charter Communications bank term loan FRN 7.985s, 2013  1,600,254  1,613,756 
Insight Midwest bank term loan FRN 7.61s, 2014  136,150  137,171 
Jean Coutu Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7 7/8s, 2011 (Canada)  227,874  228,071 
Mediacom Communications Corp. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. C, 7.172s, 2015  987,500  988,029 
Mediacom Communications Corp. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. DD, 7.12s, 2015  240,000  239,300 
MGM Studios, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 8.614s, 2011  1,209,870  1,211,571 
Olympus Cable Holdings, LLC bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 10 1/4s, 2010  735,000  715,247 
Prestige Brands, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.71s, 2011  947,237  953,158 
Regal Cinemas, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.117s, 2010  1,203,809  1,205,207 
Reynolds American, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.14s, 2012  497,500  500,998 
Six Flags, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 8.614s, 2009  804,065  812,231 
Spanish Broadcasting Systems, Inc. bank term loan     
FRN 7.12s, 2012  787,970  788,299 
Spectrum Brands, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
8.605s, 2013  1,130,695  1,133,925 
Universal City Development bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.368s, 2011  1,136,666  1,140,219 
Warner Music Group bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.37s, 2011  463,512  465,656 
Young Broadcasting, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.937s, 2012  477,321  478,216 
    19,429,762 

48


SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c) continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Energy (0.4%)     
CR Gas Storage bank term loan FRN 7.141s, 2013  $ 126,318  $ 126,239 
CR Gas Storage bank term loan FRN 7.097s, 2013  121,212  121,288 
CR Gas Storage bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.151s, 2013  661,894  661,480 
CR Gas Storage bank term loan FRN Ser. DD, 7.103s, 2013  84,636  84,689 
EPCO Holding, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. C, 7.36s, 2010  588,093  591,663 
Key Energy Services, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.86s, 2010  130,000  130,650 
Key Energy Services, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.836s, 2012  1,857,500  1,866,788 
Meg Energy Corp. bank term loan FRN 7.37s, 2013 (Canada)  223,313  224,010 
Meg Energy Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. DD, 6s,     
2013 (Canada) (U)  225,000  222,629 
Petroleum Geo-Services ASA bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.61s, 2012 (Norway)  57,324  57,639 
Targa Resources, Inc. bank term loan FRN 7.624s, 2012  971,573  977,189 
Targa Resources, Inc. bank term loan FRN 5.239s, 2012  236,129  237,494 
    5,301,758 

 
Health Care (0.3%)     
AmeriPath, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.36s, 2012  92,534  92,511 
DaVita, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.404s, 2012  383,062  385,679 
Healthsouth Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 8.61s, 2013  2,338,250  2,359,442 
LifePoint, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 6.975s, 2012  277,625  276,931 
Psychiatric Solutions, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.099s, 2012  307,692  308,077 
Stewart Enterprises, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.181s, 2011  210,764  211,027 
United Surgical Partners International, Inc. bank     
term loan FRN 7.145s, 2013  104,475  104,475 
    3,738,142 

 
Technology (0.2%)     
AMI Semiconductor, Inc. bank term loan FRN 6.82s, 2012  629,750  628,176 
Aspect Software, Inc. bank term loan FRN 8 3/8s, 2011  49,875  50,041 
JDA Software Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B,     
7.61s, 2013  119,625  120,223 
Travelport bank term loan FRN 8.364s, 2013  12,491  12,566 
Travelport bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 8.364s, 2013  127,190  127,950 
UGS Corp. bank term loan FRN Ser. C, 7.126s, 2012  816,552  817,232 
    1,756,188 

 
Transportation (0.1%)     
Travelcenters of America, Inc. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.106s, 2011  633,650  632,858 
United Airlines bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 9.12s, 2012  565,906  567,220 
United Airlines bank term loan FRN Ser. DD, 9 1/8s, 2012  80,844  81,031 
    1,281,109 

49


SENIOR LOANS (5.3%)* (c) continued     
  Principal amount  Value 

Utilities & Power (0.1%)     
Mirant North America, LLC. bank term loan FRN     
Ser. B, 7.1s, 2013  $ 150,241  $ 150,408 
NRG Energy, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, 7.364s, 2013  1,207,319  1,217,593 
    1,368,001 

Total senior loans (cost $68,189,753)    $ 68,181,698 

 
UNITS (0.3%)* (cost $2,676,027)     

  Units  Value 

XCL, Ltd. Equity Units (F)  1,327  $ 3,856,309 

 
PREFERRED STOCKS (0.1%)* (cost $605,823)     

  Shares  Value 

Rural Cellular Corp. Ser. B, 11.375% cum. pfd.  828  $ 1,035,000 

 
COMMON STOCKS (0.1%)*     
  Shares  Value 

Contifinancial Corp. Liquidating Trust Units (F)  5,273,336  $527 
Knology, Inc. †  381  5,067 
Owens Corning, Inc. †  20,810  595,998 
Sterling Chemicals, Inc. †  497  4,498 
USA Mobility, Inc.  27  548 
VFB LLC (acquired various dates from 6/22/99 through     
12/08/03, cost $1,311,474) (F) ‡  1,795,382  37,139 
WHX Corp. †  35,941  323,469 

Total common stocks (cost $6,804,922)    $ 967,246 

 
CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS (—%)*     
  Shares  Value 

Emmis Communications Corp. Ser. A, $3.125     
cum. cv. pfd.  4,826  $ 211,138 
Ion Media Networks, Inc. 144A 9.75% cv. pfd. PIK  31  133,300 

Total convertible preferred stocks (cost $558,483)    $ 344,438 

50


PURCHASED OPTIONS OUTSTANDING (1.3%)*       
      Expiration date/   
    Contract amount  strike price  Value 

 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Lehman Brothers for the right to pay         
a fixed rate swap of 4.148% versus the         
six month EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate maturing         
October 10, 2016.  EUR  67,220,000  Oct-11/4.148  $ 2,105,547 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Citibank, N.A. London for the right         
to pay a fixed rate swap of 4.1925%         
versus the six month EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate         
maturing October 13, 2016.  EUR  67,220,000  Oct-11/4.193  2,029,970 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Citibank, N.A. London for the right         
to receive a fixed rate swap of 4.1925%         
versus the six month EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate         
maturing October 13, 2016.  EUR  52,989,000  Oct-11/4.193  952,670 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Lehman Brothers for the right         
to receive a fixed rate swap of 4.148%         
versus the six month EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate         
maturing October 10, 2016.  EUR  52,989,000  Oct-11/4.148  935,066 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Citibank for the right to pay a         
fixed rate of 1.03% versus the six-month         
JPY-LIBOR-BBA maturing on         
January 26, 2009.  JPY  13,814,000,000  Jan-08/1.03  169,897 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Lehman Brothers International         
(Europe) for the right to pay a fixed         
rate swap of 4.4175% versus the six month         
EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate maturing         
January 30, 2017.  EUR  52,989,000  Jan-12/4.418  1,327,525 
Option on an interest rate swap         
with Lehman Brothers Special         
Financing, Inc.for the right to receive a         
fixed rate of 4.4175% versus the six         
month EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate maturing         
on January 30, 2017.  EUR  52,989,000  Jan-12/4.418  1,233,639 
Option on an interest rate swap with         
Lehman Brothers International (Europe)         
for the right to pay a fixed rate swap of         
5.3475% versus the three month         
USD-LIBOR-BBA maturing February 4, 2018.  $131,421,000  Jan-08/5.348  2,641,562 
Option on an interest rate swap with Lehman         
Brothers Special Financing, Inc.for the right to         
receive a fixed rate of 5.3475% versus the three month       
USD-LIBOR-BBA maturing on February 4, 2018.  131,421,000  Jan-08/5.348  2,641,562 

51


PURCHASED OPTIONS OUTSTANDING (1.3%)* continued     
      Expiration date/   
    Contract amount  strike price  Value 

Option on an interest rate swap with JPMorgan Chase       
Bank, N.A. for the right to receive a fixed rate       
of 5.39% versus the three month USD-LIBOR-BBA       
maturing on January 29, 2018.    $ 59,983,000  Jan-08/5.39  $ 1,299,010 
Option on an interest rate swap with JPMorgan Chase       
Bank, N.A. for the right to pay a fixed rate       
of 5.39% versus the three month USD-LIBOR-BBA       
maturing on January 29, 2018.    59,983,000  Jan-08/5.39  1,098,439 

Total purchased options outstanding (cost $16,569,771)    $ 16,434,887 

 
WARRANTS (—%)* †         

  Expiration  Strike     
  date  price  Warrants  Value 

Dayton Superior Corp. 144A (F)  6/15/09  0.01  1,980  $ 20 
MDP Acquisitions PLC 144A (Ireland)  10/01/13  EUR 0.001  960  26,880 
Ubiquitel, Inc. 144A  4/15/10  22.74  3,210  32 

Total warrants (cost $219,448)        $ 26,932 

 
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (12.5%)*         

    Principal amount/shares  Value 

Putnam Prime Money Market Fund (e)      152,427,516  $ 152,427,516 
Short-term investments held as collateral for loaned       
securities with yields ranging from 5.27% to 5.46%       
and due dates ranging from February 1, 2007       
to March 23, 2007 (d)    $ 3,218,263  3,213,020 
U.S. Treasury Bills 4.76%, March 29, 2007 #    4,604,000  4,569,179 

Total short-term investments (cost $160,209,715)      $ 160,209,715 

 
TOTAL INVESTMENTS         
Total investments (cost $1,258,258,463)      $ 1,268,414,328 

52


* Percentages indicated are based on net assets of $1,281,142,554.

† Non-income-producing security.

†† 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.

‡ Restricted, excluding 144A securities, as to public resale. The total market value of restricted securities held at January 31, 2007 was $1,418,519, or 0.1% of net assets.

‡‡ Income may be received in cash or additional securities at the discretion of the issuer.

# This security was pledged and segregated with the custodian to cover margin requirements for futures contracts at January 31, 2007.

(c) Senior loans are exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, but contain certain restrictions on resale and cannot be sold publicly. These loans pay interest at rates which adjust periodically. The interest rate shown for senior loans are the current interest rates at January 31, 2007. Senior loans are also subject to mandatory and/or optional prepayment which cannot be predicted. As a result, the remaining maturity may be substantially less than the stated maturity shown (Notes 1 and 6).

(d) See Note 1 to the financial statements.

(e) See Note 5 to the financial statements regarding investments in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund.

(F) Security is valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees.

(R) Real Estate Investment Trust.

(S) Securities on loan, in part or in entirety, at January 31, 2007.

(U) A portion of the position represents unfunded loan commitments (Note 7).

At January 31, 2007, liquid assets totaling $297,019,908 have been designated as collateral for open forward commitments, swap contracts and forward contracts.

144A after the name of an issuer represents securities exempt from registration under Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers.

TBA after the name of a security represents to be announced securities (Note 1).

The rates shown on Floating Rate Bonds (FRB) and Floating Rate Notes (FRN) are the current interest rates at January 31, 2007.

Inverse Floating Rate Bonds (IFB) are securities that pay interest rates that vary inversely to changes in the market interest rates. As interest rates rise, inverse floaters produce less current income. The interest rates shown are the current interest rates at January 31, 2007.

DIVERSIFICATION BY COUNTRY

Distribution of investments by country of issue at January 31, 2007 (as a percentage of Portfolio Value):

Argentina  1.2% 
Austria  0.8 
Brazil  0.5 
Canada  1.0 
Cayman Islands  1.2 
France  3.0 
Germany  6.8 
Ireland  2.5 
Japan  1.6 
Luxembourg  0.7 
Mexico  0.7 
Russia  1.2 
Spain  0.5 
Sweden  0.8 
Turkey  0.9 
United Kingdom  1.9 
United States  73.2 
Other  1.5 

Total  100.0 

53


FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACTS TO BUY at 1/31/07 (aggregate face value $153,722,188) (Unaudited) 

        Unrealized 
    Aggregate  Delivery  appreciation/ 
  Value  face value  date  (depreciation) 

Australian Dollar  $29,392,462  $29,566,762  4/18/07  $ (174,300) 
Brazilian Real  3,195,382  3,177,446  4/18/07  17,936 
British Pound  28,910,908  29,052,378  3/22/07  (141,470) 
Czechoslovak Koruna  3,636,565  3,728,100  3/22/07  (91,535) 
Canadian Dollar  6,454,042  6,456,013  4/18/07  (1,971) 
Danish Krone  2,440,414  2,491,752  3/22/07  (51,338) 
Euro  19,803,614  19,764,185  3/22/07  39,429 
Japanese Yen  10,142,215  10,336,662  2/21/07  (194,447) 
Malaysian Ringgit  3,477,049  3,343,167  3/22/07  133,882 
Mexican Peso  3,244,898  3,252,439  4/18/07  (7,541) 
Norwegian Krone  15,958,505  16,016,802  3/22/07  (58,297) 
Polish Zloty  4,546,614  4,745,815  3/22/07  (199,201) 
South Korean Won  6,461,264  6,474,745  2/21/07  (13,481) 
Swedish Krona  6,651,525  6,708,566  3/22/07  (57,041) 
Swiss Franc  8,325,017  8,607,356  3/22/07  (282,339) 

Total        $(1,081,714) 

 
 
FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACTS TO SELL at 1/31/07 (aggregate face value $365,439,197) (Unaudited) 

        Unrealized 
    Aggregate  Delivery  appreciation/ 
  Value  face value  date  (depreciation) 

Australian Dollar  $22,039,229  $22,159,841  4/18/07  $ 120,612 
British Pound  20,653,461  20,683,007  3/22/07  29,546 
Canadian Dollar  10,555,807  10,555,232  4/18/07  (575) 
Columbian Peso  3,166,689  3,175,054  4/18/07  8,365 
Euro  159,239,344  162,811,864  3/22/07  3,572,520 
Hungarian Forint  3,148,545  3,153,447  3/22/07  4,902 
Japanese Yen  85,166,617  87,776,567  2/21/07  2,609,950 
Korean Won  30,771  30,905  3/22/07  134 
Norwegian Krone  8,713,814  8,710,789  3/22/07  (3,025) 
Swedish Krona  23,605,791  23,636,068  3/22/07  30,277 
Swiss Franc  19,084,140  19,625,705  3/22/07  541,565 
Turkish Lira  3,186,282  3,120,718  3/22/07  (65,564) 

Total        $6,848,707 

54


FUTURES CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited)     
        Unrealized 
Number of    Expiration  appreciation/ 
  contracts  Value  date  (depreciation) 

Canadian Government Bond 10 yr (Long)  23  $2,211,945  Mar-07  $ (37,071) 
Euro-Bobl 5 yr (Short)  109  15,396,194  Mar-07  (5,933) 
Euro-Bund 10 yr (Long)  235  35,198,963  Mar-07  (385,371) 
Euro-Dollar 90-day (Short)  1,163  363,050,188  Sep-07  (30,898) 
Euro-Schatz 2 yr (Short)  558  75,156,961  Mar-07  496,671 
Euro-Sterling 90 day (Long)  1,553  358,942,288  Sep-07  (258,481) 
Japanese Government Bond 10 yr (Long)  100  111,432,359  Mar-07  410,348 
U.K. Gilt 10 yr (Long)  60  12,518,481  Mar-07  (394,832) 
U.S. Treasury Bond 20 yr (Long)  513  56,494,125  Mar-07  (1,936,738) 
U.S. Treasury Note 10 yr (Short)  952  101,626,000  Mar-07  1,060,687 
U.S. Treasury Note 5 yr (Short)  1,090  113,939,063  Mar-07  1,420,271 
U.S. Treasury Notes 2 yr (Short)  832  169,390,000  Mar-07  999,436 

Total        $1,338,089 

 
 
TBA SALE COMMITMENTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (proceeds receivable $28,246,391) (Unaudited) 
    Principal  Settlement   
    amount  date  Value 

FNMA, 5 1/2s, February 1, 2037    $28,800,000  2/12/07  $28,332,000 

 
 
WRITTEN OPTIONS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (premiums received $483,403) (Unaudited)   

    Contract  Expiration date/ 
    amount  strike price  Value 

Option on an interest rate swap with Citibank         
for the obligation to pay a fixed rate of 1.165%         
versus the six-month JPY-LIBOR maturing on         
April 3, 2008.  JPY  25,769,748,000  Mar-07/1.165   $848,197 

55


INTEREST RATE SWAP CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited)   

        Payments  Payments  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /    Termination  made by  received by  appreciation/ 
Notional amount    date  fund per annum  fund per annum  (depreciation) 

Bank of America, N.A.           
  $900,000    9/1/15  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  4.53%  $ (39,323) 

  32,700,000    3/30/09  3.075%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  1,274,807 

  6,900,000    1/27/14  4.35%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  373,905 

Citibank N.A., London           
JPY  1,103,000,000    1/26/17  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  2.49375%  (57,762) 

JPY  2,674,000,000    1/26/37  1.8025%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  58,796 

SEK  97,760,000    1/19/12  4.25%  3 month SEK-STIBOR-SIDE  72,292 

JPY  1,886,000,000    1/19/17  1.84%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  (15,561) 

JPY  10,549,000,000    1/19/09  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  0.888%  47,970 

AUD  22,710,000    1/19/17  3 month AUD-BBR-BBSW  6.37%  (48,363) 

AUD  88,090,000    1/19/09  6.56%  3 month AUD-BBR-BBSW  (112,926) 

Citibank, N.A.           
  $46,380,000    7/27/09  5.504%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  (254,283) 

JPY  10,565,597,000  (E)  4/3/08  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  1.165%  367,621 

JPY  2,600,000,000    2/10/16  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  1.755%  143,156 

  $42,250,000  (E)  5/23/12  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  4.923%  (573,755) 

  65,000,000  (E)  5/23/12  3.422%  U.S. Bond Market   
          Association Municipal Swap   
          Index  615,245 

  23,700,000    9/29/13  5.078%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  (29,459) 

JPY  2,230,000,000    9/11/16  1.8675%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  (212,541) 

Credit Suisse First Boston International       
  $11,257,600    7/9/14  4.945%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  239,590 

Credit Suisse International         
EUR  5,062,000    7/17/21  6 month EUR-EURIBOR-     
        Telerate  4.445%  162,776 

EUR  19,571,000    7/17/13  4.146%  6 month   
          EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate  (355,763) 

EUR  23,621,000    7/17/09  6 month EUR-EURIBOR-     
        Telerate  3.896%  372,486 

GBP  2,910,000    4/3/36  7,330,962 GBP at maturity  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  383,624 

EUR  56,330,000    7/4/15  3.93163%  6 month   
          EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate  1,459,998 

Deutsche Bank AG           
ZAR  23,880,000    7/6/11  3 month ZAR-JIBAR-SAFEX  9.16%  66,322 

Goldman Sachs International         
SEK  130,350,000    1/26/12  4.28%  3 month SEK-STIBOR-SIDE  62,531 

GBP  6,230,000    1/19/37  4.57%  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  245,508 

GBP  12,890,000    1/19/17  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  5.25125%  (190,753) 

EUR  9,330,000    1/23/37  6 month EUR-EURIBOR-     
        Telerate  4.36%  (179,692) 

EUR  19,920,000    1/23/17  4.269%  6 month   
          EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate  142,561 

GBP  10,380,000    1/10/37  4.5325%  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  517,736 

GBP  43,080,000    1/10/17  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  5.17%  (1,072,460) 

GBP  38,730,000    1/10/12  5.43%  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  634,382 


56


INTEREST RATE SWAP CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited) continued   

        Payments  Payments  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /    Termination  made by  received by  appreciation/ 
Notional amount    date  fund per annum  fund per annum  (depreciation) 

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.         
  $30,500,000    8/4/16  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.5195%  $ 866,949 

  56,000,000    8/4/08  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.40%  801,753 

  139,343,000    5/4/08  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.37%  (54,875) 

  45,120,000    5/4/16  5.62375%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  (999,197) 

JPY  11,230,000,000    6/6/13  1.83%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  (2,107,368) 

  $13,000,000    5/10/35  5.062%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  761,950 

  30,000,000    5/10/15  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  4.687%  (1,282,658) 

  21,450,000  (E)  11/8/11  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.036%  (188,974) 

  33,000,000  (E)  11/8/11  3.488%  U.S. Bond Market   
          Association Municipal Swap   
          Index  154,268 

  20,430,000    10/10/13  5.09%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  (40,831) 

  14,680,000    10/10/13  5.054%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5,026 

  56,000,000    5/10/07  4.062%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  379,121 

  66,000,000    3/6/16  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.176%  161,897 

Lehman Brothers International (Europe)       
  1,789,000    8/3/16  5.5675%  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  (57,039) 

  18,882,000    8/3/11  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.445%  407,804 

EUR  14,810,000    10/5/21  6 month EUR-EURIBOR-     
        Telerate  4.093%  (657,231) 

EUR  55,790,000    10/5/13  3.8975%  6 month   
          EUR-EURIBOR-Telerate  1,462,249 

EUR  67,340,000    10/5/09  6 month EUR-EURIBOR-     
        Telerate  3.825%  (760,611) 

Lehman Brothers Special Financing, Inc.       
JPY  4,600,000,000    10/21/15  1.61%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  241,092 

  $108,143,000    8/3/08  3 month USD-LIBOR-BBA  5.425%  1,567,923 

GBP  2,685,000    3/15/36  6,499,937.50 GBP at     
        maturity  6 month GBP-LIBOR-BBA  503,013 

Merrill Lynch Capital Services, Inc.       
JPY  2,500,000,000    10/31/16  1.90%  6 month JPY-LIBOR-BBA  (239,812) 

Total            $5,023,114 

(E) See Note 1 to the financial statements regarding extended effective dates.

57


TOTAL RETURN SWAP CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited)   

 
    Upfront      Fixed payments  Total return  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /  premium  Termination  received (paid) by  received by  appreciation/ 
Notional amount  received (paid)  date  fund per annum  or paid by fund  (depreciation) 

Credit Suisse International         
GBP  2,910,000     4/3/36  4,409,746 GBP  GBP Non-revised  $ 3,608 
        at maturity  Retail Price   
          Index   

Goldman Sachs International         
  $2,644,000    9/15/11  678 bp (1 month  Ford Credit Auto  (11,699) 
        USD-LIBOR-BBA)  Owner Trust   
          Series 2005-B   
          Class D   

EUR  33,800,000    1/9/12  2.17%  Eurostat  81,328 
          Eurozone HICP   
          excluding tobacco   

EUR  9,290,000    1/9/37  (2.3325%)  Eurostat  (51,765) 
          Eurozone HICP   
          excluding tobacco   

EUR  33,169,000    10/31/11  2.12%  Eurostat  (146,033) 
          Eurozone HICP   
          excluding tobacco   

EUR  33,169,000    10/31/11  (1.935%)  French Consumer  (182,962) 
          Price Index   
          excluding tobacco   

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.         
EUR  31,400,000    7/21/11  (2.295%)  Euro Non-revised  (642,199) 
          Consumer Price   
          Index excluding   
          tobacco   

EUR  31,400,000    7/21/11  2.2325%  Euro Non-revised  457,994 
          Consumer Price   
          Index excluding   
          tobacco   

Lehman Brothers Special Financing, Inc.         
EUR  33,169,000    4/26/11  2.11%  French Non-  587,691 
          revised Consumer   
          Price Index   
          excluding tobacco   

EUR  33,169,000    4/26/11  (2.115%)  Euro Non-revised  (120,995) 
          Consumer Price   
          Index excluding   
          tobacco   

GBP  2,685,000    3/15/36  4,063,876 GBP  GBP Non-revised  (18,451) 
        at maturity  Retail Price   
          Index   

 
Total            $ (43,483) 

58


CREDIT DEFAULT CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited)     

  Upfront      Fixed payments  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /  premium  Notional                      Termination  received (paid)   by appreciation/ 
Referenced debt*  received (paid)**  amount  date  fund per annum  (depreciation) 

Bank of America, N.A.           
DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  $69,454  $3,515,000  6/20/10  360 bp  $ 304,080 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  32,165  1,710,000  6/20/10  360 bp  146,308 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  (28,754)  9,500,000  6/20/10  (360 bp)  (662,879) 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  (19,180)  4,750,000  6/20/10  (360 bp)  (336,242) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,           
7/16/31    935,000  3/20/12  (525 bp)  (21,254) 

Ford Motor Credit Co.,           
7%, 10/1/13    2,805,000  3/20/12  285 bp  47,484 

L-3 Communications           
Corp. 7 5/8%, 6/15/12    1,155,000  9/20/11  (111 bp)  (15,172) 

L-3 Communications           
Corp. 7 5/8%, 6/15/12    460,000  6/20/11  (101 bp)  (4,884) 

CreditSuisse First Boston International         
Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,           
7/16/31    2,720,000  9/20/07  (487.5 bp)  (78,038) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,           
7/16/31    3,300,000  9/20/08  725 bp  292,973 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,           
7/16/31    580,000  9/20/07  (485 bp)  (16,529) 

Republic of Argentina,           
8.28%, 2033    2,315,000  7/20/09  (214 bp)  (59,137) 

Ukraine Government,           
7.65%, 6/11/13    2,175,000  10/20/11  194 bp  62,240 

Deutsche Bank AG           
DJ CDX NA IG Series 7  (1)  2,578,000  12/20/13  (50 bp)  (9,997) 

DJ iTraxx Europe Series           
6 Version 1  18,016  EUR 4,571,000  12/20/2013  (40bp)  (13,175) 

DJ iTraxx Europe Series           
6 Version 1, 6-9%           
tranche    EUR 4,571,000  12/20/2013  43bp  48,310 

DJ CDX NA IG Series 7           
Index 7-10% tranche    $ 2,578,000  12/20/13  55 bp  30,980 

Republic of Indonesia,           
6.75%, 2014    1,125,000  9/20/16  292 bp  91,738 

Goldman Sachs International           
Any one of the           
underlying securities           
in the basket of BB           
CMBS securities    7,487,000  (a)  2.461%  666,040 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  22,067  1,805,000  6/20/10  360 bp  142,550 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4           
Index  23,427  4,750,000  6/20/10  (360 bp)  (293,635) 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 5           
Index  (393,126)  26,688,000  12/20/10  (395 bp)  (2,492,085) 

DJ CDX NA IG Series 7           
Index  (1)  4,293,000  12/20/13  (50 bp)  (16,646) 


59


CREDIT DEFAULT CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited) continued   

  Upfront                                   Fixed payments  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /  premium    Notional  Termination  received (paid)   by appreciation/ 
Referenced debt*  received (paid)**    amount  date  fund per annum  (depreciation) 

Goldman Sachs International continued           
DJ CDX NA IG Series 7             
Index 7-10% tranche      $4,293,000  12/20/13  56 bp  $ 54,173 

Smurfit Kappa Funding,             
10 1/8%, 10/1/12    EUR  860,000  12/20/2007  (70 bp)  (4,836) 

Smurfit Kappa Funding,             
10 1/8%, 10/1/12    EUR  860,000  12/20/2011  375 bp  77,275 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      $2,720,000  9/20/08  620 bp  211,767 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      2,720,000  9/20/07  (427.5 bp)  (73,038) 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      580,000  9/20/07  (425 bp)  (15,466) 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      580,000  9/20/08  620 bp  45,063 

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.             
Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      460,000  9/20/07  (345 bp)  (9,376) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      460,000  9/20/08  550 bp  27,374 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      460,000  9/20/07  (350 bp)  (8,069) 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      460,000  9/20/08  500 bp  26,511 

Lehman Brothers Special Financing, Inc.           
DJ CDX NA HY Series 4             
Index  39,936    9,500,000  6/20/10  (360 bp)  (594,189) 

DJ iTraxx Europe Series             
6 Version 1, 6-9%             
tranche    EUR  5,485,000  12/20/2013  45.25bp  50,101 

DJ CDX NA HY Series 4             
Index  35,397    $1,710,000  6/20/10  360 bp  149,540 

DJ iTraxx Europe Series             
6 Version 1  17,006  EUR  5,485,000  12/20/2013  (40 bp)  (20,423) 

DJ CDX NA IG Series 7             
Index  2,489    $4,197,000  12/20/13  (50 bp)  (13,783) 

DJ CDX NA IG Series 7             
Index 7-10% tranche      4,197,000  12/20/13  54.37 bp  48,893 

DJ iTraxx EUR Series 5             
Index  24,712  EUR  3,628,000  6/20/13  (50 bp)  (29,536) 

DJ iTraxx EUR Series 5             
Index 6-9% tranche    EUR  3,628,000  6/20/13  53.5 bp  72,029 

Republic of Peru, 8             
3/4%, 11/21/33      $2,330,000  10/20/16  215 bp  142,327 


60


CREDIT DEFAULT CONTRACTS OUTSTANDING at 1/31/07 (Unaudited) continued   

  Upfront        Fixed payments  Unrealized 
Swap counterparty /  premium    Notional  Termination  received (paid)   by appreciation/ 
Referenced debt*  received (paid)**    amount  date  fund per annum  (depreciation) 

Merrill Lynch Capital Services, Inc.           
Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      $1,355,000  9/20/07  (345 bp)  $ (26,255) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      1,355,000  9/20/08  570 bp  86,424 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      1,895,000  9/20/07  (335 bp)  (37,107) 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      1,895,000  9/20/08  500 bp  109,213 

L-3 Communications             
Corp. 7 5/8%, 2012      1,910,000  9/20/11  (111 bp)  (27,160) 

L-3 Communications             
Corp. 7 5/8%, 2012      1,152,000  6/20/11  (92 bp)  (8,791) 

Merrill Lynch International             
DJ CDX NA HY Series 4             
Index  42,489    2,185,000  6/20/10  360 bp  188,337 

Morgan Stanley Capital Services, Inc.           
DJ CDX NA IG Series 7             
Index  2,650    4,463,000  12/20/13  (50 bp)  (14,655) 

DJ CDX NA IG Series 7             
Index, 7-10% tranche      4,463,000  12/20/13  53 bp  48,348 

DJ iTraxx EUR Series 5             
Index    EUR  3,628,000  6/20/13  (50 bp)  (54,249) 

DJ iTraxx EUR Series 5             
Index 6-9% tranche    EUR  3,628,000  6/20/13  57 bp  81,396 

Dominican Republic, 8             
5/8%, 4/20/27      $2,340,000  11/20/11  (170 bp)  (13,651) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      465,000  9/20/07  (345 bp)  (9,023) 

Ford Motor Co., 7.45%,             
7/16/31      465,000  9/20/08  560 bp  28,448 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      465,000  9/20/07  (335 bp)  (8,234) 

General Motors Corp.,             
7 1/8%, 7/15/13      465,000  9/20/08  500 bp  26,799 

Total            $(1,680,793) 

* Payments related to the reference debt are made upon a credit default event.

** Upfront premium is based on the difference between the original spread on issue and the market spread on day of execution.

(a) Terminating on the date on which the notional amount is reduced to zero or the date on which the assets securing the reference entity are liquidated.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

61


Statement of assets and liabilities 1/31/07 (Unaudited)

ASSETS   

Investment in securities, at value, including $3,124,721 of securities on loan (Note 1):   
Unaffiliated issuers (identified cost $1,105,830,947)  $1,115,986,812 
Affiliated issuers (identified cost $152,427,516) (Note 5)  152,427,516 

Cash  1,394,207 

Foreign currency (cost $10,734,723) (Note 1)  10,706,986 

Interest and other receivables  15,665,221 

Receivable for securities sold  62,826,917 

Unrealized appreciation on swap contracts (Note 1)  18,991,693 

Receivable for open forward currency contracts (Note 1)  7,489,162 

Receivable for closed forward currency contracts (Note 1)  3,911,247 

Receivable for closed swap contracts (Note 1)  1,059 

Premium paid on swap contracts (Note 1)  441,062 

Total assets  1,389,841,882 
 
LIABILITIES   

Payable for variation margin  295,443 

Distributions payable to shareholders  5,356,843 

Payable for securities purchased  17,014,617 

Payable for purchases of delayed delivery securities (Note 1)  28,510,997 

Payable for compensation of Manager (Note 2)  2,094,079 

Payable for investor servicing and custodian fees (Note 2)  83,207 

Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2)  178,304 

Payable for administrative services (Note 2)  3,892 

Payable for open forward currency contracts (Note 1)  1,722,169 

Payable for closed forward currency contracts (Note 1)  4,238,159 

Payable for closed swap contracts (Note 1)  553,715 

Premium received on swap contracts (Note 1)  329,808 

Written options outstanding, at value (premiums received $483,403) (Note 1)  848,197 

Unrealized depreciation on swap contracts (Note 1)  15,692,855 

TBA sales commitments, at value (proceeds receivable $28,246,391) (Note 1)  28,332,000 

Collateral on securities loaned, at value (Note 1)  3,213,020 

Other accrued expenses  232,023 

Total liabilities  108,699,328 

Net assets  $1,281,142,554 

(Continued on next page)

62


Statement of assets and liabilities (Continued)

REPRESENTED BY   

Paid-in capital (Unlimited shares authorized)  $1,542,089,650 

Distributions in excess of net investment income (Note 1)  (122,349) 

Accumulated net realized loss on investments   
and foreign currency transactions (Note 1)  (280,936,793) 

Net unrealized appreciation of investments   
and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies  20,112,046 

Total — Representing net assets applicable to capital shares outstanding  $1,281,142,554 
 
COMPUTATION OF NET ASSET VALUE AND OFFERING PRICE   

Net asset value per share   
($1,281,142,554 divided by 178,799,196 shares)  $7.17 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

63


Statement of operations Six months ended 1/31/07 (Unaudited)

INVESTMENT INCOME   

Interest (including interest income of $4,557,147   
from investments in affiliated issuers) (Note 5)  $38,587,055 

Dividends  22,908 

Securities lending  9,123 

Total investment income  38,619,086 
 
EXPENSES   

Compensation of Manager (Note 2)  4,409,929 

Investor servicing fees (Note 2)  325,969 

Custodian fees (Note 2)  201,945 

Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2)  27,093 

Administrative services (Note 2)  11,799 

Other  381,956 

Fees waived by Manager (Note 5)  (87,227) 

Total expenses  5,271,464 

Expense reduction (Note 2)  (76,588) 

Net expenses  5,194,876 

Net investment income  33,424,210 

Net realized gain on investments (Notes 1 and 3)  2,349,209 

Net increase from payments by affiliates (Note 2)  38,937 

Net realized loss on swap contracts (Note 1)  (2,019,660) 

Net realized loss on futures contracts (Note 1)  (2,828,152) 

Net realized loss on foreign currency transactions (Note 1)  (1,290,879) 

Net realized loss on written options (Notes 1 and 3)  (154,192) 

Net unrealized appreciation of assets and liabilities   
in foreign currencies during the period  4,810,605 

Net unrealized appreciation of investments, futures contracts, swap contracts,   
written options, and TBA sale commitments during the period  17,980,234 

Net gain on investments  18,886,102 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations  $52,310,312 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

64


Statement of changes in net assets

DECREASE IN NET ASSETS     
  Six months ended  Year ended 
  1/31/07*  7/31/06 

Operations:     
Net investment income  $ 33,424,210  $ 65,861,141 

Net realized loss on investments and     
foreign currency transactions  (3,904,737)  (10,978,350) 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments     
and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies  22,790,839  (19,713,253) 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations  52,310,312  35,169,538 

Distributions to shareholders: (Note 1)     

From ordinary income     

Taxable net investment income  (32,773,198)  (69,087,605) 

Decrease from shares repurchased (Note 4)  (48,473,033)  (52,983,647) 

Total decrease in net assets  (28,935,919)  (86,901,714) 
 
NET ASSETS     

Beginning of period  1,310,078,473  1,396,980,187 

End of period (including distributions in excess     
of net investment income of $122,349     
and $773,361, respectively)  $1,281,142,554  $1,310,078,473 
 
NUMBER OF FUND SHARES     

Shares outstanding at beginning of period  186,509,884  195,156,300 

Shares repurchased (Note 4)  (7,710,688)  (8,646,416) 

Shares outstanding at end of period  178,799,196  186,509,884 

* Unaudited

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

65


Financial highlights (For a common share outstanding throughout the period)

PER-SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE           
  Six months ended**      Year ended     
    1/31/07  7/31/06  7/31/05  7/31/04  7/31/03  7/31/02 

Net asset value,               
beginning of period    $7.02  $7.16  $7.03  $6.75  $6.22  $6.68 

Investment operations:             
Net investment income (a)  .18(d)  .34(d)  .36(d)  .44(d)  .51  .55 

Net realized and unrealized             
gain (loss) on investments  .11  (.16)  .28  .31  .54  (.47) 

Total from               
investment operations  .29  .18  .64  .75  1.05  .08 

Less distributions:               
From net investment income  (.18)  (.36)  (.51)  (.47)  (.52)  (.53) 

From return of capital            (.01) 

Total distributions    (.18)  (.36)  (.51)  (.47)  (.52)  (.54) 

Increase from               
shares repurchased    .04  .04         

Net asset value,               
end of period    $7.17  $7.02  $7.16  $7.03  $6.75  $6.22 

Market price,               
end of period    $6.46  $6.02  $6.31  $6.29  $6.31  $6.03 

Total return at               
market price (%)(b)    10.38*  1.14  8.35  7.18  13.41  4.44 

 
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA           
Net assets, end of period             
(in thousands)  $1,281,143   $1,310,078   $1,396,980   $992,676  $952,730  $877,649 

Ratio of expenses to               
average net assets (%)(c)   .40*(d) .81(d)  .84(d)  .83(d)  .85  .86 

Ratio of net investment income           
to average net assets (%)  2.65*(d) 4.86(d)  4.99(d)  6.19(d)  7.91  8.39 

Portfolio turnover (%)  47.72*(e)  104.97(e) 139.74(e)  78.43  96.21(f )  175.78(f ) 

* Not annualized.

** Unaudited.

(a) Per share net investment income has been determined on the basis of the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period.

(b) Total return assumes dividend reinvestment.

(c) Includes amounts paid through expense offset arrangements (Note 2).

(d) Reflects waivers of certain fund expenses in connection with Putnam Prime Money Market Fund during the period. As a result of such waivers, the expenses of the fund for the periods ended January 31, 2007, July 31, 2006, July 31, 2005, and July 31, 2004 reflect a reduction of 0.01%, 0.01%, 0.02% and less than 0.01% of average net assets, respectively (Note 5).

(e) Portfolio turnover excludes dollar roll transactions.

(f) Portfolio turnover excludes certain treasury note transactions executed in connection with a short-term trading strategy.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

66


Notes to financial statements 1/31/07 (Unaudited)

Note 1: Significant accounting policies

Putnam Premier Income Trust (the “fund”), a Massachusetts business trust, is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company. The fund’s investment objective is to seek high current income consistent with the preservation of capital by allocating its investments among the U.S. government sector, high yield sector and international sector of the fixed-income securities market. The fund may invest in higher yielding, lower-rated bonds that have a higher rate of default due to the nature of the investments.

In the normal course of business, the fund enters into contracts that may include agreements to indemnify another party under given circumstances. The fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be, but have not yet been, made against the fund. However, the fund expects the risk of material loss to be remote.


The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the fund in the preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements is in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

A) Security valuation Investments for which market quotations are readily available are valued at the last reported sales price on their principal exchange, or official closing price for certain markets. If no sales are reported — as in the case of some securities traded over-the-counter — a security is valued at its last reported bid price. Market quotations are not considered to be readily available for certain debt obligations; such investments are valued on the basis of valuations furnished by an independent pricing service approved by the Trustees or dealers selected by Putnam Investment Management, LLC (“Putnam Management”), the fund’s manager, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam, LLC. Such services or dealers determine valuations for normal institutional-size trading units of such securities using methods based on market transactions for comparable securities and various relationships, generally recognized by institutional traders, between securities. Many securities markets and exchanges outside the U.S. close prior to the close of the New York Stock Exchange and therefore the closing prices for securities in such markets or on such exchanges may not fully reflect events that occur after such close but before the close of the New York Stock Exchange. Accordingly, on certain days, the fund will fair value foreign equity securities taking into account multiple factors, including movements in the U.S. securities markets. The number of days on which fair value prices will be used will depend on market activity and it is possible that fair value prices will be used by the fund to a significant extent. Securities quoted in foreign currencies, if any, are translated into U.S. dollars at the current exchange rate. Certain investments, including certain restricted securities, are also valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees. Such valuations and procedures are reviewed periodically by the Trustees. 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 at a given point in time and does not reflect an actual market price, which may be different by a material amount.

B) Joint trading account Pursuant to an exemptive order from the Securities and Exchange Commission, the fund may transfer uninvested cash balances, including cash collateral received under security lending arrangements, into a joint

67


trading account along with the cash of other registered investment companies and certain other accounts managed by Putnam Investment Management, LLC (“Putnam Management”), the fund’s manager, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam, LLC. These balances may be invested in issues of high-grade short-term investments having maturities of up to 397 days for collateral received under security lending arrangements and up to 90 days for other cash investments.

C) Repurchase agreements The fund, or any joint trading account, through its custodian, receives delivery of the underlying securities, the market value of which at the time of purchase is required to be in an amount at least equal to the resale price, including accrued interest. Collateral for certain tri-party repurchase agreements is held at the counterparty’s custodian in a segregated account for the benefit of the fund and the counterparty. Putnam Management is responsible for determining that the value of these underlying securities is at all times at least equal to the resale price, including accrued interest.

D) 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.

Dividend income, net of applicable withholding taxes, is recognized on the ex-dividend date except that certain dividends from foreign securities, if any, are recognized as soon as the fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Dividends representing a return of capital or capital gains, if any, are reflected as a reduction of cost and/or as a realized gain. All premiums/discounts are amortized/accreted on a yield-to-maturity basis.

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.

The fund earned certain fees in connection with its senior loan purchasing activities. These fees are treated as market discount and are recorded as income in the statement of operations.

E) Stripped securities The fund may invest in stripped securities which represent a participation in securities that may be structured in classes with rights to receive different portions of the interest and principal. Interest-only securities receive all of the interest and principal-only securities receive all of the principal. If the interest-only securities experience greater than anticipated prepayments of principal, the fund may fail to recoup fully its initial investment in these securities. Conversely, principal-only securities increase in value if prepayments are greater than anticipated and decline if prepayments are slower than anticipated. The market value of these securities is highly sensitive to changes in interest rates.

F) Foreign currency translation The accounting records of the fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. The market value of foreign securities, currency holdings, and other assets and liabilities are recorded in the books and records of the fund after translation to U.S. dollars based on the exchange rates on that day. The cost of each security is determined using historical exchange rates. Income and withholding taxes are translated at prevailing exchange rates when earned or incurred. The fund does not isolate that portion of realized or unrealized gains or losses resulting from changes in the foreign exchange rate on investments from fluctuations arising from changes in the market prices of the securities. Such gains and losses are included with the net realized and unrealized gain or loss on investments. Net realized gains and losses on foreign currency transactions represent net realized exchange gains or losses on closed forward currency contracts, disposition of foreign currencies, currency gains and losses realized between the

68


trade and settlement dates on securities transactions and the difference between the amount of investment income and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the fund’s books and the U.S. dollar equivalent amounts actually received or paid. Net unrealized appreciation and depreciation of assets and liabilities in foreign currencies arise from changes in the value of open forward currency contracts and assets and liabilities other than investments at the period end, resulting from changes in the exchange rate. Investments in foreign securities involve certain risks, including those related to economic instability, unfavorable political developments, and currency fluctuations, not present with domestic investments.

G) Forward currency contracts The fund may buy and sell forward currency contracts, which are agreements between two parties to buy and sell currencies at a set price on a future date. These contracts are used to protect against a decline in value relative to the U.S. dollar of the currencies in which its portfolio securities are denominated or quoted (or an increase in the value of a currency in which securities a fund intends to buy are denominated, when a fund holds cash reserves and short term investments), or for other investment purposes. The U.S. dollar value of forward currency contracts is determined using current forward currency exchange rates supplied by a quotation service. The market value of the contract will fluctuate with changes in currency exchange rates. The contract is marked to market daily and the change in market value is recorded as an unrealized gain or loss. When the contract is closed, the fund records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed. The fund could be exposed to risk if the value of the currency changes unfavorably, if the counterparties to the contracts are unable to meet the terms of their contracts or if the fund is unable to enter into a closing position. Risks may exceed amounts recognized on the statement of assets and liabilities. Forward currency contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

H) Futures and options contracts The fund may use futures and options contracts to hedge against changes in the values of securities the fund owns or expects to purchase, or for other investment purposes. The fund may also write options on swaps or securities it owns or in which it may invest to increase its current returns.

The potential risk to the fund is that the change in value of futures and options contracts may not correspond to the change in value of the hedged instruments. In addition, losses may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments, if there is an illiquid secondary market for the contracts, or if the counterparty to the contract is unable to perform. Risks may exceed amounts recognized on the statement of assets and liabilities. When the contract is closed, the fund records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed. Realized gains and losses on purchased options are included in realized gains and losses on investment securities. If a written call option is exercised, the premium originally received is recorded as an addition to sales proceeds. If a written put option is exercised, the premium originally received is recorded as a reduction to the cost of investments.

Futures contracts are valued at the quoted daily settlement prices established by the exchange on which they trade. The fund and the broker agree to exchange an amount of cash equal to the daily fluctuation in the value of the futures contract. Such receipts or payments are known as “variation margin.” Exchange traded options are valued at the last sale price or, if no sales are reported, the last bid price for purchased options and the last ask price for written options. Options traded over-the-counter are valued using prices supplied by dealers. Futures and written option contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

I) Total return swap contracts The fund may enter into total return swap contracts, which are arrangements to exchange a market linked return

69


for a periodic payment, both based on a notional principal amount. To the extent that the total return of the security, index or other financial measure underlying the transaction exceeds or falls short of the offsetting interest rate obligation, the fund will receive a payment from or make a payment to the counterparty. Total return swap contracts are marked to market daily based upon quotations from market makers and the change, if any, is recorded as unrealized gain or loss. Payments received or made are recorded as realized gains or loss. Certain total return swap contracts may include extended effective dates. Income related to these swap contracts is accrued based on the terms of the contract. The fund could be exposed to credit or market risk due to unfavorable changes in the fluctuation of interest rates or in the price of the underlying security or index, the possibility that there is no liquid market for these agreements or that the counterparty may default on its obligation to perform. Risk of loss may exceed amounts recognized on the statement of assets and liabilities. Total return swap contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

J) Interest rate swap contracts The fund may enter into interest rate swap contracts, which are arrangements between two parties to exchange cash flows based on a notional principal amount, to manage the fund’s exposure to interest rates. Interest rate swap contracts are marked to market daily based upon quotations from an independent pricing service or market makers and the change, if any, is recorded as unrealized gain or loss. Payments received or made are recorded as realized gains or loss. Certain interest rate swap contracts may include extended effective dates. Income related to these swap contracts is accrued based on the terms of the contract. The fund could be exposed to credit or market risk due to unfavorable changes in the fluctuation of interest rates or if the counterparty defaults on its obligation to perform. Risk of loss may exceed amounts recognized on the statement of assets and liabilities. Interest rate swap contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

K) Credit default contracts The fund may enter into credit default contracts where one party, the protection buyer, makes an upfront or periodic payment to a counter party, the protection seller, in exchange for the right to receive a contingent payment. The maximum amount of the payment may equal the notional amount, at par, of the underlying index or security as a result of a related credit event. Payments are made upon a credit default event of the disclosed primary referenced obligation or all other equally ranked obligations of the reference entity. An upfront payment received by the fund, as the protection seller, is recorded as a liability on the fund’s books. An upfront payment made by the fund, as the protection buyer, is recorded as an asset on the fund’s books. Periodic payments received or paid by the fund are recorded as realized gains or losses. The credit default contracts are marked to market daily based upon quotations from an independent pricing service or market makers and the change, if any, is recorded as unrealized gain or loss. Payments received or made as a result of a credit event or termination of the contract are recognized, net of a proportional amount of the upfront payment, as realized gains or losses. In addition to bearing the risk that the credit event will occur, the fund could be exposed to market risk due to unfavorable changes in interest rates or in the price of the underlying security or index, the possibility that the fund may be unable to close out its position at the same time or at the same price as if it had purchased comparable publicly traded securities or that the counterparty may default on its obligation to perform. Risks of loss may exceed amounts recognized on the statement of assets and liabilities. Credit default contracts outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

L) TBA purchase commitments The fund may enter into “TBA” (to be announced) commitments to purchase securities for a fixed unit price at a future date beyond customary settlement time. Although the unit price has been established, the principal value has not been finalized. However, the amount of the commitments will

70


not significantly differ from the principal amount. The fund holds, and maintains until settlement date, cash or high-grade debt obligations in an amount sufficient to meet the purchase price, or the fund may enter into offsetting contracts for the forward sale of other securities it owns. Income on the securities will not be earned until settlement date. TBA purchase commitments may be considered securities themselves, and involve a risk of loss if the value of the security to be purchased declines prior to the settlement date, which risk is in addition to the risk of decline in the value of the fund’s other assets. Unsettled TBA purchase commitments are valued at fair value of the underlying securities, according to the procedures described under “Security valuation” above. The contract is “marked-to-market” daily and the change in market value is recorded by the fund as an unrealized gain or loss.

Although the fund will generally enter into TBA purchase commitments with the intention of acquiring securities for its portfolio or for delivery pursuant to options contracts it has entered into, the fund may dispose of a commitment prior to settlement if Putnam Management deems it appropriate to do so.

M) TBA sale commitments The fund may enter into TBA sale commitments to hedge its portfolio positions or to sell mortgage-backed securities it owns under delayed delivery arrangements. Proceeds of TBA sale commitments are not received until the contractual settlement date. During the time a TBA sale commitment is outstanding, equivalent deliverable securities or an offsetting TBA purchase commitment deliverable on or before the sale commitment date, are held as “cover” for the transaction.

Unsettled TBA sale commitments are valued at fair value of the underlying securities, generally according to the procedures described under “Security valuation” above. The contract is “marked-to-market” daily and the change in market value is recorded by the fund as an unrealized gain or loss. If the TBA sale commitment is closed through the acquisition of an offsetting purchase commitment, the fund realizes a gain or loss. If the fund delivers securities under the commitment, the fund realizes a gain or a loss from the sale of the securities based upon the unit price established at the date the commitment was entered into. TBA sale commitments outstanding at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

N) Dollar rolls To enhance returns, the fund may enter into dollar rolls (principally using TBAs) in which the fund sells securities for delivery in the current month and simultaneously contracts to purchase similar securities on a specified future date. During the period between the sale and subsequent purchase, the fund will not be entitled to receive income and principal payments on the securities sold. The fund will, however, retain the difference between the initial sales price and the forward price for the future purchase. The fund will also be able to earn interest on the cash proceeds that are received from the initial sale. The fund may be exposed to market or credit risk if the price of the security changes unfavorably or the counterparty fails to perform under the terms of the agreement.

O) Security lending The fund may lend securities, through its agents, to qualified borrowers in order to earn additional income. The loans are collateralized by cash and/or securities in an amount at least equal to the market value of the securities loaned. The market value of securities loaned is determined daily and any additional required collateral is allocated to the fund on the next business day. The risk of borrower default will be borne by the fund’s agents; the fund will bear the risk of loss with respect to the investment of the cash collateral. Income from securities lending is included in investment income on the statement of operations. At January 31, 2007, the value of securities loaned amounted to $3,124,721. The fund received cash collateral of $3,213,020 which is pooled with collateral of other Putnam funds into 36 issues of high grade short-term investments.

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P) Federal taxes It is the policy of the fund to distribute all of its taxable income within the prescribed time and otherwise comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the “Code”) applicable to regulated investment companies. It is also the intention of the fund to distribute an amount sufficient to avoid imposition of any excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code, as amended. Therefore, no provision has been made for federal taxes on income, capital gains or unrealized appreciation on securities held nor for excise tax on income and capital gains.

At July 31, 2006, the fund had a capital loss carryover of $269,212,648 available to the extent allowed by the Code to offset future net capital gain, if any. The amount of the carryover and the expiration dates are:

Loss Carryover  Expiration 

$31,644,770  July 31, 2007 

60,809,014  July 31, 2008 

51,721,443  July 31, 2009 

44,917,486  July 31, 2010 

80,119,935  July 31, 2011 


Pursuant to federal income tax regulations applicable to regulated investment companies,the fund has elected to defer to its fiscal year ending July 31, 2007 $8,533,540 of losses recognized during the period November 1, 2005 to July 31, 2006.

The aggregate identified cost on a tax basis is $1,259,201,819, resulting in gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation of $33,711,956 and $24,499,447, respectively, or net unrealized appreciation of $9,212,509.

Q) Distributions to shareholders Distributions to 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. 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 fund’s fiscal year. Reclassifications are made to the fund’s capital accounts to reflect income and gains available for distribution (or available capital loss carryovers) under income tax regulations.

Note 2: Management fee, administrative
services and other transactions

Putnam Management is paid for management and investments advisory services quarterly based on the “average weekly assets” of the fund. “Average weekly assets” is defined to mean the average of the weekly determinations of the difference between the total assets of the fund (including any assets attributable to leverage for investment purposes through incurrence of indebtedness) and the total liabilities of the fund (excluding liabilities incurred in connection with leverage for investment purposes). This fee is based on the following annual rates: 0.75% of the first $500 million of average weekly assets, 0.65% of the next $500 million, 0.60% of the next $500 million, and 0.55% of the next $5 billion, with additional breakpoints at higher asset levels.

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 weekly assets of the portion of the fund managed by PIL.

In July 2006, questions arose regarding a potential misidentification of the characteristics of certain securities in the fund's portfolio, and the value of these securities was adjusted. The fund currently expects to be reimbursed for losses relating to this matter by Putnam. The amount of such

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reimbursement has not yet been determined, but is not expected to be material to the fund.

During the period ended January 31, 2007, Putnam Management voluntarily reimbursed the fund $38,937 for net realized losses incurred from the sale of investment securities that were purchased by the fund in error. The effect of the losses incurred and the reimbursal by Putnam Management of such losses had no effect on total return.

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 fund’s assets were provided by Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company (“PFTC”), a subsidiary of Putnam, LLC. PFTC received fees for custody services based on the fund’s asset level, the number of its security holdings and transaction volumes. Putnam Investor Services, a division of PFTC, provided investor servicing agent functions to the fund. Putnam Investor Services was paid a monthly fee for investor servicing at an annual rate of 0.05% of the fund’s average net assets. During the period ended January 31, 2007, the fund incurred $526,788 for these services provided by PFTC. State Street Bank and Trust Company began providing custodial functions for the fund’s assets during the period.

The fund has entered into arrangements with PFTC and State Street Bank and Trust Company whereby credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances are used to reduce a portion of the fund’s expenses. For the six months ended January 31, 2007, the fund’s expenses were reduced by $76,588 under these arrangements.

Each independent Trustee of the fund receives an annual Trustee fee, of which $493, as a quarterly retainer, has been allocated to the fund, and an additional fee for each Trustees meeting attended. Trustees receive additional fees for attendance at
certain committee meetings, industry seminars and for certain compliance-related matters. Trustees also are reimbursed for expenses they incur relating to their services as Trustees. George Putnam, III, who is not an independent Trustee, also receives the foregoing fees for his services as Trustee.

The fund has adopted a Trustee Fee Deferral Plan (the “Deferral Plan”) which allows the Trustees to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Trustees fees payable on or after July 1, 1995. The deferred fees remain invested in certain Putnam funds until distribution in accordance with the Deferral Plan.

The fund has adopted an unfunded noncontributory defined benefit pension plan (the “Pension Plan”) covering all Trustees of the fund who have served as a Trustee for at least five years and were first elected prior to 2004. Benefits under the Pension Plan are equal to 50% of the Trustee’s average annual attendance and retainer fees for the three years ended December 31, 2005. The retirement benefit is payable during a Trustee’s lifetime, beginning 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 six months ended January 31, 2007, cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities other than U.S. government securities and short-term investments aggregated $492,150,150 and $556,932,279, respectively. Purchases and sales of U.S. government securities aggregated $27,310,808 and $11,045,638, respectively.

Written option transactions during the period ended January 31, 2007 are summarized as follows:

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  Contract  Premiums 
  Amounts  Received 
Written options     
outstanding at     
beginning of year  JPY 56,125,048,000  $921,579 

Options opened     
Options expired     
Options closed  JPY(30,355,300,000)  (438,176) 

Written options     
outstanding at     
end of year  JPY 25,769,748,000  $483,403 

Note 4: Share repurchase program

In October 2005, the Trustees of your fund authorized Putnam Investments to implement a repurchase program on behalf of your fund, which would allow your fund to repurchase up to 5% of its outstanding common shares over the 12 months ending October 6, 2006 (based on shares outstanding as of October 7, 2005). In March 2006, the Trustees approved an increase in this repurchase program to allow the fund to repurchase a total of up to 10% of its outstanding common shares over the same period. In September 2006, the Trustees extended the program on its existing terms through October 6, 2007. Repurchases will only be made when the fund’s shares are trading at less than net asset value and in accordance with procedures approved by the fund’s Trustees.

For the six months ended January 31, 2007, the fund repurchased 7,710,688 common shares for an aggregate purchase price of $48,473,033, which reflects a weighted-average discount from net asset value per share of 12%.

Note 5: Investment in Putnam Prime
Money Market Fund

The fund invests in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund, an open-end management investment company managed by Putnam Management. Investments in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund are valued at its closing net asset value each business day. Management fees paid by the fund are reduced by an amount equal to the management and administrative services fees paid by Putnam Prime Money Market Fund with respect to assets invested by the fund in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund. For the period ended January 31, 2007, management fees paid were reduced by $87,227 relating to the fund’s investment in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund. Income distributions earned by the fund are recorded as income in the statement of operations and totaled $4,557,147 for the period ended January 31, 2007. During the period ended January 31, 2007, cost of purchases and proceeds of sales of investments in Putnam Prime Money Market Fund aggregated $231,066,265 and $250,323,184, respectively

Note 6: Senior loan commitments

Senior loans are purchased or sold on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis and may be settled a month or more after the trade date, which from time to time can delay the actual investment of available cash balances; interest income is accrued based on the terms of the securities. Senior loans can be acquired through an agent, by assignment from another holder of the loan, or as a participation interest in another holder’s portion of the loan. When the fund invests in a loan or participation, the fund is subject to the risk that an intermediate participant between the fund and the borrower will fail to meet its obligations to the fund, in addition to the risk that the borrower under the loan may default on its obligations.

Note 7: Unfunded loan commitments

As of January 31, 2007, the fund had unfunded loan commitments of $393,402, which could be extended at the option of the borrower, pursuant to the following loan agreements with the following borrowers:

Borrower  Unfunded Commitments 

 
MEG Energy  $225,000 

Trump Casino  168,500 

  $393,500 

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Note 8: Regulatory matters and litigation

In late 2003 and 2004, Putnam Management settled charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and the Massachusetts Securities Division (“MSD”) in connection with excessive short-term trading by certain former Putnam employees and, in the case of charges brought by the MSD, excessive short-term trading by participants in some Putnam-administered 401(k) plans. Putnam Management agreed to pay $193.5 million in penalties and restitution, of which $153.5 million will be distributed to certain open-end Putnam funds and their shareholders after the SEC and MSD approve a distribution plan being developed by an independent consultant. The allegations of the SEC and MSD and related matters have served as the general basis for certain lawsuits, including purported class action lawsuits filed against Putnam Management and, in a limited number of cases, against some Putnam funds. Putnam Management believes that these lawsuits will have no material adverse effect on the funds or on Putnam Management’s 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.

The Staff of the SEC has indicated that it believes that Putnam Management did not comply with certain disclosure requirements in connection with dividend payments to shareholders of your fund. Putnam Management is currently engaged in settlement negotiations with the SEC Staff regarding this matter.

Putnam Management and Putnam Retail Management are named as defendants in a civil suit in which the plaintiffs allege that the management and distribution fees paid by certain Putnam funds were excessive and seek recovery under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Putnam Management and Putnam Retail Management have contested the plaintiffs’ claims and the matter is currently pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Based on currently available information, Putnam Management believes that this action is without merit and that it is unlikely to have a material effect on Putnam Management’s and Putnam Retail Management’s ability to provide services to their clients, including the fund.

Note 9: New accounting pronouncements

In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes (the “Interpretation”). The Interpretation prescribes a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken by a filer in the filer’s tax return. The Interpretation will become effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006 but will also apply to tax positions reflected in the fund’s financial statements as of that date. No determination has been made whether the adoption of the Interpretation will require the fund to make any adjustments to its net assets or have any other effect on the fund’s financial statements. The effects of implementing this pronouncement, if any, will be noted in the fund’s next semiannual financial statements.

In September 2006, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (the “Standard”). The Standard defines fair value, sets out a framework for measuring fair value and requires additional disclosures about fair value measurements. The Standard applies to fair value measurements already required or permitted by existing standards. The Standard is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007 and interim periods within those fiscal years. Putnam Management is currently evaluating what impact the adoption of the Standard will have on the fund’s financial statements.

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Shareholder meeting
results (Unaudited)

The annual meeting of shareholders of the fund was held on January 11, 2007.

At the meeting, each of the nominees for Trustees was elected, as follows:

  Votes for  Votes withheld 

Jameson A. Baxter  162,396,954  8,887,237 

Charles B. Curtis  162,431,046  8,853,145 

Myra R. Drucker  162,446,359  8,837,832 

Charles E. Haldeman, Jr.  162,453,895  8,830,296 

John A. Hill  162,444,900  8,839,291 

Paul L. Joskow  162,451,452  8,832,739 

Elizabeth T. Kennan  162,456,465  8,827,726 

Kenneth R. Leibler  162,357,753  8,926,438 

Robert E. Patterson  162,474,243  8,809,948 

George Putnam, III  162,451,586  8,832,605 

W. Thomas Stephens  162,482,738  8,801,453 

Richard B. Worley  162,483,738  8,800,453 


A proposal to convert the fund to an open-end investment company was defeated as follows:

Votes for  Votes against  Abstentions  Broker non-votes 

28,076,214  52,663,275  2,453,540  88,091,162 


All tabulations are rounded to nearest whole number.

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Fund information

About Putnam Investments

Founded over 65 years ago, Putnam Investments was built around the concept that a balance between risk and reward is the hallmark of a well-rounded financial program. We manage over 100 mutual funds in growth, value, blend, fixed income, and international.

Investment Manager  Elizabeth T. Kennan  Beth S. Mazor 
Putnam Investment  Kenneth R. Leibler  Vice President 
Management, LLC  Robert E. Patterson   
One Post Office Square  George Putnam, III  James P. Pappas 
Boston, MA 02109  W. Thomas Stephens  Vice President 
  Richard B. Worley    
Investment Sub-Manager    Richard S. Robie, III 
Putnam Investments Limited  Officers  Vice President 
57–59 St. James’s Street  George Putnam, III   
London, England SW1A 1LD  President  Francis J. McNamara, III 
    Vice President and 
Marketing Services  Charles E. Porter  Chief Legal Officer 
Putnam Retail Management  Executive Vice President,   
One Post Office Square  Principal Executive Officer,  Charles A. Ruys de Perez 
Boston, MA 02109  Associate Treasurer and  Vice President and 
  Compliance Liaison  Chief Compliance Officer 
Custodians    
Putnam Fiduciary Trust  Jonathan S. Horwitz  Mark C. Trenchard 
Company, State Street Bank  Senior Vice President  Vice President and 
and Trust Company  and Treasurer  BSA Compliance Officer 
   
Legal Counsel  Steven D. Krichmar  Judith Cohen 
Ropes & Gray LLP  Vice President and  Vice President, Clerk 
  Principal Financial Officer  and Assistant Treasurer 
Trustees     
John A. Hill, Chairman  Janet C. Smith  Wanda M. McManus 
Jameson Adkins Baxter,  Vice President, Principal  Vice President, Senior Associate 
Vice Chairman  Accounting Officer and  Treasurer and Assistant Clerk 
Charles B. Curtis  Assistant Treasurer   
Myra R. Drucker    Nancy E. Florek 
Charles E. Haldeman, Jr.  Susan G. Malloy  Vice President, Assistant Clerk, 
Paul L. Joskow  Vice President and  Assistant Treasurer and 
Assistant Treasurer  Proxy Manager 
 

Call 1-800-225-1581 weekdays between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time, or visit our Web site (www.putnam.com) anytime for up-to-date information about the fund’s 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 registrant’s 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 registrant’s identified portfolio managers included in the registrant’s 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     
        Maximum 
      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 * 
 
August 1 -         
August 31,         
2006  1,951,563  $6.15  1,951,563  8,917,651 
 
September 1 -                                                            
September 30,                                                                     
2006  1,239,098  $6.24  1,239,098  7,678,553 
 
October 1 -         
October 31,         
2006  1,397,939  $6.24  1,397,939  6,280,614 
 
November 1 -         
November 30,         
2006  1,468,936  $6.37  1,468,936  4,811,678 
  
December 1 -         
December 31,         
2006  1,549,262  $6.44  1,549,262  3,262,416 
 
January 1 -         
January 31,           
2007  103,890  $6.53  103,890  3,158,526 



The Board of Trustees announced a repurchase plan on October 7, 2005 for which 9,757,815 shares were approved for repurchase by the fund. The repurchase plan was approved through October 6, 2006. On March 10, 2006, the Trustees announced that the repurchase program was increased to allow repurchases of up to a total of 19,515,630 shares over the original term of the program. On September 15, 2006, the Trustees voted to extend the term of the repurchase program through October 6, 2007. This extension did not affect the number of shares eligible for repurchase under the program.

*Information is based on the total number of shares eligible for repurchase under the program, as amended through September 15, 2006.

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:

Effective January 1, 2007, the fund retained State Street Bank and Trust Company ("State Street") as its custodian. Putnam Fiduciary Trust Company, the fund's previous custodian, is managing the transfer of the fund's assets to State Street. This transfer is expected to be completed for all Putnam funds during the first half of 2007, with PFTC remaining as custodian with respect to fund assets until the assets are transferred.

Also effective January 1, 2007, the fund's investment manager, Putnam Investment Management, LLC entered into a Master Sub-Accounting Services Agreement with State Street, under which the investment manager has


delegated to State Street responsibility for providing certain administrative, pricing, and bookkeeping services for the fund.

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.

Putnam Premier Income Trust

By (Signature and Title):

/s/Janet C. Smith
Janet C. Smith
Principal Accounting Officer

Date: March 28, 2007

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/Charles E. Porter
Charles E. Porter
Principal Executive Officer

Date: March 28, 2007
By (Signature and Title):

/s/Steven D. Krichmar
Steven D. Krichmar
Principal Financial Officer

Date: March 28, 2007