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 811-21381 ---------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter) 1001 Warrenville Road Suite 300 LISLE, IL 60532 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code) W. Scott Jardine First Trust Portfolios L.P. 1001 Warrenville Road Suite 300 LISLE, IL 60532 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Name and address of agent for service) registrant's telephone number, including area code: 630-241-4141 ------------- Date of fiscal year end: MAY 31 ------- Date of reporting period: MAY 31, 2005 ------------- Form N-CSR is to be used by management investment companies to file reports with the Commission not later than 10 days after the transmission to stockholders of any report that is required to be transmitted to stockholders under Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30e-1). The Commission may use the information provided on Form N-CSR in its regulatory, disclosure review, inspection, and policymaking roles. A registrant is required to disclose the information specified by Form N-CSR, and the Commission will make this information public. A registrant is not required to respond to the collection of information contained in Form N-CSR unless the Form displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget ("OMB") control number. Please direct comments concerning the accuracy of the information collection burden estimate and any suggestions for reducing the burden to Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549-0609. The OMB has reviewed this collection of information under the clearance requirements of 44 U.S.C. ss. 3507. ITEM 1. REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS. The Report to Shareholders is attached herewith. -------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED MAY 31, 2005 -------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TABLE OF CONTENTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND ANNUAL REPORT MAY 31, 2005 Shareholder Letter ........................................................ 1 Portfolio Commentary ...................................................... 2 Portfolio Components ...................................................... 5 Portfolio of Investments .................................................. 6 Statement of Assets and Liabilities ....................................... 11 Statement of Operations ................................................... 12 Statements of Changes in Net Assets ....................................... 13 Financial Highlights ...................................................... 14 Notes to Financial Statements ............................................. 15 Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm ................... 18 Additional Information .................................................... 19 Dividend Reinvestment Plan Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures Portfolio Holdings Submission of Matters to a Vote of Shareholders Tax Information Management ................................................................ 21 HOW TO READ THIS REPORT This report contains information that can help you evaluate your investment. It includes details about the First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund (the "Fund") and presents data and analysis that provide insight into the Fund's performance and investment approach. By reading the letter from the Fund's President, James A. Bowen, together with the portfolio commentary by Robert F. Carey, who is the Chief Investment Officer of First Trust Advisors L.P., the Fund's investment advisor, you will obtain an understanding of how the market environment affected its performance. The statistical information that follows can help you understand the Fund's performance compared to that of relevant benchmarks. It is important to keep in mind that the opinions expressed by Mr. Bowen, Mr. Carey and First Trust Advisors L.P. personnel are just that: informed opinions. They should not be considered to be promises or advice. The opinions, like the statistics, cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in the Fund are spelled out in the prospectus. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHAREHOLDER LETTER -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND (FVD) ANNUAL REPORT MAY 31, 2005 Dear Shareholders: We are pleased to report that the First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund (the "Fund") delivered substantial upside to shareholders for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2005, relative to its benchmark. Based on market price, the Fund's total return was 15.5%. Its net asset value ("NAV") total return was 16.1%. The S&P 500 Index gained 8.2% for the same period. FVD also outperformed the dividend-paying companies within the S&P 500, which returned 14.0% according to Standard & Poor's. Despite the good returns, the Fund traded at a 15.1% discount to its NAV on May 31, 2005. FVD will celebrate its second anniversary in August 2005. Though we are disappointed that FVD's market price continues to trade at a double-digit discount to its NAV, we are pleased that the strategy is building a solid performance track record. Since the Fund began trading on August 29, 2003, FVD has posted a cumulative NAV total return of 33.6%, compared to a gain of 21.9% for the S&P 500. The Fund's market price closed at $14.64 per share on May 31, 2005, below its IPO price of $15.00 per share. In regards to dividend payouts, the Fund's regularly scheduled quarterly distribution for June 2005 will be $0.10 per share, which is up from its very first regularly scheduled distribution of $0.085 per share back in March 2004. The distribution rate on FVD has been tracking around 60-70 basis points higher than the dividend yield on the S&P 500. Since the start of 2003, companies in the S&P 500 have been distributing less than 35% of their earnings via dividends to shareholders, well below the long-term average of 54%, according to Standard & Poor's. Hypothetically, if these companies were paying out at the historical average of 54%, the yield on the S&P 500 would be approaching or slightly higher than 3.0%, rather than the 2.0% level it is at today. This implies there is room for further dividend increases in companies comprising the S&P 500. We believe that dividend-paying stocks offer investors an attractive alternative to other income-oriented investment vehicles. With interest rates still hovering near 40-year lows, most securities that generate income of a fixed-rate nature are vulnerable to rising rates. In addition to the dividend increases mentioned above, we have seen a marked increase in the number of S&P 500 companies initiating dividends. That number has risen from 351 in 2002 to 384 today. We still have a long way to go to match the 469 companies that paid a dividend back in 1980. We continue to appreciate your interest in the Fund and encourage you to read the commentary section from Bob Carey, Chief Investment Officer at First Trust. Sincerely, /S/JAMES A. BOWEN James A. Bowen President of the First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund July 8, 2005 Page 1 [GRAPHIC OMITTED] PHOTO ROBERT F. CAREY, CFA ROBERT F. CAREY, CFA CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER FIRST TRUST ADVISORS L.P. Mr. Carey has over 19 years of experience as an Equity and Fixed-Income Analyst and is a recipient of the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana with a B.S. in Physics. He is also a member of the Investment Analysts Society of Chicago and the CFA Institute. Mr. Carey has appeared as a guest on such programs as Bloomberg TV and CNBC and has been quoted by several publications, including THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, THE WALL STREET REPORTER, BLOOMBERG NEWS SERVICE, and REGISTERED REP. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A COMMENTARY ON THE FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A REVIEW OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENT STRATEGY The investment objective of the Fund is to provide total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation. The Fund will invest substantially all, but in no event less than 80% of its net assets in the stocks that are selected through application of a disciplined investment strategy applied to the universe of stocks which Value Line(R) gives a SafetyTM Ranking of #1 and #2 in the Value Line(R) SafetyTM Ranking System. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing in common stocks that pay above-average dividends and have the potential for capital appreciation. Upon commencement of the Fund's investment operations, the Fund invested equal amounts in each of the stocks selected through application of the Fund's investment strategy. Thereafter, on the last Friday of each month, the Fund's investment advisor, First Trust Advisors L.P., will reapply the Fund's investment strategy and, on or about such date, will make portfolio adjustments to match any changes made to the common stocks selected through this application of the investment strategy and reweight the portfolio as of such date. The Fund does not employ leverage. PERFORMANCE OF THE FUND The Fund posted some impressive returns for the most recent fiscal year. Based on market price, the Fund's total return was 15.5% for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2005. Its net asset value ("NAV") total return was 16.1%. Over the same period, the S&P 500 Index gained 8.2%. According to Standard & Poor's, the dividend-paying stocks within the S&P 500 returned 14.0% for the 12-month period ended May 31, versus 5.9% for the non-dividend paying stocks. FVD carried a beta of 0.77 as of May 31, according to Bloomberg. FVD traded at a 15.1% discount to its NAV on May 31, 2005. Its daily share volume throughout the fiscal year averaged 127,425. DIVIDEND DISTRIBUTIONS The Fund distributed $0.3675 per share in ordinary income for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2005. The Fund also distributed a short-term capital gain of $0.81 per share and a long-term capital gain of $0.11 in December 2004. The Fund's distribution rate, based on market share price, was 2.6% as of May 31, 2005. THE COMPOSITION OF THE FUND The Fund is usually comprised of 165-175 equity holdings. It held 171 issues on May 31, 2005. Over the past fiscal year, 55 stocks were sold and 53 were bought. As of May 31, 2005, the AVERAGE MARKET CAPITALIZATION of the stocks in the portfolio was $26.9 billion, up from $25.2 billion a year ago. The LARGEST MARKET CAPITALIZATION holding in the portfolio was $386.7 billion, up from $317.4 billion a year ago. The smallest was $993.0 million, down from $1.1 billion a year ago. SECTOR DIVERSIFICATION The following breakdown illustrates the major economic sector weightings according to S&P's Global Industry Classification Standard for FVD as of May 31, 2004, and MAY 31, 2005: Basic Materials (4.0%; 4.0%); Consumer Discretionary (4.1%; 5.8%); Consumer Staples (11.2%; 12.0%); Energy (6.8%; 5.2%); Financial Services (28.6%; 26.6%); Health Care (5.1%; 4.6%); Industrials (6.2%; 6.3%); REITs (12.2%; 11.7%); Telecommunications (2.7%; 2.9%); Utilities (18.3%; 19.8%); and Cash & Equivalents (0.8%; 1.1%). THE STATE OF THE ECONOMY While the U.S. economy continues to enjoy solid economic growth, perhaps the most noteworthy influence impacting our current expansion is the price of oil. Oil closed at $51.97 per barrel on May 31, 2005, but was as high as $57.27 over the past 12 months. In our opinion, it is clear that the high price of crude oil has tempered economic growth since the second Page 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A COMMENTARY ON THE FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- half of 2004. For every $10 of sustained price increase for a barrel of oil, Gross Domestic Product ("GDP") growth will slow by about 0.5%, according to Desmond Lachman, economist at the American Enterprise Institute. The price of a barrel of oil surged from $35.76 on March 31, 2004, to $55.40 on March 31, 2005. That is essentially a $20 move to the upside, which means that GDP growth should have retrenched by about 1.0%. Sure enough, it did. GDP growth in the first quarter of 2004 was 4.5%, versus 3.5% in the first quarter of 2005. Higher energy costs, particularly gas prices, have been offset to some degree by rising income levels in the workplace. Personal income rose about 7% in the U.S. over the past 12 months through April. Also, more people are now working. U.S. companies added 3.5 million workers to their payrolls over the past 24 months. It was reported in April that since the end of the recession in 2001, U.S. household liabilities have increased by $2.7 trillion, versus a rise in aftertax income of just $1.4 trillion, according to BUSINESSWEEK. The good news is that household assets, which include such things as home values, securities and retirement accounts, have surged by $10 trillion over the same period. Low interest rate levels continue to be a boon for real estate. Home sales and home ownership in the U.S. are at record levels. Though some analysts fear that a pricing bubble may be forming in real estate, they seem to be in agreement that it is probably limited to the east and west coasts. It is likely that the high price of oil has helped keep intermediate and long-term rates lower than they normally would be in an expanding economy such as this one. Higher gasoline prices, home heating costs in the winter season and energy costs to operate a business, particularly in the manufacturing sector, tap the discretionary spending of individuals and businesses alike. That helps keep a lid on our core inflation rate, which excludes food and energy, and that is exactly the climate that bond investors desire. The following question looms large: How much longer can intermediate and long-term rates remain near 40-year lows while the Federal Reserve continues to ratchet up short-term rates? The National Association for Business Economics ("NABE") announced that its panel of 50 forecasters sees the yield on the 10-year T-Note rising to 4.9% by the end of 2005, up from 4.0% as of May 31, 2005. AN OVERVIEW OF THE EQUITIES MARKETS The companies in the S&P 500 Index posted their 12th consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth in the first quarter of 2005, according to Standard & Poor's. Most analysts had predicted earnings growth closer to 6% to 9%, but the latest estimate put Q1 earnings growth at 13%. The current estimates for 2005 reflect earnings growth of 10.9% for the S&P 500. Value investing outpaced growth investing for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2005, as measured by Standard & Poor's. The S&P Value Index gained 11.9%, versus a 4.58% return for the S&P Barra Growth Index. For the 5-year period ended in May, the S&P Barra Value Index posted a cumulative gain of 11.6%, vs. a cumulative loss of 27.3% for the S&P Barra Growth Index. Corporate America, in our opinion, is as healthy today as it has been in a long time. Perhaps the most compelling evidence we can offer is the record amount of cash that S&P 500 companies are holding at the present time. As of the end of the first quarter, S&P 500 companies had a record $2.46 trillion in cash and equivalents. The $632 billion held by the old industrial companies in the S&P 500, or non-financial firms, is also a record. Companies are utilizing some of their cash to increase dividend payouts. Year-to-date through May 31, 2005, 163 companies in the S&P 500 have increased their dividend payouts, eight companies have initiated dividends, five have decreased their payouts and one dividend has been suspended, according to Standard & Poor's. A total of 384 companies within the index pay a dividend, versus 116 that do not. IN CLOSING As we pointed out in last year's commentary, the Jobs & Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 lowered the maximum tax rate on qualified stock dividends to 15% through 2008. According to THE WEEKLY STANDARD, President Bush stated publicly on the campaign trail last year as well as during many speaking engagements since his re-election his desire to make the tax cuts passed in 2003 a permanent part of the tax code before finishing his second term. Changes in the tax code can influence how investors allocate capital. For example, in 1997, the top tax rate on capital gains was lowered from 28% to 20%. As a result, many U.S. companies adopted growth-oriented business strategies. The number of companies in the S&P 500 Index that paid a dividend to shareholders declined from 428 in 1996 to 351 in 2001, according to Standard & Poor's. Investors favored growth stocks Page 3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A COMMENTARY ON THE FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- over value stocks from the start of 1997 through the peak in the market in March 2003, as measured by Standard & Poor's. The S&P 500 Barra Growth Index posted a cumulative return of 158.95% over that period, versus 68.32% for the S&P 500 Barra Value Index. In 2003, 370 companies in the S&P 500 distributed a dividend, up from 351 in 2002. Today, that number has risen to 384, but remains well below the most recent high of 469 posted in 1980. In our opinion, the Jobs & Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 has clearly influenced how corporations perceive dividends. We encourage investors to monitor this developing story. CAUTION REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This Annual Report contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the goals, beliefs, plans or current expectations of First Trust Advisors L.P. and its representatives, taking into account the information currently available to them. Forward-looking statements include all statements that do not relate solely to current or historical fact. For example, forward-looking statements include the use of words such as "anticipate," "estimate," "intend," "expect," "believe," "plan," "may," "should," "would," or other words that convey uncertainty of future events or outcomes. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the Fund's actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. When evaluating the information included in this Annual Report, you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect the judgment of First Trust Advisors L.P. and its representatives only as of the date hereof. We undertake no obligation to publicly revise or update these forward-looking statements to reflect events and circumstances that arise after the date hereof. Page 4 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO COMPONENTS+ MAY 31, 2005 [GRAPHIC OMITTED] EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC AS FOLLOWS: Commerical Banks .............................. 17.0% Real Estate (REITS) ........................... 11.8% Electric Utilities ............................ 9.4% Food Products ................................. 7.5% Insurance ..................................... 6.4% Gas Utilities ................................. 5.9% Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels ................... 5.2% Mult-Utilities ................................ 4.7% Pharmaceuticals ............................... 3.5% Diversified Telecommunication Services ........ 2.9% Thrifts & Mortgage Finance .................... 2.3% Household Products ............................ 2.3% Chemicals ..................................... 2.3% Media ......................................... 2.3% Machinery ..................................... 1.7% Commercial Services & Supplies ................ 1.7% Household Durables ............................ 1.2% Capital Markets ............................... 1.2% Electrical Equipment .......................... 1.2% Health Care Equipment & Supplies .............. 1.2% Containers & Packaging ........................ 1.2% Industrial Conglomerates ...................... 1.2% Beverages ..................................... 1.1% Auto Components ............................... 0.6% Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders .. 0.6% Construction Materials ........................ 0.6% Distributors .................................. 0.6% Leisure Equipment & Products .................. 0.6% Specialty Retail .............................. 0.6% Tobacco ....................................... 0.6% Food & Staples Retailing ...................... 0.6% + Percentages are based on total investments; please note that the percentages shown on the Portfolio of Investments are based on net assets. See Notes to Financial Statements. Page 5 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS MAY 31, 2005 MARKET SHARES VALUE ------------ ------------ COMMON STOCKS - 98.8% COMMERCIAL BANKS - 16.8% 120,955 AmSouth Bancorp ................................ $ 3,224,660 97,576 Associated Banc-Corp ........................... 3,260,990 69,373 Bank of America Corp. .......................... 3,213,357 73,465 Bank of Montreal ............................... 3,252,296 103,492 Bank of Nova Scotia ............................ 3,288,976 80,325 BB&T Corp. ..................................... 3,208,181 56,475 Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce ............. 3,288,539 45,705 City National Corp. ............................ 3,246,426 57,085 Comerica, Inc. ................................. 3,189,910 65,327 Commerce Bancshares, Inc. ...................... 3,184,691 72,704 Compass Bancshares, Inc. ....................... 3,240,417 74,863 Fifth Third Bancorp ............................ 3,190,661 77,563 First Horizon National Corp. ................... 3,275,485 92,937 First Midwest Bancorp, Inc. .................... 3,223,985 100,808 Hibernia Corp., Class A ........................ 3,240,977 74,431 Marshall & Ilsley Corp. ........................ 3,238,493 62,679 Mercantile Bankshares Corp. .................... 3,267,456 77,582 National Bank of Canada ........................ 3,265,342 92,991 National City Corp. ............................ 3,213,769 118,860 North Fork Bancorporation, Inc. ................ 3,240,124 164,585 Old National Bancorp ........................... 3,263,721 58,663 PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. ............. 3,205,933 96,179 Regions Financial Corp. ........................ 3,239,309 53,935 Royal Bank of Canada ........................... 3,234,482 43,563 SunTrust Banks, Inc. ........................... 3,206,672 110,588 Synovus Financial Corp. ........................ 3,214,793 77,919 Toronto-Dominion Bank .......................... 3,313,895 53,057 Wells Fargo & Company .......................... 3,205,173 91,566 Wilmington Trust Corp. ......................... 3,280,810 --------------- 93,919,523 --------------- REAL ESTATE (REITS) - 11.7% 88,744 Archstone-Smith Trust .......................... 3,267,554 43,499 Avalonbay Communities, Inc. .................... 3,256,770 84,757 BRE Properties, Inc., Class A .................. 3,266,535 105,043 Duke Realty Corp. .............................. 3,242,678 99,872 Equity Office Properties Trust ................. 3,244,841 90,158 Equity Residential ............................. 3,236,672 58,535 Federal Realty Investment Trust ................ 3,231,132 121,045 Health Care Property Investors, Inc. ........... 3,291,214 84,314 Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc. .................. 3,295,834 56,763 Kimco Realty Corp. ............................. 3,278,631 79,357 Liberty Property Trust ......................... 3,276,651 73,869 Mack-Cali Realty Corp. . ...................... 3,256,884 121,961 New Plan Excel Realty Trust .................... 3,285,629 74,898 Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust ...... 3,295,512 92,644 Plum Creek Timber Company, Inc. ................ 3,247,172 79,670 Prologis ....................................... 3,253,723 47,530 Simon Property Group, Inc. ..................... 3,266,262 141,299 United Dominion Realty Trust, Inc. ............. 3,256,942 106,044 Washington Real Estate Investment Trust ........ 3,297,968 85,431 Weingarten Realty Investors .................... 3,247,232 --------------- 65,295,836 --------------- Page 6 See Notes to Financial Statements. FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED) MAY 31, 2005 MARKET SHARES VALUE ------------ ------------ COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED ELECTRIC UTILITIES - 9.3% 67,856 ALLETE, Inc. ................................... $ 3,257,088 59,595 Ameren Corp. ................................... 3,252,695 77,938 Cinergy Corp. .................................. 3,213,384 71,274 Consolidated Edison, Inc. ...................... 3,243,680 44,804 Entergy Corp. .................................. 3,218,271 68,782 Exelon Corp. ................................... 3,222,437 79,611 FPL Group, Inc. ................................ 3,236,187 103,559 Great Plains Energy, Inc. ...................... 3,262,108 125,666 Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. ............. 3,242,183 55,162 NSTAR .......................................... 3,229,183 74,022 Pinnacle West Capital Corp. .................... 3,265,851 111,045 PNM Resources, Inc. ............................ 3,235,851 73,298 Progress Energy, Inc. .......................... 3,241,971 95,018 The Southern Company ........................... 3,225,861 141,485 Westar Energy, Inc. ........................... 3,264,059 175,796 Xcel Energy, Inc. .............................. 3,239,920 --------------- 51,850,729 --------------- FOOD PRODUCTS - 7.4% 79,947 Cadbury Schweppes PLC, Sponsored ADR ........... 3,151,511 103,892 Campbell Soup Company .......................... 3,223,769 121,501 ConAgra Foods, Inc. ............................ 3,177,251 64,907 General Mills, Inc. ............................ 3,212,896 86,810 H.J. Heinz Company ............................. 3,157,280 70,665 Kellogg Company ................................ 3,214,551 98,710 Kraft Foods, Inc. .............................. 3,202,152 73,768 Lancaster Colony Corp. ......................... 3,241,366 94,263 McCormick & Company, Inc. ...................... 3,189,860 156,595 Sara Lee Corp. ................................. 3,177,313 64,543 The J.M. Smucker Company ....................... 3,214,887 47,086 Unilever NV .................................... 3,133,102 79,789 Unilever PLC, Sponsored ADR .................... 3,149,272 --------------- 41,445,210 --------------- INSURANCE - 6.4% 117,304 Arthur J. Gallagher & Company .................. 3,239,937 81,255 Cincinnati Financial Corp. ..................... 3,207,135 64,158 Jefferson-Pilot Corp. .......................... 3,233,563 71,007 Lincoln National Corp. ......................... 3,232,949 69,807 Manulife Financial Corp. ....................... 3,207,632 57,863 MBIA, Inc. ..................................... 3,236,278 59,212 Mercury General Corp. .......................... 3,268,502 79,569 Protective Life Corp. .......................... 3,197,878 55,637 The Allstate Corp. ............................. 3,238,073 38,532 The Chubb Corp. ................................ 3,245,550 64,543 Unitrin, Inc. .................................. 3,213,596 --------------- 35,521,093 --------------- GAS UTILITIES - 5.8% 93,098 AGL Resources, Inc. ............................ 3,280,774 52,283 Equitable Resources, Inc. ...................... 3,323,107 82,355 KeySpan Corp. .................................. 3,272,788 117,775 National Fuel Gas Company ...................... 3,297,700 See Notes to Financial Statements. Page 7 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED) MAY 31, 2005 MARKET SHARES VALUE ------------ ------------ COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED GAS UTILITIES - (CONTINUED) 71,574 New Jersey Resources Corp. ..................... $ 3,227,987 82,313 Nicor, Inc. .................................... 3,251,363 77,285 Peoples Energy Corp. ........................... 3,303,934 132,588 Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc. ............. 3,243,102 120,503 UGI Corp. ...................................... 3,194,535 100,120 WGL Holdings, Inc. ............................. 3,257,905 --------------- 32,653,195 --------------- OIL, GAS & CONSUMABLE FUELS - 5.2% 53,013 BP PLC, Sponsored ADR .......................... 3,191,382 59,705 Chevron Corp. .................................. 3,210,935 30,571 ConocoPhillips ................................. 3,296,777 57,196 Exxon Mobil Corp. .............................. 3,214,415 66,871 Marathon Oil Corp. ............................. 3,242,575 54,280 Royal Dutch Petroleum Company .................. 3,179,722 60,682 Shell Transport & Trading Company PLC, Sponsored ADR ............................... 3,182,771 28,662 Total SA, Sponsored ADR ........................ 3,186,928 131,883 TransCanada Corp. .............................. 3,202,119 --------------- 28,907,624 --------------- MULTI-UTILITIES - 4.6% 46,084 Dominion Resources, Inc. ....................... 3,240,166 115,705 Energy East Corp. .............................. 3,239,740 114,271 MDU Resources Group, Inc. ...................... 3,289,862 77,489 SCANA Corp. .................................... 3,264,612 82,313 Sempra Energy .................................. 3,265,357 118,991 Vectren Corp. .................................. 3,247,264 89,260 Wisconsin Energy Corp. ......................... 3,240,138 58,652 WPS Resources Corp. ............................ 3,233,485 --------------- 26,020,624 --------------- PHARMACEUTICALS - 3.4% 67,024 Abbott Laboratories ............................ 3,233,238 64,880 GlaxoSmithKline PLC, ADR ....................... 3,224,536 47,741 Johnson & Johnson .............................. 3,203,421 54,639 Lilly (Eli) & Company .......................... 3,185,454 114,311 Pfizer, Inc. ................................... 3,189,277 73,818 Wyeth .......................................... 3,201,486 --------------- 19,237,412 --------------- DIVERSIFIED TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 2.9% 55,753 ALLTEL Corp. ................................... 3,243,152 120,503 BellSouth Corp. ................................ 3,224,660 136,515 SBC Communications, Inc. ....................... 3,191,721 94,434 Telecom Corp. of New Zealand Ltd., Sponsored ADR ............................... 3,167,317 91,306 Verizon Communications, Inc. ................... 3,230,406 --------------- 16,057,256 --------------- THRIFTS & MORTGAGE FINANCE - 2.3% 97,311 Capitol Federal Financial ...................... 3,222,940 49,250 Freddie Mac .................................... 3,203,220 141,796 Washington Federal, Inc. ....................... 3,235,785 Page 8 See Notes to Financial Statements. FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED) MAY 31, 2005 MARKET SHARES VALUE ------------ ------------ COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED THRIFTS & MORTGAGE FINANCE - (CONTINUED) 77,433 Washington Mutual, Inc. ........................ $ 3,197,983 --------------- 12,859,928 --------------- HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS - 2.3% 64,260 Colgate-Palmolive Company ...................... 3,211,072 49,928 Kimberly-Clark Corp. ........................... 3,211,868 58,239 Procter & Gamble Company ....................... 3,211,881 55,086 The Clorox Company ............................. 3,217,574 --------------- 12,852,395 --------------- CHEMICALS - 2.3% 53,470 Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. ................. 3,220,498 68,679 E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company ........... 3,194,260 86,484 International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. ....... 3,207,692 48,973 PPG Industries, Inc. ........................... 3,202,344 --------------- 12,824,794 --------------- MEDIA - 2.3% 89,408 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. ...................... 3,173,984 50,428 Knight-Ridder, Inc. ............................ 3,180,998 102,052 The New York Times Company ..................... 3,201,371 88,331 Tribune Company ................................ 3,195,816 --------------- 12,752,169 --------------- MACHINERY - 1.7% 48,663 Deere & Company ................................ 3,219,057 52,961 Eaton Corp. .................................... 3,169,716 99,227 Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. ................ 3,250,677 --------------- 9,639,450 --------------- COMMERCIAL SERVICES & SUPPLIES - 1.7% 60,705 Avery Dennison Corp. ........................... 3,183,977 71,463 Pitney Bowes, Inc. ............................. 3,187,965 96,873 R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company .................. 3,221,027 --------------- 9,592,969 --------------- HOUSEHOLD DURABLES - 1.2% 121,136 Leggett & Platt, Inc. .......................... 3,227,063 94,906 Snap-On, Inc. .................................. 3,275,206 --------------- 6,502,269 --------------- CAPITAL MARKETS - 1.2% 117,646 Allied Capital Corp. ........................... 3,229,383 109,835 Federated Investors, Inc., Class B ............. 3,252,214 --------------- 6,481,597 --------------- ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT - 1.1% 48,090 Emerson Electric Company ....................... 3,196,542 71,654 Hubbell, Inc., Class B ......................... 3,255,958 --------------- 6,452,500 --------------- HEALTH CARE EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES - 1.1% 95,624 Arrow International Inc. ....................... 3,232,091 63,364 Hillenbrand Industries, Inc. ................... 3,197,348 --------------- 6,429,439 --------------- See Notes to Financial Statements. Page 9 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED) MAY 31, 2005 MARKET SHARES VALUE ------------ ------------ COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED CONTAINERS & PACKAGING - 1.1% 117,732 Bemis Company .................................. $ 3,197,601 121,273 Sonoco Products Company ........................ 3,229,500 --------------- 6,427,101 --------------- INDUSTRIAL CONGLOMERATES - 1.1% 41,873 3M Company ..................................... 3,209,565 87,351 General Electric Company ....................... 3,186,565 --------------- 6,396,130 --------------- BEVERAGES - 1.1% 67,557 Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. ................. 3,165,045 71,942 The Coca-Cola Company .......................... 3,210,772 --------------- 6,375,817 --------------- AUTO COMPONENTS - 0.6% 48,306 Magna International, Inc. ...................... 3,285,291 --------------- INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCERS & ENERGY TRADERS - 0.6% 61,375 Constellation Energy Group, Inc. ............... 3,280,494 --------------- CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS - 0.6% 53,603 Vulcan Materials Company ....................... 3,212,428 --------------- DISTRIBUTORS - 0.6% 74,690 Genuine Parts Company .......................... 3,208,682 --------------- LEISURE EQUIPMENT & PRODUCTS - 0.6% 61,003 Polaris Industries, Inc. ....................... 3,200,827 --------------- SPECIALTY RETAIL - 0.6% 71,990 The Sherwin-Williams Company ................... 3,199,955 --------------- TOBACCO - 0.6% 71,638 Universal Corp. ................................ 3,180,727 --------------- FOOD & STAPLES RETAILING - 0.6% 86,507 Weis Markets, Inc. ............................. 3,178,267 --------------- TOTAL COMMON STOCKS ............................ 552,241,731 --------------- (Cost $489,898,247) TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 98.8% ...................... 552,241,731 (Cost $489,898,247)* NET OTHER ASSETS & LIABILITIES - 1.2% .......... 6,463,260 --------------- NET ASSETS - 100.0% ............................ $ 558,704,991 =============== ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ * Aggregate cost for federal income tax purposes is $490,456,387 ADR American Depository Receipt REIT Real Estate Investment Trust Page 10 See Notes to Financial Statements. FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES MAY 31, 2005 ASSETS: Investments, at value (Cost $489,898,247) .................................................. $552,241,731 Cash .................................................................... 3,094,741 Receivable for investment securities sold ............................... 29,619,166 Dividends receivable .................................................... 1,812,780 Prepaid expenses ........................................................ 16,623 Interest receivable ..................................................... 5,378 ------------- Total Assets ....................................................... 586,790,419 ------------- LIABILITIES: Payable for investment securities purchased ............................. 27,511,323 Investment advisory fee payable ......................................... 305,948 License fees payable .................................................... 91,974 Audit and legal fees payable ............................................ 50,175 Payable to administrator ................................................ 41,052 Trustees' fees payable .................................................. 6,963 Accrued expenses and other payables ..................................... 77,993 ------------- Total Liabilities .................................................. 28,085,428 ------------- NET ASSETS .............................................................. $558,704,991 ============= NET ASSETS CONSIST OF: Undistributed net investment income ..................................... $ 2,434,224 Accumulated net realized gain on investments sold ....................... 30,449,988 Net unrealized appreciation of investments .............................. 62,343,484 Par value ............................................................... 324,000 Paid-in capital ......................................................... 463,153,295 ------------- Net Assets ......................................................... $558,704,991 ============= NET ASSET VALUE, per Common Share (par value $0.01 per Common Share) .... $ 17.24 ============= Number of Common Shares outstanding ..................................... 32,400,000 ============= See Notes to Financial Statements. Page 11 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS FOR THE YEAR ENDED MAY 31, 2005 INVESTMENT INCOME: Dividends .................................................................................. $ 18,349,976 Interest ................................................................................... 51,743 ------------- Total investment income ............................................................... 18,401,719 ------------- EXPENSES: Investment advisory fee .................................................................... 3,542,990 License fees ............................................................................... 551,576 Administration fee ......................................................................... 476,060 Printing fees .............................................................................. 168,202 Custodian fees ............................................................................. 79,099 Insurance expense .......................................................................... 53,340 Trustees' fees and expenses ................................................................ 53,309 Audit and legal fees ....................................................................... 62,036 Other ...................................................................................... 64,411 ------------- Total expenses ........................................................................ 5,051,023 ------------- NET INVESTMENT INCOME ...................................................................... 13,350,696 ------------- NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN ON INVESTMENTS: Net realized gain on investments sold during the period .................................... 44,364,038 Net change in unrealized appreciation/(depreciation) of investments during the period ...... 20,049,513 ------------- Net realized and unrealized gain on investments ............................................ 64,413,551 ------------- NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS ....................................... $ 77,764,247 ============= Page 12 See Notes to Financial Statements. FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS YEAR PERIOD ENDED ENDED 5/31/2005 5/31/2004* ------------- -------------- Net investment income ....................................................... $ 13,350,696 $ 8,630,191 Net realized gain on investments sold during the period ..................... 44,364,038 18,408,447 Net change in unrealized appreciation/(depreciation) of investments during the period ........................................................ 20,049,513 42,293,971 ------------- ------------- Net increase in net assets resulting from operations ........................ 77,764,247 69,332,609 DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS FROM: Net investment income ....................................................... (11,907,000) (6,554,520) Net realized gains .......................................................... (29,808,000) (3,599,640) ------------- -------------- Total distributions to shareholders ......................................... (41,715,000) (10,154,160) CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS: Net proceeds from sale of 32,400,000 shares of Common Shares ................ -- 464,130,000 Offering costs .............................................................. (75,000) (577,705) ------------- -------------- Net increase in net assets .................................................. 35,974,247 522,730,744 NET ASSETS: Beginning of period ......................................................... 522,730,744 -- ------------- -------------- End of period ............................................................... $558,704,991 $ 522,730,744 ============= ============== Undistributed net investment income at end of period ........................ $ 2,434,224 $ 1,504,570 ============= ============== -------------------------------------------------- * The Fund commenced operations on August 19, 2003. See Notes to Financial Statements. Page 13 FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR A COMMON SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD. YEAR PERIOD ENDED ENDED 5/31/2005 5/31/2004* ------------- -------------- Net asset value, beginning of period ....................................... $ 16.13 $ 14.33 ------------- -------------- INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: Net investment income ...................................................... 0.41 0.27 Net realized and unrealized gain on investments ............................ 1.99 1.86 ------------- -------------- Total from investment operations ........................................... 2.40 2.13 ------------- -------------- DISTRIBUTIONS PAID TO SHAREHOLDERS FROM: Net investment income ...................................................... (0.37) (0.20) Net realized gains ......................................................... (0.92) (0.11) ------------- -------------- Total from distributions ................................................... (1.29) (0.31) ------------- -------------- Common shares offering costs charged to paid-in capital .................... (0.00)# (0.02) ------------- -------------- Net asset value, end of period ............................................. $ 17.24 $ 16.13 ============= ============== Market value, end of period ................................................ $ 14.64 $ 13.76 ============= ============== TOTAL RETURN BASED ON NET ASSET VALUE (A)+ ................................. 16.05% 15.09% ============= ============== TOTAL RETURN BASED ON MARKET VALUE (B)+ .................................... 15.52% (6.20)% ============= ============== RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA: Net assets, end of period (in 000's) ....................................... $ 558,705 $ 522,731 Ratio of total expenses to average net assets .............................. 0.93% 0.93%** Ratio of net investment income to average net assets ....................... 2.45% 2.29%** Portfolio turnover rate .................................................... 57.15% 46.13% -------------------------------------------------- * The Fund commenced operations on August 19, 2003. ** Annualized. # Amount represents less than $0.01 per share. (a) Total return based on net asset value is the combination of reinvested dividend income and reinvested capital gains distributions, at prices obtained by the Dividend Reinvestment Plan, if any, and changes in net asset value per share and does not reflect sales load. (b) Total return based on market value is the combination of reinvested dividend income and reinvested capital gains distributions, at prices obtained by the Dividend Reinvestment Plan, if any, and changes in Common Share price per share, all based on market price per share. + Total return is not annualized for periods less than one year. Page 14 See Notes to Financial Statements. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 1. FUND DESCRIPTION First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund (the "Fund") is a diversified closed-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 11, 2003, and is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"). The Fund trades under the ticker symbol FVD on the American Stock Exchange. The Fund's investment objective is to provide total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to accomplish its objective by investing in common stocks that pay above-average dividends and have the potential for capital appreciation. Such common stocks will be selected through the application of a disciplined investment strategy implemented by the Fund's investment advisor, First Trust Advisors L.P. ("First Trust"). There can be no assurance that the Fund's investment objective will be achieved. 2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES 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 in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. PORTFOLIO VALUATION: The Fund determines the net asset value ("NAV") of its shares daily, as of the close of regular session trading on the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE"), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time, on each day the NYSE is open for trading. The NAV is computed by dividing the value of all assets of the Fund (including accrued interest and dividends), less all liabilities (including accrued expenses and dividends declared but unpaid), by the total number of shares outstanding. The Fund's investments are valued at market value or, in the absence of market value with respect to any portfolio securities, at fair value according to procedures adopted by the Fund's Board of Trustees. Portfolio securities listed on any exchange other than the NASDAQ National Market ("NASDAQ") are valued at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined. If there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued at the mean of the most recent bid and asked prices on such day. Securities traded on the NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ Official Closing Price as determined by NASDAQ. Portfolio securities traded on more than one securities exchange are valued at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined at the close of the exchange representing the principal market for such securities. Portfolio securities traded in the over-the-counter market, but excluding securities trading on the NASDAQ, are valued at the closing bid prices. Short-term investments that mature in 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost. Foreign securities traded outside the United States are generally valued as of the time their trading is complete, which is usually different from the close of the NYSE. Occasionally, events affecting the value of such securities may occur between such times and the close of the NYSE that will not always be reflected in such securities' value. If events materially affecting the value of such securities occur during such period, these securities will be valued at their fair value according to procedures adopted by the Fund's Board of Trustees. All securities and other assets of the Fund denominated in foreign currencies will be converted to U.S. dollars using exchange rates in effect at the time of valuation. SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME: Securities transactions are recorded as of the trade date. Realized gains and losses from securities transactions are recorded on the identified cost basis. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. Securities purchased or sold on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis may be settled a month or more after the trade date; interest income on such securities is not accrued until settlement date. The Fund instructs the custodian to segregate assets of the Fund with a current value at least equal to the amount of its when-issued purchase commitments. Page 15 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS: Dividends from net investment income of the Fund are declared and paid quarterly or as the Board of Trustees may determine from time to time. Distributions of any net capital gains earned by the Fund are distributed at least annually. Distributions will automatically be reinvested into additional Common Shares pursuant to the Fund's Dividend Reinvestment Plan unless cash distributions are elected by the shareholder. Distributions from income and capital gains are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These differences are primarily due to differing treatments of income and gains on various investment securities held by the Fund, timing differences and differing characterization of distributions made by the Fund. Permanent differences incurred during the year ended May 31, 2005, resulting in book and tax accounting differences, have been reclassified at year end to reflect a decrease in undistributed net investment income by $514,042 and an increase in accumulated net realized gain on investments sold by $514,042. Net assets were not affected by this reclassification. The tax character of distributions paid during the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005 and the period ended May 31, 2004 is as follows: 2005 2004 ---- ---- Distributions paid from: Ordinary Income ............................... $ 38,151,000 $10,154,160 Long-term Capital Gains ....................... 3,564,000 -- As of May 31, 2005, the components of distributable earnings on a tax basis are as follows: Undistributed Ordinary Income ................. $ 9,111,242 Undistributed Long-term Capital Gains ......... $ 24,331,110 Net Unrealized Appreciation ................... $ 61,785,344 INCOME TAXES: The Fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company by complying with the requirements under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and by distributing substantially all of its net investment income and net realized gains to shareholders. Accordingly, no provision has been made for federal or state income taxes. EXPENSES: The Fund will pay all expenses directly related to its operations. First Trust has entered into a non-exclusive license agreement with Value Line(R) Publishing, Inc. which allows for the use by First Trust of the Value Line(R) Safety(TM) Ranking System and certain trademarks and trade names of Value Line(R) Publishing, Inc. The Fund is a sub-licensee to this license agreement. In exchange, Value Line(R) Publishing, Inc. receives an annual fee, payable on a quarterly basis, equal to 0.10% of the Fund's gross daily assets during such calendar quarter. This license fee is paid by the Fund to First Trust, which pays Value Line(R) Publishing, Inc. The terms of the license agreement provide that it shall continue in effect for a term of one year and will be automatically renewed for successive one-year terms unless either party elects not to renew the agreement. ORGANIZATIONAL AND OFFERING COSTS: Organization costs consist of costs incurred to establish the Fund and enable it to legally do business. These costs include filing fees, legal services pertaining to the organization of the business and audit fees relating to the initial registration and auditing the initial statement of assets and liabilities, among other fees. Offering costs consist of legal fees pertaining to the Fund's shares offered for sale, registration fees, underwriting fees, and printing of the initial prospectus, among other fees. First Trust has paid all organizational expenses and offering costs of the Fund (other than sales load) that exceeded $0.03 per Common Share. The Fund's estimated share of Common Share offering costs, $577,705, were recorded as a reduction of the proceeds from the sale of Common Shares during the period ended May 31, 2004. During the year ended May 31, 2005, it was determined that actual offering costs from the initial public offering of the Fund's Common Shares in August 2003 were more than the estimated offering cost by $75,000. Therefore, paid-in-capital in excess of par value of Common Shares has been decreased by this amount. Page 16 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 3. INVESTMENT ADVISORY FEE AND OTHER AFFILIATED TRANSACTIONS First Trust is a limited partnership with one limited partner, Grace Partners of DuPage L.P., and one general partner, The Charger Corporation. First Trust serves as investment adviser to the Fund pursuant to an Investment Management Agreement. First Trust is responsible for implementing the Fund's overall investment strategy, including the allocation and periodic reallocation of the portion of the Fund's assets to be invested in common stocks, managing the Fund's business affairs and certain administrative services necessary for the management of the Fund. For these services, First Trust is entitled to a monthly fee calculated at an annual rate of 0.65% of the Fund's average daily net assets. PFPC Inc. ("PFPC"), an indirect, majority-owned subsidiary of The PNC Financial Services Group Inc., serves as the Fund's Administrator and Transfer Agent in accordance with certain fee arrangements. PFPC Trust Company, an indirect, majority-owned subsidiary of The PNC Financial Services Group Inc., serves as the Fund's Custodian in accordance with certain fee arrangements. Effective June 7, 2004, the Trustees of the Fund approved a revised compensation plan. Under the revised plan, the Fund pays each Trustee who is not an officer or employee of First Trust or any of its affiliates an annual retainer of $10,000 which includes compensation for all regular quarterly board meetings and regular committee meetings. No additional meeting fees are paid in connection with regular quarterly board meetings or regular committee meetings. Additional fees of $1,000 and $500 are paid to non-interested Trustees for special board meetings and non-regular committee meetings, respectively. These additional fees are shared by the funds in the First Trust fund complex that participate in the particular meeting and are not per fund fees. Trustees are also reimbursed for travel and out-of-pocket expenses in connection with all meetings. The Trustees adopted the revised plan because the increase in the number of funds in the First Trust fund complex had the effect of rapidly increasing their compensation under the previous arrangements. Prior to June 7, 2004, the Fund paid each Trustee who was not an officer or employee of First Trust or any of its affiliates $10,000 per annum plus $1,000 per regularly scheduled meeting attended, $500 per committee meeting attended and reimbursement for travel and out-of-pocket expenses. 4. PURCHASES AND SALES OF SECURITIES Cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities, excluding short-term investments, for the year ended May 31, 2005, aggregated amounts were $308,699,760 and $339,838,565, respectively. As of May 31, 2005, the aggregate gross unrealized appreciation for all securities in which there was an excess of value over tax cost was $68,429,510 and the aggregate gross unrealized depreciation for all securities in which there was an excess of tax cost over value was $6,644,166. 5. SUBSEQUENT EVENT On May 20, 2005, the Fund declared a dividend of $0.10 per share which represents a dividend from net investment income to Common Shareholders of record June 3, 2005, payable June 15, 2005. Page 17 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TO THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND SHAREHOLDERS OF FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND: We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund (the "Fund"), including the portfolio of investments, as of May 31, 2005, the related statement of operations for the year then ended, and the statements of changes in net assets and the financial highlights for the year then ended and for the period August 19, 2003 (inception) through May 31, 2004. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. The Fund is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund's internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of May 31, 2005, by correspondence with the Fund's custodian and broker. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund as of May 31, 2005, the results of its operations, the changes in its net assets, and the financial highlights for the respective stated periods, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. /S/DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP Chicago, Illinois July 8, 2005 Page 18 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (UNAUDITED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN If your Common Shares are registered directly with the Fund or if you hold your Common Shares with a brokerage firm that participates in the Fund's Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the "Plan"), unless you elect to receive cash distributions, all dividends, including any capital gain distributions, on your Common Shares will be automatically reinvested by PFPC (the "Plan Agent"), in additional Common Shares under the Plan. If you elect to receive cash distributions, you will receive all distributions in cash paid by check mailed directly to you by PFPC, as dividend paying agent. If you decide to participate in the Plan, the number of Common Shares you will receive will be determined as follows: (1) If the Common Shares are trading at or above net asset value at the time of valuation, the Fund will issue new shares at a price equal to the greater of (i) net asset value per Common Share on that date or (ii) 95% of the market price on that date. (2) If the Common Shares are trading below net asset value at the time of valuation, the Plan Agent will receive the dividend or distribution in cash and will purchase Common Shares in the open market, on the American Stock Exchange or elsewhere, for the participants' accounts. It is possible that the market price for the Common Shares may increase before the Plan Agent has completed its purchases. Therefore, the average purchase price per share paid by the Plan Agent may exceed the market price at the time of valuation, resulting in the purchase of fewer shares than if the dividend or distribution had been paid in Common Shares issued by the Fund. The Plan Agent will use all dividends and distributions received in cash to purchase Common Shares in the open market within 30 days of the valuation date except where temporary curtailment or suspension of purchases is necessary to comply with federal securities laws. Interest will not be paid on any uninvested cash payments. You may withdraw from the Plan at any time by giving written notice to the Plan Agent, or by telephone in accordance with such reasonable requirements as the Plan Agent and Fund may agree upon. If you withdraw or the Plan is terminated, you will receive a certificate for each whole share in your account under the Plan and you will receive a cash payment for any fraction of a share in your account. If you wish, the Plan Agent will sell your shares and send you the proceeds, minus brokerage commissions. The Plan Agent maintains all shareholders' accounts in the Plan and gives written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information you may need for tax records. Common Shares in your account will be held by the Plan Agent in non-certificated form. The Plan Agent will forward to each participant any proxy solicitation material and will vote any shares so held only in accordance with proxies returned to the Fund. Any proxy you receive will include all Common Shares you have received under the Plan. There is no brokerage charge for reinvestment of your dividends or distributions in Common Shares. However, all participants will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred by the Plan Agent when it makes open market purchases. Automatically reinvesting dividends and distributions does not mean that you do not have to pay income taxes due upon receiving dividends and distributions. Capital gains and income are realized, although cash is not received by you. If you hold your Common Shares with a brokerage firm that does not participate in the Plan, you will not be able to participate in the Plan and any dividend reinvestment may be effected on different terms than those described above. Consult your financial advisor for more information. The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan if in the judgment of the Board of Trustees the change is warranted. There is no direct service charge to participants in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants. Additional information about the Plan may be obtained by writing PFPC Inc., 301 Bellevue Parkway, Wilmington, Delaware 19809. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES A description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies and information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling (800) 988-5891; (2) on the Fund's website located at http://www.ftportfolios.com; and (3) on the Securities and Exchange Commission's website located at http://www.sec.gov. Page 19 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Fund's Forms N-Q are available (1) by calling (800) 988-5891; (2) on the Fund's website located at http://www.ftportfolios.com; (3) on the SEC's website at http://www.sec.gov; and (4) for review and copying at the SEC's Public Reference Room ("PRR") in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the PRR may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SHAREHOLDERS The Joint Annual Meeting of Shareholders of First Trust Value Line(R) Dividend Fund, First Trust/Four Corners Senior Floating Rate Income Fund, Macquarie/First Trust Global Infrastructure/Utilities Dividend & Income Fund, First Trust/Value Line(R) & Ibbotson Equity Allocation Fund, and First Trust/Four Corners Senior Floating Rate Income Fund II was held on September 13, 2004. At the Annual Meeting the Fund's Board of Trustees, consisting of James A. Bowen, Niel B. Nielson, Thomas R. Kadlec, Richard E. Erickson and David M. Oster, was elected to serve an additional one year term. The number of votes cast for James A. Bowen was 23,162,710, the number of votes withheld was 247,169 and the number of abstentions was 8,990,121. The number of votes cast for Niel B. Nielson was 23,142,879, the number of votes withheld was 267,000 and the number of abstentions was 8,990,121. The number of votes cast for Richard E. Erickson was 23,135,292, the number of votes withheld was 274,587 and the number of abstentions was 8,990,121. The number of votes cast for Thomas R. Kadlec was 23,161,913, the number of votes withheld was 247,966 and the number of abstentions was 8,990,121. The number of votes cast for David M. Oster was 23,084,272, the number of votes withheld was 196,677 and the number of abstentions was 9,119,051. TAX INFORMATION Of the ordinary income (including short-term capital gain) distributions made by the Fund during the year ended May 31, 2005, 39.67% qualify for the corporate dividend received deduction available to corporate shareholders. The Fund hereby designates as qualified dividend income distributions 43.16% of the ordinary income (including short-term capital gain), for the year ended May 31, 2005. For the year ended May 31, 2005, the amount of long-term capital gain designated by the Fund was $27,355,991, which is taxable at a 15% rate for federal income tax purposes. Page 20 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MANAGEMENT (UNAUDITED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Information pertaining to the Trustees and officers* of the Fund is set forth below. The statement of additional information ("SAI") includes additional information about the Trustees and is available without charge, upon request, by calling (800) 988-5891. NUMBER OF OTHER PORTFOLIOS TRUSTEESHIPS/ NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND TERM OF OFFICE AND PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) IN FUND COMPLEX DIRECTORSHIPS POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED DURING PAST 5 YEARS OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE HELD BY TRUSTEE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DISINTERESTED TRUSTEES ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Richard Erickson, Trustee o One year term Physician; President, 22 portfolios None D.O.B. 04/51 o 22 months served Wheaton Orthopedics; c/o First Trust Advisors L.P. Co-owner and Co-Director, 1001 Warrenville Road Sports Med Center for Suite 300 Fitness; Limited Partner, Lisle, IL 60532 Gundersen Real Estate Partnership Niel B. Nielson, Trustee o One year term President, Covenant 22 portfolios Director of Good News D.O.B. 03/54 o 22 months served College (June 2002 to Publishers-Crossway c/o First Trust Advisors L.P. Present); Pastor, College Books; Covenant 1001 Warrenville Road Church in Wheaton (1997 Transport, Inc. Suite 300 to June 2002) Lisle, IL 60532 Thomas R. Kadlec, Trustee o One year term Vice President and Chief 22 portfolios None D.O.B. 11/57 o 22 months served Financial Officer (1990 c/o First Trust Advisors L.P. to present), ADM Investor 1001 Warrenville Road Services, Inc. (Futures Suite 300 Commission Merchant); Lisle, IL 60532 Registered Representative (2000 to present), Segerdahl & Company, Inc., an NASD member (Broker-Dealer) David M. Oster, Trustee o One year term Trader and Market Maker, 10 portfolios None D.O.B. 03/64 o 22 months served Chicago Board Options c/o First Trust Advisors L.P. Exchange (Self Employed- 1001 Warrenville Road 1987 to present in Suite 300 options trading and Lisle, IL 60532 market making) Page 21 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MANAGEMENT - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS (CONTINUED) NUMBER OF OTHER PORTFOLIOS TRUSTEESHIPS/ NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND TERM OF OFFICE AND PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) IN FUND COMPLEX DIRECTORSHIPS POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED DURING PAST 5 YEARS OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE HELD BY TRUSTEE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERESTED TRUSTEE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- James A. Bowen, Trustee, o One year Trustee President, First Trust 22 portfolios None President, Chairman of term and indefinite Advisors L.P. and First the Board and CEO officer term Trust Portfolios L.P; D.O.B. 09/55 o 22 months served Chairman of the Board, 1001 Warrenville Road BondWave LLC and Suite 300 Stonebridge Advisors LLC Lisle, IL 60532 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT TRUSTEES ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Robert F. Carey, Vice o Indefinite term Senior Vice President, N/A N/A President o 22 months served First Trust Advisors L.P. D.O.B. 07/63 and First Trust 1001 Warrenville Road Portfolios L.P Suite 300 Lisle, IL 60532 Mark R. Bradley, Treasurer, o Indefinite term Chief Financial Officer, N/A N/A Controller, Chief Financial o 22 months served Managing Director, First Officer, Chief Accounting Trust Advisors L.P. and Officer First Trust Portfolios D.O.B. 11/57 L.P.; Chief Financial 1001 Warrenville Road Officer, BondWave LLC Suite 300 and Stonebridge Advisors LLC Lisle, IL 60532 W. Scott Jardine, o Indefinite term General Counsel, First N/A N/A Secretary and Chief o 22 months served Trust Advisors L.P. and Compliance Officer First Trust Portfolios D.O.B. 05/60 1001 L.P.; Secretary, BondWave Warrenville Road LLC and Stonebridge Suite 300 Advisors LLC Lisle, IL 60532 Page 22 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MANAGEMENT - (CONTINUED) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND MAY 31, 2005 BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS (CONTINUED) NUMBER OF OTHER PORTFOLIOS TRUSTEESHIPS/ NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND TERM OF OFFICE AND PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) IN FUND COMPLEX DIRECTORSHIPS POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED DURING PAST 5 YEARS OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE HELD BY TRUSTEE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT TRUSTEES- (CONTINUED) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger F. Testin o Indefinite term Senior Vice President, N/A N/A Vice President o 22 months served First Trust Advisors L.P. D.O.B. 06/66 (August 2001 to present); 1001 Warrenville Road Analyst, Dolan Capital Suite 300 Management (1998-2001) Lisle, IL 60532 Susan M. Brix o Indefinite term Representative, First N/A N/A Assistant Vice President o 22 months served Trust Portfolios L.P.; D.O.B. 01/60 Assistant Portfolio 1001 Warrenville Road Manager, First Trust Suite 300 Advisors L.P. Lisle, IL 60532 Kristi A. Maher o Indefinite term Assistant General Counsel, N/A N/A Assistant Secretary o 1 year served First Trust Portfolios D.O.B. 12/66 L.P. (March 2004 to 1001 Warrenville Road present); Associate, Suite 300 Chapman and Cutler LLP Lisle, IL 60532 (1995-2004) -------------------- * The term "officer" means the president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, controller or any other officer who performs a policy making function. Page 23 This Page Left Blank Intentionally. ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS. (a) The registrant, as of the end of the period covered by this report, has adopted a code of ethics that applies to the registrant's principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions, regardless of whether these individuals are employed by the registrant or a third party. (c) There have been no amendments, during the period covered by this report, to a provision of the code of ethics that applies to the registrant's principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions, regardless of whether these individuals are employed by the registrant or a third party, and that relates to any element of the code of ethics description. (d) The registrant has not granted any waivers, including an implicit waiver, from a provision of the code of ethics that applies to the registrant's principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions, regardless of whether these individuals are employed by the registrant or a third party, that relates to one or more of the items set forth in paragraph (b) of this item's instructions. ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT. As of the end of the period covered by the report, the registrant's board of trustees has determined that Thomas R. Kadlec is qualified to serve as an audit committee financial expert serving on its audit committee and that he is "independent," as defined by Item 3 of Form N-CSR. ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES. (a) AUDIT FEES (REGISTRANT) -- The aggregate fees billed for each of the last two fiscal years for professional services rendered by the principal accountant for the audit of the registrant's annual financial statements or services that are normally provided by the accountant in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements for such fiscal years were $23,500 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $17,975 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. (b) AUDIT-RELATED FEES (REGISTRANT) -- The aggregate fees billed in the Fund's last two fiscal years for assurance and related services by the principal accountant that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit of the registrant's financial statements and are not reported under paragraph (a) of this Item were $0 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $0 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. AUDIT-RELATED FEES (INVESTMENT ADVISER) -- The aggregate fees billed in the last two fiscal years (of the Registrant) for assurance and related services by the principal accountant that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit of the adviser's registration statements and are not reported under paragraph (a) of this Item were $20,400 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $20,000 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. These fees were for AIMR-PPS verification services. (c) TAX FEES (REGISTRANT) -- The aggregate fees billed in the last two fiscal years for professional services rendered by the principal accountant for tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning to the registrant were $0 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $3,500 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. These fees were for review and signing of tax returns. TAX FEES (INVESTMENT ADVISER) -- The aggregate fees billed in the last two fiscal years (of the Registrant) for professional services rendered by the principal accountant for tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning to the Fund's adviser were $6,000 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $6,000 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. These fees were for tax return preparation. (d) ALL OTHER FEES (REGISTRANT) -- The aggregate fees billed in the last two fiscal years for products and services provided by the principal accountant to the registrant, other than the services reported in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this Item were $0 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $0 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. ALL OTHER FEES (INVESTMENT ADVISER) -- The aggregate fees billed in the last two fiscal years (of the Registrant) for products and services provided by the principal accountant to the registrant's investment adviser, other than services reported in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this Item were $0 from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $35,000 for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. These fees were for tax services in connection with the development of a new fund. (e)(1) Disclose the audit committee's pre-approval policies and procedures described in paragraph (c)(7) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X. Pursuant to its charter, the Audit Committee (the "COMMITTEE") is responsible for the pre-approval of all audit services and permitted non-audit services (including the fees and terms thereof) to be performed for the Fund by its independent auditors. The Chairman of the Committee is authorized to give such pre-approvals on behalf of the Committee and shall report any such pre-approval to the full Committee. The Committee is also responsible for the approval of the independent auditor's engagements for non-audit services with the Fund's management (not including a sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is sub-contracted or overseen by another investment adviser) and any entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the investment adviser that provides ongoing services to the Fund, if the engagement relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund, subject to the DE MINIMIS exceptions for non-audit services described in Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X. If the independent auditor has provided non-audit services to the Fund's management (other than any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is sub-contracted with or overseen by another investment adviser) and any entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the investment adviser that provides ongoing services to the Fund that were not pre-approved pursuant to the DE MINIMIS exception, the Committee will consider whether the provision of such non-audit services is compatible with the auditor's independence. (e)(2) The percentage of services described in each of paragraphs (b) through (d) for the registrant and the registrant's investment adviser of this Item that were approved by the audit committee pursuant to the pre-approval exceptions included in paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) or paragraph (c)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X are as follows: (b) 0%. (c) 0%. (d) 0%. (f) The percentage of hours expended on the principal accountant's engagement to audit the registrant's financial statements for the most recent fiscal year that were attributed to work performed by persons other than the principal accountant's full-time, permanent employees was less than fifty percent. (g) The aggregate non-audit fees billed by the registrant's accountant for services rendered to the registrant, and rendered to the registrant's investment adviser (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser), and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant for the last two fiscal years of the registrant were $0 for the registrant and $26,400 for the registrant's investment adviser from inception on August 26, 2003 to May 31, 2004 and $3,500 for the registrant and $61,000 for the registrant's investment adviser for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005. (h) Not applicable. The audit committee pre-approved all non-audit services rendered to the Registrant's investment adviser and any entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant. ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS. (a) The registrant has a separately designated audit committee consisting of all the independent directors of the registrant. The members of the audit committee are: Thomas R. Kadlec, Niel B. Nielson, David M. Oster and Richard E. Erickson. ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS. Schedule of Investments in securities of unaffiliated issuers as of the close of the reporting period is included as part of the report to shareholders filed under Item 1 of this form. ITEM 7. DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES. The Proxy Voting Policies are attached herewith. FIRST TRUST ADVISORS, L.P. FIRST TRUST FUNDS PROXY VOTING GUIDELINES First Trust Advisors, L.P. (the "ADVISER") serves as investment adviser providing discretionary investment advisory services for several open or closed-end investment companies (the "FUNDS"). As part of these services, the Adviser has full responsibility for proxy voting and related duties. In fulfilling these duties, the Adviser and Funds have adopted the following policies and procedures: 1. It is the Adviser's policy to seek to ensure that proxies for securities held by a Fund are voted consistently and solely in the best economic interests of the respective Fund. 2. The Adviser shall be responsible for the oversight of a Fund's proxy voting process and shall assign a senior member of its staff to be responsible for this oversight. 3. The Adviser has engaged the services of Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. ("ISS") to make recommendations to the Adviser on the voting of proxies related to securities held by a Fund. ISS provides voting recommendations based on established guidelines and practices. The Adviser has adopted these ISS Proxy Voting Guidelines. 4. The Adviser shall review the ISS recommendations and generally will vote the proxies in accordance with such recommendations. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Adviser may not vote in accordance with the ISS recommendations if the Adviser believes that the specific ISS recommendation is not in the best interests of the respective Fund. 5. If the Adviser manages the assets or pension fund of a company and any of the Adviser's clients hold any securities in that company, the Adviser will vote proxies relating to such company's securities in accordance with the ISS recommendations to avoid any conflict of interest. In addition, if the Adviser has actual knowledge of any other type of material conflict of interest between itself and the respective Fund with respect to the voting of a proxy, the Adviser shall vote the applicable proxy in accordance with the ISS recommendations to avoid such conflict of interest. 6. If a Fund requests the Adviser to follow specific voting guidelines or additional guidelines, the Adviser shall review the request and follow such guidelines, unless the Adviser determines that it is unable to follow such guidelines. In such case, the Adviser shall inform the Fund that it is not able to follow the Fund's request. 7. The Adviser may have clients in addition to the Funds which have provided the Adviser with discretionary authority to vote proxies on their behalf. In such cases, the Adviser shall follow the same policies and procedures. Dated: September 15, 2003 EXHIBIT B ISS 2005 PROXY VOTING GUIDELINES SUMMARY The following is a condensed version of all proxy voting recommendations contained in the ISS Proxy Voting Manual. 1. OPERATIONAL ITEMS ADJOURN MEETING Generally vote AGAINST proposals to provide management with the authority to adjourn an annual or special meeting absent compelling reasons to support the proposal. Vote FOR proposals that relate specifically to soliciting votes for a merger or transaction for which ISS has recommended a FOR vote. Vote AGAINST proposals if the wording is too vague or if the proposal includes "other business." AMEND QUORUM REQUIREMENTS Vote AGAINST proposals to reduce quorum requirements for shareholder meetings below a majority of the shares outstanding unless there are compelling reasons to support the proposal. AMEND MINOR BYLAWS Vote FOR bylaw or charter changes that are of a housekeeping nature (updates or corrections). CHANGE COMPANY NAME Vote FOR proposals to change the corporate name. CHANGE DATE, TIME, OR LOCATION OF ANNUAL MEETING Vote FOR management proposals to change the date/time/location of the annual meeting unless the proposed change is unreasonable. Vote AGAINST shareholder proposals to change the date/time/location of the annual meeting unless the current scheduling or location is unreasonable. RATIFYING AUDITORS Vote FOR proposals to ratify auditors, unless any of the following apply: o An auditor has a financial interest in or association with the company, and is therefore not independent o Fees for non-audit services are excessive, or o There is reason to believe that the independent auditor has rendered an opinion which is neither accurate nor indicative of the company's financial position. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on shareholder proposals asking companies to prohibit or limit their auditors from engaging in non-audit services. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on shareholder proposals asking for audit firm rotation, taking into account the tenure of the audit firm, the length of rotation specified in the proposal, any significant audit-related issues at the company, the number of Audit Committee meetings held each year, the number of financial experts serving on the committee, and whether the company has a periodic renewal process where the auditor is evaluated for both audit quality and competitive price. TRANSACT OTHER BUSINESS Vote AGAINST proposals to approve other business when it appears as voting item. VOTING ON DIRECTOR NOMINEES IN UNCONTESTED ELECTIONS Votes on director nominees should be made on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, examining the following factors: composition of the board and key board committees, attendance at board meetings, corporate governance provisions and takeover activity, long-term company performance relative to a market index, directors' investment in the company, whether the chairman is also serving as CEO, and whether a retired CEO sits on the board. However, there are some actions by directors that should result in votes being withheld. These instances include directors who: o Attend less than 75 percent of the board and committee meetings without a valid excuse o Implement or renew a dead-hand or modified dead-hand poison pill o Adopt a poison pill without shareholder approval since the company's last annual meeting and there is no requirement to put the pill to shareholder vote within 12 months of its adoption o Ignore a shareholder proposal that is approved by a majority of the shares outstanding o Ignore a shareholder proposal that is approved by a majority of the votes cast for two consecutive years o Failed to act on takeover offers where the majority of the shareholders tendered their shares o Are inside directors or affiliated outsiders and sit on the audit, compensation, or nominating committees o Are inside directors or affiliated outsiders and the full board serves as the audit, compensation, or nominating committee or the company does not have one of these committees o Are audit committee members and the non -audit fees paid to the auditor are excessive. In addition, directors who enacted egregious corporate governance policies or failed to replace management as appropriate would be subject to recommendations to withhold votes. o Are inside directors or affiliated outside directors and the full board is less than majority independent o Sit on more than six public company boards, or on more than two public boards in addition to their own if they are CEOs of public companies. o Are on the compensation committee when there is a negative correlation between chief executive pay and company performance o Have failed to address the issue(s) that resulted in any of the directors receiving more than 50% withhold votes out of those cast at the previous board election AGE LIMITS Vote AGAINST shareholder or management proposals to limit the tenure of outside directors either through term limits or mandatory retirement ages. BOARD SIZE Vote FOR proposals seeking to fix the board size or designate a range for the board size. Vote AGAINST proposals that give management the ability to alter the size of the board outside of a specified range without shareholder approval. CLASSIFICATION/DECLASSIFICATION OF THE BOARD Vote AGAINST proposals to classify the board. Vote FOR proposals to repeal classified boards and to elect all directors annually. CUMULATIVE VOTING Vote AGAINST proposals to eliminate cumulative voting. Vote proposals to restore or permit cumulative voting on a CASE-BY-CASE basis based on the extent that shareholders have access to the board through their own nominations. DIRECTOR AND OFFICER INDEMNIFICATION AND LIABILITY PROTECTION Proposals on director and officer indemnification and liability protection should be evaluated on a CASE-BYCASE basis, using Delaware law as the standard. Vote AGAINST proposals to eliminate entirely directors' and officers' liability for monetary damages for violating the duty of care. Vote AGAINST indemnification proposals that would expand coverage beyond just legal expenses to acts, such as negligence, that are more serious violations of fiduciary obligation than mere carelessness. Vote FOR only those proposals providing such expanded coverage in cases when a director's or officer's legal defense was unsuccessful if both of the following apply: o The director was found to have acted in good faith and in a manner that he reasonably believed was in the best interests of the company, and o Only if the director's legal expenses would be covered. ESTABLISH/AMEND NOMINEE QUALIFICATIONS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals that establish or amend director qualifications. Votes should be based on how reasonable the criteria are and to what degree they may preclude dissident nominees from joining the board. Vote AGAINST shareholder proposals requiring two candidates per board seat. FILLING VACANCIES/REMOVAL OF DIRECTORS Vote AGAINST proposals that provide that directors may be removed only for cause. Vote FOR proposals to restore shareholder ability to remove directors with or without cause. Vote AGAINST proposals that provide that only continuing directors may elect replacements to fill board vacancies. Vote FOR proposals that permit shareholders to elect directors to fill board vacancies. INDEPENDENT CHAIRMAN (SEPARATE CHAIRMAN/CEO) Generally vote FOR shareholder proposals requiring the position of chairman be filled by an independent director unless there are compelling reasons to recommend against the proposal, such as a counterbalancing governance structure. This should include all of the following: o Designated lead director, elected by and from the independent board members with clearly delineated and comprehensive duties. (The role may alternatively reside with a presiding director, vice chairman, or rotating lead director). o Two-thirds independent board o All-independent key committees o Established governance guidelines Additionally, the company should not have under-performed its peers. MAJORITY OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/ESTABLISHMENT OF COMMITTEES Vote FOR shareholder proposals asking that a majority or more of directors be independent unless the board composition already meets the proposed threshold by ISS's definition of independence. Vote FOR shareholder proposals asking that board audit, compensation, and/or nominating committees be composed exclusively of independent directors if they currently do not meet that standard. OPEN ACCESS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on shareholder proposals asking for open access taking into account the ownership threshold specified in the proposal and the proponent's rationale for targeting the company in terms of board and director conduct. STOCK OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENTS Generally vote AGAINST shareholder proposals that mandate a minimum amount of stock that directors must own in order to qualify as a director or to remain on the board. While ISS favors stock ownership on the part of directors, the company should determine the appropriate ownership requirement. Vote CASE-BY-CASE shareholder proposals asking that the company adopt a holding or retention period for its executives (for holding stock after the vesting or exercise of equity awards), taking into account any stock ownership requirements or holding period/retention ratio already in place and the actual ownership level of executives. TERM LIMITS Vote AGAINST shareholder or management proposals to limit the tenure of outside directors either through term limits or mandatory retirement ages. 3. PROXY CONTESTS VOTING FOR DIRECTOR NOMINEES IN CONTESTED ELECTIONS Votes in a contested election of directors must be evaluated on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: o Long-term financial performance of the target company relative to its industry; management's track record o Background to the proxy contest o Qualifications of director nominees (both slates) o Evaluation of what each side is offering shareholders as well as the likelihood that the proposed objectives and goals can be met; and stock ownership positions. REIMBURSING PROXY SOLICITATION EXPENSES Voting to reimburse proxy solicitation expenses should be analyzed on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. In cases where ISS recommends in favor of the dissidents, we also recommend voting for reimbursing proxy solicitation expenses. CONFIDENTIAL VOTING Vote FOR shareholder proposals requesting that corporations adopt confidential voting, use independent vote tabulators and use independent inspectors of election, as long as the proposal includes a provision for proxy contests as follows: In the case of a contested election, management should be permitted to request that the dissident group honor its confidential voting policy. If the dissidents agree, the policy remains in place. If the dissidents will not agree, the confidential voting policy is waived. Vote FOR management proposals to adopt confidential voting. 4. ANTITAKEOVER DEFENSES AND VOTING RELATED ISSUES Advance Notice Requirements for Shareholder Proposals/Nominations Votes on advance notice proposals are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, giving support to those proposals which allow shareholders to submit proposals as close to the meeting date as reasonably possible and within the broadest window possible. AMEND BYLAWS WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER CONSENT Vote AGAINST proposals giving the board exclusive authority to amend the bylaws. Vote FOR proposals giving the board the ability to amend the bylaws in addition to shareholders. POISON PILLS Vote FOR shareholder proposals requesting that the company submit its poison pill to a shareholder vote or redeem it. Vote FOR shareholder proposals asking that any future pill be put to a shareholder vote. SHAREHOLDER ABILITY TO ACT BY WRITTEN CONSENT Vote AGAINST proposals to restrict or prohibit shareholder ability to take action by written consent. Vote FOR proposals to allow or make easier shareholder action by written consent. SHAREHOLDER ABILITY TO CALL SPECIAL MEETINGS Vote AGAINST proposals to restrict or prohibit shareholder ability to call special meetings. Vote FOR proposals that remove restrictions on the right of shareholders to act independently of management. SUPERMAJORITY VOTE REQUIREMENTS Vote AGAINST proposals to require a supermajority shareholder vote. Vote FOR proposals to lower supermajority vote requirements. 5. MERGERS AND CORPORATE RESTRUCTURINGS APPRAISAL RIGHTS Vote FOR proposals to restore, or provide shareholders with, rights of appraisal. ASSET PURCHASES Vote CASE-BY-CASE on asset purchase proposals, considering the following factors: o Purchase price o Fairness opinion o Financial and strategic benefits o How the deal was negotiated o Conflicts of interest o Other alternatives for the business o Noncompletion risk. ASSET SALES Votes on asset sales should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: o Impact on the balance sheet/working capital o Potential elimination of diseconomies o Anticipated financial and operating benefits o Anticipated use of funds o Value received for the asset o Fairness opinion o How the deal was negotiated o Conflicts of interest. BUNDLED PROPOSALS Review on a CASE-BY-CASE basis bundled or "conditioned" proxy proposals. In the case of items that are conditioned upon each other, examine the benefits and costs of the packaged items. In instances when the joint effect of the conditioned items is not in shareholders' best interests, vote against the proposals. If the combined effect is positive, support such proposals. CONVERSION OF SECURITIES Votes on proposals regarding conversion of securities are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. When evaluating these proposals the investor should review the dilution to existing shareholders, the conversion price relative to market value, financial issues, control issues, termination penalties, and conflicts of interest. Vote FOR the conversion if it is expected that the company will be subject to onerous penalties or will be forced to file for bankruptcy if the transaction is not approved. CORPORATE REORGANIZATION/DEBT RESTRUCTURING/PREPACKAGED BANKRUPTCY PLANS/REVERSE LEVERAGED BUYOUTS/WRAP PLANS Votes on proposals to increase common and/or preferred shares and to issue shares as part of a debt restructuring plan are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, taking into consideration the following: o Dilution to existing shareholders' position o Terms of the offer o Financial issues o Management's efforts to pursue other alternatives o Control issues o Conflicts of interest. Vote FOR the debt restructuring if it is expected that the company will file for bankruptcy if the transaction is not approved. FORMATION OF HOLDING COMPANY Votes on proposals regarding the formation of a holding company should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, taking into consideration the following: o The reasons for the change o Any financial or tax benefits o Regulatory benefits o Increases in capital structure o Changes to the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the company. o Absent compelling financial reasons to recommend the transaction, vote AGAINST the formation of a holding company if the transaction would include either of the following: o Increases in common or preferred stock in excess of the allowable maximum as calculated by the ISS Capital Structure model o Adverse changes in shareholder rights GOING PRIVATE TRANSACTIONS (LBOS AND MINORITY SQUEEZEOUTS) Vote going private transactions on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, taking into account the following: offer price/premium, fairness opinion, how the deal was negotiated, conflicts of interest, other alternatives/offers considered, and noncompletion risk. JOINT VENTURES Votes CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to form joint ventures, taking into account the following: percentage of assets/business contributed, percentage ownership, financial and strategic benefits, governance structure, conflicts of interest, other alternatives, and noncompletion risk. LIQUIDATIONS Votes on liquidations should be made on a CASE-BY-CASE basis after reviewing management's efforts to pursue other alternatives, appraisal value of assets, and the compensation plan for executives managing the liquidation. Vote FOR the liquidation if the company will file for bankruptcy if the proposal is not approved. MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS/ ISSUANCE OF SHARES TO FACILITATE MERGER OR ACQUISITION Votes on mergers and acquisitions should be considered on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, determining whether the transaction enhances shareholder value by giving consideration to the following: o Prospects of the combined company, anticipated financial and operating benefits o Offer price o Fairness opinion o How the deal was negotiated o Changes in corporate governance o Change in the capital structure o Conflicts of interest. PRIVATE PLACEMENTS/WARRANTS/CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES Votes on proposals regarding private placements should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. When evaluating these proposals the investor should review: dilution to existing shareholders' position, terms of the offer, financial issues, management's efforts to pursue other alternatives, control issues, and conflicts of interest. Vote FOR the private placement if it is expected that the company will file for bankruptcy if the transaction is not approved. SPINOFFS Votes on spinoffs should be considered on a CASE-BY-CASE basis depending on: o Tax and regulatory advantages o Planned use of the sale proceeds o Valuation of spinoff o Fairness opinion o Benefits to the parent company o Conflicts of interest o Managerial incentives o Corporate governance changes o Changes in the capital structure. VALUE MAXIMIZATION PROPOSALS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on shareholder proposals seeking to maximize shareholder value by hiring a financial advisor to explore strategic alternatives, selling the company or liquidating the company and distributing the proceeds to shareholders. These proposals should be evaluated based on the following factors: prolonged poor performance with no turnaround in sight, signs of entrenched board and management, strategic plan in place for improving value, likelihood of receiving reasonable value in a sale or dissolution, and whether company is actively exploring its strategic options, including retaining a financial advisor. 6. STATE OF INCORPORATION CONTROL SHARE ACQUISITION PROVISIONS Vote FOR proposals to opt out of control share acquisition statutes unless doing so would enable the completion of a takeover that would be detrimental to shareholders. Vote AGAINST proposals to amend the charter to include control share acquisition provisions. Vote FOR proposals to restore voting rights to the control shares. CONTROL SHARE CASHOUT PROVISIONS Vote FOR proposals to opt out of control share cashout statutes. DISGORGEMENT PROVISIONS Vote FOR proposals to opt out of state disgorgement provisions. FAIR PRICE PROVISIONS Vote proposals to adopt fair price provisions on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, evaluating factors such as the vote required to approve the proposed acquisition, the vote required to repeal the fair price provision, and the mechanism for determining the fair price. Generally, vote AGAINST fair price provisions with shareholder vote requirements greater than a majority of disinterested shares. FREEZEOUT PROVISIONS Vote FOR proposals to opt out of state freezeout provisions. GREENMAIL Vote FOR proposals to adopt antigreenmail charter of bylaw amendments or otherwise restrict a company's ability to make greenmail payments. Review on a CASE-BY-CASE basis antigreenmail proposals when they are bundled with other charter or bylaw amendments. REINCORPORATION PROPOSALS Proposals to change a company's state of incorporation should be evaluated on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, giving consideration to both financial and corporate governance concerns, including the reasons for reincorporating, a comparison of the governance provisions, and a comparison of the jurisdictional laws. Vote FOR reincorporation when the economic factors outweigh any neutral or negative governance changes. STAKEHOLDER PROVISIONS Vote AGAINST proposals that ask the board to consider nonshareholder constituencies or other nonfinancial effects when evaluating a merger or business combination. STATE ANTITAKEOVER STATUTES Review on a CASE-BY-CASE basis proposals to opt in or out of state takeover statutes (including control share acquisition statutes, control share cash-out statutes, freezeout provisions, fair price provisions, stakeholder laws, poison pill endorsements, severance pay and labor contract provisions, antigreenmail provisions, and disgorgement provisions). 7. CAPITAL STRUCTURE ADJUSTMENTS TO PAR VALUE OF COMMON STOCK Vote FOR management proposals to reduce the par value of common stock. COMMON STOCK AUTHORIZATION Votes on proposals to increase the number of shares of common stock authorized for issuance are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis using a model developed by ISS. Vote AGAINST proposals at companies with dual-class capital structures to increase the number of authorized shares of the class of stock that has superior voting rights. Vote FOR proposals to approve increases beyond the allowable increase when a company's shares are in danger of being delisted or if a company's ability to continue to operate as a going concern is uncertain. DUAL-CLASS STOCK Vote AGAINST proposals to create a new class of common stock with superior voting rights. Vote FOR proposals to create a new class of nonvoting or subvoting common stock if: o It is intended for financing purposes with minimal or no dilution to current shareholders o It is not designed to preserve the voting power of an insider or significant shareholder ISSUE STOCK FOR USE WITH RIGHTS PLAN Vote AGAINST proposals that increase authorized common stock for the explicit purpose of implementing a shareholder rights plan (poison pill). PREEMPTIVE RIGHTS Review on a CASE-BY-CASE basis shareholder proposals that seek preemptive rights. In evaluating proposals on preemptive rights, consider the size of a company, the characteristics of its shareholder base, and the liquidity of the stock. PREFERRED STOCK Vote AGAINST proposals authorizing the creation of new classes of preferred stock with unspecified voting, conversion, dividend distribution, and other rights ("blank check" preferred stock). Vote FOR proposals to create "declawed" blank check preferred stock (stock that cannot be used as a takeover defense). Vote FOR proposals to authorize preferred stock in cases where the company specifies the voting, dividend, conversion, and other rights of such stock and the terms of the preferred stock appear reasonable. Vote AGAINST proposals to increase the number of blank check preferred stock authorized for issuance when no shares have been issued or reserved for a specific purpose. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to increase the number of blank check preferred shares after analyzing the number of preferred shares available for issue given a company's industry and performance in terms of shareholder returns. RECAPITALIZATION Votes CASE-BY-CASE on recapitalizations (reclassifications of securities), taking into account the following: more simplified capital structure, enhanced liquidity, fairness of conversion terms, impact on voting power and dividends, reasons for the reclassification, conflicts of interest, and other alternatives considered. REVERSE STOCK SPLITS Vote FOR management proposals to implement a reverse stock split when the number of authorized shares will be proportionately reduced. Vote FOR management proposals to implement a reverse stock split to avoid delisting. Votes on proposals to implement a reverse stock split that do not proportionately reduce the number of shares authorized for issue should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis using a model developed by ISS. SHARE REPURCHASE PROGRAMS Vote FOR management proposals to institute open-market share repurchase plans in which all shareholders may participate on equal terms. STOCK DISTRIBUTIONS: SPLITS AND DIVIDENDS Vote FOR management proposals to increase the common share authorization for a stock split or share dividend, provided that the increase in authorized shares would not result in an excessive number of shares available for issuance as determined using a model developed by ISS. TRACKING STOCK Votes on the creation of tracking stock are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, weighing the strategic value of the transaction against such factors as: adverse governance changes, excessive increases in authorized capital stock, unfair method of distribution, diminution of voting rights, adverse conversion features, negative impact on stock option plans, and other alternatives such as spinoff. 8. EXECUTIVE AND DIRECTOR COMPENSATION Votes with respect to equity-based compensation plans should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. Our methodology for reviewing compensation plans primarily focuses on the transfer of shareholder wealth (the dollar cost of pay plans to shareholders instead of simply focusing on voting power dilution). Using the expanded compensation data disclosed under the SEC's rules, ISS will value every award type. ISS will include in its analyses an estimated dollar cost for the proposed plan and all continuing plans. This cost, dilution to shareholders' equity, will also be expressed as a percentage figure for the transfer of shareholder wealth, and will be considered along with dilution to voting power. Once ISS determines the estimated cost of the plan, we compare it to a company-specific dilution cap. Our model determines a company-specific allowable pool of shareholder wealth that may be transferred from the company to plan participants, adjusted for: o Long-term corporate performance (on an absolute basis and relative to a standard industry peer group and an appropriate market index), o Cash compensation, and o Categorization of the company as emerging, growth, or mature. These adjustments are pegged to market capitalization. Vote AGAINST plans that expressly permit the repricing of underwater stock options without shareholder approval. Generally vote AGAINST plans in which (1) there is a disconnect between the CEO's pay and company performance (an increase in pay and a decrease in performance) and the main source of the pay increase (over half) is equity-based and (2) the CEO is the participant of the equity proposal. A decrease in performance is based on negative one- and three-year total shareholder returns. An increase in pay is based on the CEO's total direct compensation (salary, cash bonus, present value of stock options, face value of restricted stock, face value of long-term incentive plan payouts, and all other compensation) increasing over the previous year. Also may WITHHOLD votes from the Compensation Committee members. Generally vote AGAINST plans if the company's most recent three-year burn rate exceeds one standard deviation in excess of the industry mean and is over two percent of common shares outstanding. See Table 1 for details. TABLE 1 : PROXY SEASON 2005 BURN RATE THRESHOLDS RUSSELL 3000 NON-RUSSELL 3000 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Standard Mean + Std Standard Mean + Std GICS GICS Dsec Mean Deviation Dev Mean Deviation Dev ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1010 Energy 1.60% 1.02% 2.61% 2.59% 2.19% 4.78% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1510 Materials 1.55% 0.81% 2.36% 2.54% 1.92% 4.46% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2010 Capital Goods 1.86% 1.19% 3.05% 3.23% 2.93% 6.17% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2020 Commercial Services & Supplies 2.87% 1.53% 4.40% 4.39% 3.68% 8.07% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2030 Transportation 2.10% 1.50% 3.60% 2.44% 2.22% 4.66% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2510 Automobiles & Components 2.10% 1.37% 3.48% 2.90% 2.28% 5.18% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2520 Consumer Durables & Apparel 2.40% 1.51% 3.90% 3.42% 2.79% 6.21% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2530 Hotels Restaurants & Leisure 2.39% 1.08% 3.48% 3.30% 2.87% 6.17% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2540 Media 2.34% 1.50% 3.84% 4.12% 2.89% 7.01% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2550 Retailing 2.89% 1.95% 4.84% 4.26% 3.50% 7.75% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3010 to 3030 Food & Staples Retailing 1.98% 1.50% 3.48% 3.37% 3.32% 6.68% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3510 Health Care Equipment & Services 3.24% 1.96% 5.20% 4.55% 3.24% 7.79% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3520 Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology 3.60% 1.72% 5.32% 5.77% 4.15% 9.92% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4010 Banks 1.44% 1.17% 2.61% 1.65% 1.60% 3.25% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4020 Diversified Financials 3.12% 2.54% 5.66% 5.03% 3.53% 8.55% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4030 Insurance 1.45% 0.88% 2.32% 2.47% 1.77% 4.24% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4040 Real Estate 1.01% 0.89% 1.90% 1.51% 1.50% 3.01% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4510 Software & Services 5.44% 3.05% 8.49% 8.08% 6.01% 14.10% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4520 Technology Hardware & Equipment 4.00% 2.69% 6.68% 5.87% 4.25% 10.12% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4530 Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipmen 5.12% 2.86% 7.97% 6.79% 3.95% 10.74% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5010 Telecommunication Services 2.56% 2.39% 4.95% 4.66% 3.90% 8.56% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5510 Utilities 0.90% 0.65% 1.55% 3.74% 4.63% 8.38% ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ A company with high three-year average burn rates may avoid triggering the burn rate policy by committing to the industry average over the next years. However, the above general voting guidelines for pay for performance may change if the compensation committee members can demonstrate that they have improved committee performance based on additional public filing such as an DEFA 14A or 8K. The additional filing needs to present strong and compelling evidence of improved performance with new information that has not been disclosed in the original proxy statement. The reiteration of the compensation committee report will not be sufficient evidence of improved committee performance. Evidence of improved compensation committee performance includes all of the following: o The compensation committee has reviewed all components of the CEO's compensation, including the following: - Base salary, bonus, long-term incentives - Accumulative realized and unrealized stock option and restricted stock gains - Dollar value of perquisites and other personal benefits to the CEO and the cost to the company - Earnings and accumulated payment obligations under the company's nonqualified deferred compensation program - Actual projected payment obligations under the company's supplemental executive retirement plan (SERPs) A tally sheet setting forth all the above components was prepared and reviewed affixing dollar amounts under the various payout scenarios. o A tally sheet with all the above components should be disclosed for the following termination scenarios: - Payment if termination occurs within 12 months: $_____ - Payment if "not for cause" termination occurs within 12 months: $_____ - Payment if "change of control" termination occurs within 12 months: $_____ o The compensation committee is committed to provide additional information on the named executives' annual cash bonus program and/or long-term incentive cash plan for the current fiscal year. The compensation committee will provide full disclosure of the qualitative and quantitative performance criteria and hurdle rates used to determine the payouts of the cash program. From this disclosure, shareholders will know the minimum level of performance required for any cash bonus to be delivered as well as the maximum cash bonus payable for superior performance. The repetition of the compensation committee report does not meet ISS' requirement of compelling and strong evidence of improved disclosure. The level of transparency and disclosure is at the highest level where shareholders can understand the mechanics of the annual cash bonus and/or long-term incentive cash plan based on the additional disclosure. o The compensation committee is committed to grant a substantial portion of performance-based equity awards to the named executive officers. A substantial portion of performance-based awards would be at least 50 percent of the shares awarded to each of the named executive officers. Performance-based equity awards are earned or paid out based on the achievement of company performance targets. The company will disclose the details of the performance criteria (e.g., return on equity) and the hurdle rates (e.g., 15 percent) associated with the performance targets. From this disclosure, shareholders will know the minimum level of performance required for any equity grants to be made. The performance-based equity awards do not refer to non-qualified stock options(1) or performance-accelerated grants(2). Instead, performance-based equity awards are performancecontingent grants where the individual will not receive the equity grant by not meeting the target performance and vice versa. The level of transparency and disclosure is at the highest level where shareholders can understand the mechanics of the performance-based equity awards based on the additional disclosure. o The compensation committee has the sole authority to hire and fire outside compensation consultants. The role of the outside compensation consultant is to assist the compensation committee to analyze executive pay packages or contracts and understand the company's financial measures. BASED ON THE ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURE OF IMPROVED PERFORMANCE OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE, ISS WILL GENERALLY VOTE FOR THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE MEMBERS UP FOR ANNUAL ELECTION AND VOTE FOR THE EMPLOYEE-BASED STOCK PLAN IF THERE IS ONE ON THE BALLOT. HOWEVER, ISS IS NOT LIKELY TO VOTE FOR THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE MEMBERS AND/OR THE EMPLOYEE-BASED STOCK PLAN IF ISS BELIEVES THE COMPANY HAS NOT PROVIDED COMPELLING AND SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE OF TRANSPARENT ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURE OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION BASED ON THE ABOVE REQUIREMENTS. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION Votes on compensation plans for directors are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, using a proprietary, quantitative model developed by ISS. On occasion, director stock plans that set aside a relatively small of shares when combined with employee or executive stock compensation plans exceed the allowable cap. In such cases, starting proxy season 2005, ISS will supplement the analytical approach with a qualitative review of board compensation for companies, taking into consideration: o Director stock ownership guidelines - A minimum of three times the annual cash retainer. o Vesting schedule or mandatory holding/deferral period - A minimum vesting of three years for stock options or restricted stock, or - Deferred stock payable at the end of a three-year deferral period. o Mix between cash and equity - A balanced mix of cash and equity, for example 40% cash/60% equity or 50% cash/50% equity. - If the mix is heavier on the equity component, the vesting schedule or deferral period should be more stringent, with the lesser of five years or the term of directorship. ---------- (1) Non-qualified stock options are not performance-based awards unless the grant or the vesting of the stock options is tied to the achievement of a pre-determined and disclosed performance measure. A rising stock market will generally increase share prices of all companies, despite of the company's underlying performance. (2) Performance-accelerated grants are awards that vest earlier based on the achievement of a specified measure. However, these grants will ultimately vest over time even without the attainment of the goal(s). o Retirement/Benefit and Perquisites programs - No retirement/benefits and perquisites provided to non-employee directors. o Quality of disclosure - Provide detailed disclosure on cash and equity compensation delivered to each non-employee director for the most recent fiscal year in a table. The column headers for the table may include the following: name of each non-employee director, annual retainer, board meeting fees, committee retainer, committee-meeting fees, and equity grants. For ISS to recommend a vote FOR director equity plans based on the above qualitative features, a company needs to demonstrate that it meets all the above qualitative features in its proxy statement. STOCK PLANS IN LIEU OF CASH Votes for plans which provide participants with the option of taking all or a portion of their cash compensation in the form of stock are determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. Vote FOR plans which provide a dollar-for-dollar cash for stock exchange. Votes for plans which do not provide a dollar-for-dollar cash for stock exchange should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis using a proprietary, quantitative model developed by ISS. In cases where the exchange is not dollar-for-dollar, the request for new or additional shares for such equity program will be considered in the quantitative model. However, the cost would be lower than full-value awards since part of the deferral compensation is in-lieu-of cash compensation. DIRECTOR RETIREMENT PLANS Vote AGAINST retirement plans for nonemployee directors. Vote FOR shareholder proposals to eliminate retirement plans for nonemployee directors. MANAGEMENT PROPOSALS SEEKING APPROVAL TO REPRICE OPTIONS Votes on management proposals seeking approval to reprice options are evaluated on a CASE-BY-CASE basis giving consideration to the following: o Historic trading patterns o Rationale for the repricing o Value-for-value exchange o Treatment of surrendered options o Option vesting o Term of the option o Exercise price o Participation. QUALIFIED EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLANS Votes on qualified employee stock purchase plans should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. Vote FOR employee stock purchase plans where all of the following apply: o Purchase price is at least 85 percent of fair market value o Offering period is 27 months or less, and o The number of shares allocated to the plan is ten percent or less of the outstanding shares Vote AGAINST qualified employee stock purchase plans where any of the following apply: o Purchase price is less than 85 percent of fair market value, or o Offering period is greater than 27 months, or o The number of shares allocated to the plan is more than ten percent of the outstanding shares NONQUALIFIED EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLANS Votes on nonqualified employee stock purchase plans should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. Vote FOR nonqualified employee stock purchase plans with all the following features: o Broad-based participation (i.e., all employees of the company with the exclusion of individuals with 5 percent or more of beneficial ownership of the company). o Limits on employee contribution, which may be a fixed dollar amount or expressed as a percent of base salary. o Company matching contribution up to 25 percent of employee's contribution, which is effectively a discount of 20 percent from market value. o No discount on the stock price on the date of purchase since there is a company matching contribution. Vote AGAINST nonqualified employee stock purchase plans when any of the plan features do not meet the above criteria. INCENTIVE BONUS PLANS AND TAX DEDUCTIBILITY PROPOSALS (OBRA-RELATED COMPENSATION PROPOSALS) Vote FOR proposals that simply amend shareholder-approved compensation plans to include administrative features or place a cap on the annual grants any one participant may receive to comply with the provisions of Section 162(m). Vote FOR proposals to add performance goals to existing compensation plans to comply with the provisions of Section 162(m) unless they are clearly inappropriate. Votes to amend existing plans to increase shares reserved and to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the provisions of Section 162(m) should be considered on a CASE-BY-CASE basis using a proprietary, quantitative model developed by ISS. Generally vote FOR cash or cash and stock bonus plans that are submitted to shareholders for the purpose of exempting compensation from taxes under the provisions of Section 162(m) if no increase in shares is requested. EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLANS (ESOPS) Vote FOR proposals to implement an ESOP or increase authorized shares for existing ESOPs, unless the number of shares allocated to the ESOP is excessive (more than five percent of outstanding shares.) 401(K) EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS Vote FOR proposals to implement a 401(k) savings plan for employees. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS REGARDING EXECUTIVE AND DIRECTOR PAY Generally, vote FOR shareholder proposals seeking additional disclosure of executive and director pay information, provided the information requested is relevant to shareholders' needs, would not put the company at a competitive disadvantage relative to its industry, and is not unduly burdensome to the company. Vote AGAINST shareholder proposals seeking to set absolute levels on compensation or otherwise dictate the amount or form of compensation. Vote AGAINST shareholder proposals requiring director fees be paid in stock only. Vote FOR shareholder proposals to put option repricings to a shareholder vote. Vote on a CASE-BY-CASE basis for all other shareholder proposals regarding executive and director pay, taking into account company performance, pay level versus peers, pay level versus industry, and long term corporate outlook. OPTION EXPENSING Generally vote FOR shareholder proposals asking the company to expense stock options, unless the company has already publicly committed to expensing options by a specific date. PERFORMANCE-BASED AWARDS Generally vote FOR shareholder proposals advocating the use of performance-based awards like indexed, premium-priced, and performance-vested options or performance-based shares, unless: o The proposal is overly restrictive (e.g., it mandates that awards to all employees must be performance-based or all awards to top executives must be a particular type, such as indexed options) o The company demonstrates that it is using a substantial portion of performance-based awards for its top executives GOLDEN PARACHUTES AND EXECUTIVE SEVERANCE AGREEMENTS Vote FOR shareholder proposals to require golden parachutes or executive severance agreements to be submitted for shareholder ratification, unless the proposal requires shareholder approval prior to entering into employment contracts. Vote on a CASE-BY-CASE basis on proposals to ratify or cancel golden parachutes. An acceptable parachute should include the following: o The triggering mechanism should be beyond the control of management o The amount should not exceed three times base amount (defined as the average annual taxable W-2 compensation during the five years prior to the year in which the change of control occurs o Change-in-control payments should be double-triggered, i.e., (1) after a change in control has taken place, and (2) termination of the executive as a result of the change in control. ISS defines change in control as a change in the company ownership structure. PENSION PLAN INCOME ACCOUNTING Generally vote FOR shareholder proposals to exclude pension plan income in the calculation of earnings used in determining executive bonuses/compensation. SUPPLEMENTAL EXECUTIVE RETIREMENT PLANS (SERPS) Generally vote FOR shareholder proposals requesting to put extraordinary benefits contained in SERP agreements to a shareholder vote unless the company's executive pension plans do not contain excessive benefits beyond what is offered under employee-wide plans. 9. SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES CONSUMER ISSUES AND PUBLIC SAFETY ANIMAL RIGHTS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to phase out the use of animals in product testing, taking into account: o The nature of the product and the degree that animal testing is necessary or federally mandated (such as medical products), o The availability and feasibility of alternatives to animal testing to ensure product safety, and o The degree that competitors are using animal-free testing. o Generally vote FOR proposals seeking a report on the company's animal welfare standards unless: o The company has already published a set of animal welfare standards and monitors compliance o The company's standards are comparable to or better than those of peer firms, and o There are no serious controversies surrounding the company's treatment of animals DRUG PRICING Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking the company to implement price restraints on pharmaceutical products, taking into account: o Whether the proposal focuses on a specific drug and region o Whether the economic benefits of providing subsidized drugs (e.g., public goodwill) outweigh the costs in terms of reduced profits, lower R&D spending, and harm to competitiveness o The extent that reduced prices can be offset through the company's marketing budget without affecting R&D spending o Whether the company already limits price increases of its products o Whether the company already contributes life -saving pharmaceuticals to the needy and Third World countries o The extent that peer companies implement price restraints GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOODS Vote AGAINST proposals asking companies to voluntarily label genetically engineered (GE) ingredients in their products or alternatively to provide interim labeling and eventually eliminate GE ingredients due to the costs and feasibility of labeling and/or phasing out the use of GE ingredients. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking for a report on the feasibility of labeling products containing GE ingredients taking into account: o The relevance of the proposal in terms of the company's business and the proportion of it affected by the resolution o The quality of the company's disclosure on GE product labeling and related voluntary initiatives and how this disclosure compares with peer company disclosure o Company's current disclosure on the feasibility of GE product labeling, including information on the related costs o Any voluntary labeling initiatives undertaken or considered by the company. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking for the preparation of a report on the financial, legal, and environmental impact of continued use of GE ingredients/seeds. o The relevance of the proposal in terms of the company's business and the proportion of it affected by the resolution o The quality of the company's disclosure on risks related to GE product use and how this disclosure compares with peer company disclosure o The percentage of revenue derived from international operations, particularly in Europe, where GE products are more regulated and consumer backlash is more pronounced. Vote AGAINST proposals seeking a report on the health and environmental effects of genetically modified organisms (GMOs). Health studies of this sort are better undertaken by regulators and the scientific community. Vote AGAINST proposals to completely phase out GE ingredients from the company's products or proposals asking for reports outlining the steps necessary to eliminate GE ingredients from the company's products. Such resolutions presuppose that there are proven health risks to GE ingredients (an issue better left to federal regulators) that outweigh the economic benefits derived from biotechnology. HANDGUNS Generally vote AGAINST requests for reports on a company's policies aimed at curtailing gun violence in the United States unless the report is confined to product safety information. Criminal misuse of firearms is beyond company control and instead falls within the purview of law enforcement agencies. HIV/AIDS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on requests for reports outlining the impact of the health pandemic (HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis) on the company's Sub-Saharan operations and how the company is responding to it, taking into account: o The nature and size of the company's operations in Sub-Saharan Africa and the number of local employees o The company's existing healthcare policies, including benefits and healthcare access for local workers o Company donations to healthcare providers operating in the region Vote AGAINST proposals asking companies to establish, implement, and report on a standard of response to the HIV/AIDS, TB, and Malaria health pandemic in Africa and other developing countries, unless the company has significant operations in these markets and has failed to adopt policies and/or procedures to address these issues comparable to those of industry peers. PREDATORY LENDING Vote CASE-BY CASE on requests for reports on the company's procedures for preventing predatory lending, including the establishment of a board committee for oversight, taking into account: o Whether the company has adequately disclosed mechanisms in place to prevent abusive lending practices o Whether the company has adequately disclosed the financial risks of its subprime business o Whether the company has been subject to violations of lending laws or serious lending controversies o Peer companies' policies to prevent abusive lending practices. TOBACCO Most tobacco-related proposals should be evaluated on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, taking into account the following factors: Second-hand smoke: o Whether the company complies with all local ordinances and regulations o The degree that voluntary restrictions beyond those mandated by law might hurt the company's competitiveness o The risk of any health-related liabilities. Advertising to youth: o Whether the company complies with federal, state, and local laws on the marketing of tobacco or if it has been fined for violations o Whether the company has gone as far as p eers in restricting advertising o Whether the company entered into the Master Settlement Agreement, which restricts marketing of tobacco to youth o Whether restrictions on marketing to youth extend to foreign countries Cease production of tobacco-related products or avoid selling products to tobacco companies: o The percentage of the company's business affected o The economic loss of eliminating the business versus any potential tobacco-related liabilities. o Spinoff tobacco-related businesses: o The percentage of the company's business affected o The feasibility of a spinoff o Potential future liabilities related to the company's tobacco business. Stronger product warnings: Vote AGAINST proposals seeking stronger product warnings. Such decisions are better left to public health authorities. Investment in tobacco stocks: Vote AGAINST proposals prohibiting investment in tobacco equities. Such decisions are better left to portfolio managers. ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY ARCTIC NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Generally vote AGAINST request for reports outlining potential environmental damage from drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) unless: o New legislation is adopted allowing development and drilling in the ANWR region; o The company intends to pursue operations in the ANWR; and o The company does not currently disclose an environmental risk report for their operations in the ANWR. CERES PRINCIPLES Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to adopt the CERES Principles, taking into account: o The company's current environmental disclosure beyond legal requirements, including environmental health and safety (EHS) audits and reports that may duplicate CERES o The company's environmental performance record, including violations of federal and state regulations, level of toxic emissions, and accidental spills o Environmentally conscious practices of peer companies, including endorsement of CERES o Costs of membership and implementation. ENVIRONMENTAL-ECONOMIC RISK REPORT Vote CASE BY CASE on proposals requesting an economic risk assessment of environmental performance considering: o The feasibility of financially quantifying environmental risk factors, o The company's compliance with applicable legislation and/or regulations regarding environmental performance, o The costs associated with implementing improved standards, o The potential costs associated with remediation resulting from poor environmental performance, and o The current level of disclosure on environmental policies and initiatives. ENVIRONMENTAL REPORTS Generally vote FOR requests for reports disclosing the company's environmental policies unless it already has well-documented environmental management systems that are available to the public. GLOBAL WARMING Generally vote FOR proposals requesting a report on greenhouse gas emissions from company operations and/or products unless this information is already publicly disclosed or such factors are not integral to the company's line of business. Generally vote AGAINST proposals that call for reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by specified amounts or within a restrictive time frame unless the company lags industry standards and has been the subject of recent, significant fines or litigation resulting from greenhouse gas emissions. RECYCLING Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to adopt a comprehensive recycling strategy, taking into account: o The nature of the company's business and the percentage affected o The extent that peer companies are recycling o The timetable prescribed by the proposal o The costs and methods of implementation o Whether the company has a poor environmental track record, such as violations of federal and state regulations. RENEWABLE ENERGY In general, vote FOR requests for reports on the feasibility of developing renewable energy sources unless the report is duplicative of existing disclosure or irrelevant to the company's line of business. Generally vote AGAINST proposals requesting that the company invest in renewable energy sources. Such decisions are best left to management's evaluation of the feasibility and financial impact that such programs may have on the company. SUSTAINABILITY REPORT Generally vote FOR proposals requesting the company to report on policies and initiatives related to social, economic, and environmental sustainability, unless: o The company already discloses similar information through existing reports or policies such as an Environment, Health, and Safety (EHS) report; comprehensive Code of Corporate Conduct; and/or Diversity Report; or o The company has formally committed to the implementation of a reporting program based on Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) guidelines or a similar standard within a specified time frame. GENERAL CORPORATE ISSUES OUTSOURCING/ OFFSHORING Vote CASE BY CASE on proposals calling for companies to report on the risks associated with outsourcing, considering: o Risks associated with certain international markets o The utility of such a report to shareholders o The existence of a publicly available code of corporate conduct that applies to international operations LINK EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TO SOCIAL PERFORMANCE Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to review ways of linking executive compensation to social factors, such as corporate downsizings, customer or employee satisfaction, community involvement, human rights, environmental performance, predatory lending, and executive/employee pay disparities. Such resolutions should be evaluated in the context of: o The relevance of the issue to be linked to pay o The degree that social performance is already included in the company's pay structure and disclosed o The degree that social performance is used by peer companies in setting pay o Violations or complaints filed against the company relating to the particular social performance measure o Artificial limits sought by the proposal, such as freezing or capping executive pay o Independence of the compensation committee o Current company pay levels. CHARITABLE/POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS Generally vote AGAINST proposals asking the company to affirm political nonpartisanship in the workplace so long as: o The company is in compliance with laws governing corporate political activities, and o The company has procedures in place to ensure that employee contributions to company-sponsored political action committees (PACs) are strictly voluntary and not coercive. Vote AGAINST proposals to report or publish in newspapers the company's political contributions. Federal and state laws restrict the amount of corporate contributions and include reporting requirements. Vote AGAINST proposals disallowing the company from making political contributions. Businesses are affected by legislation at the federal, state, and local level and barring contributions can put the company at a competitive disadvantage. Vote AGAINST proposals restricting the company from making charitable contributions. Charitable contributions are generally useful for assisting worthwhile causes and for creating goodwill in the community. In the absence of bad faith, self-dealing, or gross negligence, management should determine which contributions are in the best interests of the company. Vote AGAINST proposals asking for a list of company executives, directors, consultants, legal counsels, lobbyists, or investment bankers that have prior government service and whether such service had a bearing on the business of the company. Such a list would be burdensome to prepare without providing any meaningful information to shareholders. LABOR STANDARDS AND HUMAN RIGHTS CHINA PRINCIPLES Vote AGAINST proposals to implement the China Principles unless: o There are serious controversies surrounding the company's China operations, and o The company does not have a code of conduct with standards similar to those promulgated by the International Labor Organization (ILO). COUNTRY-SPECIFIC HUMAN RIGHTS REPORTS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on requests for reports detailing the company's operations in a particular country and steps to protect human rights, based on: o The nature and amount of company business in that country o The company's workplace code of conduct o Proprietary and confidential information involved o Company compliance with U.S. regulations on investing in the country o Level of peer company involvement in the country. INTERNATIONAL CODES OF CONDUCT/VENDOR STANDARDS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to implement certain human rights standards at company facilities or those of its suppliers and to commit to outside, independent monitoring. In evaluating these proposals, the following should be considered: o The company's current workplace code of conduct or adherence to other global standards and the degree they meet the standards promulgated by the proponent o Agreements with foreign suppliers to meet certain workplace standards o Whether company and vendor facilities are monitored and how o Company participation in fair labor organizations o Type of business o Proportion of business conducted overseas o Countries of operation with known human rights abuses o Whether the company has been recently involved in significant labor and human rights controversies or violations o Peer company standards and practices o Union presence in company's international factories o Generally vote FOR reports outlining vendor standards compliance unless any of the following apply: o The company does not operate in countries with significant human rights violations o The company has no recent human rights controversies or violations, or o The company already publicly discloses information on its vendor standards compliance. MACBRIDE PRINCIPLES Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals to endorse or increase activity on the MacBride Principles, taking into account: o Company compliance with or violations of the Fair Employment Act of 1989 o Company antidiscrimination policies that already exceed the legal requirements o The cost and feasibility of adopting all nine principles o The cost of duplicating efforts to follow two sets of standards (Fair Employment and the MacBride Principles) o The potential for charges of reverse discrimination o The potential that any company sales or contracts in the rest of the United Kingdom could be negatively impacted o The level of the company's investment in Northern Ireland o The number of company employees in Northern Ireland o The degree that industry peers have adopted the MacBride Principles o Applicable state and municipal laws that limit contracts with companies that have not adopted the MacBride Principles. MILITARY BUSINESS FOREIGN MILITARY SALES/OFFSETS Vote AGAINST reports on foreign military sales or offsets. Such disclosures may involve sensitive and confidential information. Moreover, companies must comply with government controls and reporting on foreign military sales. LANDMINES AND CLUSTER BOMBS Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking a company to renounce future involvement in antipersonnel landmine production, taking into account: o Whether the company has in the past manufactured landmine components o Whether the company's peers have renounced future production o Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking a company to renounce future involvement in cluster bomb production, taking into account: o What weapons classifications the proponent views as cluster bombs o Whether the company currently or in the past has manufactured cluster bombs or their components o The percentage of revenue derived from cluster bomb manufacture o Whether the company's peers have renounced future production NUCLEAR WEAPONS Vote AGAINST proposals asking a company to cease production of nuclear weapons components and delivery systems, including disengaging from current and proposed contracts. Components and delivery systems serve multiple military and non-military uses, and withdrawal from these contracts could have a negative impact on the company's business. OPERATIONS IN NATIONS SPONSORING TERRORISM (IRAN) Vote CASE-BY-CASE on requests for a board committee review and report outlining the company's financial and reputational risks from its operations in Iran, taking into account current disclosure on: o The nature and purpose of the Iranian operations and the amount of business involved (direct and indirect revenues and expenses) that could be affected by political disruption o Compliance with U.S. sanctions and laws SPACED-BASED WEAPONIZATION Generally vote FOR reports on a company's involvement in spaced-based weaponization unless: o The information is already publicly available or o The disclosures sought could compromise proprietary information. WORKPLACE DIVERSITY BOARD DIVERSITY Generally vote FOR reports on the company's efforts to diversify the board, unless: o The board composition is reasonably inclusive in relation to companies of similar size and business or o The board already reports on its nominating procedures and diversity initiatives. Generally vote AGAINST proposals that would call for the adoption of specific committee charter language regarding diversity initiatives unless the company fails to publicly disclose existing equal opportunity or nondiscrimination policies. Vote CASE-BY-CASE on proposals asking the company to increase the representation of women and minorities on the board, taking into account: o The degree of board diversity o Comparison with peer companies o Established process for improving board diversity o Existence of independent nominating committee o Use of outside search firm o History of EEO violations. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY (EEO) Generally vote FOR reports outlining the company's affirmative action initiatives unless all of the following apply: o The company has well-documented equal opportunity programs o The company already publicly reports on its company-wide affirmative initiatives and provides data on its workforce diversity, and o The company has no recent EEO-related violations or litigation. Vote AGAINST proposals seeking information on the diversity efforts of suppliers and service providers, which can pose a significant cost and administration burden on the company. GLASS CEILING Generally vote FOR reports outlining the company's progress towards the Glass Ceiling Commission's business recommendations, unless: o The composition of senior management and the board is fairly inclusive o The company has well-documented programs addressing diversity initiatives and leadership development o The company already issues public reports on its company-wide affirmative initiatives and provides data on its workforce diversity, and o The company has had no recent, significant EEO-related violations or litigation SEXUAL ORIENTATION Vote FOR proposals seeking to amend a company's EEO statement in order to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, unless the change would result in excessive costs for the company. Vote AGAINST proposals to ext end company benefits to or eliminate benefits from domestic partners. Benefits decisions should be left to the discretion of the company. 10. MUTUAL FUND PROXIES ELECTION OF DIRECTORS Vote the election of directors on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: board structure; director independence and qualifications; and compensation of directors within the fund and the family of funds attendance at board and committee meetings. Votes should be withheld from directors who: o attend less than 75 percent of the board and committee meetings o without a valid excuse for the absences. Valid reasons include illness or o absence due to company business. Participation via telephone is acceptable. o In addition, if the director missed only one meeting or one day's o meetings, votes should not be withheld even if such absence dropped the o director's attendance below 75 percent. o ignore a shareholder proposal that is approved by a majority of shares o outstanding; o ignore a shareholder proposal that is approved by a majority of the o votes cast for two consecutive years; o are interested directors and sit on the audit or nominating committee; or o are interested directors and the full board serves as the audit or o nominating committee or the company does not have one of these o committees. CONVERTING CLOSED-END FUND TO OPEN-END FUND Vote conversion proposals on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: past performance as a closed-end fund; market in which the fund invests; measures taken by the board to address the discount; and past shareholder activism, board activity, and votes on related proposals. Proxy Contests Votes on proxy contests should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: o Past performance relative to its peers o Market in which fund invests o Measures taken by the board to address the issues o Past shareholder activism, board activity, and votes on related proposals o Strategy of the incumbents versus the dissidents o Independence of directors o Experience and skills of director candidates o Governance profile of the company o Evidence of management entrenchment INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENTS Votes on investment advisory agreements should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: o Proposed and current fee schedules o Fund category/investment objective o Performance benchmarks o Share price performance as compared with peers o Resulting fees relative to peers o Assignments (where the advisor undergoes a change of control) APPROVING NEW CLASSES OR SERIES OF SHARES Vote FOR the establishment of new classes or series of shares. PREFERRED STOCK PROPOSALS Votes on the authorization for or increase in preferred shares should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: stated specific financing purpose, possible dilution for common shares, and whether the shares can be used for antitakeover purposes 1940 ACT POLICIES Votes on 1940 Act policies should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: potential competitiveness; regulatory developments; current and potential returns; and current and potential risk. Generally vote FOR these amendments as long as the proposed changes do not fundamentally alter the investment focus of the fund and do comply with t he current SEC interpretation. CHANGING A FUNDAMENTAL RESTRICTION TO A NONFUNDAMENTAL RESTRICTION Proposals to change a fundamental restriction to a nonfundamental restriction should be evaluated on a CASE-BY- CASE basis, considering the following factors: the fund's target investments, the reasons given by the fund for the change, and the projected impact of the change on the portfolio. CHANGE FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE TO NONFUNDAMENTAL Vote AGAINST proposals to change a fund's fundamental investment objective to nonfundamental. NAME CHANGE PROPOSALS Votes on name change proposals should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: political/economic changes in the target market, consolidation in the target market, and current asset composition CHANGE IN FUND'S SUBCLASSIFICATION Votes on changes in a fund's subclassification should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: potential competitiveness, current and potential returns, risk of concentration, and consolidation in target industry DISPOSITION OF ASSETS/TERMINATION/LIQUIDATION Vote these proposals on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: strategies employed to salvage the company; the fund's past performance; and terms of the liquidation. CHANGES TO THE CHARTER DOCUMENT Votes on changes to the charter document should be determined on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: o The degree of change implied by the proposal o The efficiencies that could result o The state of incorporation o Regulatory standards and implications Vote AGAINST any of the following changes: o Removal of shareholder approval requirement to reorganize or terminate the trust or any of its series o Removal of shareholder approval requirement for amendments to the new declaration of trust o Removal of shareholder approval requirement to amend the fund's management contract, allowing the contract to be modified by the investment manager and the trust management, as permitted by the 1940 Act o Allow the trustees to impose other fees in addition to sales charges on investment in a fund, such as deferred sales charges and redemption fees that may be imposed upon redemption of a fund's shares o Removal of shareholder approval requirement to engage in and terminate subadvisory arrangements o Removal of shareholder approval requirement to change the domicile of the fund CHANGING THE DOMICILE OF A FUND Vote reincorporations on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: regulations of both states; required fundamental policies of both states; and the increased flexibility available. AUTHORIZING THE BOARD TO HIRE AND TERMINATE SUBADVISORS WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL Vote AGAINST proposals authorizing the board to hire/terminate subadvisors without shareholder approval. DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS Vote these proposals on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: fees charged to comparably sized funds with similar objectives, the proposed distributor's reputation and past performance, the competitiveness of the fund in the industry, and terms of the agreement. MASTER-FEEDER STRUCTURE Vote FOR the establishment of a master-feeder structure. MERGERS Vote merger proposals on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: resulting fee structure, performance of both funds, continuity of management personnel, and changes in corporate governance and their impact on shareholder rights. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS TO ESTABLISH DIRECTOR OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENT Generally vote AGAINST shareholder proposals that mandate a specific minimum amount of stock that directors must own in order to qualify as a director or to remain on the board. While ISS favors stock ownership on the part of directors, the company should determine the appropriate ownership requirement. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS TO REIMBURSE SHAREHOLDER FOR EXPENSES INCURRED Voting to reimburse proxy solicitation expenses should be analyzed on a CASE-BY-CASE basis. In cases where ISS recommends in favor of the dissidents, we also recommend voting for reimbursing proxy solicitation expenses. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS TO TERMINATE THE INVESTMENT ADVISOR Vote to terminate the investment advisor on a CASE-BY-CASE basis, considering the following factors: performance of the fund's NAV, the fund's history of shareholder relations, and the performance of other funds under the advisor's management. ITEM 8. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES. Not yet applicable. ITEM 9. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS. Not Applicable. ITEM 10. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS. There have been no material changes to the procedures by which the shareholders may recommend nominees to the registrant's board of directors, where those changes were implemented after the registrant last provided disclosure in response to the requirements of Item 7(d)(2)(ii)(G) of Schedule 14A (17 CFR 240.14a-101), or this Item. ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES. (a) The registrant's principal executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing similar functions, have concluded that the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act") (17 CFR 270.30a-3(c))) are effective, as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of the report that includes the disclosure required by this paragraph, based on their evaluation of these controls and procedures required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the 1940 Act (17 CFR 270.30a-3(b)) and Rules 13a-15(b) or 15d-15(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (17 CFR 240.13a-15(b) or 240.15d-15(b)). (b) There were no changes in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the 1940 Act (17 CFR 270.30a-3(d)) that occurred during the registrant's second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting. ITEM 12. EXHIBITS. (a)(1) Code of ethics, or any amendment thereto, that is the subject of disclosure required by Item 2 is attached hereto. (a)(2) Certifications pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the 1940 Act and Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached hereto. (a)(3) Not applicable. (b) Certifications pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) under the 1940 Act and Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached hereto. SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized. (registrant) FIRST TRUST VALUE LINE(R) DIVIDEND FUND -------------------------------------------------------------------- By (Signature and Title)* /S/ JAMES A. BOWEN ------------------------------------------------------- James A. Bowen, Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer Date JULY 28, 2005 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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/ JAMES A. BOWEN ------------------------------------------------------- James A. Bowen, Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer) Date JULY 28, 2005 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- By (Signature and Title)* /S/ MARK R. BRADLEY ------------------------------------------------------- Mark R. Bradley, Treasurer, Controller, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer (principal financial officer) Date JULY 28, 2005 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Print the name and title of each signing officer under his or her signature.