# EDGAR Filing Document

**Accession Number:** 0001616037
**File Stem:** 0001193125-23-048697
**Filing Date:** 2023-2
**Character Count:** 882141
**Document Hash:** c5758dc7bfa3312ce6b871c98dd4e5a9
**Contains OCR:** False
**Source Format:** 

## Filing Content

## Filing Summary
**0001193125-23-048697.hdr.sgml**: 20230224

**ACCESSION NUMBER**: 0001193125-23-048697

**CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE**: 486BPOS

**PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT**: 24

**FILED AS OF DATE**: 20230224

**DATE AS OF CHANGE**: 20230224

**EFFECTIVENESS DATE**: 20230301

**FILER**: 

**COMPANY DATA:**
- **COMPANY CONFORMED NAME:** Pioneer ILS Interval Fund
- **CENTRAL INDEX KEY:** 0001616037
- **IRS NUMBER:** 000000000
- **STATE OF INCORPORATION:** DE
- **FISCAL YEAR END:** 1031

**FILING VALUES:**
- **FORM TYPE:** 486BPOS
- **SEC ACT:** 1940 Act
- **SEC FILE NUMBER:** 811-22987
- **FILM NUMBER:** 23666554

**BUSINESS ADDRESS:**
- **STREET 1:** 60 STATE STREET
- **STREET 2:** 5TH FLOOR
- **CITY:** BOSTON
- **STATE:** MA
- **ZIP:** 02109
- **BUSINESS PHONE:** (617) 742-7825

**MAIL ADDRESS:**
- **STREET 1:** 60 STATE STREET
- **STREET 2:** 5TH FLOOR
- **CITY:** BOSTON
- **STATE:** MA
- **ZIP:** 02109
**FILER**: 

**COMPANY DATA:**
- **COMPANY CONFORMED NAME:** Pioneer ILS Interval Fund
- **CENTRAL INDEX KEY:** 0001616037
- **IRS NUMBER:** 000000000
- **STATE OF INCORPORATION:** DE
- **FISCAL YEAR END:** 1031

**FILING VALUES:**
- **FORM TYPE:** 486BPOS
- **SEC ACT:** 1933 Act
- **SEC FILE NUMBER:** 333-225814
- **FILM NUMBER:** 23666553

**BUSINESS ADDRESS:**
- **STREET 1:** 60 STATE STREET
- **STREET 2:** 5TH FLOOR
- **CITY:** BOSTON
- **STATE:** MA
- **ZIP:** 02109
- **BUSINESS PHONE:** (617) 742-7825

**MAIL ADDRESS:**
- **STREET 1:** 60 STATE STREET
- **STREET 2:** 5TH FLOOR
- **CITY:** BOSTON
- **STATE:** MA
- **ZIP:** 02109

?xml version='1.0' encoding='ASCII'? PIONEER ILS INTERVAL FUND

1933 Act File No. 333-225814

1940 Act File No. 811-22987

------

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 24, 2023

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

------

FORM N-2

(Check appropriate box or boxes)

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

☒

Pre-Effective Amendment No. ___

☐

Post-Effective Amendment No. 5

☒

and/or

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE

INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940

☒

Amendment No. 11

☒

(Check appropriate box or boxes)

------

PIONEER ILS INTERVAL FUND

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

------

60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109

(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)

Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (617) 742-7825

------

Christopher J. Kelley, Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.,

60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109

(Name and Address of Agent for Service)

Copies of Communications to:

Roger P. Joseph, Esq.

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP

One Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110

------

Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: As soon as practicable after the effective date of this Registration Statement.

__________________________

☐

Check box if the only securities being registered on this Form are being offered pursuant to dividend or interest reinvestment plans.

☒

Check box if any securities being registered on the Form will be offered on a delayed or continuous basis in reliance on Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933 ("Securities Act"), other than securities offered in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan.

☐

Check box if this Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction A.2 or a post-effective amendment thereto.

☐

Check box if this Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction B or a post-effective amendment thereto that will become effective upon filing with the Commission pursuant to Rule 462(e) under the Securities Act.

------

☐

Check box if this Form is a post-effective amendment to a registration statement filed pursuant to General Instruction B to register additional securities or additional classes of securities pursuant to Rule 413(b) under the Securities Act.

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)

☐

when declared effective pursuant to section 8(c).

☐

immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 486.

☒

on March 1, 2023 pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 486.

☐

60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 486.

☐

on [date] pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 486.

If appropriate, check the following box:

☐

This [post-effective] amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed [post-effective amendment] [registration statement].

☐

This Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: ______.

☐

This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: ______.

☐

This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: ______.

Check each box that appropriately characterizes the Registrant:

☒

Registered Closed-End Fund (closed-end company that is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("Investment Company Act")).

☐

Business Development Company (closed-end company that intends or has elected to be regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act).

☒

Interval Fund (Registered Closed-End Fund or a Business Development Company that makes periodic repurchase offers under Rule 23c-3 under the Investment Company Act).

☐

A.2 Qualified (qualified to register securities pursuant to General Instruction A.2 of this Form).

☐

Well-Known Seasoned Issuer (as defined by Rule 405 under the Securities Act).

☐

Emerging Growth Company (as defined by Rule 12b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act").

☐

If an Emerging Growth Company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 7(a)(2)(B) of Securities Act.

☐

New Registrant (registered or regulated under the Investment Company Act for less than 12 calendar months preceding this filing).

------

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund

Prospectus

Common Shares

March 1,

2022

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company.

Investment Objective.

The fund's investment objective is total return. There can be no assurance that the fund will

achieve its investment objective.

Principal Investment Strategies.

The fund invests primarily in insurance-linked securities ("

ILS

"). ILS may include

event-linked bonds (also known as insurance-linked bonds or catastrophe bonds), quota share instruments (also known

as

"

reinsurance sidecars

"), collateralized reinsurance investments, industry loss warranties, event-linked swaps, securities

of companies in the insurance or reinsurance industries, and other insurance- and reinsurance-related securities.

Because ILS are typically rated below investment grade or unrated, a substantial portion of the fund's assets ordinarily

will consist of below investment grade (high yield) debt securities. Investment in securities of below investment grade

quality, commonly referred to as

"

junk bonds,

"

involves substantial risk of loss.

Investment Adviser.

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("

Amundi US

"

or the

"

Adviser

") is the fund's investment

adviser. Amundi US is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Amundi and Amundi's wholly owned subsidiary, Amundi

Holdings US, Inc. Amundi, one of the world's largest asset managers, is headquartered in Paris, France. As of

December 31,

2021

, Amundi had more than $

2.3 trillion in assets under management worldwide. As of December 31,

2021

,

Amundi US (and its U.S. affiliates) had over $

billion in assets under management.

Interval Fund.

The fund is operated as an interval fund. Pursuant to the fund's interval fund structure, the fund will

conduct quarterly repurchase offers of no less than 5% and no more than 25% of the fund's outstanding shares at net

asset value ("

NAV

"). Typically, the fund will seek to conduct such quarterly repurchase offers for 10% of the fund's

outstanding shares at NAV. Even though the fund will make quarterly repurchase offers, investors should consider the

fund's shares illiquid. Repurchase offers in excess of 5% are made solely at the discretion of the fund's Board of Trustees

and investors should not rely on any expectation of repurchase offers in excess of 5%. It is also possible that a repurchase

offer may be oversubscribed, with the result that shareholders may only be able to have a portion of their shares repurchased.

The fund's shares are sold at a price equal to their NAV per share and are not subject to any sales charge as of the date of

this registration statement. See

"

Summary of fund expenses

"

and

"

Purchase of shares.

"

The fund's shares are not listed and the fund does not currently intend to list its shares for trading on any national securities exchange. There is not expected to be any secondary market for the fund's shares. The shares are, therefore, not readily marketable. Even if such a market were to develop, shares of closed-end funds frequently trade at prices lower than their net asset value. Even though the fund will make periodic repurchase offers to repurchase a portion of its shares to provide some liquidity to shareholders, you should consider the shares to be an illiquid investment. An investment in the fund is suitable only for long-term investors who can bear the risks associated with the limited liquidity of the shares.

You should carefully consider the fund's risks and investment objective, as an investment in the fund may not be appropriate for all investors and is not designed to be a complete investment program. An investment in the fund involves a high degree of risk. The insurance-linked securities in which the fund invests are considered "high yield securities" or "junk bonds." It is possible that investing in the fund may result in a loss of some or all of the amount invested. Before making an investment/allocation decision, you should (i) consider the suitability of this investment with respect to your investment objectives and individual situation and (ii) consider factors such as your net worth, income, age, and risk tolerance. You should not invest if you have a short-term investing horizon and/or cannot bear the loss of some or all of your investment.

Before buying shares of the fund, you should read the discussion of the material risks of investing in the fund under "Risk Factors" beginning on page 21. Certain of these risks are summarized in "Prospectus Summary — Risk Considerations" beginning on page 2.

![](g436461g2covers_amundipionee.jpg)

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Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this Prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

THE FUND'S SHARES DO NOT REPRESENT A DEPOSIT OR OBLIGATION OF, AND ARE NOT GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED BY, ANY BANK OR OTHER INSURED DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION AND ARE NOT FEDERALLY INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER GOVERNMENT AGENCY.

Please read this Prospectus carefully before investing and keep it for future reference. It contains important information

that a prospective investor ought to know before investing in the fund. A Statement of Additional Information ("

SAI

"),

dated March 1,

2022

, containing additional information about the fund has been filed with the SEC and is incorporated

by reference in its entirety into this Prospectus. A

copy of the SAI can be obtained without charge by writing to the fund

at Pioneer Funds, 60 State Street, Boston, MA 02109, by calling 1-844-391-3034, or from the SEC's website at

http://www.sec.gov. Copies of the fund's Annual Report and Semi-Annual Report may be obtained upon request by

writing to the fund, by calling 1-844-391-3034, or by visiting the fund's website at amundi.com/

us

.

You should rely only on the information contained in this Prospectus and the fund's Statement of Additional Information.

The fund has not authorized any other person to provide you with different information. If anyone provides you with

different or inconsistent information, you should not rely on it. The fund is not making an offer to sell these securities

in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. You should not assume that the information contained in

this Prospectus is accurate as of any date other than the date on the front of this Prospectus. The fund's business, financial

condition, results of operations and prospects may have changed since the date of this Prospectus. Subsequent to the

date of this Prospectus, the fund will amend this Prospectus if, during the period this Prospectus is required to be delivered,

any material information herein becomes materially inaccurate.

------

**Table of Contents**

------

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| Prospectus summary | [1](#xx_82986262-e8f6-46ad-b9b9-0b0067da3bcc_1) |
| Summary of fund expenses | [10](#xx_2a9a736d-63be-461c-a7ae-9bc979acf25e_1) |
| Financial highlights | [11](#xx_e164998b-5fe6-4399-a54d-0bc9fbb9deed_1) |
| The fund | [12](#xx_e164998b-5fe6-4399-a54d-0bc9fbb9deed_1) |
| Use of proceeds | [12](#xx_d9e87080-6ce2-47f1-8a0d-cc5a89cca130_1) |
| Investment objective and principal investment strategies | [13](#xx_f046862e-4b56-4090-abd3-7883774d5ed9_1) |
| Risk factors | [21](#xx_8400832f-bd0b-4e6b-91b7-ecfd8549ace6_1) |
| Management of the fund | [34](#xx_5021c11e-2c82-4318-8bcd-30699d8ff5c6_1) |
| Dividends and distributions | [36](#xx_b77246ba-0668-49aa-b796-d2598729b8cc_1) |
| Purchase of shares | [38](#xx_ca66fda1-1ed4-41bf-8c56-30cb9a1decea_1) |
| Periodic repurchase offers | [39](#xx_024e8dca-1005-4bd5-a120-b333d7814f0d_1) |
| Federal income tax matters | [41](#xx_022e6f97-dd59-4597-b244-debd3c2aff34_1) |
| Net asset value | [50](#xx_ff1650b9-a686-492a-8dcf-39f6d585eb53_1) |
| Certain provisions of the agreement and declaration of trust and by-laws | [52](#xx_08ed1e74-9e16-42d2-ae7a-418af08b2e25_1) |
| Privacy notice | 54 |

---

------

Prospectus summary

This is only a summary. This summary does not contain all of the information that you should consider before investing in

the fund's shares, especially the information set forth under the heading

"

Risk Factors.

"

You should review the more detailed

information contained in this Prospectus and in the Statement of Additional Information. Capitalized terms used but not

defined herein shall have the meaning attributed to such term in the Statement of Additional Information.

THE FUND

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company. The fund is an interval

fund that will offer to make quarterly repurchases of shares at net asset value ("

NAV

").

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("

Amundi US

"

or the

"

Adviser

") is the fund's investment adviser.

THE OFFERING

Shares of beneficial interest in the fund are offered on a continuous basis at NAV per share. The fund generally expects

to accept orders to purchase shares on a quarterly basis. However, the fund's ability to accept orders to purchase shares

may be limited, including during periods when, in the judgment of Amundi US, appropriate investments for the fund

are not available. Shares are generally available for purchase by registered investment advisers acting in a fiduciary

capacity on behalf of their clients and by or through other qualified intermediaries and programs sponsored by such

qualified financial intermediaries. Shares are also available to certain direct investors, which may be individuals, trusts,

foundations and other institutional investors. Initial investments in the fund by or through a registered investment

adviser or other qualified financial intermediary are subject to a $1,000,000 minimum per registered investment adviser

or intermediary. Initial investments in the fund by direct investors are subject to a $1,000,000 minimum. Registered

investment advisers and other financial intermediaries may impose different or additional minimum investment and

eligibility requirements from those of the fund. Please contact your registered investment adviser or financial intermediary

for more information.Amundi US or the fund's Distributor, Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (the

"

Distributor

"), may waive

these minimum investment requirements. The fund and the Distributor reserve the right to reject a purchase order for

any reason.

The shares are not listed on any securities exchange and the fund does not expect there to be any secondary market for

the fund's shares. Shareholders will not have the right to redeem their shares. However, as described below, in order to

provide some liquidity to shareholders, the fund will conduct periodic repurchase offers for a portion of its outstanding shares.

INTERVAL FUND; PERIODIC REPURCHASE OFFERS

As an interval fund, the fund will make periodic offers to repurchase a portion of its outstanding shares at their NAV.

The fund has adopted a fundamental policy, which cannot be changed without shareholder approval, to make repurchase

offers every three months. Quarterly repurchase offers occur in the months of January, April, July and October.

Subject to applicable law and the approval of the Board of Trustees, the fund will seek to conduct such quarterly repurchase

offers typically for 10% of the fund's outstanding shares at NAV. In connection with any given repurchase offer, it is

possible that the fund may offer to repurchase only the minimum amount of 5% of its outstanding shares. There is no

guarantee that you will be able to sell shares in an amount or at the time that you desire. The procedures that will apply

to the fund's repurchase offers are described in

"

Periodic Repurchase Offers

"

below. Proceeds from the repurchase of

shares will be paid in cash (in U.S. dollars).

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

The fund's investment objective is total return. There can be no assurance that the fund will achieve its investment objective.

PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES

The fund invests primarily in insurance-linked securities ("

ILS

"). ILS may include event-linked bonds (also known as

insurance-linked bonds or catastrophe bonds), quota share instruments (also known as

"

reinsurance sidecars

"), collateralized

reinsurance investments, industry loss warranties, event-linked swaps, securities of companies in the insurance or

reinsurance industries, and other insurance- and reinsurance-related securities.

------

Because ILS are typically rated below investment grade or unrated, a substantial portion of the fund's assets ordinarily

will consist of below investment grade (high yield) debt securities. Investment in securities of below investment grade

quality, commonly referred to as

"

junk bonds,

"

involves substantial risk of loss. Securities in which the fund may invest

may also be subordinated or

"

junior

"

to more senior securities of the issuer.

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("

Amundi US

"

or the

"

Adviser

") is the fund's investment adviser. In selecting ILS

for investment, Amundi US considers their relative return potential in view of their expected relative risk, using quantitative

and qualitative analysis. Amundi US's analysis may consider various factors, such as expected loss, probability of occurrence

or loss, trigger term (measurement of loss event specific to an instrument) or other terms of an instrument, sponsor

quality, deal structure, alignment of interests between the fund and the sponsoring insurance company, and model

accuracy. Amundi US's analysis guides Amundi US in determining the desired allocation of reinsurance-related securities

by issuer, peril and geographic exposure. Amundi US also may consider the financial condition and risks associated

with the sponsoring insurance company. Amundi US may rely on information and analysis obtained from brokers,

dealers and ratings organizations, among other sources.

Amundi US may sell a portfolio security when it believes the security no longer will contribute to meeting the fund's

investment objective. Amundi US makes that determination based on the same criteria it uses to select portfolio securities.

Portfolio investments

Normally, the fund invests at least 80% of its net assets (plus the amount of borrowings, if any, for investment purposes)

in ILS. Derivative instruments that provide exposure to such ILS or have similar economic characteristics may be used to

satisfy the fund's 80% policy. ILS include event-linked bonds (also known as insurance-linked bonds or catastrophe

bonds), structured reinsurance investments such as quota share instruments (a form of proportional reinsurance whereby

an investor participates in the premiums and losses of a reinsurer's portfolio of catastrophe-oriented policies, sometimes

referred to as

"

reinsurance sidecars

") and collateralized reinsurance investments, industry loss warranties, event-linked

swaps, securities of companies in the insurance or reinsurance industries, and other insurance- and

reinsurance-related securities.

Reinsurance-related securities are typically below investment grade, or unrated, and may be referred to as

"

junk bonds.

"

The fund has no limit as to the maturity of the securities in which it invests. Event-linked bonds typically have maturities

between three and five years, while quota shares, collateralized reinsurance investments and industry loss warranties

typically have maturities that generally do not exceed two years. Maturity is a measure of the time remaining until final

payment on the security is due.

The fund will provide written notice to shareholders at least 60 days prior to any change to the requirement that it invest

at least 80% of its assets in ILS.

The fund may invest in ILS issued by non-U.S. issuers.

The fund may, but is not required to, use derivatives, such as currency forward contracts and bond and interest rate

futures. The fund may use derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: in an attempt to hedge against adverse changes

in the market price of securities, interest rates or currency exchange rates; as a substitute for purchasing or selling

securities; to seek event-linked exposure; to attempt to increase the fund's return as a non-hedging strategy that may be

considered speculative; to manage portfolio characteristics; and as a cash flow management technique. The fund may

choose not to make use of derivatives for a variety of reasons, and any use may be limited by applicable law and regulations.

The fund also may hold cash or other short-term investments.

To the extent consistent with the repurchase liquidity requirement of an interval fund, the fund may invest without

limit in illiquid securities.

RISK CONSIDERATIONS

The following is a summary of the principal risks of investing in the fund. You should read the fuller discussion in this

Prospectus under

"

Risk Factors

"

on page 21.

General

. The fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company designed primarily as a long-term

investment and not as a trading tool. The fund is not a complete investment program and should be considered only as

an addition to an investor's existing portfolio of investments. Because the fund invests predominantly in ILS of U.S. and

------

Prospectus summary

non-U.S. issuers, which are high yield debt securities, an investment in the fund's shares is speculative in that it involves

a high degree of risk. Due to uncertainty inherent in all investments, there can be no assurance that the fund will achieve

its investment objective. ILS in which the fund invests may only have limited liquidity, or may be illiquid. In addition,

even though the fund will make periodic offers to repurchase a portion of its outstanding shares to provide some liquidity

to shareholders, shareholders should consider the fund to be an illiquid investment.

Risks of investing in insurance-linked securities.

The fund could lose a portion or all of the principal it has invested

in an

ILS, and the right to additional interest

and/or dividend

payments with respect to the security, upon the occurrence

of one or more trigger events, as defined within the terms of the ILS. Trigger events may include natural or other perils

of a specific size or magnitude that occur in a designated geographic region during a specified time period, and/or that

involve losses or other metrics that exceed a specific amount. Natural perils include disasters such as hurricanes, earthquakes,

windstorms, fires, floods and other weather-related occurrences, as well as mortality or longevity events. Non-natural

perils include disasters resulting from human-related activity such as commercial and industrial accidents or business

interruptions.

The fund may also invest in ILS that are subject to

"

indemnity triggers.

"

An indemnity trigger is a trigger

based on the actual losses of the ceding sponsor (i.e., the party seeking reinsurance). ILS subject to indemnity triggers

are often regarded as being subject to potential moral hazard, since such ILS are triggered by actual losses of the ceding

sponsor and the ceding sponsor may have an incentive to take actions and/or risks that would have an adverse effect on

the fund.

There is no way to accurately predict whether a trigger event will occur and, accordingly,

ILS carry significant

risks. In addition to the specified trigger events,

ILS may expose the fund to other risks, including but not limited to

issuer (credit) default, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional interpretations and adverse tax consequences.

Risks of investing in structured reinsurance investments.

The fund

invests in ILS that are

special purpose vehicles

("

SPVs

") or similar instruments structured to comprise a portion of a reinsurer's catastrophe-oriented business, known

as quota share instruments (sometimes referred to as reinsurance sidecars), or to provide reinsurance relating to specific

risks to insurance or reinsurance companies through a collateralized instrument, known as collateralized reinsurance.

Quota shares instruments and other structured reinsurance investments generally will be considered illiquid securities

by the fund. Structured reinsurance investments are typically more customizable but less liquid investments than event-linked

bonds. Like event-linked bonds, an investor in structured reinsurance investments participates in the premiums and

losses associated with underlying reinsurance contracts.

Structured reinsurance investments are subject to the same risks as event-linked bonds

and other ILS

. In addition,

because quota share instruments represent an interest in a basket of underlying reinsurance contracts, the fund has

limited transparency into the individual underlying contracts and therefore must rely upon the risk assessment and

sound underwriting practices of the insurer and/or reinsurer. Structured reinsurance investments may be difficult to value.

ILS market and reinvestment risk.

The size of the ILS market may change over time, which may limit the availability

of ILS for investment by the fund. The original issuance of ILS in general, including ILS with desired instrument or risk

characteristics, may fluctuate depending on the capital and capacity needs of reinsurers as well as the demand for ILS by

institutional investors. The availability of ILS in the secondary market also may be limited by supply and demand dynamics

and prevailing economic conditions. To the extent ILS held by the fund mature, or the fund must sell securities in

connection with share repurchases, the fund may be required to hold more cash or short-term instruments than it

normally would until attractive ILS becomes available. Holding excess cash and/or reinvestment in securities that are

lower yielding or less desirable than securities sold may negatively affect performance.

Market risk.

The market prices of securities or other assets held by the fund may go up or down, sometimes rapidly or

unpredictably, due to general market conditions, such as real or perceived adverse economic, political, or regulatory

conditions, recessions, inflation, changes in interest or currency rates, lack of liquidity in the bond markets, the spread

of infectious illness or other public health issues, market disruptions caused by tariffs, trade disputes or other factors or

adverse investor sentiment. If the market prices of the fund's securities and assets fall, the value of your investment will

go down. A change in financial condition or other event affecting a single issuer may adversely impact securities markets

as a whole. The value of assets or income from investment may be worth less in the future as inflation decreases the

value of money. As inflation increases, the real value of the fund's assets can decline as can the value of the fund's distributions.

In the past decade, financial markets throughout the world have experienced increased volatility, depressed valuations,

decreased liquidity and heightened uncertainty. Governmental and non-governmental issuers have defaulted on, or

been forced to restructure, their debts. These conditions may continue, recur, worsen or spread. Events that have contributed

------

to these market conditions include, but are not limited to, major cybersecurity events; geopolitical events (including

wars and terror attacks); measures to address budget deficits; downgrading of sovereign debt; changes in oil and commodity

prices; dramatic changes in currency exchange rates; global pandemics; and public sentiment. U.S. and non-U.S. governments

and central banks have provided significant support to financial markets, including by keeping interest rates at historically

low levels. U.S. Federal Reserve or other U.S. or non-U.S. governmental or central bank actions, including interest rate

increases or decreases, or contrary actions by different governments, could negatively affect financial markets generally,

increase market volatility and reduce the value and liquidity of securities in which the fund invests. Policy and legislative

changes in the U.S. and in other countries are affecting many aspects of financial regulation, and these and other events

affecting global markets, such as the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union (or Brexit)

or potential trade

imbalances with China or other countries

, may in some instances contribute to decreased liquidity and increased volatility

in the financial markets. The impact of these changes on the markets, and the practical implications for market participants,

may not be fully known for some

time

.

Economies and financial markets throughout the world are increasingly interconnected. Economic, financial or political

events, trading and tariff arrangements, armed conflict, terrorism, natural disasters, infectious illness or public health

issues, cybersecurity events, supply chain disruptions, and other circumstances in one country or region could have

profound impacts on global economies or markets. As a result, whether or not the fund invests in securities of issuers

located in or with significant exposure to the countries directly affected, the value and liquidity of the fund's investments

may be negatively affected. The fund may experience a substantial or complete loss on any individual security or

derivative position.

The

global pandemic of the novel coronavirus respiratory disease designated

has resulted in

major disruption

to economies and markets around the world, including the United States. Global financial markets have experienced

extreme volatility and severe losses, and trading in many instruments has been disrupted. Liquidity for many instruments

has been greatly reduced for periods of time. Some interest rates are very low and in some cases yields are negative.

Some sectors of the economy and individual issuers have experienced particularly large losses.

Rates of inflation have

recently risen.

These circumstances may continue for an extended period of time, and may continue to affect adversely

the value and liquidity of the fund's investments.

Governments and central banks, including the Federal Reserve in the

U.S., have taken extraordinary and unprecedented actions to support local and global economies and the financial

markets. These actions have resulted in significant expansion of public debt, including in the U.S. The impact of these

measures

may not be known for some time. The consequences of high public debt, including its future impact on the

economy and securities markets, likewise may not be known for some time.

The fund's investments, payment obligations and financing terms may be based on floating rates, such as LIBOR (London

Interbank Offered Rate). The UK Financial Conduct Authority ("

FCA

") and LIBOR's administrator, ICE Benchmark

Administration ("

IBA

"), have announced that most LIBOR rates will no longer be published after the end of 2021 and a

majority of U.S. dollar LIBOR rates will no longer be published after June 30, 2023. It is possible that the FCA may

compel the IBA to publish a subset of LIBOR settings after these dates on a

"

synthetic

"

basis, but any such publications

would be considered non-representative of the underlying market. There remains uncertainty regarding the nature of

any replacement rate and the impact of the transition from LIBOR on the fund, issuers of instruments in which the fund

invests, and financial markets generally.

High yield or "junk" bond risk.

Debt securities that are below investment grade, called

"

junk bonds,

"

are speculative,

have a higher risk of default or are already in default, tend to be less liquid and are more difficult to value than higher

grade securities. Junk bonds tend to be volatile and more susceptible to adverse events and negative sentiments. These

risks are more pronounced for securities that are already in default.

Interest rate risk

.

The market prices

of the fund's

fixed income securities

may fluctuate significantly when interest

rates change.

The value of your investment will generally go down when interest rates rise.

A rise in rates tends to have

a greater impact on the prices of longer term or duration

securities

. For example, if interest rates increase by 1%, the

value of a fund's portfolio with a portfolio duration of ten years would be expected to decrease by 10%, all other things

being equal.

In recent years interest rates and credit spreads in the U.S. have been at historical lows, which means there

is more risk that they may go up.

A general rise in interest rates could adversely affect the price and liquidity of fixed

income securities and could also result in increased redemptions from the fund. The maturity of a security may be

significantly longer than its effective duration. A security's maturity and other features may be more relevant than its

------

Prospectus summary

effective duration in determining the security's sensitivity to other factors affecting the issuer or markets generally, such

as changes in credit quality or in the yield premium that the market may establish for certain types of

securities (sometimes

called

"

credit spread

"). In general, the longer its maturity the more a security may be susceptible to these factors. When

the credit spread for a fixed income security goes up, the value of the security will generally go

down

.

Rising interest rates can lead to increased default rates, as issuers of floating rate securities find themselves faced with

higher payments. Unlike fixed rate securities, floating rate securities generally will not increase in value if interest rates

decline. Changes in interest rates also will affect the amount of interest income the fund earns on its floating rate investments.

Credit risk.

If an issuer or guarantor of a security held by the fund or a counterparty to a financial contract with the

fund defaults on its obligation to pay principal and/or interest, has its credit rating downgraded or is perceived to be less

creditworthy, or the credit quality or value of any underlying assets declines, the value of your investment will decline. In

addition, the fund may incur expenses and suffer delays in an effort to protect the fund's interest in securities experiencing

these events.

Changes in actual or perceived creditworthiness may occur quickly. The fund could be delayed or hindered

in its enforcement of rights against an issuer, guarantor or counterparty.

A security may change in price for a variety of

reasons. For example, floating rate securities may have final maturities of ten or more years, but their effective durations

will tend to be very short. If there is an adverse credit event, or a perceived change in the issuer's creditworthiness, these

securities could experience a far greater negative price movement than would be predicted by the change in the security's

yield in relation to their effective duration. The fund evaluates the credit quality of issuers and counterparties prior to

investing in securities. Credit risk is broadly gauged by the credit ratings of the securities in which the fund invests.

However, ratings are only the opinions of the companies issuing them and are not guarantees as to quality. Securities

rated in the lowest category of investment grade (Baa/BBB) may possess certain speculative characteristics.

Prepayment or call risk.

Many issuers have a right to prepay their securities. If interest rates fall, an issuer may exercise

this right. If this happens, the fund will not benefit from the rise in market price that normally accompanies a decline in

interest rates, and will be forced to reinvest prepayment proceeds at a time when yields on securities available in the

market are lower than the yield on the prepaid security. The fund also may lose any premium it paid on the security.

Risk of illiquid investments.

Certain securities and derivatives held by the fund may be or become impossible or

difficult to purchase, sell or unwind. Illiquid securities and derivatives also may be difficult to value. Liquidity risk may

be magnified in a rising interest rate environment. If the fund is forced to sell an illiquid asset or unwind a derivatives

position, the fund may suffer a substantial loss or may not be able to sell at all.

Risks of non-U.S. investments.

Investing in non-U.S. issuers, or in U.S. issuers that have significant exposure to

foreign markets, may involve unique risks compared to investing in securities of U.S. issuers. These risks are more

pronounced for issuers in emerging markets or to the extent that the fund invests significantly in one region or country.

These risks may include different financial reporting practices and regulatory standards, less liquid trading markets,

extreme price volatility, currency risks, changes in economic, political, regulatory and social conditions, terrorism,

sustained economic downturns, financial instability, reduction of government or central bank support, inadequate

accounting standards, tariffs, tax disputes or other tax burdens, and investment and repatriation restrictions. Lack of

information and less market regulation also may affect the value of these securities. Withholding and other non-U.S.

taxes may decrease the fund's return. Non-U.S. issuers may be located in parts of the world that have historically been

prone to natural disasters.

Emerging market economies tend to be less diversified than those of more developed countries.

They typically have fewer medical and economic resources than more developed countries and thus they may be less

able to control or mitigate the effects of a pandemic.

Investing in depositary receipts is subject to many of the same risks

as investing directly in non-U.S. issuers. Depositary receipts may involve higher expenses and may trade at a discount

(or premium) to the underlying security. A number of countries in the European Union (EU) have experienced, and

may continue to experience, severe economic and financial difficulties. In addition, the United Kingdom has withdrawn

from the EU (commonly known as

"

Brexit

").

The range and potential implications of possible political, regulatory,

economic, and market outcomes of Brexit cannot be fully known but could be significant, potentially resulting in increased

volatility, illiquidity and potentially lower economic growth in the affected markets, which will adversely affect the fund's

investments. Sanctions or other government actions against a foreign nation could negatively impact the fund's investments

in securities that have exposure to that nation. The Ukraine has experienced ongoing military conflict; this conflict may

expand and military conflicts could potentially occur elsewhere in Europe. China and other developing market Asia-Pacific

------

countries may be subject to considerable degrees of economic, political and social instability. In addition, the U.S.

government has imposed restrictions on U.S. investor participation in certain Chinese

investments.

These matters could

adversely affect China's

economy.

Derivatives risk.

Using swaps, futures, forwards and other derivatives exposes the fund to special risks and costs and

may result in losses to the fund, even when used for hedging purposes. Using derivatives can increase losses and reduce

opportunities for gain when market prices, interest rates or currencies, or the derivative instruments themselves, behave

in a way not anticipated by the fund, especially in abnormal market conditions. Using derivatives can have a leveraging

effect (which may increase investment losses) and increase the fund's volatility, which is the degree to which the fund's

share price may fluctuate within a short time period. Certain derivatives have the potential for unlimited loss, regardless

of the size of the fund's initial investment. Derivatives are generally subject to the risks applicable to the assets, rates,

indices or other indicators underlying the derivative. If changes in a derivative's value do not correspond to changes in

the value of the fund's other investments or do not correlate well with the underlying assets, rate or index, the fund may

not fully benefit from, or could lose money on, or could experience unusually high expenses as a result of, the derivative

position. The other parties to certain derivative transactions present the same types of credit risk as issuers of fixed

income securities. Derivatives also tend to involve greater liquidity risk and they may be difficult to value. The fund

may be unable to terminate or sell its derivative positions. In fact, many over-the-counter derivatives will not have

liquidity beyond the counterparty to the instrument.

The fund also may have to sell assets at inopportune times to satisfy

its obligations.

Use of derivatives or similar instruments may have different tax consequences for the fund than an

investment in the underlying security, and those differences may affect the amount, timing and character of income

distributed to shareholders. The fund's use of derivatives may also increase the amount of taxes payable by shareholders.

Risks associated with the use of derivatives are magnified to the extent that an increased portion of the fund's assets are

committed to derivatives in general or are invested in just one or a few types of derivatives.

The U.S. government and foreign governments are in the process of adopting and implementing regulations governing

derivatives

markets, including mandatory clearing of certain derivatives, margin and reporting requirements. The ultimate

impact of the regulations remains unclear. Additional regulation of derivatives may make derivatives more costly, may

limit their availability or utility or otherwise adversely affect their performance, or may disrupt markets. The fund may

be exposed to additional risks as a result of the additional regulations. The extent and impact of the regulations are not

yet fully known and may not be for some time.

The fund will be required to maintain its positions with a clearing organization through one or more clearing brokers.

The clearing organization will require the fund to post margin and the broker may require the fund to post additional

margin to secure the fund's obligations. The amount of margin required may change from time to time. In addition,

cleared transactions may be more expensive to maintain than over-the-counter transactions and may require the fund

to deposit larger amounts of margin. The fund may not be able to recover margin amounts if the broker has financial

difficulties. Also, the broker may require the fund to terminate a derivatives position under certain circumstances. This

may cause the fund to lose money. The fund's ability to use certain derivative instruments currently is limited by Commodity

Futures Trading Commission rules.

Leveraging risk.

The value of your investment may be more volatile and other risks tend to be compounded if the

fund borrows or uses derivatives or other investments that have embedded leverage. Leverage generally magnifies the

effect of any increase or decrease in the value of the fund's underlying assets and creates a risk of loss of value on a larger

pool of assets than the fund would otherwise have, potentially resulting in the loss of all assets. Engaging in such transactions

may cause the fund to liquidate positions when it may not be advantageous to do so to satisfy its obligations or meet

segregation requirements.

Tax and regulated investment company qualification risk.

As described in more detail below, in order to qualify

for the favorable tax treatment generally available to regulated investment companies, at least 90% of the fund's gross

income each taxable year must consist of qualifying income, the fund must meet certain asset diversification tests at the

end of each fiscal quarter, and the fund must meet certain distribution requirements for each taxable year.

The tax treatment of certain ILS is not entirely clear. Certain of the fund's investments (including, potentially, certain

ILS) may generate income that is not qualifying income. The fund might generate more non-qualifying income than

anticipated, might not be able to generate qualifying income in a particular taxable year at levels sufficient to meet the

qualifying income test, or might not be able to determine the percentage of qualifying income it has derived for a taxable

------

Prospectus summary

year until after year-end. The fund may determine not to make an investment that it otherwise would have made, or

may dispose of an investment it otherwise would have retained (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain

or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), in an effort to meet the qualifying income test.

Certain investments made by the fund (including certain ILS) may be treated as equity in passive foreign investment

companies ("

PFICs

") for federal income tax purposes. In general, a PFIC is a foreign corporation (i) that receives at least

75% of its annual gross income from passive sources (such as interest, dividends, certain rents and royalties, or capital

gains) or (ii) where at least 50% of its assets (computed based on average fair market value) either produce or are held

for the production of passive income. If the fund acquires any equity interest in a PFIC, the fund could be subject to

U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on

"

excess distributions

"

received from the PFIC or on gain from

the sale of stock in the PFIC, even if all income or gain actually received by the fund is timely distributed to its shareholders.

The fund would not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or deduction for such a tax. A

"

qualified

electing fund

"

election or a

"

mark to market

"

election may be available that would ameliorate these adverse tax consequences,

but such elections could require the fund to recognize taxable income or gain (which would be subject to the distribution

requirements applicable to regulated investment companies, as described above) without the concurrent receipt of cash.

In order to satisfy the distribution requirements and avoid a tax on the fund, the fund may be required to liquidate

portfolio securities that it might otherwise have continued to hold (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable

gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), or the fund may be required to borrow cash. Under

proposed Treasury regulations, certain income derived by the fund for a taxable year from a PFIC with respect to which

the fund has made a qualified electing fund election would generally constitute qualifying income only to the extent the

PFIC makes distributions in respect of that income to the fund for that taxable year. Gains from the sale of stock of

PFICs may also be treated as ordinary income. In order for the fund to make a qualified electing fund election with

respect to a PFIC, the PFIC would have to agree to provide certain tax information to the fund on an annual basis, which

it might not agree to do. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in PFICs to limit its tax liability or maximize

its after-tax return from these investments.

If a sufficient portion of the interests in a foreign issuer (including certain ILS issuers) is held or deemed held by the

fund, independently or together with certain other U.S. persons, that issuer may be treated as a

"

controlled foreign

corporation

"

(a

"

CFC

") with respect to the fund, in which case the fund will be required to take into account each year,

as ordinary income, its share of certain portions of that issuer's income, whether or not such amounts are distributed. The

fund may have to dispose of its portfolio securities (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and

potentially under disadvantageous circumstances) to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to meet its distribution

requirements and avoid fund-level taxes. Under proposed Treasury regulations, certain income derived by the fund

from a CFC for a taxable year would generally constitute qualifying income only to the extent the CFC makes distributions

in respect of that income to the fund for that taxable year. In addition, some fund gains on the disposition of interests in

such an issuer may be treated as ordinary income. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in issuers that could

be treated as CFCs in order to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

If the fund were to fail to qualify for treatment as a regulated investment company, it would generally be taxed in the

same manner as an ordinary corporation, and distributions to its shareholders generally would not be deductible by the

fund in computing its taxable income. Under certain circumstances, the fund may be able to cure a failure to meet the

qualifying income test or the diversification test if such failure was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, but

in order to do so the fund may incur a significant penalty tax that would reduce (and potentially could eliminate) the

fund's returns.

Valuation risk.

The sales price the fund could receive for any particular portfolio investment may differ from the fund's

valuation of the investment, particularly for illiquid securities and securities that trade in thin or volatile markets or that

are valued using a fair value methodology. These differences may increase significantly and affect fund investments

more broadly during periods of market volatility. Investors who purchase or redeem fund shares on days when the fund

is holding fair-valued securities may receive fewer or more shares or lower or higher redemption proceeds than they

would have received if the fund had not fair-valued the securities or had used a different valuation methodology. The

fund's ability to value its investments may also be impacted by technological issues and/or errors by pricing services or

other third party service providers.

------

Concentration risk.

A fund that invests a significant percentage of its assets in a single industry may be particularly

susceptible to adverse economic, regulatory or other events affecting that industry and may be more risky than a fund that

does not concentrate in an industry.

Industries

in the financial segment, such as

insurance companies,

may be sensitive to changes in interest rates and

general economic activity and are generally subject to extensive government regulation.

Non-diversification risk.

The fund is not diversified, which means that it can invest a higher percentage of its assets

in the securities of any one or more issuers than a diversified fund. Being non-diversified may magnify the fund's losses

from adverse events affecting a particular issuer.

Cybersecurity risk.

Cybersecurity failures by and breaches of the fund's Adviser, transfer agent, distributor, custodian,

fund accounting agent or other service providers may disrupt fund operations, interfere with the fund's ability to calculate

its NAV, prevent fund shareholders from purchasing

or

redeeming

shares or receiving distributions, cause loss of or

unauthorized access to private shareholder information, and result in financial losses

to the fund and its shareholders

,

regulatory fines, penalties, reputational damage, or additional compliance costs.

Expense risk.

Your actual costs of investing in the fund may be higher than the expenses shown in

"

Annual fund

operating expenses

"

for a variety of reasons. For example, expense ratios may be higher than those shown if overall net

assets decrease. Net assets are more likely to decrease and fund expense ratios are more likely to increase when markets

are volatile.

Portfolio selection risk.

The Adviser's judgment about

the quality

,

relative yield,

relative value or market trends

affecting

a particular sector

or region,

market segment,

security

or about

interest rates generally

may prove to be incorrect,

or there may be imperfections, errors or limitations in the models, tools and data used by the Adviser.

Repurchase offers risk.

The risk that the fund's repurchases of shares may hurt investment performance by forcing

the fund to maintain a higher percentage of its assets in liquid investments or to liquidate certain investments when it is

not desirable to do so. Repurchases may be oversubscribed, preventing shareholders from selling some or all of their

shares back to the fund.

Anti-takeover provisions.

The fund's Agreement and Declaration of Trust and by-laws include provisions that could

limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the fund or convert the fund to open-end status.

To learn more about the fund's investments and risks, you should obtain and read the statement of additional information.

Please note that there are many other factors that could adversely affect your investment and that could prevent the

fund from achieving its goals.

INVESTMENT ADVISER

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("

Amundi US

"

or the

"

Adviser

") is the fund's investment Adviser. The Adviser is

responsible on a day-to-day basis for investment of the fund's portfolio in accordance with its investment objective and

principal investment strategies. The Adviser's main office is at 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Amundi US is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Amundi and Amundi's wholly owned subsidiary, Amundi USA,

Inc. Amundi, one of the world's largest asset managers, is headquartered in Paris, France. As of December 31,

2021

,

Amundi had more than $

2.3 trillion in assets under management worldwide. As of December 31,

2021

, Amundi US

(and its U.S. affiliates) had over $

billion in assets under management.

The firm's U.S. mutual fund investment history includes creating in 1928 one of the first mutual funds.

The fund pays the Adviser a fee for its investment advisory services equal on an annual basis to 1.75% of the fund's

average daily net assets up to $1 billion, and 1.70% of the fund's average daily net assets over $1 billion. This fee is accrued

daily and paid monthly. See

"

Management of the Fund.

"

The fund does not currently charge a repurchase fee, and it does not currently expect to impose a repurchase fee. However,

the fund may charge a repurchase fee of up to 2.0%, which the fund would retain to help offset non-de minimis estimated

costs related to the repurchase (such as bid to ask spreads) incurred by the fund, directly or indirectly, as a result of

repurchasing shares, thus allocating estimated transaction costs to the shareholder whose shares are being repurchased.

------

Prospectus summary

The fund may introduce, or modify the amount of, a repurchase fee at any time. The fund may also waive or reduce the

repurchase fee if the Adviser determines that the repurchase is offset by a corresponding purchase or if for other reasons

the fund will not incur transaction costs or will incur reduced transaction costs.

ADMINISTRATOR, CUSTODIAN, FUND ACCOUNTING AGENT, TRANSFER AGENT AND DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. serves as the fund's administrator.

The

Bank of New York Mellon ("

BNY Mellon

")

serves as

the fund

'

s

custodian

and

fund accounting agent.

BNY Mellon

Investment Servicing

(US)

Inc. serves as the

fund's transfer agent and dividend disbursing agent.

UNLISTED CLOSED-END FUND STRUCTURE

The fund's shares have very limited liquidity. The fund's shares will not be listed on a stock exchange, and the fund does

not anticipate that a secondary market will develop for its shares. The fund will offer to repurchase a limited amount of

shares quarterly, which is discussed in more detail below.

DISTRIBUTIONS

The fund intends to distribute to shareholders all or a portion of its net investment income annually and realized net

capital gains, if any, at least annually. After the first year of operations, the fund may pay dividends twice annually.

Unless shareholders specify otherwise, dividends will be reinvested in shares of the fund.

TAX CONSIDERATIONS

You will normally have to pay federal income taxes, and any state or local taxes, on the dividends and other distributions

you receive from the fund. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, distributions from the fund's net capital gains (the

excess, if any, of its net long-term capital gains over its net short-term capital losses) are considered long-term capital

gains and are generally taxable to noncorporate shareholders at

reduced rates

. Distributions from the fund's net short-term

capital gains are generally taxable as ordinary income. Other dividends are generally taxable as ordinary income or, in

general, if paid from the fund's

"

qualified dividend income

"

and if certain conditions, including holding period requirements,

are met by the fund and the shareholder, as qualified dividend income taxable to individual and certain other noncorporate

shareholders at

reduced

U.S. federal income tax rates

.

"

Qualified dividend income

"

generally is income derived from

dividends paid by U.S. corporations or certain foreign corporations that are either incorporated in a U.S. possession or

eligible for tax benefits under certain U.S. income tax treaties. In addition, dividends that the fund receives in respect of

stock of certain foreign corporations may be qualified dividend income if that stock is readily tradable on an established

U.S. securities market. A portion of dividends received from the fund (but none of the fund's capital gain distributions)

may qualify for the dividends-received deduction for corporations.

The fund will report to shareholders annually the U.S. federal income tax status of all fund distributions.

If the fund declares a dividend in October, November or December, payable to shareholders of record in such a month,

and pays it in January of the following year, you will be taxed on the dividend as if you received it in the year in which it

was declared.

You should consult a tax adviser about state, local and foreign taxes on your distributions from the fund.

See

"

Dividends and Distributions

"

and

"

Federal Income Tax Matters.

"

------

Summary of fund expenses

The following table describes the fees and expenses you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the fund.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| Shareholder Transaction Expenses |  |
| Maximum Repurchase Fee<sup>1</sup> <br>| 2.00% |
| Sales Load |  |

---

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| Annual Fund Operating Expenses | As a Percentage<br>of Net Assets<br>Attributable to<br>the Common Shares<br>|
| Management Fee | 1.75% |
| Other Expenses | 0.16% |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses | 1.91% |

---

Example

The following examples illustrate the expenses that you would pay on an investment in the fund's shares, assuming

(1) the fund's total annual operating expenses attributable to

Common

shares remain the same and (2) a 5% annual return\*:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

---

| | | | | | | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|
|  | Without a repurchase<br>at the end of the period | Without a repurchase<br>at the end of the period | Without a repurchase<br>at the end of the period | Without a repurchase<br>at the end of the period | With a repurchase<br>at the end of the period<sup>1</sup>  | With a repurchase<br>at the end of the period<sup>1</sup>  | With a repurchase<br>at the end of the period<sup>1</sup>  | With a repurchase<br>at the end of the period<sup>1</sup>  |
|  | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares | Number of years you own your shares |
|  | 1 | 3 | 5 | 10 | 1 | 3 | 5 | 10 |
| Total expenses incurred <br>on a $1,000 investment<br>| $19 | $60 | $103 | $223 | $40 | $82 | $127 | $251 |
| Total expenses incurred<br>on a $1,000,000 investment<br>| $19395 | $60002 | $103157 | $223267 | $40308  | $82227 | $126777 | $250769 |

---

The foregoing fee table and examples are intended to assist investors in understanding the costs and expenses that an

investor in the fund will bear directly or indirectly.

\* The Examples should not be considered representations of future expenses. Actual expenses may be greater or lesser than those assumed for purposes of the Examples.

The Examples assume that the other

expenses set forth in the fee table are accurate and that all dividends and distributions are reinvested at net asset value.

Moreover, the fund's actual rate of return may be greater or less than the hypothetical 5% return shown in the example.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

(1) The fund does not currently charge a repurchase fee. However, the fund may in the future charge a repurchase fee of up to 2.00%, which the fund would retain to help offset non-de minimis estimated costs related to the repurchase.

------

Financial highlights

The financial highlights table helps you understand the fund's financial performance since the fund's inception.

Certain information reflects financial results for a single fund share. The total returns in the table represent the rate that

you would have earned or lost on an investment in shares of the fund (assuming reinvestment of all dividends

and distributions).

The information below for the fiscal years ended October 31, 2017 through October 31,

2021

has been audited by Ernst

& Young LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, whose report is included in the fund's annual report along

with the fund's financial statements. The information below for the

years

ended on October 31,

2015

and

October 31,

2016

was audited by another independent registered public accounting firm. The fund's annual report is incorporated by

reference in the statement of additional information and is available upon request.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

---

| | | | | | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|
|  | Year <br>Ended <br>10/31/21<br>| Year <br>Ended <br>10/31/20<br>| Year <br>Ended <br>10/31/19<br>| Year <br>Ended <br>10/31/18<br>| Year <br>Ended <br>10/31/17<br>| Year<br>Ended<br>10/31/16\*<br>| 12/22/14<br>to<br>10/31/15\*<br>|
| Net asset value, beginning of period | $8.88 | $8.79 | $9.93 | $9.59 | $11.09 | $10.59 | $10.00 |
| Increase (decrease) from investment operations: |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |
| Net investment income (loss) (a) | $0.30 | $0.33 | $0.06 | $0.31 | $0.25 | $0.63 | $(0.12) |
| Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | (0.31) | 0.31 | (0.65) | 0.17 | (0.74) | 0.51 | 0.71 |
| Net increase (decrease) from investment operations | $(0.01) | $0.64 | $(0.59) | $0.48 | $(0.49) | $1.14 | $0.59 |
| Distributions to shareowners: |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |
| Net investment income | $(0.44)(b) | $(0.55)(b) | $(0.55)(b) | $(0.14) | $(1.01)(b) | $(0.64) | $— |
| Total distributions | $(0.44) | $(0.55) | $(0.55) | $(0.14) | $(1.01) | $(0.64) | $— |
| Net increase (decrease) in net asset value | $(0.45) | $0.09 | $(1.14) | $0.34 | $(1.50) | $0.50 | $0.59 |
| Net asset value, end of period | $8.43 | $8.88 | $8.79 | $9.93 | $9.59 | $11.09 | $10.59 |
| Total return (c) | (0.11)% | 7.77% | (5.85)% | 5.04% | (4.95)% | 11.23% | 5.90%(d) |
| Ratio of net expenses to average net assets | 1.91% | 1.93% | 1.96% | 1.95% | 2.00% | 2.10% | 2.10%(e) |
| Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net <br>assets<br>| 3.46% | 3.92% | 0.68% | 3.19% | 2.38% | 5.93% | (1.30)%(e) |
| Portfolio turnover rate | 70% | 60% | 50% | 42% | 34% | 29% | 1% |
| Net assets, end of period (in thousands) | $982923 | $876126 | $831640 | $991447 | $359114 | $161667 | $75400 |

---

\*

The Fund was audited by an independent registered public accounting firm other than Ernst & Young LLP.

(a) The per-share data presented above is based on the average shares outstanding for the periods presented.

(b) The amount of distributions made to shareowners during the year was in excess of the net investment income earned by the Fund during the year.

(c) Assumes initial investment at net asset value at the beginning of each period, reinvestment of all distributions and the complete redemption of the investment at net asset value at the end of each period.

(d) Not annualized.

(e) Annualized.

------

The fund

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company that is operated as an

interval fund. The fund was organized under the laws of the State of Delaware on July 15, 2014, and has registered under

the 1940 Act. The fund's principal office is located at 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, and its telephone

number is (617) 742-7825.

Use of proceeds

The fund will invest the proceeds of the offering of shares in accordance with the fund's investment objective and principal

investment strategies as stated below. It is presently anticipated that the fund will be able to fully invest all of the proceeds

according to its investment objective and policies within approximately three months after the receipt of proceeds,

depending on the amount and timing of proceeds available to the fund as well as the availability of securities consistent

with the fund's investment objective and strategies. Pending investment, all or a portion of the proceeds may be invested

in U.S. government securities or high grade, short-term money market instruments. See

"

Investment Objective and

Principal Investment Strategies.

"

------

Investment objective and principal investment strategies

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

The fund's investment objective is total return. There can be no assurance that the fund will achieve its investment objective.

The fund's investment objective may be changed without shareholder approval. The fund will provide

30 days' written

notice prior to implementing any change to its investment objective.

PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES

The fund invests primarily in insurance-linked securities ("

ILS

"). ILS include event-linked bonds (also known as

insurance-linked bonds or catastrophe bonds), quota share instruments (also known as

"

reinsurance sidecars

"), collateralized

reinsurance investments, industry loss warranties, event-linked swaps, securities of companies in the insurance or

reinsurance industries, and other insurance- and reinsurance-related securities.

Because ILS are typically rated below investment grade or unrated, a substantial portion of the fund's assets ordinarily

will consist of below investment grade (high yield) debt securities. Investment in securities of below investment grade

quality, commonly referred to as

"

junk bonds,

"

involves substantial risk of loss. Securities in which the fund may invest

may also be subordinated or

"

junior

"

to more senior securities of the issuer.

In selecting ILS for investment, Amundi US uses quantitative and qualitative analysis. Amundi US utilizes quantitative

analysis in an effort to model portfolio risk and attribution. This modeling process is supported by use of a risk analytic

system that is used by the insurance industry. The risk analytic system contains a database of historical and hypothetical

catastrophic events and property structures that assists Amundi US in its efforts to model peril exposures at both the

security and portfolio level. Among the factors considered in this process are expected loss and the probabilities of loss

and maximum loss. Amundi US's qualitative analysis may consider various factors, such as trigger term (measurement

of loss event specific to an instrument) or other terms of an instrument, sponsor quality, deal structure, alignment of

interest between the fund and the sponsoring insurance company, and model accuracy. Amundi US's analysis guides

Amundi US in determining the desired allocation of reinsurance-related securities by issuer, peril and geographic exposure.

The fund seeks to participate broadly in the spectrum of natural catastrophe risks within the global reinsurance market,

while seeking to reduce exposure to reinsurers where there is not an alignment of interest. However, there are no limits

on the fund's potential investment in a particular issue, peril or geographic exposure. Amundi US may rely on information

and analysis obtained from brokers, dealers and ratings organizations, among other sources.

In selecting investments other than ILS, Amundi US also considers both broad economic and issuer specific factors.

Amundi US selects individual securities based upon the terms of the securities, liquidity and rating, sector and exposure

to particular issuers and sectors. Amundi US also employs fundamental research to assess an issuer's credit quality,

taking into account financial condition and profitability, future capital needs, potential for change in rating, industry

outlook, the competitive environment and management ability. In making these portfolio decisions, Amundi US relies

on the knowledge, experience and judgment of its staff and the staff of its affiliates who have access to a wide variety

of research.

Amundi US may sell a portfolio security when it believes the security no longer will contribute to meeting the fund's

investment objective. Amundi US makes that determination based on the same criteria it uses to select portfolio securities.

Portfolio investments

Normally, the fund invests at least 80% of its net assets (plus the amount of borrowings, if any, for investment purposes)

in insurance-linked securities ("

ILS

"). Derivative instruments that provide exposure to such ILS or have similar economic

characteristics may be used to satisfy the fund's 80% policy. ILS include event-linked bonds (also known as insurance-linked

bonds or catastrophe bonds), structured reinsurance investments such as quota share instruments (a form of proportional

reinsurance in which an investor participates in the premiums and losses of a reinsurer's portfolio of catastrophe-oriented

policies, sometimes referred to as

"

reinsurance sidecars

") and collateralized reinsurance investments, industry loss

warranties, event-linked swaps, securities of companies in the insurance or reinsurance industries, and other insurance-

and reinsurance-related securities.

Reinsurance-related securities are typically below investment grade, or unrated, and may be referred to as

"

junk bonds.

"

------

The fund has no limit as to the maturity of the securities in which it invests. Event-linked bonds typically have maturities

between three and five years, while quota shares, collateralized reinsurance investments and industry loss warranties

typically have maturities that generally do not exceed two years. Maturity is a measure of the time remaining until final

payment on the security is due.

The fund will provide written notice to shareholders at least 60 days prior to any change to the requirement that it invest

at least 80% of its assets in ILS.

In addition to ILS, the fund may invest in in a broad range of issuers and segments of the debt securities market. Debt

securities may include instruments and obligations of U.S. and non-U.S. corporate and other non-governmental entities,

those of U.S. and non-U.S. governmental entities (including government agencies and instrumentalities), floating rate

loans and other floating rate securities, subordinated debt securities, certificates of deposit, money market securities,

funds that invest primarily in debt securities, and cash, cash equivalents and other short term holdings.

The fund's investments may have fixed or variable principal payments and all types of interest rate and dividend payment

and reset terms, including fixed rate, adjustable rate, floating rate, contingent, deferred, payment in kind and auction

rate features.

The fund may invest in ILS issued by non-U.S. issuers.

The fund may, but is not required to, use derivatives, such as currency forward contracts and bond and interest rate

futures. The fund may use derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: in an attempt to hedge against adverse changes

in the market price of securities, interest rates or currency exchange rates; as a substitute for purchasing or selling

securities; to seek event-linked exposure; to attempt to increase the fund's return as a non-hedging strategy that may be

considered speculative; and to manage portfolio characteristics. The fund may choose not to make use of derivatives for

a variety of reasons, and any use may be limited by applicable law and regulations. The fund also may hold cash or other

short-term investments.

To the extent consistent with the repurchase liquidity requirement of an interval fund, the fund may invest without

limit in illiquid securities.

The fund's investment strategies and policies may be changed from time to time without shareholder approval, unless

specifically stated otherwise in this prospectus or in the statement of additional information.

Insurance-linked securities

Event-linked bonds

The fund may invest in

"

event-linked

"

bonds, which sometimes are referred to as

"

insurance-linked

"

or

"

catastrophe

"

bonds. Event-linked bonds are floating rate debt obligations for which the return of principal and the payment of interest

are contingent on the non-occurrence of a pre-defined

"

trigger

"

event, such as a hurricane or an earthquake of a specific

magnitude. The trigger event's magnitude may be based on losses to a company or industry, industry indexes or readings

of scientific instruments, or may be based on specified actual losses. If a trigger event, as defined within the terms of an

event-linked bond occurs, the fund may lose a portion or all of its accrued interest and/or principal invested in such

event-linked bond. The fund is entitled to receive principal and interest payments so long as no trigger event occurs of

the description and magnitude specified by the instrument.

Event-linked bonds may be issued by government agencies, insurance companies, reinsurers, special purpose corporations

or other U.S. or non-U.S. entities. Event-linked bonds are typically rated below investment grade or may be unrated.

The rating for an event-linked bond primarily reflects the rating agency's calculated probability that a pre-defined trigger

event will occur, which will cause a loss of principal. This rating may also assess the credit risk of the bond's collateral

pool, if any, and the reliability of the model used to calculate the probability of a trigger event.

The fund's investments in event-linked bonds may have trigger events related to a broad range of insurance risks, which

can be broken down into three major categories: natural risks, weather risks and non-natural events. Investments in

event-linked bonds with trigger events related to natural risks will represent the largest portion of the fund's event-linked

bond investments. The events covered are natural catastrophes, such as hurricanes, other windstorms, earthquakes and

fires. Investments in event-linked bonds linked to weather risks provide insurance to companies, or insurers of companies,

whose sales depend on the weather and provide a hedge on the impact of weather-related risks. For example, a weather

------

Investment objective and principal investment strategies

event-linked bond could provide coverage based on the average temperature in a region over a given period. Investments

in event-linked bonds linked to non-natural risks could cover a much broader array of insurable risks, such as aerospace

and shipping catastrophes.

The fund may invest in other types of event-linked bonds where the trigger event may be based on company-wide losses

("

indemnity triggers

"), index-based losses ("

index triggers

") or a combination of triggers ("

hybrid triggers

").

Indemnity triggers.

Indemnity triggers are based on losses of the insurance company or other entity issuing the

event-linked bond. The trigger event would be considered to have occurred if a company's losses on catastrophic insurance

claims exceeded a certain aggregate amount of insured claims. If the company's losses were less than the pre-determined

aggregate amount, then the trigger event would not be considered to have occurred and the fund would be entitled to

recover its principal plus accrued but unpaid interest. Indemnity triggers require investors and rating agencies to understand

the risks of the insurance and reinsurance policies underwritten by the company, which may be difficult to obtain and

ascertain, particularly in the case of complex commercial insurance and reinsurance policies. In addition, event-linked

bond investors are dependent upon the company's ability to settle catastrophe claims in a manner that would not be

disadvantageous to investors' interests.

Index triggers.

Index triggers follow one of three broad approaches: parametric, industry-loss and modeled-loss, or a

combination thereof, which is discussed below as

"

hybrid triggers.

"

Index triggers are based on pre-defined formulas,

which eliminate the risks relating to a company's insurance claims-handling practices and potential information barriers.

However, index triggers are generally riskier than indemnity triggers, since investors in event-linked bonds that have

index triggers are dependent upon the accuracy of the models and reporting services used to calculate the formulas.

- Parametric.

Parametric index triggers are based upon the occurrence of a catastrophic event with certain defined

physical parameters (e.g., wind speed and location of a hurricane or magnitude and location of an earthquake).

- Industry-loss.

Industry loss index triggers are based upon the estimated loss for the insurance industry as a whole

from a particular catastrophe. Estimates are derived from a reporting service, such as Property Claim Services.

- Modeled-loss.

Modeled-loss index triggers are based upon a catastrophe-modeling firm's database estimate of an

industry loss, or a company's losses compared to a modeling firm's industry estimate of losses.

Hybrid triggers.

Hybrid triggers involve more than one trigger type in a single transaction or tranche of an event-linked

bond. For example, a hybrid trigger could involve the occurrence of both a U.S. hurricane and a Japanese earthquake

with a different kind of index trigger for each. Another example of a hybrid trigger involves different trigger types

occurring in a particular sequence. For example, after the occurrence of a qualifying U.S. earthquake, a modeled-loss

index is used to establish a company's overall market share, and then applied to the industry loss index associated with

the qualifying event to determine any principal reduction. Hybrid triggers may be more complicated and difficult to

understand for investors, and involve the applicable risks associated with the types of triggers described above.

Structured reinsurance investments

ILS include special purpose vehicles ("

SPVs

") or similar instruments structured to comprise a portion of a reinsurer's

catastrophe-oriented business, known as quota share instruments (sometimes referred to as reinsurance sidecars), or to

provide reinsurance relating to specific risks to insurance or reinsurance companies through a collateralized instrument,

known as collateralized reinsurance. Quota share instruments and other structured reinsurance investments generally

will be considered illiquid securities by the fund. The fund may invest substantially in illiquid securities.

Structured reinsurance investments developed along with event-linked bonds as a mechanism to facilitate risk-transfer

from insurance markets to capital markets investors. These instruments are typically more customizable but less liquid

investments than event-linked bonds. Like event-linked bonds, an investor in structured reinsurance investments

participates in the premiums and losses associated with underlying reinsurance contracts. Where the instruments are

based on the performance of underlying reinsurance contracts, the fund has limited transparency into the underlying

insurance policies and therefore must rely upon the risk assessment and sound underwriting practices of the insurer

and/or reinsurer. The instruments typically mature in one year.

------

The fund invests indirectly in reinsurance contracts, by holding notes or preferred shares issued by a SPV or similar

instrument whose performance is tied to an underlying reinsurance transaction, including quota share instruments.

Quota share instruments are a form of proportional reinsurance in which an investor participates in the premiums and

losses of a reinsurer's portfolio of catastrophe-oriented policies, according to a pre-defined percentage. For example,

under a 10% quota share agreement, the SPV would be entitled to 10% of all premiums associated with a defined portfolio

and be responsible for 10% of all related claims. The fund, as a holder of a quota share issued by an SPV would be

entitled to its pro rata share of premiums received by the SPV and would be responsible for its pro rata share of the

claims, up to the total amount invested.

Collateralized reinsurance investments, are privately structured securities or derivatives utilized to gain exposure to the

reinsurance market. Collateralized reinsurance entails an SPV entering into a reinsurance arrangement that is then

collateralized by invested capital and premiums related to the insurance coverage. The collateral is designed to cover in

full the potential claims that could arise from the underlying reinsurance contract.

Structured reinsurance investments may include industry loss warranties ("

ILWs

"). ILWs are insurance-linked securities

used to finance peak, non-recurrent insurance risks, such as hurricanes, tropical storms and earthquakes. ILWs feature

an industry loss index trigger, and, in some cases, a dual trigger design that includes a protection buyer indemnity trigger.

A traditional ILW takes the form of a bilateral reinsurance contract, but there are also index products that take the form

of derivatives, collateralized structures or exchange traded instruments. The common feature among these forms is that

the payout trigger is based on an industry loss index or a parametric index. County-weighted industry loss warranties

are variations of ILWs that provide reinsurance protection at a county level rather than state-wide or industry-wide losses.

The reinsurance market is highly cyclical, with coverage being written at the beginning of the year and midyear for

coverage for the following 12 months. The pricing of reinsurance is also highly cyclical as premiums for reinsurance

coverage are driven, in large part, by insurers' recent loss experience.

Liquidity and Restricted Securities

A significant percentage of the ILS in which the fund invests are legally restricted as to resale pursuant to Section 4(2) of

the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the

"

1933 Act

"), and securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A thereunder.

Certain Section 4(2) and Rule 144A securities may be determined to be liquid securities and most or all of the event-linked

bonds in which the fund invests will be considered liquid securities. Even if determined to be liquid, holdings of Rule

144A securities may increase the level of fund illiquidity if eligible buyers become uninterested in purchasing them.

Other ILS, including quota share instruments, generally will be considered illiquid securities by the fund. The fund may

invest substantially in illiquid securities.

Credit management

The fund may invest in securities and other obligations of any credit quality, including those that are rated below

investment grade (debt securities rated below investment grade are commonly referred to as

"

junk bonds

") or are unrated

but determined by the Adviser to be of equivalent credit quality, and those that are in default or in bankruptcy. Because

ILS typically are rated below investment grade or are unrated, a substantial portion of the fund's assets ordinarily will

consist of below investment grade securities. An investor can still lose significant amounts when investing in investment

grade securities. The fund does not have a policy of maintaining a specific average credit quality of its portfolio. The

Adviser monitors the credit quality and price of the securities and other instruments held by the fund.

Although the Adviser considers ratings when making investment decisions, it performs its own credit and investment

analysis and does not rely primarily on ratings assigned by rating services. In evaluating the attractiveness of a particular

obligation, whether rated or unrated, the Adviser generally gives equal weight to the obligation's yield and the issuer's

creditworthiness and will normally take into consideration, among other things, the issuer's financial resources and

operating history, its sensitivity to economic conditions and trends, the availability of its management, its debt maturity

schedules and borrowing requirements, and relative values based on anticipated cash flow, interest and asset coverage

and earnings prospects.

Below investment grade securities

The fund may invest in debt securities rated below investment grade or, if unrated, of equivalent quality as determined

by the Adviser. Because ILS typically are rated below investment grade or are unrated, a substantial portion of the fund's

assets ordinarily will consist of below investment grade securities. A debt security is below investment grade if it is rated

------

Investment objective and principal investment strategies

Ba/BB or lower or the equivalent rating by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization or determined

to be of equivalent credit quality by the Adviser. Debt securities rated below investment grade are commonly referred to

as

"

junk bonds

"

and are considered speculative. Below investment grade debt securities involve greater risk of loss, are

subject to greater price volatility and are less liquid, especially during periods of economic uncertainty or change, than

higher quality debt securities. Below investment grade securities also may be more difficult to value. With respect to

event-linked bonds, the rating reflects the probability that a pre-defined trigger event will occur, rather than the bond's

credit rating. The rating also assesses the model used to calculate the probability of the trigger event.

If a security receives different ratings from nationally recognized statistical rating organizations, the fund will use the

rating chosen by the portfolio manager as most representative of the security's credit quality. The ratings of nationally

recognized statistical rating organizations represent their opinions as to the quality of the securities that they undertake

to rate and may not accurately describe the risks of the securities. A rating organization may have a conflict of interest

with respect to a security for which it assigns a quality rating. In addition, there may be a delay between a change in the

credit quality of a security or other asset and a change in the quality rating assigned to the security or other asset by a

rating organization. If a rating organization changes the quality rating assigned to one or more of the fund's portfolio

securities, the Adviser will consider if any action is appropriate in light of the fund's investment objective and policies.

An investor can still lose significant amounts when investing in investment grade securities.

Floating rate investments

Floating rate investments are securities and other instruments with interest rates that adjust or

"

float

"

periodically based

on a specified interest rate or other reference and include floating rate loans, repurchase agreements, money market

securities and shares of money market and short-term bond funds. For purposes of the fund's investment policies, the

fund considers as floating rate instruments adjustable rate securities, fixed rate securities with durations of less than or

equal to one year, funds that invest primarily in floating rate instruments, and fixed rate securities with respect to which

the fund has entered into derivative instruments to effectively convert the fixed rate interest payments into floating rate

interest payments.

Floating rate loans

Floating rate loans are provided by banks and other financial institutions to large corporate customers. These loans are

rated below investment grade, but typically are secured with specific collateral and have a senior position in the capital

structure of the borrower. These loans typically have rates of interest that are reset periodically by reference to a base

lending rate, such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), plus a premium.

Second lien loans and other subordinated debt obligations

The fund may invest in loans and other debt securities that have the same characteristics as senior floating rate loans

except that such loans are second in lien property rather than first. Such

"

second lien

"

loans and securities, like senior

floating rate loans, typically have adjustable or floating rate interest payments. The risks associated with

"

second lien

"

loans are higher than the risk of loans with first priority over the collateral. In the event of default on a

"

second lien

"

loan, the first priority lien holder has first claim to the underlying collateral of the loan. It is possible that no collateral

value would remain for the second priority lien holder and therefore result in a loss of investment to the fund.

U.S. government securities

The fund may invest in U.S. government securities. U.S. government securities are obligations of, or guaranteed by, the

U.S. government, its agencies or government-sponsored entities. U.S. government securities include obligations: directly

issued by or supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, like Treasury bills, notes and bonds and

Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA)

certificates; supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from

the U.S. Treasury, like those of the

Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBs)

; supported by the discretionary authority of the

U.S. government to purchase the agency's securities

,

like those of the

Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA)

;

or supported only by the credit of the issuer itself, like the Tennessee Valley Authority. U.S. government securities include

issues by non-governmental entities (like financial institutions) that carry direct guarantees from U.S. government

agencies

. U.S. government securities include zero coupon securities that make payments of interest and principal only

upon maturity and which therefore tend to be subject to greater volatility than interest-bearing securities with

comparable maturities.

------

Although the U.S. government guarantees principal and interest payments on securities issued by the U.S. government

and some of its agencies, such as securities issued by GNMA, this guarantee does not apply to losses resulting from

declines in the market value of these securities. Some of the U.S. government securities that the fund may hold are not

guaranteed or backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, such as those issued by FNMA and

Federal

Home Loan Mortgage Corporation

(FHLMC)

.

Non-U.S. investments

The fund may invest without limit in securities of non-U.S. issuers, including securities of emerging market issuers.

Non-U.S. issuers are issuers that are organized and have their principal offices outside of the United States. Non-U.S.

securities may be issued by non-U.S. governments, banks or corporations, or private issuers, and certain supranational

organizations, such as the World Bank and the European Union. The fund considers emerging market issuers to include

issuers organized under the laws of an emerging market country, issuers with a principal office in an emerging market

country, issuers that derive at least 50% of their gross revenues or profits from goods or services produced in emerging

markets or sales made in emerging

market countries, or issuers that have at least 50% of their assets in emerging market

countries.

Emerging markets will generally include

,

but not be limited to, countries included in the Morgan Stanley

Capital International (MSCI)

Emerging + Frontier Markets

Index

.

Derivatives

The fund may purchase and sell derivative instruments such as exchange-listed and over-the-counter put and call options

on securities, financial futures, equity, fixed income and interest rate indices, and other financial instruments, purchase

and sell financial futures contracts and options thereon, enter into various interest rate transactions such as swaps, caps,

floors or collars and enter into various currency transactions such as currency forward contracts, currency futures

contracts, currency swaps or options on currency or currency futures or credit transactions and credit default swaps.

The fund also may purchase derivative instruments that combine features of these instruments. The fund may use

derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: in an attempt to hedge against adverse changes in the market price of

securities, interest rates or currency exchange rates; as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities; to seek event-linked

exposure; to attempt to increase the fund's return as a non-hedging strategy that may be considered speculative; to

manage portfolio characteristics, and as a cash flow management technique. The fund may choose not to make use of

derivatives for a variety of reasons, and any use may be limited by applicable law and regulations. The fund also may

hold cash or other short-term investments.

Structured securities

The fund may invest in structured securities. The value of the principal and/or interest on such securities is determined

by reference to changes in the value of specific currencies, interest rates, commodities, indices or other financial indicators

("

Reference

") or the relative change in two or more References. The interest rate or the principal amount payable upon

maturity or redemption may be increased or decreased depending upon changes in the Reference. The terms of the

structured securities may provide in certain circumstances that no principal is due at maturity and, therefore, may result

in a loss of the fund's investment. Changes in the interest rate or principal payable at maturity may be a multiple of the

changes in the value of the Reference. Consequently, structured securities may entail a greater degree of market risk

than other types of fixed income securities.

Credit-linked notes

The fund may invest in credit-linked notes ("

CLNs

"). A CLN is a derivative instrument. It is a synthetic obligation

between two or more parties where the payment of principal and/or interest is based on the performance of some

obligation (a reference obligation). In addition to credit risk of the reference obligations and interest rate risk, the

buyer/seller of the CLN is subject to counterparty risk.

Credit default swaps

The fund may enter into credit default swaps, which are a type of derivative transaction. In a credit default swap, the

credit default protection buyer makes periodic payments, known as premiums, to the credit default protection seller. In

return, the credit default protection seller will make a payment to the credit default protection buyer upon the occurrence

of a specified credit event. A credit default swap can refer to a single issuer or asset, a basket of issuers or assets, or an

index of assets, each known as the

"

reference obligation.

"

------

Investment objective and principal investment strategies

A credit default swap is designed as a means to purchase (or sell) a hedge against the risk of default on the reference

obligation. If a credit event occurs, the seller generally must pay the buyer the par value (i.e., full notional value) of the

swap in exchange for an equal face amount of deliverable obligations of the reference obligation, or the seller may be

required to deliver the related net cash amount, if the swap is cash settled.

The fund may be either the buyer or seller in a credit default swap. If the fund is a buyer and no credit event occurs, the

fund may recover nothing if the swap is held through its termination date. However, if a credit event occurs, the fund

generally may elect to receive the full notional value of the swap in exchange for an equal face amount of the reference

obligation, the value of which may have significantly decreased. As a seller, the fund generally would receive an upfront

payment or a fixed rate of income throughout the term of the swap provided that there is no credit event. As the seller,

the fund would effectively add leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the fund would be

subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap.

Event-linked swaps

The fund may obtain event-linked exposure by investing in event-linked swaps, which are similar to credit default swaps

but typically are contingent, or formulaically related to defined trigger events. Trigger events include hurricanes, earthquakes

and weather-related phenomena, including statistics relating to such events. If a trigger event occurs, the fund may lose

the swap's notional amount. As derivative instruments, event-linked swaps are subject to risks in addition to the risks of

investing in event-linked bonds, including counterparty risk and leverage risk.

Inverse floating rate obligations

The fund may invest in inverse floating rate obligations (a type of derivative instrument). The interest rate on inverse

floating rate obligations will generally decrease as short-term interest rates increase, and increase as short-term rates

decrease. Due to their leveraged structure, the sensitivity of the market value of an inverse floating rate obligation to

changes in interest rates is generally greater than a comparable long-term bond issued by the same issuer and with

similar credit quality, redemption and maturity provisions. Inverse floating rate obligations may be volatile and involve

leverage risk.

Other investment companies

The fund may invest in the securities of other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds and money

market funds, to the extent that such investments are consistent with the fund's investment objective and policies and

permissible under the 1940 Act. The fund may also invest without limit in money market funds. The fund, as a holder

of the securities of other investment companies, will bear its pro rata portion of the other investment companies' expenses,

including advisory fees. These expenses will be in addition to the direct expenses incurred by the fund.

Exchange-traded funds

Subject to the fund's limitations on investment in other investment companies, the fund may invest in exchange-traded

funds ("

ETFs

"). ETFs, such as SPDRs, PowerShares QQQ™ (QQQQs), iShares and various country index funds, are

funds whose shares are traded on a national exchange. ETFs may be based on underlying equity or fixed income securities.

SPDRs, for example, seek to provide investment results that generally correspond to the performance of the component

common stocks of the S&P® 500 Index. ETFs do not sell individual shares directly to investors and only issue their shares

in large blocks known as

"

creation units.

"

The investor purchasing a creation unit may sell the individual shares on a

secondary market. Therefore, the liquidity of ETFs depends on the adequacy of the secondary market. There can be no

assurance that an ETF's investment objective will be achieved. ETFs based on an index may not replicate and maintain

exactly the composition and relative weightings of securities in the index. ETFs are subject to the risks of investing in the

underlying securities. The fund, as a holder of the securities of the ETF, will bear its pro rata portion of the ETF's expenses,

including advisory fees. These expenses are in addition to the direct expenses of the fund's own operations.

Money market instruments

The fund may invest in money market instruments or a money market fund that invests in money market instruments.

Money market instruments include short-term U.S. government securities, U.S. dollar-denominated, high quality commercial

paper (unsecured promissory notes issued by corporations to finance their short-term credit needs), certificates of

deposit, bankers' acceptances and repurchase agreements relating to any of the foregoing.

------

Reverse repurchase agreements and borrowing

The fund may enter into reverse repurchase agreements pursuant to which the fund transfers securities to a counterparty

in return for cash, and the fund agrees to repurchase the securities at a later date and for a higher price. Reverse repurchase

agreements are treated as borrowings by the fund, are a form of leverage and may make the value of an investment in

the fund more volatile and increase the risks of investing in the fund. The fund also may borrow money from banks or

other lenders for temporary purposes. The fund may borrow up to 33

∕

% of its total assets. Entering into reverse repurchase

agreements and other borrowing transactions may cause the fund to liquidate positions when it may not be advantageous

to do so in order to satisfy its obligations or meet segregation requirements.

Repurchase agreements

The fund may enter into repurchase agreements with broker-dealers, member banks of the Federal Reserve System and

other financial institutions. Repurchase agreements are arrangements under which the fund purchases securities and the

seller agrees to repurchase the securities within a specific time and at a specific price. The repurchase price is generally

higher than the fund's purchase price, with the difference being income to the fund. A repurchase agreement may be

considered a loan by the fund collateralized by securities. The Adviser reviews and monitors the creditworthiness of any

institution which enters into a repurchase agreement with the fund. All repurchase agreements entered into by the fund

shall be fully collateralized with U.S. Treasury and/or agency obligations at all times during the period of the agreement

in that the value of the collateral shall be at least equal to an amount of the loan, including interest thereon. Collateral is

held by the fund's custodian in a segregated safekeeping account for the benefit of the fund. Repurchase agreements

afford the fund an opportunity to earn income on temporarily available cash. In the event of commencement of bankruptcy

or insolvency proceedings with respect to the seller of the security before repurchase of the security under a repurchase

agreement, the fund may encounter delay and incur costs before being able to sell the security. Such a delay may involve

loss of interest or a decline in price of the security. If the court characterizes the transaction as a loan and the fund has

not perfected a security interest in the collateral, the fund may be required to return the collateral to the seller's estate

and be treated as an unsecured creditor of the seller. As an unsecured creditor, the fund would be at risk of losing some

or all of the principal and interest involved in the transaction.

Cash management and temporary investments

Normally, the fund invests substantially all of its assets to meet its investment

objective

. The fund may invest the remainder

of its assets in securities with remaining maturities of less than one year or cash equivalents, or may hold cash. For

temporary defensive purposes, including during periods of unusual cash flows, the fund may depart from its principal

investment strategies and invest part or all of its assets in these securities or may hold cash. The fund may adopt a

defensive strategy when the Adviser believes securities in which the fund normally invests have special or unusual risks

or are less attractive due to adverse market, economic, political or other conditions. During such periods, it may be more

difficult for the fund to achieve its investment objective.

Short-term trading

The fund usually does not trade for short-term profits. The fund will sell an investment, however, even if it has only

been held for a short time, if it no longer meets the fund's investment criteria. If the fund does a lot of trading, it may

incur additional operating expenses, which would reduce performance, and could cause shareowners to incur a higher

level of taxable income or capital gains.

------

Risk factors

Risk is inherent in all investing. Investing in any investment company security involves risk, including the risk that you

may receive little or no return on your investment. Therefore, before purchasing shares, you should consider carefully the

following risks that you assume when you invest in the fund.

General.

The fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company designed primarily as a long-term

investment and not as a trading tool. The fund is not a complete investment program and should be considered only as

an addition to an investor's existing portfolio of investments. Because the fund invests predominantly in ILS of U.S. and

non-U.S. issuers, floating rate loans, and high yield debt securities, an investment in the fund's shares is speculative in

that it involves a high degree of risk. Due to uncertainty inherent in all investments, there can be no assurance that the

fund will achieve its investment objective. ILS in which the fund invests may only have limited liquidity, or may be

illiquid. In addition, even though the fund will make periodic offers to repurchase a portion of its outstanding shares to

provide some liquidity to shareholders, shareholders should consider the fund to be an illiquid investment.

Risks of investing in insuranced-linked securities.

The fund could lose a portion or all of the principal it has

invested in an ILS, and the right to additional interest and/or dividend payments with respect to the security, upon the

occurrence of one or more trigger events, as defined within the terms of the ILS. Trigger events may include natural or

other perils of a specific size or magnitude that occur in a designated geographic region during a specified time period,

and/or that involve losses or other metrics that exceed a specific amount. Natural perils include disasters such as hurricanes,

earthquakes, windstorms, fires, floods and other weather-related occurrences, as well as mortality or longevity events.

Non-natural perils include disasters resulting from human-related activity such as commercial and industrial accidents

or business interruptions.

The fund may also invest in ILS that are subject

to

"

indemnity triggers.

"

An indemnity trigger

is a trigger based on the actual

losses

of the ceding sponsor

(i.e.,

the party seeking reinsurance).

ILS

subject to indemnity

triggers are often regarded as being subject to potential moral hazard

,

since such ILS are triggered by actual losses of the

ceding sponsor and the ceding sponsor may have an incentive to take

actions

and/or risks that would have an adverse

effect on the fund. There is no way to accurately predict whether a trigger event will occur and

,

accordingly,

ILS carry

significant risks

. In addition to the specified trigger events, ILS may expose the fund to other risks, including but not

limited to issuer (credit) default, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional interpretations and adverse tax consequences. ILS

are also subject to the risk that the model used to calculate the probability of a trigger event was not accurate and

underestimated the likelihood of a trigger event. ILS may provide for extensions of maturity in order to process and

audit loss claims in those cases when a trigger event has, or possibly has, occurred. Certain ILS may have limited liquidity,

or may be illiquid. Upon the occurrence or possible occurrence of a trigger event, and until the completion of the

processing and auditing of applicable loss claims, the fund's investment in an ILS may be priced using fair value methods.

Lack of a liquid market may impose the risk of higher transaction costs and the possibility that the fund may be forced

to liquidate positions when it would not be advantageous to do so.

Risks of investing in structured reinsurance investments.

The fund invests in ILS that are special purpose vehicles

("

SPVs

") or similar instruments structured to comprise a portion of a reinsurer's catastrophe-oriented business, known

as quota share instruments (sometimes referred to as reinsurance sidecars), or to provide reinsurance relating to specific

risks to insurance or reinsurance companies through a collateralized instrument, known as collateralized reinsurance.

Quota shares instruments and other structured reinsurance investments generally will be considered illiquid securities

by the fund.

Structured reinsurance investments are typically more customizable but less liquid investments than event-linked bonds.

Like event-linked bonds, an investor in structured reinsurance investments participates in the premiums and losses

associated with underlying reinsurance contracts.

Structured reinsurance investments are subject to the same risks as event-linked bonds

and other ILS

. In addition,

because quota share instruments represent an interest in a basket of underlying reinsurance contracts, the fund has

limited transparency into the individual underlying contracts and therefore must rely upon the risk assessment and

sound underwriting practices of the insurer and/or reinsurer. Accordingly, it may be more difficult for the Adviser to

fully evaluate the underlying risk profile of the fund's investment in quota share instruments and therefore place the

fund's assets at greater risk of loss than if the Adviser had more complete information. Structured reinsurance investments

may be difficult to value.

------

Since ILS issuers typically are structured so as to be bankruptcy remote SPVs or similar structures, it is unlikely that the

fund could lose its investment if the applicable trigger event never occurs. However, there can be no assurance that ILS

in which the fund may invest in the future will be structured in a similar manner or that a court would uphold the

intended bankruptcy remote characterization of the structure. If ILS issued in the future is structured in a different

manner, it may be possible that the fund would lose its entire investment in an event-linked bond even though the

applicable trigger event never occurs.

ILS market and reinvestment risk.

The size of the ILS market may change over time, which may limit the availability

of ILS for investment by the fund. The original issuance of ILS in general, including ILS with desired instrument or risk

characteristics, may fluctuate depending on the capital and capacity needs of reinsurers as well as the demand for ILS by

institutional investors. The availability of ILS in the secondary market also may be limited by supply and demand dynamics

and prevailing economic conditions. To the extent ILS held by the fund mature, or the fund must sell securities in

connection with share repurchases, the fund may be required to hold more cash or short-term investments than it

normally would until attractive ILS becomes available. Holding excess cash and/or reinvestment in securities that are

lower yielding or less desirable than securities sold may negatively affect performance.

There are relatively few market participants that market reinsurance arrangements, create SPVs and similar structures,

and otherwise facilitate the participation in the reinsurance industry by funds and other capital market investors. Withdrawal

from the industry by key market participants may affect negatively the liquidity of the ILS market or the operation or

value of ILS structures that rely on these market participants.

Market risk.

The market prices of securities or other assets held by the fund may go up or down, sometimes rapidly or

unpredictably, due to general market conditions, such as real or perceived adverse economic, political, or regulatory

conditions, recessions, inflation, changes in interest or currency rates, lack of liquidity in the bond markets, the spread

of infectious illness or other public health issues, market disruptions caused by tariffs, trade disputes or other factors or

adverse investor sentiment. If the market prices of the fund's securities and assets fall, the value of your investment will

go down. A change in financial condition or other event affecting a single issuer may adversely impact securities markets

as a whole. The value of assets or income from investment may be worth less in the future as inflation decreases the

value of money. As inflation increases, the real value of the fund's assets can decline as can the value of the fund's distributions.

Changes in market conditions may not have the same impact on all types of securities. The value of securities may also

fall due to specific conditions that affect a particular sector of the securities market or a particular issuer. In the past

decade, financial markets throughout the world have experienced increased volatility, depressed valuations, decreased

liquidity and heightened uncertainty. Governmental and non-governmental issuers have defaulted on, or been forced to

restructure, their debts. These conditions may continue, recur, worsen or spread. Events that have contributed to these

market conditions include, but are not limited to, major cybersecurity events; geopolitical events (including wars and

terror attacks); measures to address budget deficits; downgrading of sovereign debt; changes in oil and commodity

prices; dramatic changes in currency exchange rates; global pandemics; and public sentiment. U.S. and non-U.S. governments

and central banks have provided significant support to financial markets, including by keeping interest rates at historically

low levels. U.S. Federal Reserve or other U.S. or non-U.S. governmental or central bank actions, including interest rate

increases or decreases, or contrary actions by different governments, could negatively affect financial markets generally,

increase market volatility and reduce the value and liquidity of securities in which the fund invests. Policy and legislative

changes in the U.S. and in other countries are affecting many aspects of financial regulation, and these and other events

affecting global markets, such as the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union (or Brexit),

or potential trade

imbalances with China or other countries

may in some instances contribute to decreased liquidity and increased volatility

in the financial markets. The impact of these changes on the markets, and the practical implications for market participants,

may not be fully known for some

time

.

Economies and financial markets throughout the world are increasingly interconnected. Economic, financial or political

events, trading and tariff arrangements, armed conflict, terrorism, natural disasters, infectious illness or public health

issues, cybersecurity events, supply chain disruptions, and other circumstances in one country or region could have

profound impacts on global economies or markets. As a result, whether or not the fund invests in securities of issuers

located in or with significant exposure to the countries directly affected, the value and liquidity of the fund's investments

may be negatively affected. The fund may experience a substantial or complete loss on any individual security or

derivative position.

------

Risk factors

The global pandemic of the novel coronavirus respiratory disease designated COVID-19 has resulted in major disruption

to economies and markets around the world, including the United States. Global financial markets have experienced

extreme volatility and severe losses, and trading in many instruments has been disrupted. Liquidity for many instruments

has been greatly reduced for periods of time. Some interest rates are very low and in some cases yields are negative.

Some sectors of the economy and individual issuers have experienced particularly large losses. Rates of inflation have

recently risen. These circumstances may continue for an extended period of time, and may continue to affect adversely

the value and liquidity of the fund's investments. Governments and central banks, including the Federal Reserve in the

U.S., have taken extraordinary and unprecedented actions to support local and global economies and the financial

markets. These actions have resulted in significant expansion of public debt, including in the U.S. The impact of these

measures may not be known for some time. The consequences of high public debt, including its future impact on the

economy and securities markets, likewise may not be known for some time.

LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) is used extensively in the U.S. and globally as a

"

benchmark

"

or

"

reference

rate

"

for various commercial and financial contracts, including corporate and municipal bonds, bank loans, asset-backed

and mortgage-related securities, and interest rate swaps and other derivatives.

The UK

Financial Conduct Authority

("

FCA

") and LIBOR's administrator, ICE Benchmark Administration ("

IBA

"), have

announced that

most LIBOR rates

will no longer

be published after

the end of 2021 and

a majority of

U.S. dollar LIBOR

rates will no

longer be published

after

June 30,

2023

. It is

possible that the FCA may compel the IBA to publish a subset of LIBOR settings after these dates

on

a

"

synthetic

"

basis, but any such publications would be considered non-representative of the underlying market

.

Actions by regulators have resulted in the establishment of alternative reference rates to LIBOR in most major currencies.

Based on the recommendations of the New York Federal Reserve's Alternative Reference Rate Committee (comprised

of major derivative market participants and their regulators), the U.S. Federal Reserve began publishing a Secured

Overnight Funding Rate ("

SOFR

") that is intended to replace U.S. Dollar LIBOR. Proposals for alternative reference

rates for other currencies have also been announced or have already begun publication, such as SONIA in the United

Kingdom. Markets are slowly developing in response to these new rates, and transition planning is at a relatively early

stage. Neither the effect of the transition process nor its ultimate success is known. The transition process may lead to

increased volatility and illiquidity in markets that currently rely on LIBOR to determine interest rates. The effect of any

changes to

-

or discontinuation of

-

LIBOR on the fund will vary depending on, among other things, provisions in

individual contracts and whether, how, and when industry participants develop and adopt new reference rates and

alternative reference rates for both legacy and new products and instruments. Because the usefulness of LIBOR as a

benchmark may deteriorate during the transition period, these effects could

occur at any

time

.

High yield or "junk" bond risk.

Debt securities that are below investment grade, called

"

junk bonds,

"

are speculative,

have a higher risk of default or are already in default, tend to be less liquid and are more difficult to value than higher

grade securities and may involve major risk of exposure to adverse conditions and negative sentiments. These securities

have a higher risk of issuer default because, among other reasons, issuers of junk bonds often have more debt in relation

to total capitalization than issuers of investment grade securities. Junk bonds tend to be volatile and more susceptible to

adverse events and negative sentiments. These risks are more pronounced for securities that are already in default.

The

fund may not receive interest payments on defaulted securities and may incur costs to protect its investment. In addition,

defaulted securities involve the substantial risk that principal will not be repaid.

Changes in economic conditions or

developments regarding the individual issuer are more likely to cause price volatility and weaken the capacity of such

securities to make principal and interest payments than is the case for higher grade debt securities. The value of lower-quality

debt securities often changes in response to company, political, or economic developments and can decline significantly

over short as well as long periods of time or during periods of general or regional economic difficulty. Junk bonds may

also be less liquid than higher-rated securities, which means that the fund may have difficulty selling them at times, and

it may have to apply a greater degree of judgment in establishing a price for purposes of valuing fund shares. Junk bonds

generally are issued by less creditworthy issuers. Issuers of junk bonds may have a larger amount of outstanding debt

securities relative to their assets than issuers of investment grade bonds. In the event of an issuer's bankruptcy, claims of

other creditors may have priority over the claims of junk bond holders, leaving few or no assets available to repay junk

bond holders. The fund may incur expenses to the extent necessary to seek recovery upon default or to negotiate new

terms with a defaulting issuer. Junk bonds frequently have redemption features that permit an issuer to repurchase the

security from the fund before it matures. If the issuer redeems junk bonds, the fund may have to invest the proceeds in

bonds with lower yields and may lose income.

------

Interest rate risk.

The market prices of the fund's fixed income securities may fluctuate significantly when interest

rates change. When interest rates rise, the value of fixed income securities and therefore the value of your investment in

the fund, generally falls. For example, if interest rates increase by 1%, the value of a fund's portfolio with a portfolio

duration of ten years would be expected to decrease by 10%, all other things being equal.

In recent years

interest rates

and credit spreads in the U

.

S

.

have been at historical lows

,

which means there is more risk

that they may go up

. A general rise in interest rates could adversely affect the price and liquidity of fixed income securities

and could also result in increased redemptions from the fund. A change in interest rates will not have the same impact

on all fixed income securities. Generally, the longer the maturity or duration of a fixed income security, the greater the

impact of a rise in interest rates on the security's value. The maturity of a security may be significantly longer than its

effective duration. A security's maturity and other features may be more relevant than its effective duration in determining

the security's sensitivity to other factors affecting the issuer or markets generally, such as changes in credit quality or in

the yield premium that the market may establish for certain types of securities

(sometimes called

"

credit spread

")

.

In

general, the longer its maturity the more a security may be susceptible to these factors. When the credit spread for a

fixed income security goes up, the value of the security will generally go down.

Calculations of duration and maturity

may be based on estimates and may not reliably predict a security's price sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Moreover,

securities can change in value in response to other factors, such as credit risk. In addition, different interest rate measures

(such as short- and long-term interest rates and U.S. and foreign interest rates), or interest rates on different types of

securities or securities of different issuers, may not necessarily change in the same amount or in the same direction.

When interest rates go down, the income received by the fund, and the fund's yield, may decline. Also, when interest

rates decline, investments made by the fund may pay a lower interest rate, which would reduce the income received and

distributed by the fund.

Certain fixed income securities pay interest at variable or floating rates. Variable rate securities tend to reset at specified

intervals, while floating rate securities may reset whenever there is a change in a specified index rate. In most cases, these

reset provisions reduce the impact of changes in market interest rates on the value of the security. However, some

securities do not track the underlying index directly, but reset based on formulas that may produce a leveraging effect;

others may also provide for interest payments that vary inversely with market rates. The market prices of these securities

may fluctuate significantly when interest rates change. Yield generated by the fund may decline due to a decrease in

market interest rates.

The values of securities with floating interest rates generally are less sensitive to interest rate changes but may decline in

value if their interest rates do not rise as much, or as quickly, as prevailing interest rates. In addition, rising interest rates

can also lead to increased default rates, as issuers of floating rate securities find themselves faced with higher payments.

Further, in the case of some instruments, if the underlying reference interest rate does not move by at least a prescribed

increment, no adjustment will occur in the floating rate instrument's interest rate. This means that, when prevailing

interest rates increase, a corresponding increase in the instrument's interest rate may not result and the instrument may

decline in value.

Similarly, certain floating rate obligations have an interest rate floor feature, which prevents the interest

rate payable by the security from dropping below a specified level as compared to a reference interest rate. Such a floor

protects the fund from losses resulting from a decrease in the reference interest rate below the specified level. However,

if the reference interest rate is below the floor, there will be a lag between a rise in the reference interest rate and a rise in

the interest rate payable by the obligation, and the fund may not benefit from increasing interest rates for a significant

amount of time.

Unlike fixed rate securities, floating rate securities generally will not increase in value if interest rates

decline. Changes in interest rates also will affect the amount of interest income the fund earns on its floating rate investments.

Unlike fixed rate securities, when prevailing interest rates decrease, the interest rate payable on floating rate investments

will decrease.

The interest rates of some floating rate obligations adjust only periodically. Between the times that interest rates on

floating rate obligations adjust, the interest rate on those obligations may not correlate to prevailing rates that will affect

the value of the loans and may cause the net asset values of the fund's shares to fluctuate.

Credit risk

. If an obligor (such as the issuer itself or a party offering credit enhancement) for a security held by the fund

fails to pay, otherwise defaults, is perceived to be less creditworthy, becomes insolvent or files for bankruptcy, a security's

credit rating is downgraded or the credit quality or value of an underlying asset declines, the value of your investment

could decline. Changes in actual or perceived creditworthiness may occur quickly. If the fund enters into financial

------

Risk factors

contracts (such as certain derivatives, repurchase agreements, reverse repurchase agreements, and when-issued, delayed

delivery and forward commitment transactions), the fund will be subject to the credit risk presented by the counterparty. In

addition, the fund may incur expenses and suffer delays in an effort to protect the fund's interests or to enforce its rights.

A security may change in price for a variety of reasons. For example, floating rate securities may have final maturities of

ten or more years, but their effective durations will tend to be very short. If there is an adverse credit event, or a perceived

change in the issuer's creditworthiness, these securities could experience a far greater negative price movement than

would be predicted by the change in the security's yield in relation to their effective duration. The fund evaluates the

credit quality of issuers and counterparties prior to investing in securities. Credit risk is broadly gauged by the credit

ratings of the securities in which the fund invests. However, ratings are only the opinions of the companies issuing them

and are not guarantees as to quality. Securities rated in the lowest category of investment grade (Baa/BBB) may possess

certain speculative characteristics.

Prepayment or call risk.

Many fixed income securities give the issuer the option to prepay or call the security prior to

its maturity date. Issuers often exercise this right when interest rates fall. Accordingly, if the fund holds a fixed income

security that can be prepaid or called prior to its maturity date, it will not benefit fully from the increase in value that

other fixed income securities generally experience when interest rates fall. Upon prepayment of the security, the fund

also would be forced to reinvest the proceeds at then current yields, which would be lower than the yield of the security

that was prepaid or called. In addition, if the fund purchases a fixed income security at a premium (at a price that exceeds

its stated par or principal value), the fund may lose the amount of the premium paid in the event of prepayment.

Risk of illiquid investments.

Certain securities or derivatives held by the fund may be or become impossible or difficult

to purchase or dispose of at a fair price at the times when the fund believes it is desirable to do so. The market price of

illiquid securities generally is more volatile than that of more liquid securities, which may adversely affect the price that

the fund pays for or recovers upon the sale of illiquid securities. Illiquid securities are also more difficult to value and the

Adviser's judgment may play a greater role in the valuation process. Investment of the fund's assets in illiquid securities

may restrict the fund's ability to take advantage of market opportunities. The risks associated with illiquid securities may

be particularly acute in situations in which the fund's operations require cash and could result in the fund borrowing to

meet its short-term needs or incurring losses on the sale of illiquid securities. Markets may become illiquid when, for

instance, there are few, if any, interested buyers and sellers or when dealers are unwilling to make a market for certain securities

or when dealer market-making capacity is otherwise reduced.

Risks of investing in loans

. Floating rate loans and similar investments may be illiquid or less liquid than other

investments and difficult to value. Market quotations for these securities may be volatile and/or subject to large spreads

between bid and ask prices. No active trading market may exist for many floating rate loans, and many loans are subject

to restrictions on resale. Any secondary market may be subject to irregular trading activity and extended trade settlement

periods. An economic downturn generally leads to a higher non-payment rate, and a loan may lose significant value

before a default occurs.

When the fund invests in a loan participation, the fund does not have a direct claim against the borrower and must rely

upon an intermediate participant to enforce any rights against the borrower. As a result, the fund is subject to the risk

that an intermediate participant between the fund and the borrower will fail to meet its obligations to the fund, in addition

to the risk that the issuer of the loan will default on its obligations. Also the fund may be regarded as the creditor of the

agent lender (rather than the borrower), subjecting the fund to the creditworthiness of the lender as well as the borrower.

There is less readily available, reliable information about most senior loans than is the case for many other types of

securities. Although the features of senior loans, including being secured by collateral and having priority over other

obligations of the issuer, reduce some of the risks of investment in below investment grade securities, the loans are

subject to significant risks. Amundi US believes, based on its experience, that senior floating rate loans generally have

more favorable loss recovery rates than most other types of below investment grade obligations. However, there can be

no assurance that the fund's actual loss recovery experience will be consistent with Amundi US's prior experience or that

the senior loans in which the fund invests will achieve any specific loss recovery rate.

Loans may take longer than seven days to settle, potentially leading to the sale proceeds of loans not being available to

meet redemptions for a substantial period of time after the sale of the loans. To the extent that sale proceeds of loans are

not available, the fund may sell securities that have shorter settlement periods or may access other sources of liquidity to

------

meet redemption

requests. During periods of heightened redemption activity or distressed market conditions, the fund

may seek to obtain expedited trade settlement, which will generally incur additional costs (although expedited trade

settlement will not always be

available)

.

Some of the loans in which the fund may invest may be

"

covenant lite.

"

Covenant lite loans contain fewer maintenance

covenants, or no maintenance covenants at all, than traditional loans and may not include terms that allow the lender to

monitor the financial performance of the borrower and declare a default if certain criteria are breached. This may expose

the fund to greater credit risk associated with the borrower and reduce the fund's ability to restructure a problematic

loan and mitigate potential loss. As a result the fund's exposure to losses on such investments may be increased, especially

during a downturn in the credit cycle.

Second lien loans generally are subject to similar risks as those associated with senior loans. Because second lien loans

are subordinated or unsecured and thus lower in priority on payment to senior loans, they are subject to the additional

risk that the cash flow of the borrower and property securing the loan or debt, if any, may be insufficient to meet scheduled

payments after giving effect to the senior secured obligations of the borrower. This risk is generally higher for subordinated

unsecured loans or debt, which are not backed by a security interest in any specific collateral. Second lien loans generally

have greater price volatility than senior loans and may be less liquid.

Certain floating rate loans and other corporate debt securities involve refinancings, recapitalizations, mergers and

acquisitions, and other financings for general corporate purposes. Other loans are incurred in restructuring or

"

work-out

"

scenarios, including debtor-in-possession facilities in bankruptcy. Loans in restructuring or similar scenarios may be

especially vulnerable to the inherent uncertainties in restructuring processes. In addition, the highly leveraged capital

structure of the borrowers in any of these transactions, whether acquisition financing or restructuring, may make the

loans especially vulnerable to adverse economic or market conditions and the risk of default.

Loans to entities located outside of the U.S. may have substantially different lender protections and covenants as compared

to loans to U.S. entities and may involve greater risks. The fund may have difficulties and incur expense enforcing its

rights with respect to non-U.S. loans and such loans could be subject to bankruptcy laws that are materially different

than in the U.S.

Because affiliates of Amundi US may participate in the primary and secondary market for senior loans, limitations

under applicable law may restrict the fund's ability to participate in structuring a senior loan or to acquire some senior

loans, or affect the timing or price of such acquisition.

Loans may not be considered

"

securities,

"

and purchasers, such as the fund, therefore may not be entitled to rely on the

anti-fraud protections afforded by federal securities laws.

Collateral risk.

The value of collateral, if any, securing a floating rate loan can decline, and may be insufficient to meet

the issuer's obligations or may be difficult to liquidate. In addition, the fund's access to collateral may be limited by

bankruptcy or other insolvency laws. These laws may be less developed and more cumbersome with respect to the fund's

non-U.S. floating rate investments. Floating rate loans may not be fully collateralized or may be uncollateralized.

Uncollateralized loans involve a greater risk of loss. In the event of a default, the fund may have difficulty collecting on

any collateral and would not have the ability to collect on any collateral for an uncollateralized loan. In addition, the

lender's security interest or their enforcement of their security interest under the loan agreement may be found by a

court to be invalid or the collateral may be used to pay other outstanding obligations of the borrower. Further, the fund's

access to collateral, if any, may be limited by bankruptcy law. To the extent that a loan is collateralized by stock of the

borrower or its affiliates, this stock may lose all or substantially all of its value in the event of bankruptcy of the borrower.

Loans that are obligations of a holding company are subject to the risk that, in a bankruptcy of a subsidiary operating

company, creditors of the subsidiary may recover from the subsidiary's assets before the lenders to the holding company

would receive any amount on account of the holding company's interest in the subsidiary.

Risk of disadvantaged access to confidential information.

The issuer of a floating rate loan may offer to provide

material, non-public information about the issuer to investors, such as the fund. Normally, Amundi US will seek to

avoid receiving this type of information about the issuer of a loan either held by, or considered for investment by, the

fund. Amundi US's decision not to receive the information may place it at a disadvantage, relative to other loan investors,

in assessing a loan or the loan's issuer. For example, in instances where holders of floating rate loans are asked to grant

------

Risk factors

amendments, waivers or consents, Amundi US's inability to assess the impact of these actions may adversely affect the

value of the portfolio. For this and other reasons, it is possible that Amundi US's decision not to receive material, non-public

information under normal circumstances could adversely affect the fund's investment performance.

Risks of subordinated securities.

A holder of securities that are subordinated or

"

junior

"

to more senior securities

of an issuer is entitled to payment after holders of more senior securities of the issuer. Subordinated securities are more

likely to suffer a credit loss than non-subordinated securities of the same issuer, any loss incurred by the subordinated

securities is likely to be proportionately greater, and any recovery of interest or principal may take more time. If there is

a default, bankruptcy or liquidation of the issuer, most subordinated securities are paid only if sufficient assets remain

after payment of the issuer's non-subordinated securities. As a result, even a perceived decline in creditworthiness of the

issuer is likely to have a greater impact on subordinated securities than more senior securities.

U.S. Treasury obligations risk.

The market value of direct obligations of the U.S. Treasury may vary due to changes

in interest rates. In addition, changes to the financial condition or credit rating of the U.S. government may cause the

value of the fund's investments in obligations issued by the U.S. Treasury to decline.

U.S. government agency obligations risk.

The fund invests in obligations issued by agencies and instrumentalities

of the U.S. government. Government-sponsored entities such as FNMA, FHLMC and the FHLBs, although chartered or

sponsored by Congress, are not funded by congressional appropriations and the debt and mortgage-backed securities

issued by them are neither guaranteed nor issued by the U.S. government. The maximum potential liability of the issuers

of some U.S. government obligations may greatly exceed their current resources, including any legal right to support

from the U.S. government. Such debt and mortgage-backed securities are subject to the risk of default on the payment

of interest and/or principal, similar to debt of private issuers. Although the U.S. government has provided financial

support to FNMA and FHLMC in the past, there can be no assurance that it will support these or other government-sponsored

entities in the future.

Risks of non-U.S. investments.

Investing in non-U.S. issuers, or in U.S. issuers that have significant exposure to

foreign markets, may involve unique risks compared to investing in securities of U.S. issuers. These risks are more

pronounced for issuers in emerging markets or to the extent that the fund invests significantly in one region or country.

These risks may include:

• Less information about non-U.S. issuers or markets may be available due to less rigorous disclosure or accounting

standards or regulatory practices

• Many non-U.S. markets are smaller, less liquid and more volatile. In a changing market, the Adviser may not be able

to sell the fund's securities at times, in amounts and at prices it considers reasonable

• Adverse effect of currency exchange rates or controls on the value of the fund's investments, or its ability to convert

non-U.S. currencies to U.S. dollars

• The economies of non-U.S. countries may grow at slower rates than expected or may experience a downturn or recession

• Economic, political, regulatory and social developments may adversely affect the securities markets

• It may be difficult for the fund to pursue claims or enforce judgments against a foreign bank, depository or issuer of a

security, or any of their agents, in the courts of a foreign country

• The value of the fund's foreign investments may also be affected by foreign tax laws, special U.S. tax considerations

and restrictions on receiving the investment proceeds from a foreign country. Withholding and other non-U.S. taxes

may decrease the fund's return. The value of the fund's foreign investments also may be affected by U.S. tax considerations

and restrictions in receiving investment proceeds from a foreign country

• Some markets in which the fund may invest are located in parts of the world that have historically been prone to

natural disasters that could result in a significant adverse impact on the economies of those countries and investments

made in those countries

• It is often more expensive for the fund to buy, sell and hold securities in certain foreign markets than in the United States

• A governmental entity may delay, or refuse or be unable to pay, interest or principal on its sovereign debt due to cash

flow problems, insufficient foreign currency reserves, political considerations, the relative size of the governmental

entity's debt position in relation to the economy or the failure to put in place economic reforms

• Investing in depositary receipts is subject to many of the same risks as investing directly in non-U.S. issuers. Depositary

receipts may involve higher expenses and may trade at a discount (or premium) to the underlying security. In addition,

depositary receipts may not pass through voting and other shareholder rights, and may be less liquid than the underlying

securities listed on an exchange

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

• A number of countries in the European Union (EU) have experienced, and may continue to experience, severe economic

and financial difficulties. Additional EU member countries may also fall subject to such difficulties. A number of

countries in Europe have suffered terror attacks, and additional attacks may occur in the future. In addition, the

United Kingdom has withdrawn from the EU (commonly known as

"

Brexit

").

The range and potential implications

of possible political, regulatory, economic, and market outcomes of Brexit cannot be fully known but could be significant,

potentially resulting in increased volatility, illiquidity and potentially lower economic growth in the affected markets,

which will adversely affect the fund's investments, particularly in euro-denominated securities and derivative contracts,

securities of issuers located in the EU or with significant exposure to EU issuers or countries

• Markets in China and other Asian countries are relatively new and undeveloped. China's economic health is largely

dependent upon exports, and may be dependent upon the economies of other Asian countries. Investments in Chinese

and other Asian issuers could be adversely affected by changes in government policies, or trade or political disputes

with major trading partners, including the U.S. China's growing trade surplus with the U.S. has given rise to trade

disputes and the imposition of tariffs. In addition, the U.S. government has imposed restrictions on U.S. investor

participation in certain Chinese investments. These matters could adversely affect China's economy. China's central

government exercises significant control over China's economy and may intervene in the financial markets, such as by

imposing trading restrictions, and investments in Chinese issuers could be adversely affected by changes in government

policies. The Chinese economy could be adversely affected by supply chain disruptions. An economic slowdown in

China could adversely affect economies of other emerging market countries that trade with China, as well as companies

operating in those countries. Economies of Asian countries and Asian issuers could be adversely affected by regional

security threats.

• If one or more stockholders of a supranational entity such as the World Bank fail to make necessary additional capital

contributions, the entity may be unable to pay interest or repay principal on its debt securities

• Sanctions or other government actions against a foreign nation could negatively impact the fund's investments in

securities that have exposure to that nation

• The Ukraine has experienced ongoing military conflict; this conflict may expand and military conflicts could potentially

occur elsewhere in Europe

Additional risks of investing in emerging markets include:

• The extent of economic development, political stability, market depth, infrastructure, capitalization and regulatory

oversight can be less than in more developed

markets. Emerging market economies tend to be less diversified than

those of more developed countries. They typically have fewer medical and economic resources than most developed

countries and thus they may be less able to control or mitigate the effects of a

pandemic

• Emerging market countries may experience rising interest rates, or, more significantly, rapid inflation or hyperinflation

• The fund could experience a loss from settlement and custody practices in some emerging markets

• The possibility that a counterparty may not complete a currency or securities transaction

• Low trading volumes may result in a lack of liquidity and in extreme price volatility

• China and other developing market Asia-Pacific countries may be subject to considerable degrees of economic, political

and social instability

Derivatives risk.

Using futures, options and other derivatives exposes the fund to special risks and costs and may result

in losses to the fund, even when used for hedging purposes. Using derivatives can increase losses and reduce opportunities

for gain when market prices, interest rates or currencies, or the derivative instruments themselves, behave in a way not

anticipated by the fund, especially in abnormal market conditions. Using derivatives can have a leveraging effect (which

may increase investment losses) and increase the fund's volatility, which is the degree to which the fund's share price

may fluctuate within a short time period. Certain derivatives have the potential for unlimited loss, regardless of the size

of the fund's initial investment. Derivatives are generally subject to the risks applicable to the assets, rates, indices or

other indicators underlying the derivative. If changes in a derivative's value do not correspond to changes in the value of

the fund's other investments or do not correlate well with the underlying assets, rate or index, the fund may not fully

benefit from, or could lose money on, or could experience unusually high expenses as a result of, the derivative position.

The other parties to certain derivative transactions present the same types of credit risk as issuers of fixed income

securities. Derivatives also tend to involve greater liquidity risk and they may be difficult to value. The fund may be

unable to terminate or sell its derivative positions. In fact, many over-the-counter derivatives will not have liquidity

beyond the counterparty to the instrument.

The fund also may have to sell assets at inopportune times to satisfy its

obligations.

Use of derivatives or similar instruments may have different tax consequences for the fund than an investment

------

Risk factors

in the underlying security, and those differences may affect the amount, timing and character of income distributed to

shareholders. The fund's use of derivatives may also increase the amount of taxes payable by shareholders. Risks associated

with the use of derivatives are magnified to the extent that a an increased portion of the fund's assets are committed to

derivatives in general or are invested in just one or a few types of derivatives.

The U.S. government and foreign governments are in the process of adopting and implementing regulations governing

derivative markets, including mandatory clearing of certain derivatives, margin and reporting requirements. The ultimate

impact of the regulations remains unclear. Additional regulation of derivatives may make derivatives more costly, may

limit their availability or utility or otherwise adversely affect their performance, or may disrupt markets. The fund may

be exposed to additional risks as a result of the additional regulations. The extent and impact of the regulations are not

yet fully known and may not be for some time. In addition, the SEC has proposed a new rule that would change the

regulation of the use of derivatives by registered investment companies, such as the fund. If the proposed rule takes

effect, it could limit the ability of the fund to invest in derivatives.

There are several risks associated with the use of futures contracts and futures options. A purchase or sale of a futures

contract may result in losses in excess of the amount invested in the futures contract. While the fund may enter into

futures contracts and options on futures contracts for hedging purposes, the use of futures contracts and options on

futures contracts might result in a poorer overall performance for the fund than if it had not engaged in any such

transactions. There may be an imperfect correlation between the fund's portfolio holdings and futures contracts or

options on futures contracts entered into by the fund, which may prevent the fund from achieving the intended hedge

or expose the fund to risk of loss. The degree of imperfection of correlation depends on circumstances such as variations

in market demand for futures, futures options and the related securities, including technical influences in futures and

futures options trading, and differences between the securities markets and the securities underlying the standard contracts

available for trading. Further, the fund's use of futures contracts and options on futures contracts to reduce risk involves

costs and will be subject to the Adviser's ability to predict correctly changes in interest rate relationships or other factors.

Under an interest rate swap agreement, the payment obligations, if any, of the fund and the counterparty are netted

against each other, resulting in a net payment due either from the fund or the counterparty. Depending on whether the

fund would be entitled to receive payments from the counterparty on a swap or cap, which in turn would depend on the

general state of short-term interest rates at that point in time, a default by a counterparty could negatively impact the

fund's overall performance. In addition, at the time an interest rate swap or cap transaction reaches its scheduled termination

date, there is a risk that the fund would not be able to obtain a replacement transaction or that the terms of the replacement

would not be as favorable as on the expiring transaction. If this occurs, it could have a negative impact on the

fund's performance.

The use of interest rate swaps and caps is a highly specialized activity that involves investment techniques and risks

different from those associated with ordinary portfolio security transactions. Depending on the state of interest rates in

general, the fund's use of interest rate swaps or caps could enhance or harm the fund's overall performance. To the extent there

is a decline in interest rates, the value of the interest rate swap or cap could decline, and could result in a decline in the

fund's net asset value. In addition, if short-term interest rates are lower than the fund's fixed rate of payment on the

interest rate swap, the swap will reduce the fund's net earnings. If, on the other hand, short-term interest rates are higher

than the fixed rate of payment on the interest rate swap, the swap will enhance the fund's net earnings. Buying interest

rate caps could enhance the fund's performance by providing a maximum leverage expense. Buying interest rate caps

could also decrease the fund's net earnings in the event that the premium paid by the fund to the counterparty exceeds

the additional amount the fund would have been required to pay had it not entered into the cap agreement.

Interest rate swaps and caps do not involve the delivery of securities or other underlying assets or principal. Accordingly,

the risk of loss with respect to interest rate swaps is limited to the net amount of interest payments that the fund is

contractually obligated to make and any termination payments potentially owed by the fund. If the counterparty defaults,

the fund would not be able to use the anticipated net receipts under the swap or cap to offset interest payments on

borrowings. Depending on whether the fund would be entitled to receive payments from the counterparty on the swap

or cap, which in turn would depend on the general state of short-term interest rates at that point in time, such a default

could negatively impact the fund's performance.

------

The fund will be required to maintain its positions with a clearing organization through one or more clearing brokers.

The clearing organization will require the fund to post margin and the broker may require the fund to post additional

margin to secure the fund's obligations. The amount of margin required may change from time to time. In addition,

cleared transactions may be more expensive to maintain than over-the-counter transactions and may require the fund

to deposit larger amounts of margin. The fund may not be able to recover margin amounts if the broker has financial

difficulties. Also, the broker may require the fund to terminate a derivatives position under certain circumstances. This

may cause the fund to lose money. The fund's ability to use certain derivative instruments currently is limited by Commodity

Futures Trading Commission rules.

Credit default swap risk.

Credit default swap contracts, a type of derivative instrument, involve heightened risks and

may result in losses to the fund. Credit default swaps may in some cases be illiquid and difficult to value, and they increase

credit risk since the fund has exposure to both the issuer of the referenced obligation and the counterparty to the credit

default swap. If the fund buys a credit default swap, it will be subject to the risk that the credit default swap may expire

worthless, as the credit default swap would only generate income in the event of a default on the underlying debt security

or other specified event. As a buyer, the fund would also be subject to credit risk relating to the seller's payment of its

obligations in the event of a default (or similar event). If the fund sells a credit default swap, it will be exposed to the

credit risk of the issuer of the obligation to which the credit default swap relates. As a seller, the fund would also be

subject to leverage risk, because it would be liable for the full notional amount of the swap in the event of default (or

similar event). Swaps may be difficult to unwind or terminate. Certain index-based credit default swaps are structured

in tranches, whereby junior tranches assume greater default risk than senior tranches. The absence of a central exchange

or market for swap transactions may lead, in some instances, to difficulties in trading and valuation, especially in the

event of market disruptions. New regulations require many kinds of swaps to be executed through a centralized exchange

or regulated facility and be cleared through a regulated clearinghouse. Although this clearing mechanism is generally

expected to reduce counterparty credit risk, it may disrupt or limit the swap market and may not result in swaps being

easier to trade or value. As swaps become more standardized, the fund may not be able to enter into swaps that meet its

investment needs. The fund also may not be able to find a clearinghouse willing to accept the swaps for clearing. In a

cleared swap, a central clearing organization will be the counterparty to the transaction. The fund will assume the risk

that the clearinghouse may be unable to perform its obligations. The new regulations may make using swaps more

costly, may limit their availability, or may otherwise adversely affect their value or performance.

Risks of investing in inverse floating rate obligations.

The interest rate on inverse floating rate obligations will

generally decrease as short-term interest rates increase, and increase as short-term rates decrease. Due to their leveraged

structure, the sensitivity of the market value of an inverse floating rate obligation to changes in interest rates is generally

greater than a comparable long-term bond issued by the same issuer and with similar credit quality, redemption and

maturity provisions. Inverse floating rate obligations may be volatile and involve leverage risk.

Leveraging risk.

The value of your investment may be more volatile and other risks tend to be compounded if the

fund borrows or uses derivatives or other investments that have embedded leverage. Leverage generally magnifies the

effect of any increase or decrease in the value of the fund's underlying assets and creates a risk of loss of value on a larger

pool of assets than the fund would otherwise have, potentially resulting in the loss of all assets. Engaging in such transactions

may cause the fund to liquidate positions when it may not be advantageous to do so to satisfy its obligations or meet

segregation requirements.

Mortgage dollar roll transactions risk.

The benefits to the fund from mortgage dollar roll transactions depend upon

the adviser's ability to forecast mortgage prepayment patterns on different mortgage pools. The fund may lose money if,

during the period between the time it agrees to the forward purchase of the mortgage securities and the settlement date,

these securities decline in value due to market conditions or prepayments on the underlying mortgages.

Risks of zero coupon bonds, payment in kind, deferred and contingent payment securities.

Zero coupon

bonds (which do not pay interest until maturity) and payment in kind securities (which pay interest in the form of

additional securities) may be more speculative and may fluctuate more in value than securities which pay income

periodically and in cash.

Payment in kind securities are usually less volatile than zero coupon bonds, but more volatile

than cash pay securities.

These securities are more likely to respond to changes in interest rates than interest-bearing

securities having similar maturities and credit quality.

The higher interest rates of payment in kind securities reflect the

payment deferral and increased credit risk associated with these instruments, and payment in kind instruments generally

------

Risk factors

represent a significantly higher credit risk than coupon bonds.

These securities are more sensitive to the credit quality

of the underlying issuer. Payment in kind securities may be difficult to value because their continuing accruals require

continuing

judgments about the collectability of the deferred payments and the value of any

associated

collateral. Deferred

interest securities are obligations that generally provide for a period of delay before the regular payment of interest

begins and are issued at a significant discount from face value. The interest rate on contingent payment securities is

determined by the outcome of an event, such as the performance of a financial index. If the financial index does not

increase by a prescribed amount, the fund may receive no interest.

Unlike bonds that pay interest throughout the period to maturity, the fund generally will realize no cash until maturity

and, if the issuer defaults, the fund may obtain no return at all on its investment. In addition, although the fund receives

no periodic cash payments on such securities, the fund is deemed for tax purposes to receive income from such securities,

which applicable tax rules require the fund to distribute to shareholders. Such distributions may be taxable when distributed

to shareholders and, in addition, could reduce the fund's reserve position and require the fund to sell securities and

incur a gain or loss at a time it may not otherwise want in order to provide the cash necessary for these distributions.

Tax and regulated investment company qualification risk.

As described in more detail below, in order to qualify

for the favorable tax treatment generally available to regulated investment companies, at least 90% of the fund's gross

income each taxable year must consist of qualifying income, the fund must meet certain asset diversification tests at the

end of each fiscal quarter, and the fund must meet certain distribution requirements for each taxable year.

The tax treatment of certain ILS is not entirely clear. Certain of the fund's investments (including, potentially, certain

ILS) may generate income that is not qualifying income. The fund might generate more non-qualifying income than

anticipated, might not be able to generate qualifying income in a particular taxable year at levels sufficient to meet the

qualifying income test, or might not be able to determine the percentage of qualifying income it has derived for a taxable

year until after year-end. The fund may determine not to make an investment that it otherwise would have made, or

may dispose of an investment it otherwise would have retained (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain

or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), in an effort to meet the qualifying income test.

Certain investments made by the fund (including certain ILS) may be treated as equity in passive foreign investment

companies ("

PFICs

") for federal income tax purposes. In general, a PFIC is a foreign corporation (i) that receives at least

75% of its annual gross income from passive sources (such as interest, dividends, certain rents and royalties, or capital

gains) or (ii) where at least 50% of its assets (computed based on average fair market value) either produce or are held

for the production of passive income. If the fund acquires any equity interest in a PFIC, the fund could be subject to

U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on

"

excess distributions

"

received from the PFIC or on gain from

the sale of stock in the PFIC, even if all income or gain actually received by the fund is timely distributed to its shareholders.

The fund would not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or deduction for such a tax. A

"

qualified

electing fund

"

election or a

"

mark to market

"

election may be available that would ameliorate these adverse tax consequences,

but such elections could require the fund to recognize taxable income or gain (which would be subject to the distribution

requirements applicable to regulated investment companies, as described above) without the concurrent receipt of cash.

In order to satisfy the distribution requirements and avoid a tax on the fund, the fund may be required to liquidate

portfolio securities that it might otherwise have continued to hold (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable

gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), or the fund may be required to borrow cash. Under

proposed Treasury regulations, certain income derived by the fund for a taxable year from a PFIC with respect to which

the fund has made a qualified electing fund election would generally constitute qualifying income only to the extent the

PFIC makes distributions in respect of that income to the fund for that taxable year. Gains from the sale of stock of

PFICs may also be treated as ordinary income. In order for the fund to make a qualified electing fund election with

respect to a PFIC, the PFIC would have to agree to provide certain tax information to the fund on an annual basis, which

it might not agree to do. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in PFICs to limit its tax liability or maximize

its after-tax return from these investments.

If a sufficient portion of the interests in a foreign issuer (including certain ILS issuers) is held or deemed held by the

fund, independently or together with certain other U.S. persons, that issuer may be treated as a

"

controlled foreign

corporation

"

(a

"

CFC

") with respect to the fund, in which case the fund will be required to take into account each year,

as ordinary income, its share of certain portions of that issuer's income, whether or not such amounts are distributed. The

fund may have to dispose of its portfolio securities (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and

------

potentially under disadvantageous circumstances) to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to meet its distribution

requirements and avoid fund-level taxes. Under proposed Treasury regulations, certain income derived by the fund

from a CFC for a taxable year would generally constitute qualifying income only to the extent the CFC makes distributions

in respect of that income to the fund for that taxable year. In addition, some fund gains on the disposition of interests in

such an issuer may be treated as ordinary income. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in issuers that could

be treated as CFCs in order to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

If the fund were to fail to qualify for treatment as a regulated investment company, it would generally be taxed in the

same manner as an ordinary corporation, and distributions to its shareholders generally would not be deductible by the

fund in computing its taxable income. Under certain circumstances, the fund may be able to cure a failure to meet the

qualifying income test or the diversification test if such failure was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, but

in order to do so the fund may incur a significant penalty tax that would reduce (and potentially could eliminate) the

fund's returns.

Valuation risk.

Many factors may influence the price at which the fund could sell any particular portfolio investment.

The sales price may well differ – higher or lower – from the fund's valuation of the investment, and such differences

could be significant, particularly for illiquid securities and securities that trade in thin markets and/or markets that

experience extreme volatility. These differences may increase significantly and affect fund investments more broadly

during periods of market volatility. The fund may value investments using fair value methodologies. Investors who

purchase or redeem fund shares on days when the fund is holding fair-valued securities may receive fewer or more

shares, or lower or higher redemption proceeds, than they would have received if the fund had not fair-valued the

securities or had used a different valuation methodology. The value of foreign securities, certain fixed income securities

and currencies, as applicable, may be materially affected by events after the close of the market on which they are valued,

but before the fund determines its net asset value. The fund's ability to value its investments may also be impacted by

technological issues and/or errors by pricing services or other third party service providers.

Concentration risk.

A fund that invests a significant percentage of its assets in a single industry may be particularly

susceptible to adverse economic, regulatory or other events affecting that industry and may be more risky than a fund that

does not concentrate in an industry.

Industries

in the financial segment, such as

insurance companies,

may be sensitive to changes in interest rates and

general economic activity and are generally subject to extensive government regulation.

Non-diversification risk.

The fund is not diversified, which means that it can invest a higher percentage of its assets

in the securities of any one or more issuers than a diversified fund. Being non-diversified may magnify the fund's losses

from adverse events affecting a particular issuer.

Cybersecurity risk.

Cybersecurity failures by and breaches of the fund's Adviser, transfer agent, distributor, custodian,

fund accounting agent or other service providers may disrupt fund operations, interfere with the fund's ability to calculate

its NAV, prevent fund shareholders from purchasing

or

redeeming

shares or receiving distributions, cause loss of or

unauthorized access to private shareholder information, and result in financial losses

to the fund and its shareholders

,

regulatory fines, penalties, reputational damage, or additional compliance costs. Substantial costs may be incurred in

order to prevent any cyber incidents in the future. The fund and its shareholders could be negatively impacted as a result.

Expense risk.

Your actual costs of investing in the fund may be higher than the expenses shown in

"

Annual fund

operating expenses

"

for a variety of reasons. For example, expense ratios may be higher than those shown if overall net

assets decrease. Net assets are more likely to decrease and fund expense ratios are more likely to increase when markets

are volatile.

Portfolio selection risk.

The Adviser's judgment about

the quality

,

relative yield,

relative value or market trends

affecting

a particular sector

or region,

market segment,

security

or about

interest rates generally

may prove to be incorrect,

or there may be imperfections, errors or limitations in the models, tools and data used by the Adviser.

Repurchase offers risk.

The fund is an

"

interval fund

"

and, in order to provide some liquidity to shareholders, will

make periodic offers to repurchase between 5% and 25% of its outstanding shares at NAV, pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under

the 1940 Act. The fund believes that these repurchase offers are generally beneficial to the fund's shareholders, and

repurchases generally will be funded from available cash or sales of portfolio securities. However, repurchase offers and

------

Risk factors

the need to fund repurchase obligations may affect the ability of the fund to be fully invested or force the fund to maintain

a higher percentage of its assets in liquid investments, which may harm the fund's investment performance. Moreover,

reduction in the size of the fund through repurchases may result in untimely sales of portfolio securities (with associated

imputed transaction costs, which may be significant), and may limit the ability of the fund to participate in new investment

opportunities or to achieve its investment objective. The fund does not anticipate employing investment leverage, but if

it were to do so in the future, repurchases of shares may compound the adverse effects of leverage in a declining market.

In addition, if the fund borrows money to finance repurchases, interest on that borrowing will negatively affect shareholders

who do not request that their shares be repurchased by increasing fund expenses and reducing any net investment

income. If a repurchase offer is oversubscribed and the fund determines not to repurchase additional shares beyond the

repurchase offer amount, or if shareholder repurchase requests are in an amount of shares greater than that which the

fund is entitled to repurchase, the fund will repurchase shares on a pro rata basis, and shareholders will have to wait

until the next repurchase offer to make another repurchase request. As a result, shareholders may be unable to liquidate

all or a given percentage of their investment in the fund at NAV during a particular repurchase offer. Some shareholders,

in anticipation of proration, may submit more shares for repurchase than they wish to have repurchased in a particular

quarter, thereby increasing the likelihood that proration will occur. A shareholder may be subject to market and other

risks, and the NAV of shares submitted for repurchase in a repurchase offer may decline to the extent there is any delay

between the repurchase request deadline and the date on which the NAV for such shares is determined. In addition, the

repurchase of shares by the fund may be a taxable event to shareholders.

Anti-takeover provisions.

The fund's Agreement and Declaration of Trust and by-laws include provisions that could

limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the fund or convert the fund to open-end status.

To learn more about the fund's investments and risks, you should obtain and read the statement of additional information.

Please note that there are many other factors that could adversely affect your investment and that could prevent the

fund from achieving its goals.

------

Management of the fund

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

The fund's Board of Trustees provides broad supervision over the affairs of the fund. The officers of the fund are responsible

for the fund's operations. The Trustees and officers of the fund, together with their principal occupations and other

affiliations during the past five years, are listed in the Statement of Additional Information. Each of the Trustees serves

as a Trustee of other U.S. registered investment portfolios for which the Adviser serves as investment adviser.

INVESTMENT ADVISER

The fund has contracted with the Adviser to act as its investment adviser with respect to all investments of the fund.

The Adviser is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Amundi and Amundi's wholly owned subsidiary, Amundi Holdings

US, Inc. Amundi, one of the world's largest asset managers, is headquartered in Paris, France. As of December 31,

2021

,

Amundi had more than $

2.3 trillion in assets under management worldwide. As of December 31,

2021

, Amundi US

(and its U.S. affiliates) had over $

billion in assets under management. Certain Trustees or officers of the fund are

also directors and/or officers of certain of Amundi's subsidiaries, including the Adviser. The address of the Adviser is 60

State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

The Adviser is responsible for managing the fund's overall investment program, supervising the fund's overall compliance

program and providing for the general management of the business affairs of the fund.

ADVISORY AGREEMENT

Under the terms of the advisory agreement (the

"

Advisory Agreement

"), the fund will pay to the Adviser monthly, as

compensation for the services rendered and expenses paid by it, a fee equal on an annual basis to 1.75% of the fund's

average daily net assets

. This fee is accrued daily and paid monthly.

For the year ended October 31,

2021

, the effective management fee was equivalent to 1.75% of the fund's average daily

net assets.

A discussion regarding the basis for the Board of Trustees' approval of the management contract is available in the

fund's annual report to shareholders for the period ended October 31,

2021

.

ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

The fund has entered in an administration agreement with the Adviser, pursuant to which the Adviser will provide

certain administrative and accounting services to the fund. Amundi US is reimbursed for its cost of providing such

services. The cost of providing these services is based on direct costs and costs of overhead, subject to review by the

Board of Trustees.

Under the terms of the administration agreement with the fund, the Adviser pays or reimburses the fund for expenses

relating to its services for the fund, with the exception of the following, which are to be paid by the fund: (a) charges and

expenses for fund accounting, pricing and appraisal services and related overhead, including, to the extent such services

are performed by personnel of the Adviser, or its affiliates, office space and facilities and personnel compensation,

training and benefits; (b) the charges and expenses of auditors; (c) the charges and expenses of any custodian, transfer

agent, plan agent, dividend disbursing agent and registrar appointed by the fund; (d) issue and transfer taxes, chargeable

to the fund in connection with securities transactions to which the fund is a party; (e) insurance premiums, interest

charges, any expenses in connection with any preferred shares or other form of leverage, dues and fees for membership

in trade associations and all taxes and corporate fees payable by the fund to federal, state or other governmental agencies;

(f) fees and expenses involved in registering and maintaining registrations of the fund and/or its shares; (g) all expenses

of shareholders' and Trustees' meetings and of preparing, printing and distributing prospectuses, notices, proxy statements

and all reports to shareholders and to governmental agencies; (h) charges and expenses of legal counsel to the fund and

the Trustees; (i) compensation of those Trustees of the fund who are not affiliated with or interested persons of Amundi

US, the fund (other than as Trustees), Amundi US, Inc. or Amundi Distributor US, Inc.; (j) the cost of preparing and

printing share certificates; (k) interest on borrowed money; (l) fees payable by the fund under management agreements

and the administration agreement; and (m) extraordinary expenses. The fund shall also assume and pay any other

expense that the fund, the Adviser or any other agent of the fund may incur not listed above that is approved by the

------

Management of the fund

Board of Trustees (including a majority of the Independent Trustees) as being an appropriate expense of the fund. In

addition, the fund shall pay all brokers' and underwriting commissions chargeable to the fund in connection with securities

transactions to which the fund is a party.

PORTFOLIO MANAGER

Day-to-day management of the fund's portfolio is the responsibility of Chin Liu and Campbell Brown. The portfolio

managers are supported by the Adviser's fixed income team. Members of this team manage other Pioneer funds investing

primarily in fixed income securities. The portfolio managers and the team also may draw upon the research and investment

management expertise of the global research teams, which provide fundamental and quantitative research and include

members from one or more of Amundi US's affiliates.

Mr. Liu is a Managing Director

,

Director of Insurance-Linked Securities

,

Director of Fixed Income Solutions and

Responsible Investing

Research of Amundi US. He joined Amundi US in 2007 and has been an investment professional

since 2005. Prior to joining Amundi US, Mr. Liu was a quantitative equity analyst for Numeric Investors and a customer

investment researcher for E\*Trade Financial. Mr. Liu has served as a portfolio manager of the fund since 2014.

Mr. Brown is a Vice President of Amundi US. He joined Amundi US in October 2018. Prior to joining Amundi US, Mr.

Brown worked as a Property Treaty Underwriter for Odyssey Reinsurance Company. Mr. Brown has served as a portfolio

manager of the fund since 2019.

The Statement of Additional Information provides additional information about the portfolio managers' compensation,

other accounts managed by the portfolio managers and the portfolio managers' ownership of securities in the fund.

------

Dividends and distributions

The fund expects to declare and pay dividends of net investment income annually and realized net capital gains, if any,

at least annually. Unless shareholders specify otherwise, dividends will be reinvested in shares of the fund. You may

notify the Transfer Agent in writing to:

• choose to receive dividends or distributions (or both) in cash; or

• change the way you currently receive distributions

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (the

"

Distributor

") is the principal underwriter of shares of the fund. Shares may be purchased

only through the Distributor. The Distributor acts as the distributor of the shares of the fund on a best efforts basis,

subject to various conditions, pursuant to the terms of a distributor's contract with the fund. The Distributor is not

obligated to sell any specific amount of shares of the fund. The Distributor will also act as agent for the fund in connection

with repurchases of shares.

Shares of the fund will be continuously offered through the Distributor, as the exclusive distributor of the fund's shares.

The fund has authorized one or more intermediaries (e.g., brokers, investment advisers, etc.) (collectively,

"

intermediaries

")

to receive orders on its behalf. Such intermediaries are authorized to designate other intermediaries to receive orders on

the fund's behalf. The fund will be deemed to have received an order when an authorized broker or, if applicable, a

broker's authorized designee, receives the order. The shares will be offered at the NAV per share calculated each regular

business day.

The fund and the Distributor will have the sole right to accept orders to purchase shares and reserve the right to reject

any order in whole or in part.

Amundi US or the Distributor may waive the fund's minimum investment requirements (see

"

Purchase of Shares

").

Additional conditions may apply to investments in the fund made by shareholders investing through financial intermediaries,

programs sponsored by financial intermediaries and retirement plans. The investment professional or intermediary

may charge you a transaction-based, administrative or other fee for its services. These conditions and fees are in addition

to those imposed by the fund and its affiliates. You should ask your investment professional or financial intermediary

about its services and any applicable fees. In addition, when you invest through an account that is not in your name, you

generally may buy and sell shares and complete other transactions only through the account. Ask your investment

professional or financial intermediary for more information.

No market currently exists for the fund's shares. The fund's shares are not listed and the fund does not currently intend

to list its shares for trading on any securities exchange, and does not anticipate that a secondary market will develop for

its shares. Neither Amundi US, nor the Distributor, intends to make a market in the fund's shares.

The Distributor is not obligated to buy any of the shares and does not intend to make a market in the shares.

Payments to financial intermediaries

Your financial intermediary may receive compensation from Amundi US and its affiliates for the sale of fund shares

and related services, including administrative services and transaction processing.

Amundi US and its affiliates may make additional payments to your financial intermediary. These payments may provide

your financial intermediary with an incentive to favor the Pioneer funds over other mutual funds or assist the Distributor

in its efforts to promote the sale of the fund's shares. Financial intermediaries include broker-dealers, banks (including

bank trust departments), registered investment advisers, financial planners, retirement plan administrators and other

types of intermediaries.

Amundi US makes these additional payments (sometimes referred to as

"

revenue sharing

") to financial intermediaries

out of its own assets, which may include profits derived from services provided to the fund or service fees. Amundi US

may base these payments on a variety of criteria, including the amount of sales or assets of the Pioneer funds attributable

to the financial intermediary or as a per transaction fee.

Not all financial intermediaries receive additional compensation and the amount of compensation paid varies for each

financial intermediary. In certain cases, these payments may be significant. Amundi US determines which firms to

support and the extent of the payments it is willing to make, generally choosing firms that have a strong capability to

------

Dividends and distributions

effectively distribute shares of the Pioneer funds and that are willing to cooperate with

Amundi US

's promotional efforts.

Amundi US also may compensate financial intermediaries (in addition to amounts that may be paid by the fund) for

providing certain administrative services and transaction processing services.

Amundi US may benefit from revenue sharing if the intermediary features the Pioneer funds in its sales system (such as

by placing certain Pioneer funds on its preferred fund list or giving access on a preferential basis to members of the

financial intermediary's sales force or management). In addition, the financial intermediary may agree to participate in

the Distributor's marketing efforts (such as by helping to facilitate or provide financial assistance for conferences, seminars

or other programs at which Amundi US personnel may make presentations on the Pioneer funds to the intermediary's

sales force). To the extent intermediaries sell more shares of the Pioneer funds or retain shares of the Pioneer funds in

their clients' accounts, Amundi US receives greater management and other fees due to the increase in the Pioneer funds'

assets. The intermediary may earn a profit on these payments if the amount of the payment to the intermediary exceeds

the intermediary's costs.

Your intermediary may charge you additional fees or commissions other than those disclosed in this prospectus. Intermediaries

may categorize and disclose these arrangements differently than in the discussion above and in the statement of additional

information. You can ask your financial intermediary about any payments it receives from Amundi US or the Pioneer

funds, as well as about fees and/or commissions it charges.

Amundi US and its affiliates may have other relationships with your financial intermediary relating to the provision of

services to the Pioneer funds, such as providing omnibus account services or effecting portfolio transactions for the

Pioneer funds. If your intermediary provides these services, Amundi US or the Pioneer funds may compensate the

intermediary for these services. In addition, your intermediary may have other relationships with Amundi US or its

affiliates that are not related to the Pioneer funds.

------

Purchase of shares

Shares of beneficial interest in the fund are being offered

on

a continuous basis at their net asset value per share. During

any continuous offering, shares may be purchased through the fund's Distributor.

Any continuous offering may be discontinued at any time. The fund and the Distributor will have the sole right to accept

orders to purchase shares and reserve the right to reject any order in whole or in part.

The fund generally expects to accept orders to purchase shares on a quarterly basis. However, the fund's ability to accept

orders to purchase shares may be limited, including during periods when, in the judgment of Amundi US, appropriate

investments for the fund are not available.

Shares are generally available for purchase by registered investment advisers acting in a fiduciary capacity on behalf of

their clients and by or through other qualified intermediaries and programs sponsored by such qualified financial

intermediaries. Shares are also available to certain direct investors, which may be individuals, trusts, foundations and

other institutional investors. Initial investments in the fund by or through a registered investment adviser or other

qualified financial intermediary are subject to a $1,000,000 minimum per registered investment adviser or intermediary.

Initial investments in the fund by direct investors are subject to a $1,000,000 minimum. There is no minimum investment

requirement for the following groups of direct investors: (i) current or former trustees and officers of the fund; (ii) partners

and employees of legal counsel to the fund (at the time of initial share purchase); and (iii) certain employees of Amundi

US and its affiliates (at the time of initial share purchase) who are qualified to invest in the fund. Registered investment

advisers and other financial intermediaries may impose different or additional minimum investment and eligibility

requirements from those of the fund. Please contact the fund's Distributor or your registered investment adviser or

other financial intermediary for more information. Amundi US or the Distributor may waive these minimum

investment requirements.

The fund does not offer share certificates. Shares are electronically recorded.

------

Periodic repurchase offers

The fund is a closed-end

"

interval

"

fund and, to provide some liquidity and the ability to receive NAV on a disposition

of at least a portion of your shares, makes periodic offers to repurchase shares. Except as permitted by the fund's interval

structure, no shareholder will have the right to require the fund to repurchase its shares. No public market for shares

exists, and none is expected to develop in the future. Consequently, shareholders generally will not be able to liquidate

their investment other than as a result of repurchases of their shares by the fund.

The fund has adopted, pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act, a fundamental policy, which cannot be changed

without shareholder approval, requiring the fund to offer to repurchase at least 5% and up to 25% of its shares at NAV

on a regular schedule. Although the policy permits repurchases of between 5% and 25% of the fund's outstanding shares,

for each repurchase offer, the fund expects to offer to repurchase 10% of its outstanding shares unless the fund's Board

of Trustees has approved a higher or lower amount for that repurchase offer.

The fund is required to make repurchase offers every three months. The date on which the repurchase price for shares

is determined will occur no later than the 14th day after the repurchase request deadline (or the next business day, if the

14th day is not a business day).

When a repurchase offer commences, the fund sends, at least 21 days before the repurchase request deadline, written

notice to each shareholder setting forth, among other things:

• The percentage of outstanding shares that the fund is offering to repurchase and how the fund will purchase shares

on a pro rata basis if the offer is oversubscribed.

• The date on which a shareholder's repurchase request is due (the repurchase deadline).

• The date that will be used to determine the fund's NAV applicable to the repurchase offer (the

"

repurchase date

"). See

"

Net Asset Value

"

above.

• The date by which the fund will pay to shareholders the proceeds from their shares accepted for repurchase.

• The NAV of the shares as of a date no more than seven days before the date of the written notice and the means by

which shareholders may ascertain the NAV.

• The procedures by which shareholders may request that their shares be repurchased and the right of shareholders to

withdraw or modify their repurchase requests before the repurchase request deadline.

• The circumstances in which the fund may suspend or postpone the repurchase offer.

This notice may be included in a shareholder report or other fund document. The repurchase request deadline will be

strictly observed. A repurchase request is received in good order if it is properly completed and signed. If a shareholder

fails to submit a repurchase request in good order by the repurchase request deadline, the shareholder will be unable to

liquidate shares until a subsequent repurchase offer, and will have to resubmit a request in the next repurchase offer.

Shareholders may withdraw or change a repurchase request with a proper instruction submitted in good order at any

point before the repurchase request deadline.

Determination of Repurchase Price and Payment for Shares.

The repurchase price payable in respect of a share is equal

to the share's NAV as determined no later than the 14th day (or the next business day if the 14th day is not a business

day) (the

"

repurchase pricing date

") following the repurchase request deadline, and payment for all shares repurchased

pursuant to these offers is made not later than seven days after the repurchase pricing date. Under normal circumstances,

the repurchase pricing date falls ten days after the repurchase request deadline. The fund's NAV per share may change

materially between the date a repurchase offer is mailed and the repurchase request deadline, and it may also change

materially between the repurchase request deadline and repurchase pricing date. The method by which the fund calculates

NAV is discussed above under

"

Net Asset Value.

"

During the period an offer to repurchase is open, shareholders may

obtain the current NAV by calling the fund's transfer agent at 1-844-391-3034.

The fund does not currently charge a repurchase fee, and it does not currently expect to impose a repurchase fee. However,

the fund may charge a repurchase fee of up to 2.0%, which the fund would retain to help offset non-de minimis estimated

costs related to the repurchase (such as bid to ask spreads) incurred by the fund, directly or indirectly, as a result of

repurchasing shares, thus allocating estimated transaction costs to the shareholder whose shares are being repurchased.

------

The fund may introduce, or modify the amount of, a repurchase fee at any time. The fund may also waive or reduce the

repurchase fee if the Adviser determines that the repurchase is offset by a corresponding purchase of fund shares or if

for other reasons the fund will not incur transaction costs or will incur reduced transaction costs.

Suspension or Postponement of Repurchase Offers.

The fund may suspend or postpone a repurchase offer in limited

circumstances set forth in Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act, as described below, but only with the approval of a majority

of the Trustees, including a majority of Trustees who are not

"

interested persons

"

of the fund, as defined in the 1940 Act.

The fund may suspend or postpone a repurchase offer only: (1) if making or effecting the repurchase offer would cause

the fund to lose its status as a regulated investment company under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended;

(2) if making or effecting the repurchase offer would cause the shares that are subject to the offer that are either listed

on a national securities exchange or quoted in an inter-dealer quotation system of a national securities association to be

neither listed on any national securities exchange nor quoted on any inter-dealer quotation system of a national securities

association; (3) for any period during which the NYSE or any other market in which the securities owned by the fund

are principally traded is closed, other than customary weekend and holiday closings, or during which trading in such

market is restricted; (4) for any period during which an emergency exists as a result of which disposal by the fund of

securities owned by it is not reasonably practicable, or during which it is not reasonably practicable for the fund fairly to

determine the value of its net assets; or (5) for such other periods as the SEC may by order permit for the protection of

shareholders of the fund.

Oversubscribed Repurchase Offers.

There is no minimum number of shares that must be submitted for repurchase before

the fund will honor repurchase requests. However, the fund's Trustees set for each repurchase offer a maximum percentage

of shares that may be repurchased by the fund. In the event a repurchase offer by the fund is oversubscribed, the fund

may repurchase, but is not required to repurchase, additional shares up to a maximum amount of 2% of the outstanding

shares of the fund. If the fund determines not to repurchase additional shares beyond the repurchase offer amount, or if

shareholders submit for repurchase an amount of shares greater than that which the fund is entitled to repurchase, the

fund will repurchase the shares submitted for repurchase on a pro rata basis.

If any shares that you wish to have repurchased by the fund are not repurchased because of proration, you will have to

wait until the next repurchase offer and resubmit your repurchase request, and your repurchase request will not be given

any priority over other shareholders' requests. Thus, there is a risk that the fund may not purchase all of the shares you

wish to have repurchased in a given repurchase offer or in any subsequent repurchase offer. In anticipation of the possibility

of proration, some shareholders may submit for repurchase more shares than they wish to have repurchased in a particular

quarter, increasing the likelihood of proration.

There is no assurance that you will be able to have your shares repurchased by the fund when or in the amount that you desire.

Consequences of Repurchase Offers.

From the time the fund distributes or publishes each repurchase offer notification

until the repurchase pricing date for that offer, the fund must maintain liquid assets at least equal to the percentage of

its shares subject to the repurchase offer. For this purpose,

"

liquid assets

"

means assets that may be sold or otherwise

disposed of in the ordinary course of business, at approximately the price at which the fund values them, within the

period between the repurchase request deadline and the repurchase payment date, or which mature by the repurchase

payment date. The fund is also permitted to borrow up to the maximum extent permitted under the 1940 Act to meet

repurchase requests.

If the fund borrows to finance repurchases, interest on that borrowing will negatively affect shareholders who do not

submit their shares for repurchase by increasing the fund's expenses and reducing any net investment income. There is

no assurance that the fund will be able sell a significant amount of additional shares so as to mitigate these effects.

The repurchase of shares by the fund will be a taxable event to shareholders, potentially even to those shareholders that

do not participate in the repurchase. For a discussion of these tax consequences, see

"

Federal Income Tax Matters

"

below and

"

Tax Status

"

in the SAI.

------

Federal income tax matters

The following is a summary discussion of certain U.S. federal income tax consequences that may be relevant to a shareholder

acquiring, holding or disposing of shares of the fund. This discussion addresses only U.S. federal income tax consequences

to U.S. shareholders who hold their shares as capital assets and does not address all of the U.S. federal income tax

consequences that may be relevant to particular shareholders in light of their individual circumstances. This discussion

also does not address the tax consequences to shareholders who are subject to special rules, including, without limitation,

banks and financial institutions, insurance companies, real estate investment trusts, other regulated investment companies,

dealers in securities or foreign currencies, foreign shareholders, shareholders who hold their shares as or in a hedge, a

constructive sale, or a conversion transaction, S corporations, shareholders who are subject to the alternative minimum

tax, shareholders whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar, or governments or their agencies or instrumentalities.

In addition, the discussion does not address any state, local, or non-U.S. or non-income tax consequences, and it does

not address the effect of any treaty. The discussion reflects applicable tax laws of the United States as of the date of this

Prospectus, which tax laws may be changed or subject to new interpretations by the courts or the Internal Revenue

Service (the

"

IRS

") retroactively or prospectively. No attempt is made to present a detailed explanation of all U.S. federal

income tax concerns affecting the fund and its shareholders. Investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers to

determine the specific tax consequences to them of acquiring, holding and disposing of shares in the fund, including

the applicable federal, state, local and foreign tax consequences to them and the effect of possible changes in tax laws.

The fund has elected to be treated, and has qualified and intends to continue to qualify each year, as a

"

regulated investment

company

"

under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the

"

Code

"), so that it will not pay

U.S. federal income tax on income and capital gains distributed to shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated

investment company under Subchapter M of the Code, the fund must, among other things, (i) derive at least 90% of its

gross income for each taxable year from dividends, interest, payments with respect to certain securities loans, gains from

the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including gains from options,

futures and forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in such stock, securities or currencies,

and net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership (as defined in Section 851(h) of the

Code) (the

"

90% income test

") and (ii) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter of each taxable year

(subject to certain exceptions and special rules): (a) at least 50% of the value of the fund's total assets is represented by

(1) cash and cash items, U.S. government securities, securities of other regulated investment companies, and (2) other

securities, with such other securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the value

of the fund's total assets and to not more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer and (b) not more

than 25% of the value of the fund's total assets is invested in (1) the securities (other than U.S. government securities and

securities of other regulated investment companies) of any one issuer, (2) the securities (other than securities of other

regulated investment companies) of two or more issuers that the fund controls and that are engaged in the same, similar,

or related trades or businesses, or (3) the securities of one or more qualified publicly traded partnerships.

For purposes of the 90% income test, the character of income earned by any entities in which the fund may invest that

are not treated as corporations for U.S. federal income tax purposes (e.g., partnerships other than certain publicly traded

partnerships or trusts that have not elected to be classified as corporations under the

"

check-the-box

"

regulations) will

generally pass through to the fund. Consequently, in order to qualify as a regulated investment company, the fund may

be required to limit its equity investments in such entities that earn fee income, rental income, insurance income or

other non-qualifying income.

If the fund qualifies as a regulated investment company and properly distributes to its shareholders each taxable year an

amount equal to or exceeding the sum of (i) 90% of its

"

investment company taxable income

"

as that term is defined in

the Code (which includes, among other things, dividends, taxable interest, and the excess of any net short-term capital

gains over net long-term capital losses, as reduced by certain deductible expenses) without regard to the deduction for

dividends paid and (ii) 90% of the excess of its gross tax-exempt interest income, if any, over certain disallowed deductions,

the fund generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on any income of the fund, including

"

net capital gain

"

(the excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss), distributed to shareholders. However, if the

fund meets such distribution requirements, but chooses to retain some portion of its taxable income or gains, it generally

will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at the

applicable

corporate rate on the amount retained. The fund may designate

certain amounts retained as undistributed net capital gain in a notice to its shareholders, who (i) will be required to

include in income for U.S. federal income tax purposes, as long-term capital gain, their proportionate shares of the

undistributed amount so designated, (ii) will be entitled to credit their proportionate shares of the income tax paid by

------

the fund on that undistributed amount against their federal income tax liabilities and to claim refunds to the extent such

credits exceed their liabilities and (iii) will be entitled to increase their tax basis, for federal income tax purposes, in their

shares by an amount equal to the excess of the amount of undistributed net capital gain included in their respective

income over their respective income tax credits. The fund intends to distribute at least annually all or substantially all of

its investment company taxable income (computed without regard to the dividends-paid deduction), net tax-exempt

interest income, and net capital gain.

The tax treatment of certain ILS is not entirely clear. Certain of the fund's investments (including, potentially, certain

ILS) may generate income that is not qualifying income for purposes of the 90% income test. The fund might generate

more non-qualifying income than anticipated, might not be able to generate qualifying income in a particular taxable

year at levels sufficient to meet the 90% income test, or might not be able to determine the percentage of qualifying

income it has derived for a taxable year until after year-end. The fund may determine not to make an investment that it

otherwise would have made, or may dispose of an investment it otherwise would have retained (potentially resulting in

the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), in an effort to meet the

90% income test.

If, for any taxable year, the fund does not qualify as a regulated investment company or does not satisfy the 90% distribution

requirement, it will be treated as a U.S. corporation subject to U.S. federal income tax, thereby subjecting any income

earned by the fund to tax at the corporate level and to a further tax at the shareholder level when such income is distributed.

Under certain circumstances, the fund may be able to cure a failure to qualify as a regulated investment company, but

in order to do so, the fund may incur significant fund-level taxes and may be forced to dispose of certain assets.

Under the Code, the fund will be subject to a nondeductible 4% U.S. federal excise tax on a portion of its undistributed

ordinary income and capital gain net income if it fails to meet certain distribution requirements with respect to each

calendar year and year ending October 31, respectively. The fund intends to make distributions in a timely manner and

accordingly does not expect to be subject to the excise tax.

The fund expects to declare and pay dividends of net investment income and net realized capital gains annually. Dividends

from income and/or capital gains may also be paid at such other times as may be necessary for the fund to avoid U.S.

federal income or excise tax.

Unless a shareholder specifies otherwise, all distributions from the fund to that shareholder will be automatically reinvested

in additional shares of the fund. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, all dividends generally are taxable whether a

shareholder takes them in cash or they are reinvested in additional shares of the fund.

In general, assuming that the fund has sufficient earnings and profits, dividends from net investment income and net

short-term capital gains are taxable either as ordinary income or, if certain conditions are met, as

"

qualified dividend

income,

"

taxable to individual and certain other noncorporate shareholders at

reduced

U.S. federal income tax

rates

.

In general, dividends may be reported by the fund as qualified dividend income if they are attributable to qualified

dividend income received by the fund. Qualified dividend income generally means dividend income received from the

fund's investments, if any, in common and preferred stock of U.S. companies and stock of certain qualified foreign

corporations, provided that certain holding period and other requirements are met by both the fund and the shareholders.

The fund is permitted to acquire stock of corporations, and it is therefore possible that a portion of the fund's distributions

may be eligible for treatment as qualified dividend income.

A foreign corporation is treated as a qualified foreign corporation for this purpose if it is incorporated in a possession of

the United States or it is eligible for the benefits of certain income tax treaties with the United States and meets certain

additional requirements. Certain foreign corporations that are not otherwise qualified foreign corporations will be treated

as qualified foreign corporations with respect to dividends paid by them if the stock with respect to which the dividends

are paid is readily tradable on an established securities market in the United States. PFICs (including certain PFICs

issuing ILS) are not qualified foreign corporations for this purpose. Dividends received by the fund from REITs generally

are not expected to qualify for treatment as qualified dividend income.

A dividend that is attributable to qualified dividend income of the fund that is paid by the fund to a shareholder will not

be taxable as qualified dividend income to such shareholder (1) if the dividend is received with respect to any share of

the fund held for fewer than 61 days during the 121-day period beginning on the date which is 60 days before the date

------

Federal income tax matters

on which such share became ex-dividend with respect to such dividend, (2) to the extent that the shareholder is under

an obligation (whether pursuant to a short sale or otherwise) to make related payments with respect to positions in

substantially similar or related property, or (3) if the shareholder elects to have the dividend treated as investment income

for purposes of the limitation on deductibility of investment interest. The

"

ex-dividend

"

date is the date on which the

owner of the share at the commencement of such date is entitled to receive the next issued dividend payment for such

share even if the share is sold by the owner on that date or thereafter.

Distributions by the fund in excess of the fund's current and accumulated earnings and profits will be treated as a return

of capital to the extent of (and in reduction of) the shareholder's tax basis in its shares and any such amount in excess of

that basis will be treated as gain from the sale of shares, as discussed below.

Certain dividends received by the fund from U.S. corporations (generally, dividends received by the fund in respect of

any share of stock (1) with a tax holding period of at least 46 days during the 91-day period beginning on the date that is

45 days before the date on which the stock becomes ex-dividend as to that dividend and (2) that is held in an unleveraged

position) and distributed and appropriately so reported by the fund may be eligible for the 50% dividends-received

deduction generally available to corporations under the Code. Certain preferred stock must have a holding period of at

least 91 days during the 181-day period beginning on the date that is 90 days before the date on which the stock becomes

ex-dividend as to that dividend in order to be eligible. Capital gain dividends distributed to the fund from other regulated

investment companies are not eligible for the dividends-received deduction. The fund is permitted to acquire stock of

U.S. domestic corporations, and it is therefore possible that a portion of the fund's distributions may qualify for this

deduction. In order to qualify for the deduction, corporate shareholders must meet the minimum holding period requirement

stated above with respect to their fund shares, taking into account any holding period reductions from certain hedging

or other transactions or positions that diminish their risk of loss with respect to their fund shares, and, if they borrow to

acquire or otherwise incur debt attributable to fund shares, they may be denied a portion of the dividends-received

deduction with respect to those shares. Any corporate shareholder should consult its tax adviser regarding the possibility

that its tax basis in its shares may be reduced, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, by reason of

"

extraordinary dividends

"

received with respect to the shares and, to the extent such basis would be reduced below zero, current recognition of

income may be required.

Distributions from net capital gains, if any, that are reported as capital gain dividends by the fund are taxable as long-term

capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes without regard to the length of time the shareholder has held shares

of the fund. Capital gain dividends distributed by the fund to individual and certain other noncorporate shareholders

will be taxed as long-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to noncorporate taxpayers at

reduced

U.S. federal

income tax rates

. A shareholder should also be aware that the benefits of the favorable tax rates applicable to long-term

capital gains and qualified dividend income may be affected by the application of the alternative minimum tax.

The U.S. federal income tax status of all distributions will be reported to shareholders annually.

A 3.8% Medicare contribution tax generally applies to all or a portion of the net investment income of a shareholder

who is an individual and not a nonresident alien for federal income tax purposes and who has adjusted gross income

(subject to certain adjustments) that exceeds a threshold amount ($250,000 if married filing jointly or if considered a

"

surviving spouse

"

for federal income tax purposes, $125,000 if married filing separately, and $200,000 in other cases).

This 3.8% tax also applies to all or a portion of the undistributed net investment income of certain shareholders that are

estates and trusts. For these purposes, interest, dividends and certain capital gains (among other categories of income)

are generally taken into account in computing a shareholder's net investment income.

Certain tax-exempt educational institutions will be subject to a 1.4% tax on net investment income. For these purposes,

certain dividends and capital gain distributions, and certain gains from the disposition of fund shares (among other

categories of income), are generally taken into account in computing a shareholder's net investment income.

Although dividends generally will be treated as distributed when paid, any dividend declared by the fund in October,

November or December and payable to shareholders of record in such a month that is paid during the following January

will be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as received by shareholders on December 31 of the calendar year in

which it was declared. In addition, certain distributions made after the close of a taxable year of the fund may be

"

spilled

back

"

and treated for certain purposes as paid by the fund during such taxable year. In such case, shareholders generally

will be treated as having received such dividends in the taxable year in which the distributions were actually made. For

------

purposes of calculating the amount of a regulated investment company's undistributed income and gain subject to the

4% excise tax described above, such

"

spilled back

"

dividends are treated as paid by the regulated investment company

when they are actually paid.

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the fund is permitted to carry forward indefinitely a net capital loss from any

taxable year to offset its capital gains, if any, in years following the year of the loss. To the extent subsequent capital gains

are offset by such losses, they will not result in U.S. federal income tax liability to the fund and may not be distributed as

capital gains to shareholders. Generally, the fund may not carry forward any losses other than net capital losses. Under

certain circumstances, the fund may elect to treat certain losses as though they were incurred on the first day of the

taxable year immediately following the taxable year in which they were actually incurred.

Under Section 163(j) of the Code, a taxpayer's business interest expense is generally deductible to the extent of its business

interest income plus certain other amounts. If the fund earns business interest income, it may report a portion of its

dividends as

"

Section 163(j) interest dividends,

"

which its shareholders may be able to treat as business interest income

for purposes of Section 163(j) of the Code. The fund's

"

Section 163(j) interest dividend

"

for a tax year will be limited to

the excess of its business interest income over the sum of its business interest expense and other deductions properly

allocable to its business interest income. In general, the fund's shareholders may treat a distribution reported as a Section

163(j) interest dividend as interest income only to the extent the distribution exceeds the sum of the portions of the

distribution reported as other types of tax-favored income. To be eligible to treat a Section 163(j) interest dividend as

interest income, a shareholder may need to meet certain holding period requirements in respect of the shares and must

not have hedged its position in the shares in certain ways.

At the time of an investor's purchase of fund shares, a portion of the purchase price may be attributable to unrealized

appreciation in the fund's portfolio or to undistributed capital gains of the fund. Consequently, subsequent distributions

by the fund with respect to these shares from such appreciation or gains may be taxable to such investor even if the net

asset value of the investor's shares is, as a result of the distributions, reduced below the investor's cost for such shares and

the distributions economically represent a return of a portion of the investment.

A repurchase by the fund of its shares from a shareholder generally is expected to be treated as a sale of the shares by the

shareholder. If, however, the shareholder continues to own shares of the fund after the repurchase (including shares

owned by attribution), some or all of the amounts received by a shareholder in the repurchase may be recharacterized

either as a distribution of net investment income or as a capital gain dividend rather than as a sale of the shares. There is

also a risk that shareholders who do not participate in the repurchase may be deemed to have received such a distribution

as a result of their proportionate increase in the ownership of the fund. The fund will use its judgment in reporting

repurchases as sales or deemed distributions, but the IRS may disagree with the fund's reporting. Shareholders should

consult their own tax advisers with reference to their individual circumstances to determine whether any particular

transaction in fund shares (including a repurchase) is properly treated as a sale for tax purposes, as the following discussion

assumes, and to ascertain the tax treatment of any gains or losses recognized in such transactions.

In general, if fund shares are sold, the shareholder will recognize gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount

realized on the sale and the shareholder's adjusted basis in the shares. Such gain or loss generally will be treated as

long-term capital gain or loss if the shares were held for more than one year and otherwise generally will be treated as

short-term capital gain or loss. Any loss recognized by a shareholder upon the sale or other disposition of shares with a

tax holding period of six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of any amounts treated as

distributions to the shareholder of long-term capital gain with respect to such shares (including any amounts credited

to the shareholder as undistributed capital gains).

The fund may report to the IRS the amount of proceeds that a shareholder receives from a repurchase of fund shares.

The fund may also report the shareholder's basis in those shares and whether any gain or loss that the shareholder realizes

on the repurchase is short-term or long-term gain or loss. If a shareholder has a different basis for different shares of the

fund in the same account (e.g., if a shareholder purchased fund shares in the same account at different times for different

prices, including as the result of reinvestment of dividends), the fund will calculate the basis of the shares using its

default method unless the shareholder has properly elected to use a different method. The fund's default method for

calculating basis will be the average basis method, under which the basis per share is reported as the average of the bases

of all of the shareholder's fund shares in the account. A shareholder may elect, on an account-by-account basis, to use a

method other than average basis by following procedures established by the fund. If such an election is made on or prior

------

Federal income tax matters

to the date of the first repurchase of shares in the account and on or prior to the date that is one year after the shareholder

receives notice of the fund's default method, the new election will generally apply as if the average basis method had

never been in effect for such account. If such an election is not made on or prior to such dates, the shares in the account

at the time of the election will generally retain their averaged bases. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers

concerning the tax consequences of applying the average basis method or electing another method of basis calculation.

Losses on repurchases of shares may be disallowed under

"

wash sale

"

rules in the event of other investments in the fund

(including those made pursuant to reinvestment of distributions) within a period of 61 days beginning 30 days before

and ending 30 days after a repurchase or other disposition of shares. In such a case, the disallowed portion of any loss

generally would be included in the U.S. federal tax basis of the shares acquired in the other investments.

Under Treasury regulations, if a shareholder recognizes a loss with respect to fund shares of $2 million or more for an

individual shareholder, or $10 million or more for a corporate shareholder, in any single taxable year (or certain greater

amounts over a combination of years), the shareholder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on IRS Form 8886.

Shareholders who own portfolio securities directly are in many cases excepted from this reporting requirement but,

under current guidance, shareholders of regulated investment companies are not excepted. A shareholder who fails to

make the required disclosure to the IRS may be subject to substantial penalties. The fact that a loss is reportable under

these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether or not the taxpayer's treatment of the loss is proper.

Shareholders should consult with their tax advisers to determine the applicability of these regulations in light of their

individual circumstances.

Shareholders that are exempt from U.S. federal income tax, such as retirement plans that are qualified under Section

401 of the Code, generally are not subject to U.S. federal income tax on fund dividends or distributions, or on repurchases

of fund shares unless the fund shares are

"

debt-financed property

"

within the meaning of the Code. However, in the

case of fund shares held through a non-qualified deferred compensation plan, fund dividends and distributions received

by the plan and gains from repurchases of fund shares by the plan generally are taxable to the employer sponsoring such

plan in accordance with the U.S. federal income tax laws that are generally applicable to shareholders receiving such

dividends or distributions from regulated investment companies such as the fund.

A plan participant whose retirement plan invests in the fund, whether such plan is qualified or not, generally is not taxed

on fund dividends or distributions received by the plan or on gains from repurchases of fund shares by the plan for U.S.

federal income tax purposes. However, distributions to plan participants from a retirement plan account generally are

taxable as ordinary income, and different tax treatment, including penalties on certain excess contributions and deferrals,

certain pre-retirement and post-retirement distributions and certain prohibited transactions, is accorded to accounts

maintained as qualified retirement plans. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers for more information.

Foreign exchange gains and losses realized by the fund in connection with certain transactions involving foreign

currency-denominated debt securities, certain options and futures contracts relating to foreign currency, foreign currency

forward contracts, foreign currencies, or payables or receivables denominated in a foreign currency are subject to Section

988 of the Code, which generally causes such gains and losses to be treated as ordinary income and losses and may affect

the amount, timing and character of distributions to shareholders. Under Treasury regulations that may be promulgated

in the future, any gains from such transactions that are not directly related to the fund's principal business of investing

in stock or securities (or its options contracts or futures contracts with respect to stock or securities) may have to be

limited in order to enable the fund to satisfy the 90% income test.

Certain investments made by the fund (including certain ILS) may be treated as equity in PFICs for federal income tax

purposes. In general, a PFIC is a foreign corporation (i) that receives at least 75% of its annual gross income from passive

sources (such as interest, dividends, certain rents and royalties, or capital gains) or (ii) where at least 50% of its assets

(computed based on average fair market value) either produce or are held for the production of passive income. If the

fund acquires any equity interest (under Treasury regulations that may be promulgated in the future, generally including

not only stock but also an option to acquire stock such as is inherent in a convertible bond) in a PFIC, the fund could be

subject to U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on

"

excess distributions

"

received from the PFIC or on

gain from the sale of stock in the PFIC, even if all income or gain actually received by the fund is timely distributed to

its shareholders. The fund would not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or deduction for such a tax.

Gains from the sale of stock of PFICs may also be treated as ordinary income.

------

A

"

qualified electing fund

"

election or a

"

mark to market

"

election may be available that would ameliorate these adverse

tax consequences, but such elections could require the fund to recognize taxable income or gain (which would be subject

to the distribution requirements applicable to regulated investment companies, as described above) without the concurrent

receipt of cash. In order to satisfy the distribution requirements and avoid a tax on the fund, the fund may be required

to liquidate portfolio securities that it might otherwise have continued to hold (potentially resulting in taxable gain or

loss to the fund and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), or the fund may be required to borrow cash. In

order for the fund to make a qualified electing fund election with respect to a PFIC, the PFIC would have to agree to

provide certain tax information to the fund on an annual basis, which it might not agree to do. If the fund makes a valid

qualified electing fund election with respect to a PFIC, the fund will include in its income each year its pro rata share of

the PFIC's net capital gains (as long-term capital gain) and other earnings and profits (as ordinary income), whether or

not any amounts are distributed from the PFIC to the fund. If the qualified electing fund election is made, actual cash

distributions by the PFIC paid out of earnings and profits already included in taxable income will not be taken into

account in determining the taxable income of the fund. Any gain or loss recognized by the fund on a disposition of a

PFIC for which the fund has made a qualified electing fund election will generally be treated as a capital gain or loss. If

the fund makes a mark-to-market election with respect to a PFIC, the fund generally will include as ordinary income

each taxable year the excess, if any, of the fair market value of its stock in the PFIC at the end of the year over its adjusted

tax basis in that stock, and the fund generally will be allowed to take an ordinary loss in respect of the excess, if any, of

its adjusted tax basis in that stock over the fair market value of that stock at the end of the year (but only to the extent of

the net amount of income previously included by the fund as a result of the mark-to-market election). If the fund makes

a mark-to-market election with respect to a PFIC, then any gain recognized by the fund on a disposition of the PFIC will

generally be treated as ordinary income, and any loss so recognized will be treated as an ordinary loss to the extent of

the net amount of income previously included by the fund as a result of the mark-to-market election. The fund may

limit and/or manage its holdings in PFICs to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

If a sufficient portion of the interests in a foreign issuer (including certain ILS issuers) is held or deemed held by the

fund, independently or together with certain other U.S. persons, that issuer may be treated as a

"

CFC

"

with respect to

the fund, in which case the fund will be required to take into account each year, as ordinary income, its share of certain

portions of that issuer's income, whether or not such amounts are distributed. The fund may have to dispose of its

portfolio securities (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous

circumstances) to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to meet its distribution requirements and avoid fund-level

taxes. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in issuers that could be treated as controlled foreign corporations

in order to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

A different definition of CFC applies to non-U.S. entities treated as corporations for tax purposes that earn

"

related

person insurance income

"

("

RPII

"). RPII is, in general, any insurance income attributable to policies of insurance or

reinsurance with respect to which the person (directly or indirectly) insured or reinsured is an RPII Shareholder (as

defined in the following paragraph) of the non-U.S. entity or a related person (described below) to such an RPII Shareholder.

In general, and subject to certain limitations, insurance income is income (including premium and investment income)

attributable to the issuing of any insurance or reinsurance contract that would be taxed under subchapter L of the Code

if the income were earned by a domestic insurance company.

For purposes only of taking into account RPII, and subject to the exceptions described below, a foreign entity in which

the fund invests that is treated as a corporation will be treated as a CFC under the RPII rules (an

"

RPII CFC

") if RPII

Shareholders (defined below) collectively own, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities or constructively, 25% or

more of the total combined voting power or value of such entity on any day during a taxable year. If an entity is an RPII

CFC

at any time

during any taxable year, then a United States person who owns, directly or indirectly through non-U.S.

entities, an equity interest in such entity on the last day of any such taxable year must include in its gross income for U.S.

federal income tax purposes its allocable share of RPII of such entity for the entire taxable year, subject to certain

modifications. An RPII Shareholder is a United States person who owns, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities,

any amount (rather than 10% or more) of an RPII CFC's equity (an

"

RPII Shareholder

"). Generally, for purposes of the

RPII rules, a related person is someone who controls or is controlled by the RPII Shareholder or someone who is controlled

by the same person or persons which control the RPII shareholder. For these purposes, control is measured by stock

ownership of either more than 50% in value or more than 50% in voting power after applying certain constructive

ownership rules.

------

Federal income tax matters

The special RPII rules do not apply to a non-U.S. insurance company if (i) the direct and indirect insureds and persons

related to such insureds, whether or not United States persons, are treated at all times during the taxable year as owning,

directly or indirectly, less than 20% of the voting power and less than 20% of the value of the stock of the non-U.S.

insurance company; (ii) the RPII of the non-U.S. insurance company, determined on a gross basis, is less than 20% of

the company's gross insurance income for such taxable year; (iii) the non-U.S. insurance company elects to be taxed on

its RPII as if it were engaged in a trade or business within the United States and waives all treaty benefits to which it

would otherwise be entitled; or (iv) the non-U.S. insurance company elects to be treated as a domestic corporation for

U.S. federal income tax purposes. If no exception applies, each United States person who owns, directly or indirectly

through non-U.S. entities, shares of an RPII CFC on the last day of such entity's taxable year will be required to include

in gross income for U.S. federal income tax purposes its allocable share of RPII for the entire taxable year, but only to the

extent of its share of the RPII CFC's earnings and profits. The amount includible will be determined as if all such RPII

were distributed proportionately only to such United States persons at that date. Amounts distributed out of previously

taxed RPII would be excluded from the U.S. shareholder's income.

If the fund invests in certain pay-in-kind securities, zero coupon securities, deferred interest securities or, in general,

any other securities with original issue discount (or with market discount if the fund elects to include market discount

in income currently), the fund generally must accrue income on such investments for each taxable year, which generally

will be prior to the receipt of the corresponding cash payments. However, the fund must distribute to its shareholders, at

least annually, all or substantially all of its investment company taxable income (determined without regard to the

deduction for dividends paid), including such accrued income, to qualify to be treated as a regulated investment company

under the Code and avoid U.S. federal income and excise taxes. Therefore, the fund may have to dispose of its portfolio

securities, potentially under disadvantageous circumstances, to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to satisfy

distribution requirements. Such a disposition of securities may potentially result in additional taxable gain or loss to

the fund.

The fund may invest to a significant extent in, or hold, debt obligations that are below investment grade or that are

unrated, including debt obligations of issuers not currently paying interest or that are in default. Investments in debt

obligations that are at risk of or are in default present special tax issues for the fund. Federal income tax rules are not

entirely clear about issues such as when the fund may cease to accrue interest, original issue discount or market discount,

when and to what extent deductions may be taken for bad debts or worthless securities, how payments received on

obligations in default should be allocated between principal and interest and whether certain exchanges of debt obligations

in a workout context are taxable. These and other issues will be addressed by the fund, in the event it invests in or holds

such securities, in order to seek to ensure that it distributes sufficient income to preserve its status as a regulated investment

company and does not become subject to U.S. federal income or excise tax.

Options written or purchased and futures contracts entered into by the fund on certain securities, indices and foreign

currencies, as well as certain forward foreign currency contracts, may cause the fund to recognize gains or losses from

marking-to-market even though such options may not have lapsed or been closed out or exercised, or such futures or

forward contracts may not have been performed or closed out. The tax rules applicable to these contracts may affect the

characterization of some capital gains and losses realized by the fund as long-term or short-term. Certain options, futures

and forward contracts relating to foreign currency may be subject to Section 988 of the Code, as described above, and

accordingly may produce ordinary income or loss. Additionally, the fund may be required to recognize gain if an option,

futures contract, forward contract, short sale or other transaction that is not subject to the mark-to-market rules is

treated as a

"

constructive sale

"

of an

"

appreciated financial position

"

held by the fund under Section 1259 of the Code.

Any net mark-to-market gains and/or gains from constructive sales may also have to be distributed to satisfy the distribution

requirements referred to above even though the fund may receive no corresponding cash amounts, possibly requiring

the disposition of portfolio securities or borrowing to obtain the necessary cash. Such a disposition of securities may

potentially result in additional taxable gain or loss to the fund. Losses on certain options, futures or forward contracts

and/or offsetting positions (portfolio securities or other positions with respect to which the fund's risk of loss is substantially

diminished by one or more options, futures or forward contracts) may also be deferred under the tax straddle rules of

the Code, which may also affect the characterization of capital gains or losses from straddle positions and certain successor

positions as long-term or short-term. Certain tax elections may be available that would enable the fund to ameliorate

------

some adverse effects of the tax rules described in this paragraph. The tax rules applicable to options, futures, forward

contracts and straddles may affect the amount, timing and character of the fund's income and gains or losses and hence

of its distributions to shareholders.

The fund may be subject to withholding and other taxes imposed by foreign countries, including taxes on interest,

dividends and capital gains with respect to its investments in those countries. Any such taxes would, if imposed, reduce

the yield on or return from those investments. Tax conventions between certain countries and the U.S. may reduce or

eliminate such taxes in some cases. If more than 50% of the fund's total assets at the close of any taxable year consist of

stock or securities of foreign corporations, the fund may elect to pass through to its shareholders their pro rata shares of

qualified foreign taxes paid by the fund for that taxable year. If the fund so elects, shareholders would be required to

include such taxes in their gross incomes (in addition to the dividends and distributions they actually receive), would

treat such taxes as foreign taxes paid by them, and as described below may be entitled to a tax deduction for such taxes

or a tax credit, subject to a holding period requirement and other limitations under the Code.

Qualified foreign taxes generally include taxes that would be treated as income taxes under U.S. tax regulations but do

not include most other taxes, such as stamp taxes, securities transaction taxes, and similar taxes. If the fund qualifies to

make, and makes, the election described above, shareholders may deduct their pro rata portion of qualified foreign taxes

paid by the fund for that taxable year in computing their income subject to U.S. federal income taxation or, alternatively,

claim them as credits, subject to applicable limitations under the Code, against their U.S. federal income taxes. Shareholders

who do not itemize deductions for U.S. federal income tax purposes will not, however, be able to deduct their pro rata

portion of qualified foreign taxes paid by the fund, although such shareholders will be required to include their shares of

such taxes in gross income if the fund makes the election described above. No deduction for such taxes will be permitted

to individuals in computing their alternative minimum tax liability.

If the fund makes this election and a shareholder chooses to take a credit for the foreign taxes deemed paid by such

shareholder, the amount of the credit that may be claimed in any year may not exceed the same proportion of the U.S.

tax against which such credit is taken that the shareholder's taxable income from foreign sources (but not in excess of the

shareholder's entire taxable income) bears to his entire taxable income. For this purpose, long-term and short-term

capital gains the fund realizes and distributes to shareholders will generally not be treated as income from foreign sources

in their hands, nor will distributions of certain foreign currency gains subject to Section 988 of the Code or of any other

income realized by the fund that is deemed, under the Code, to be U.S.-source income in the hands of the fund. This

foreign tax credit limitation may also be applied separately to certain specific categories of foreign-source income and

the related foreign taxes. As a result of these rules, which may have different effects depending upon each shareholder's

particular tax situation, certain shareholders may not be able to claim a credit for the full amount of their proportionate

share of the foreign taxes paid by the fund. Shareholders who are not liable for U.S. federal income taxes, including

tax-exempt shareholders, will ordinarily not benefit from this election. If the fund does make the election, it will provide

required tax information to shareholders. The fund generally may deduct any foreign taxes that are not passed through

to its shareholders in computing its income available for distribution to shareholders to satisfy applicable tax distribution

requirements. Under certain circumstances, if the fund receives a refund of foreign taxes paid in respect of a prior year,

the value of the fund's shares could be reduced, or any foreign tax credits or deductions passed through to shareholders

in respect of the fund's foreign taxes for the current year could be reduced.

The fund is required to withhold (as

"

backup withholding

") a portion of reportable payments, including dividends,

capital gain distributions and the proceeds of repurchases of fund shares, paid to shareholders who have not complied

with certain IRS regulations. The backup withholding rate is currently 24%. In order to avoid this withholding requirement,

shareholders, other than certain exempt entities, must generally certify that the Social Security Number or other Taxpayer

Identification Number they provide is their correct number and that they are not currently subject to backup withholding,

or that they are exempt from backup withholding. The fund may nevertheless be required to backup withhold if it receives

notice from the IRS or a broker that the number provided is incorrect or backup withholding is applicable as a result of

previous underreporting of interest or dividend income.

Investors other than U.S. persons may be subject to different U.S. federal income tax treatment, including a non-resident

alien U.S. withholding tax at the rate of 30% or any lower applicable treaty rate on amounts treated as ordinary dividends

from the fund (other than certain dividends reported by the fund as (i) interest-related dividends, to the extent such

dividends are derived from the fund's

"

qualified net interest income,

"

or (ii) short-term capital gain dividends, to the

------

Federal income tax matters

extent such dividends are derived from the fund's

"

qualified short-term gain

") or, in certain circumstances, unless an

effective IRS Form W-8BEN or other authorized withholding certificate is on file, to backup withholding on certain

other payments from the fund.

"

Qualified net interest income

"

is the fund's net income derived from U.S. source interest

and original issue discount, subject to certain exceptions and limitations.

"

Qualified short-term gain

"

generally means

the excess of the net short-term capital gain of the fund for the taxable year over its net long-term capital loss, if any.

Backup withholding will not be applied to payments that have been subject to the 30% (or lower applicable treaty rate)

withholding tax described in this paragraph.

Unless certain non-U.S. entities that hold fund shares comply with IRS requirements that will generally require them to

report information regarding U.S. persons investing in, or holding accounts with, such entities, a 30% withholding tax

may apply to fund distributions payable to such entities. A non-U.S. shareholder may be exempt from the withholding

described in this paragraph under an applicable intergovernmental agreement between the U.S. and a foreign government,

provided that the shareholder and the applicable foreign government comply with the terms of such agreement.

Shareholders should consult their own tax advisers on these matters and on state, local, foreign and other applicable

tax laws.

If, as anticipated, the fund qualifies as a regulated investment company under the Code, it will not be required to pay

any Massachusetts income, corporate excise or franchise taxes or any Delaware corporation income tax.

A state income (and possibly local income and/or intangible property) tax exemption is generally available to the extent

the fund's distributions are derived from interest on (or, in the case of intangible property taxes, to the extent the value

of its assets is attributable to) certain U.S. government obligations, provided, in some states, that certain thresholds for

holdings of such obligations and/or reporting requirements are satisfied. The fund will not seek to satisfy any threshold

or reporting requirements that may apply in particular taxing jurisdictions, although the fund may in its sole discretion

provide relevant information to shareholders.

------

Net asset value

The fund calculates a net asset value for its shares every day the New York Stock Exchange is open as of the close of

regular trading (normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). On days when the New York Stock Exchange is closed for trading,

including certain holidays listed in the statement of additional information, a net asset value is not calculated. The fund's

most recent net asset value is available on the fund's website, amundi.com/

us

. For purposes of determining the net asset

value of a common share, the value of the securities held by the fund plus any cash or other assets (including interest

accrued but not yet received) minus all liabilities (including accrued expenses and indebtedness) is divided by the total

number of shares outstanding at such time. Expenses, including the fees payable to the Adviser, are accrued daily.

The fund generally values debt securities and certain derivative instruments by using the prices supplied by independent

third party pricing services. A pricing service may use market prices or quotations from one or more brokers or other

sources, or may use a pricing matrix or other fair value methods or techniques to provide an estimated value of the

security or instrument. A pricing matrix is a means of valuing a debt security on the basis of current market prices for

other debt securities, historical trading patterns in the market for fixed income securities and/or other factors. Non-U.S.

debt securities that are listed on an exchange will be valued at the bid price obtained from an independent third party

pricing service.

Senior loans are valued at the mean between the last available bid and asked prices for one or more brokers or dealers as

obtained from an independent third party pricing service. Senior loans for which no reliable price quotes are available

will be valued by an independent third party pricing service through the use of a pricing matrix or other fair value

methods or techniques. Event linked bonds are valued at the bid price obtained from an independent third party pricing

service. Other ILS may be valued at the bid price obtained from an independent third party pricing service, or through a

third party using a pricing matrix, insurance industry valuation models, or other fair value methods or techniques to

provide an estimated value of the instrument.

The fund generally values its equity securities and certain derivative instruments that are traded on an exchange using

the last sale price on the principal exchange on which they are traded. Equity securities that are not traded on the date of

valuation, or securities for which no last sale prices are available, are valued at the mean between the last bid and asked

prices or, if both last bid and asked prices are not available, at the last quoted bid price. Last sale, bid and asked prices are

provided by independent third party pricing services. In the case of equity securities not traded on an exchange, prices

are typically determined by independent third party pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees using a variety

of techniques and methods. The fund may use a fair value model developed by an independent pricing service to value

non-U.S. equity securities.

To the extent that the fund invests in shares of other funds that are not traded on an exchange, such shares are valued at

their net asset values as provided by those funds. The prospectuses for those funds explain the circumstances under

which those funds will use fair value pricing methods and the effects of using fair value pricing methods.

The valuations of securities traded in non-U.S. markets and certain fixed income securities will generally be determined

as of the earlier closing time of the markets on which they primarily trade. When the fund holds securities or other

assets that are denominated in a foreign currency, the fund will normally use the currency exchange rates as of 3:00 p.m.

(Eastern time). Non-U.S. markets are open for trading on weekends and other days when the fund does not price its

shares. Therefore, the value of the fund's shares may change on days when you will not be able to purchase or redeem

fund shares.

When independent third party pricing services are unable to supply prices for an investment, or when prices or market

quotations are considered by Amundi US to be unreliable, the value of that security may be determined using quotations

from one or more broker-dealers. When such prices or quotations are not available, or when they are considered by

Amundi US to be unreliable, the fund uses fair value methods to value its securities pursuant to procedures adopted by

the Board of Trustees. The fund also may use fair value methods if it is determined that a significant event has occurred

between the time at which a price is determined and the time at which the fund's net asset value is calculated. Because

the fund may invest in securities rated below investment grade—some of which may be thinly-traded and for which

prices may not be readily available or may be unreliable—the fund may use fair value methods more frequently than

funds that primarily invest in securities that are more widely traded. Valuing securities using fair value methods may

cause the net asset value of the fund's shares to differ from the net asset value that would be calculated only using market

prices. The fund's fair value policies and procedures may be impacted as the fund comes into compliance with a newly

adopted SEC rule.

------

Net asset value

The prices used by the fund to value its securities may differ from the amounts that would be realized if these securities

were sold and these differences may be significant, particularly for securities that trade in relatively thin markets and/or

markets that experience extreme volatility.

Description of shares

The fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of common shares, without par value.

All shares have equal rights

to the payment of dividends and other distributions and the distribution of assets upon liquidation. Shares, when issued

and outstanding, will be fully paid and non-assessable. Shareholders are entitled to share pro rata in the net assets of the fund available for distribution to common shareholders upon liquidation of the fund.

Common shareholders are entitled

to one vote for each share held.

As of January 31,

2022

, the following number of shares were outstanding:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

---

| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) |
| Title of class | Amount Authorized | &nbsp;&nbsp;Amount Held by <br>the Fund for its <br>own Account<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp;Amount of <br>Outstanding <br>Shares Exclusive <br>of Amount shown <br>under (3)<br>|
| Common Shares | Unlimited | 0 | 108119444.759 |

---

As of January 31, 2022, the following person owned more than 25% of the outstanding shares of the fund. A person may be deemed to control the fund if such person owns more than 25% of the outstanding shares of the fund.

---

| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| Record Holder | Share Class | &nbsp;&nbsp;Number of<br>Shares<br>| % of Class |
| Charles Schwab & Co Inc<br>Special Custody A/C FBO Customers<br>Attn Mutual Funds<br>211 Main Street<br>San Francisco CA 94105-1901<br>| Common | 39697771.939 | 36.72% |
| Band & Co<br>C/O US Bank NA<br>1555 N River Center Dr<br>Milwaukee WI 53212-3981<br>| Common | 37692564.248 | 34.86% |

---

------

Certain provisions of the agreement and declaration of trust and by-laws

The Declaration of Trust includes provisions that could have the effect of limiting the ability of other entities or persons

to acquire control of the fund or to change the composition of its Board of Trustees and could have the effect of depriving

shareholders of an opportunity to sell their shares at a premium over prevailing market prices by discouraging a third

party from seeking to obtain control of the fund.

Although the fund is not required to hold annual meetings of its shareholders, shareholders holding at least a majority

of the outstanding shares entitled to vote have the right, under certain circumstances, to call a meeting for any purpose

requiring action by the shareholders as provided in the Declaration of Trust or in the By-Laws.

A Trustee may be removed from office only (i) by action of at least three-quarters (3/4) of the outstanding shares, or

(ii) by the action of at least three-quarters (3/4) of the remaining Trustees, specifying the date when such removal shall

become effective.

The Declaration of Trust provides for shareholder voting as required by the 1940 Act or other applicable laws but

otherwise permits, consistent with Delaware law, actions by the Trustees without seeking the consent of shareholders.

The Trustees may, without shareholder approval, where approval of shareholders is not otherwise required under the

1940 Act, merge or consolidate the fund into other entities, reorganize the fund into another trust or entity or a series

or class of another entity, sell the assets of the fund to another entity, or terminate the fund.

The fund may be converted to an open-end investment company at any time by a vote of the outstanding shares.

Conversion of the fund to an open-end investment company would require the favorable vote of the holders of at least

three-quarters (3/4) of the fund's outstanding shares (or a majority of such shares if the action was previously approved

by three-quarters (3/4) of the Trustees). Such a vote also would satisfy a separate requirement in the 1940 Act that the

change be approved by the shareholders. Shareholders of an open-end investment company may require the company

to redeem their shares of common stock at any time (except in certain circumstances as authorized by or under the 1940

Act) at their net asset value, or net asset value per share less such redemption charge, if any, as might be in effect at the

time of a redemption. All such redemptions generally will be made in cash. If the fund is converted to an open-end

investment company, it could be required to liquidate portfolio securities to meet requests for redemption.

Conversion to an open-end investment company would also require changes in certain of the fund's investment policies

and restrictions, such as those relating to leverage and the purchase of illiquid securities.

The Declaration of Trust requires the favorable vote of the holders of at least three-quarters (3/4) of the outstanding

shares of the fund to approve, adopt or authorize certain transactions with 5% or greater holders of a class of shares and

their associates. For purposes of these provisions, a 5% or greater holder of a class or series of shares (a

"

Principal

Shareholder

") refers to any person who, whether directly or indirectly and whether alone or together with its affiliates

and associates, beneficially owns 5% or more of the outstanding shares of any class or series of shares of beneficial interest

of the fund. The 5% holder transactions subject to these special approval requirements are:

• the merger or consolidation of the fund or any subsidiary of the fund with or into any Principal Shareholder;

• the issuance of any securities of the fund to any Principal Shareholder for cash, other than pursuant to any automatic

dividend reinvestment plan;

• the sale, lease or exchange of all or any substantial part of the assets of the fund to any Principal Shareholder, except

assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than $1,000,000, aggregating for the purpose of such computation

all assets sold, leased or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a 12-month period; and

• the sale, lease or exchange to the fund or any subsidiary of the fund, in exchange for securities of the fund, of any

assets of any Principal Shareholder, except assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than $1,000,000, aggregating

for purposes of such computation all assets sold, leased or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a

12-month period.

The Declaration of Trust provides a detailed process for the bringing of derivative or direct actions by shareholders in

order to permit legitimate inquiries and claims while avoiding the time, expense, distraction, and other harm that can be

caused to the fund or its shareholders as a result of spurious shareholder demands and derivative actions. Prior to

bringing a derivative action, a demand by three unrelated shareholders must first be made on the fund's trustees. The

Declaration of Trust details various information, certifications, undertakings and acknowledgements that must be included

------

Certain provisions of the agreement and declaration of trust and by-laws

in the demand. Following receipt of the demand, the trustees have a period of 90 days, which may be extended by an

additional 60 days, to consider the demand. If a majority of the trustees who are considered independent for the purposes

of considering the demand determine that maintaining the suit would not be in the best interests of the fund, the trustees

are required to reject the demand and the complaining shareholders may not proceed with the derivative action unless

the shareholders are able to sustain the burden of proof to a court that the decision of the trustees not to pursue the

requested action was not a good faith exercise of their business judgment on behalf of the fund. The Declaration of Trust

further provides that shareholders owning shares representing at least 10% of the voting power of the affected fund must

join in bringing the derivative action. If a demand is rejected, the complaining shareholders will be responsible for the

costs and expenses (including attorneys' fees) incurred by the fund in connection with the consideration of the demand,

if a court determines that the demand was made without reasonable cause or for an improper purpose. If a derivative

action is brought in violation of the Declaration of Trust, the shareholders bringing the action may be responsible for

the fund's costs, including attorneys' fees, if a court determines that the action was brought without reasonable cause or

for an improper purpose.

The Declaration of Trust provides that no shareholder may bring a direct action claiming injury as a shareholder of the

Trust, or any series or class thereof, where the matters alleged (if true) would give rise to a claim by the Trust or by the

Trust on behalf of a series or class, unless the shareholder has suffered an injury distinct from that suffered by the

shareholders of the Trust, or the series or class, generally. Under the Declaration of Trust, a shareholder bringing a

direct claim must be a shareholder of the series or class with respect to which the direct action is brought at the time of

the injury complained of, or have acquired the shares afterwards by operation of law from a person who was a shareholder

at that time.

The Declaration of Trust also provides that shareholders have no rights, privileges, claims or remedies under any contract

or agreement entered into by the Trust with any service provider or other agent or contract with the Trust, including,

without limitation, any third party beneficiary rights, except as may be expressly provided in any service contract

or agreement.

Administrator, custodian, fund accounting agent, transfer agent and dividend disbursing agent

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. serves as the fund's administrator.

The fund's securities and cash are held under a custodian agreement with

The

Bank of New York Mellon ("

BNY Mellon

")

,

225 Liberty Street,

New York,

New York

10286. BNY Mellon also serves

as fund accounting agent.

BNY Mellon

Investment

Servicing

(US)

Inc.,

4400 Computer Drive,

Westborough,

Massachusetts 01581,

is the fund's transfer agent and dividend

disbursing agent for the fund's shares.

------

Privacy notice

March 2020

Please read this important Privacy Notice — about the privacy of our customers' personal information — from Amundi

Asset Management US, Inc., Amundi Distributor US, Inc. and the Pioneer Funds (together

"

Amundi US

").

This Privacy Notice and in the case of EU nationals, the Addendum to this Privacy Notice as amended from time to time,

outlines our guidelines and practices for how we use and protect information about individual customers. Accordingly,

references to this Privacy Notice shall include references to the Addendum (as applicable). We will send customers our

Privacy Notice and Addendum each year.

Amundi US Respects Your Privacy

Amundi US considers the privacy of our customers and former customers a matter of great importance. We respect

your privacy and believe that any personal customer data we have should be treated with the highest regard for its

confidentiality, whether it is financial information or other personal data.

Amundi US does not sell information about customers to any third party. Our company works hard to safeguard your

personal information.

Employee Behavior

Amundi US instructs its employees to keep your personal and financial information confidential

and secure when they have access to it and when they see it as they communicate with you and process transactions on

your or your financial intermediary's instructions. Employees are directed not to disclose information to unauthorized

persons, either during their Amundi US employment or afterward.

Vendor Contracts

When Amundi US hires vendors, such as mail houses or data processors, to assist in delivering

services to clients, we require these vendors to commit contractually to keep the information they handle confidential

and secure.

Your Personal Information We Collect

We collect and record personal information that customers provide:

• on forms and applications

• through electronic media

• through information collected from the web browser of your personal computer or laptop that allows our website to

recognize your browser (commonly known as

"

cookies

")

• by telephone

• in correspondence

We also collect and record information from:

• your financial advisor

• your transactions with us and our affiliates

• other firms, such as those from whom you transfer assets

• third parties, such as service providers that may notify us of your change of address

Personal information may include:

• names

• addresses

• telephone numbers

• Social Security numbers

• your investments in the Pioneer Funds, such as your account balance and transaction activity

How Amundi US Uses and Discloses Personal Information

Amundi US gathers personal information to help us serve our customers and enhance other products and programs. For

instance,

• we may share information about your transactions with our affiliates in connection with providing services to your account;

• we may use it to send notices about fund products and services; or

• we may employ a mail house to survey all our customers about our products or the quality of our communications

or services.

------

Privacy notice

All financial companies need to share customers' personal information to run their everyday business. Amundi US shares

personal information with nonaffiliated third party service providers for our everyday business purposes, such as:

• to assist in processing account transactions that you request or authorize; or

• to provide products or services that you request.

Amundi US does not share personal information with affiliated or nonaffiliated companies for marketing purposes.

Amundi US does not use or disclose personal information about our customers except as described in this notice or as

permitted by law. For example, we would disclose this information as needed to law enforcement and regulatory agencies,

in connection with a subpoena or other legal process, as part of an audit or examination, and to trustees or custodians

you have appointed. Disclosures made at your request include disclosures of personal information requested by your

authorized intermediaries and employers sponsoring your investment plans.

Amundi US may share your personal information with other business entities in connection with the sale, assignment,

merger or other transfer of all or a portion of Amundi US's business to such business entity. We will require any such

successor business entity to honor the terms of this Privacy Notice.

Security

Amundi US maintains physical, electronic and administrative safeguards designed to protect customer information.

We employ various forms of Internet security, such as

• data encryption

• Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) and/or Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocols (encryption for network communications)

• anti-malware software

• user names and passwords

Please note, however, that while Amundi US has endeavored to create a secure and reliable website for users, the

confidentiality of any communication or material transmitted to/from the website or via e-mail cannot be guaranteed.

If you access information through our website,

amundi.com

/

us

, you should not give your user name or passwords to

anyone for any reason. Choosing to provide this information to a third party invites problems and puts the confidentiality

of your personal information at risk.

Changes to this Privacy Notice

This Privacy Notice may be revised from time to time as we add new features and services, as laws change, and as industry

privacy and security best practices evolve. We will notify you if we make material changes to the Privacy Notice. The

most current version of the Privacy Notice is available on the website at

https://www.amundi.com/usinvestors/Local-Content/Footer/Quick-Links/Privacy-Policy-Business-Continuity-and-Legal-Notices.

You can check the date posted at the top to see when the Privacy Notice was last updated. Small changes or changes that

do not significantly affect individual privacy interests may be made at any time and without prior notice.

Contact

If you have any questions about this Privacy Notice or if you have any questions or concerns about how Amundi US

maintains the privacy of your customer information, please contact us at 844-391-3034 Monday through Friday, between

the hours of 8:00 am and 7:00 pm Eastern Time.

Privacy Notice – EU Addendum

Please read this important notice — about the privacy of our customers' personal information — from Amundi Asset

Management US, Inc., Amundi Distributor US, Inc. and the Pioneer Funds (together

"

Amundi US

"). This Addendum only

applies to EU nationals and should be read together with the Privacy Notice. References to the Privacy Notice shall include

references to this Addendum (as applicable).

How Amundi US Uses and Discloses Personal Information

Amundi US may share your personal information under confidentiality agreements and any legally required data

processing agreements with other companies that work with, or on behalf of, Amundi US to provide products and

services, such as those who are providing email or mail solutions, providing cloud hosting services, analyzing data and

------

usage of the website, or providing support and maintenance services for the website, as well as legal, regulatory, audit

and other professional advisors. These companies may use your personal information to assist us in our operations or

for our legitimate business interests. However, these companies do not have any independent right to share this information.

Amundi US will not sell, rent, license, or trade your personal information with third parties for their own direct marketing

use unless we receive your express consent to do so. Unless you give us permission to do so, we will not share your

personal information with third parties other than as specified in this Privacy Notice.

Amundi US will retain in accordance with its data retention policy your personal information only for as long as is

reasonably necessary to achieve the purposes for which it is collected.

Automatically Collected Information and Anonymous Information

Each time you visit the website, Amundi US collects some information to improve the overall quality of your online experience.

An Internet Protocol ("

IP

") address is a number that automatically identifies the computer or device you have used to

access the Internet. The IP address enables our server to send you the web pages that you want to visit, and it may disclose

the server owned by your Internet Service Provider. Amundi US may use IP addresses to conduct website analyses and

performance reviews and to administer the website, although it will not combine traffic data with user accounts.

Cookies are pieces of information that a website transfers to a user's computer for purposes of storing information about

a user's preferences. Cookies in and of themselves do not personally identify users, although they do identify a user's

computer. Many websites use cookies as a standard practice to provide useful features when a user visits the website and

most web browsers are set up to accept cookies. Amundi US uses cookies to improve your online experience when

visiting the website. You can set your browser to refuse cookies, but some portions of a website may not work properly

if you refuse cookies. A session cookie is one that exists for the time period that your browser is open. A persistent

cookie is one that is saved on your device/computer even after the browser is closed. Like many websites, we may use

both session cookies and persistent cookies.

Privacy Settings/Opt Out/Changes/Access

You have the right to request that your personal information be removed from our database, changed or updated, and

can do so by contacting us at one of the telephone numbers listed at the end of this Addendum. If requested, we will

promptly verify and delete your account and you will no longer receive information or correspondence from Amundi

US. Your removal from the mailing list or database will not remove records of past transactions or delete information

stored in our data backups and archives where we are required to keep your data for legitimate business or legal requirements.

Data on past transactions and data stored in backups and archives will be deleted in the normal course of our business.

You have the right to access or, if required by applicable laws, receive a copy of your personal information held by

contacting us at one of the telephone numbers below.

In addition, you have the right to make a complaint to the relevant supervisory authority in your home country if you

have concerns about Amundi US's handling of your personal information.

Some of the recipients of your personal information as specified above may be located in countries (including the United

States) that do not provide a level of data protection equivalent to that set forth by the European Union and some other

jurisdictions. Amundi US will take appropriate steps to ensure that such recipients act in accordance with applicable

law. To the extent that Amundi US transfers personal information to recipients which are located outside the European

Union, Amundi US will implement appropriate contractual measures to secure such transfer, in compliance with applicable

law. If you choose to access or use the Services, you consent to the transfer, use and disclosure of information in accordance

with this Privacy Notice and subject to such applicable laws.

Toll-free numbers:

Germany

0800 082 08 68

Austria

0800 29 76 57

Switzerland

0800 55 40 91

Other countries (not toll-free):

+353 1 480 2200

------

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund

------

PROSPECTUS

------

March 1,

2022

You should rely only on the information contained in or incorporated by reference into this prospectus. The fund has

not authorized any other person to provide you with different information. If anyone provides you with different or

inconsistent information, you should not rely on it.

All dealers that buy, sell, or trade the fund's shares, whether or not participating in the offering, may be required to

deliver a prospectus when acting on behalf of the Distributor.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| ![](g436461g2img7e3308691.jpg)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp;28062-08-0322<br>©2022 Amundi Distributor US, Inc.<br>Underwriter of Pioneer mutual funds<br>Member SIPC<br>|

---

------

**Pioneer ILS Interval Fund**

------

60 State Street

Boston, Massachusetts 02109

Statement of Additional Information

Common Shares

March 1, 2023

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund (the "fund") is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company. This statement of additional information related to the shares does not constitute a prospectus, but should be read in conjunction with the prospectus relating thereto, dated March 1, 2023 (the "prospectus"). This statement of additional information does not include all information that a prospective investor should consider before purchasing shares, and investors should obtain and read the prospectus prior to purchasing such shares. A copy of the prospectus may be obtained without charge by calling 844-391-3034 or by written request to the fund at 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109. You may also obtain a copy of the prospectus from our website at: amundi.com/us. The fund's [financial statements](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000182126823000016/pio84860.htm)for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2022, including the independent registered public accounting firm's report thereon, are incorporated into this statement of additional information by reference.

**Contents** 

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. [Fund history](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_1) 1

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. [Use of Proceeds](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_1) 1

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. [Investment policies, risks and restrictions](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_1) 1

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4. [Trustees and officers](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_34) 34

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5. [Investment adviser and other fund service providers](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_43) 43

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6. [Portfolio management](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_46) 46

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7. [Portfolio transactions](#xx_bfbeaade-ef00-4b3f-8414-b8f635ebfb12_48) 48

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8. [Purchase of shares; Repurchase of shares](#xx_1e98f537-8533-49ce-a18a-99d527f2c89f_1) 50

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9. [Pricing of shares](#xx_496b6848-c47e-4d32-8904-5540fddfaef4_1) 51

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10. [Description of shares](#xx_dfce338d-2d6b-48b5-976b-d379e41e2240_1) 52

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11. [Tax status](#xx_dfce338d-2d6b-48b5-976b-d379e41e2240_3) 54

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12. [Financial statements](#xx_dfce338d-2d6b-48b5-976b-d379e41e2240_11) 62

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13. [Additional Information](#xx_fa3bfe3c-f888-42a3-af5c-fb6d2c41d355_1) 63

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14. [Annual fee, expense and other information](#xx_fa3bfe3c-f888-42a3-af5c-fb6d2c41d355_1) 63

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15. [Appendix A — Description of Ratings](#xx_fa3bfe3c-f888-42a3-af5c-fb6d2c41d355_4) 66

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16. [Appendix B — Proxy voting policies and procedures](#xx_fa3bfe3c-f888-42a3-af5c-fb6d2c41d355_17) 79

![](g262783covers_amundipioneer2.jpg)

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

**1. Fund history** 

The fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company that is operated as an interval fund. The fund was organized as a Delaware statutory trust on July 15, 2014. Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("Amundi US") is the fund's investment adviser.

**2. Use of Proceeds** 

The fund will invest the proceeds of the offering of shares in accordance with the fund's investment objective and principal investment strategies. It is presently anticipated that the fund will be able to fully invest all of the proceeds according to its investment objective and policies within approximately three months after the receipt of proceeds, depending on the amount and timing of proceeds available to the fund as well as the availability of securities consistent with the fund's investment objective and strategies. Pending investment, all or a portion of the proceeds may be invested in U.S. government securities or high grade, short-term money market instruments.

**3. Investment policies, risks and restrictions** 

The prospectus presents the investment objective and the principal investment strategies and risks of the fund. This section supplements the disclosure in the fund's prospectus and provides additional information on the fund's investment policies or restrictions. Restrictions or policies stated as a maximum percentage of the fund's assets are only applied immediately after a portfolio investment to which the policy or restriction is applicable (other than the limitation on borrowing). Accordingly, any later increase or decrease in a percentage resulting from a change in values, net assets or other circumstances will not be considered in determining whether the investment complies with the fund's restrictions and policies.

**Debt securities and related investments**

**Insurance-linked securities** 

The fund may invest in insurance-linked securities (ILS). The fund could lose a portion or all of the principal it has invested in an ILS, and the right to additional interest or dividend payments with respect to the security, upon the occurrence of one or more trigger events, as defined within the terms of an insurance-linked security. Trigger events, generally, are hurricanes, earthquakes, or other natural events of a specific size or magnitude that occur in a designated geographic region during a specified time period, and/or that involve losses or other metrics that exceed a specific amount. There is no way to accurately predict whether a trigger event will occur, and accordingly, ILS carry significant risk. The fund is entitled to receive principal and interest and/or dividend payments so long as no trigger event occurs of the description and magnitude specified by the instrument. In addition to the specified trigger events, ILS may expose the fund to other risks, including but not limited to issuer (credit) default, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional interpretations and adverse tax consequences.

Event-linked bonds may be issued by government agencies, insurance companies, reinsurers, special purpose corporations or other on-shore or off-shore entities. In addition to the specified trigger events, event-linked bonds may also expose the fund to other risks, including but not limited to issuer (credit) default, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional interpretations and adverse tax consequences. Event-linked bonds are subject to the risk that the model used to calculate the probability of a trigger event was not accurate and underestimated the likelihood of a trigger event. This may result in more frequent and greater than expected loss of principal and/or interest, which would adversely impact the fund's total returns. Further, to the extent there are events that involve losses or other metrics, as applicable, that are at, or near, the threshold for a trigger event, there may be some delay in the return of principal and/or interest until it is determined whether a trigger event has occurred. Finally, to the extent there is a dispute concerning the definition of the trigger event relative to the specific manifestation of a catastrophe, there may be losses or delays in the payment of principal and/or interest on the event-linked bond. Lack of a liquid market for these instruments may impose the risk of higher transactions costs and the possibility that the fund may be forced to liquidate positions when it would not be advantageous to do so.

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Event-linked bonds are typically rated below investment grade or may be unrated. Securities rated BB or lower are considered to be below investment grade. The rating for an event-linked bond primarily reflects the rating agency's calculated probability that a pre-defined trigger event will occur, which will cause a loss of principal. This rating may also assess the credit risk of the bond's collateral pool, if any, and the reliability of the model used to calculate the probability of a trigger event.

In addition to event-linked bonds, the fund also may invest in other insurance-linked securities, including notes or preferred shares issued by special purpose vehicles structured to comprise a portion of an reinsurer's or insurer's catastrophe-oriented business, known as sidecars, or to provide reinsurance to reinsurers or insurers, known as collateralized reinsurance ("Reinsurance Notes"). An investor in Reinsurance Notes participates in the premiums and losses associated with underlying reinsurance contracts. Reinsurance Notes are subject to the same risks discussed herein for event-linked bonds. In addition, because Reinsurance Notes represent an interest in underlying reinsurance contracts, the fund has limited transparency into the underlying insurance policies and therefore must rely upon the risk assessment and sound underwriting practices of the reinsurer and/or insurer. Accordingly, it may be more difficult for the investment adviser to fully evaluate the underlying risk profile of the fund's investment in Reinsurance Notes and therefore place the fund's assets at greater risk of loss than if the adviser had more complete information. The lack of transparency may also make the valuation of Reinsurance Notes more difficult and potentially result in mispricing that could result in losses to the fund. Reinsurance Notes are also subject to extension risk. The sponsor of such an investment might have the right to extend the maturity of the notes to verify that the trigger event did occur or to process and audit insurance claims. In certain circumstances, the extension may exceed two years.

Event-linked bonds and other insurance-linked securities typically are restricted to qualified institutional buyers and, therefore, are not subject to registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") or any state securities commission and are not listed on any national securities exchange. The amount of public information available with respect to event-linked bonds and other insurance-linked securities is generally less extensive than that available for issuers of registered or exchange listed securities. Event-linked bonds may be subject to the risks of adverse regulatory or jurisdictional determinations. There can be no assurance that future regulatory determinations will not adversely affect the overall market for event-linked bonds.

**Event-linked swaps** 

The fund may obtain event-linked exposure by investing in event-linked swaps, which typically are contingent, or formulaically related to defined trigger events, or by pursuing similar event-linked derivative strategies. Trigger events include hurricanes, earthquakes and weather-related phenomena. If a trigger event occurs, the fund may lose the swap's notional amount. As derivative instruments, event-linked swaps are subject to risks in addition to the risks of investing in event-linked bonds, including counterparty risk and leverage risk.

**Structured reinsurance investments** 

Insurance-linked securities ("ILS") may include special purpose vehicles ("SPVs") or similar instruments structured to comprise a portion of a reinsurer's catastrophe-oriented business, known as quota share instruments (sometimes referred to as reinsurance sidecars), or to provide reinsurance relating to specific risks to insurance or reinsurance companies through a collateralized instrument, known as collateralized reinsurance. Quota share instruments and other structured reinsurance investments generally will be considered illiquid securities by the fund. The fund may invest substantially in illiquid securities.

Structured reinsurance investments developed along with event-linked bonds as a mechanism to facilitate risk-transfer from insurance markets to capital markets investors. These instruments are typically more customizable but less liquid investments than event-linked bonds. The instruments typically mature in one year. Like event-linked bonds, an investor in structured reinsurance investments participates in the premiums and losses associated with underlying reinsurance contracts. Structured reinsurance investments are subject to the same risks as event-linked bonds. In cases where structured reinsurance investments represent an interest in underlying reinsurance contracts, the fund has limited transparency into the underlying insurance policies and therefore must rely upon the risk assessment and sound underwriting practices of the reinsurer and/or insurer. Accordingly, it may be more difficult for the investment adviser to fully evaluate the underlying risk profile of the fund's investment in structured reinsurance investments and therefore place the fund's assets at greater risk of loss than if the adviser had more complete information. The lack of transparency may also make the valuation of structured reinsurance investments more difficult and potentially

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result in mispricing that could result in losses to the fund. Structured reinsurance investments are also subject to extension risk. The sponsor of such an investment might have the right to extend the maturity of the notes to verify that the trigger event did occur or to process and audit insurance claims. In certain circumstances, the extension may exceed two years.

The fund may invest indirectly in reinsurance contracts, by holding notes or preferred shares issued by a SPV whose performance is tied to an underlying reinsurance transaction, including quota share instruments. Quota shares are a form of proportional reinsurance in which an investor participates in the premiums and losses of a reinsurer's portfolio of catastrophe-oriented policies, according to a pre-defined percentage. For example, under a 10% quota share agreement, the SPV be entitled to 10% of all premiums associated with a defined portfolio and be responsible for 10% of all related claims.

Collateralized reinsurance investments, are privately structured securities or derivatives utilized to gain exposure to the reinsurance market. Collateralized reinsurance entails an SPV entering into a reinsurance arrangement that is then collateralized by invested capital and premiums related to the insurance coverage. The collateral is designed to cover in full the potential claims that could arise from the underlying reinsurance contract.

Industry loss warranties ("ILWs") are a form of insurance-linked security used to finance peak, non-recurrent insurance risks, such as hurricanes, tropical storms and earthquakes. ILWs feature an industry loss index trigger, and, in some cases, a dual trigger design that includes a protection buyer indemnity trigger. A traditional ILW takes the form of a bilateral reinsurance contract, but there are also index products that take the form of derivatives or exchange traded instruments. The common feature among these forms is that the payout trigger is based on an industry loss index or a parametric index.

The reinsurance market is highly cyclical, with coverage being written at the beginning of the year and midyear for coverage for the following 12 months. The pricing of reinsurance is also highly cyclical as premiums for reinsurance coverage are driven, in large part, by insurers' recent loss experience.

Since ILS are typically structured so as to be bankruptcy remote SPVs or similar structures it is unlikely that the fund could lose its investment if the applicable trigger event never occurs, However, there can be no assurance that ILS in which the fund may invest in the future will be structured in a similar manner or that a court would uphold the intended bankruptcy remote characterization of the structure. If ILS issued in the future is structured in a different manner, it may be possible that the fund would lose its entire investment in an event-linked bond even though the applicable trigger event never occurs.

**Floating rate loans** 

A floating rate loan is typically originated, negotiated and structured by a U.S. or foreign commercial bank, insurance company, finance company or other financial institution for a group of investors. The financial institution typically acts as an agent for the investors, administering and enforcing the loan on their behalf. In addition, an institution, typically but not always the agent, holds any collateral on behalf of the investors.

The interest rates are adjusted based on a base rate plus a premium or spread or minus a discount. The base rate usually is the London Interbank Offered Rate ("LIBOR"), the Federal Reserve federal funds rate, the prime rate or other base lending rates used by commercial lenders. LIBOR usually is an average of the interest rates quoted by several designated banks as the rates at which they pay interest to major depositors in the London interbank market on U.S. dollar-denominated deposits.

Floating rate loans include loans to corporations and institutionally traded floating rate debt obligations issued by an asset-backed pool, and interests therein. The fund may invest in loans in different ways. The fund may: (i) make a direct investment in a loan by participating as one of the lenders; (ii) purchase an assignment of a loan; or (iii) purchase a participation interest in a loan.

**Direct investment in loans.** It can be advantageous to the fund to make a direct investment in a loan as one of the lenders. When a new issue is purchased, such an investment is typically made at par. This means that the fund receives a return at the full interest rate for the loan. Secondary purchases of loans may be made at par, at a premium from par or at a discount from par. When the fund invests in an assignment of, or a participation interest in, a loan, the fund may pay a fee or forgo a portion of the interest payment. Consequently, the fund's return on such an investment

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may be lower than it would have been if the fund had made a direct investment in the underlying corporate loan. The fund may be able, however, to invest in corporate loans only through assignments or participation interests at certain times when reduced direct investment opportunities in corporate loans may exist. At other times, however, such as recently, assignments or participation interests may trade at significant discounts from par.

**Assignments.** An assignment represents a portion of a loan previously attributable to a different lender. The purchaser of an assignment typically succeeds to all the rights and obligations under the loan agreement of the assigning investor and becomes an investor under the loan agreement with the same rights and obligations as the assigning investor. Assignments may, however, be arranged through private negotiations between potential assignees and potential assignors, and the rights and obligations acquired by the purchaser of an assignment may differ from, and be more limited than, those held by the assigning investor.

**Participation interests.** Participation interests are interests issued by a lender or other financial institution, which represent a fractional interest in a corporate loan. The fund may acquire participation interests from the financial institution or from another investor. The fund typically will have a contractual relationship only with the financial institution that issued the participation interest. As a result, the fund may have the right to receive payments of principal, interest and any fees to which it is entitled only from the financial institution and only upon receipt by such entity of such payments from the borrower. In connection with purchasing a participation interest, the fund generally will have no right to enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement, nor any rights with respect to any funds acquired by other investors through set-off against the borrower and the fund may not directly benefit from the collateral supporting the loan in which it has purchased the participation interest. As a result, the fund may assume the credit risk of both the borrower and the financial institution issuing the participation interest. In the event of the insolvency of the financial institution issuing a participation interest, the fund may be treated as a general creditor of such entity.

**Other information about floating rate loans.** Loans typically have a senior position in a borrower's capital structure. The capital structure of a borrower may include loans, senior unsecured loans, senior and junior subordinated debt, preferred stock and common stock, typically in descending order of seniority with respect to claims on the borrower's assets. Although loans typically have the most senior position in a borrower's capital structure, they remain subject to the risk of non-payment of scheduled interest or principal. Such non-payment would result in a reduction of income to the fund, a reduction in the value of the investment and a potential decrease in the net asset value of the fund. There can be no assurance that the liquidation of any collateral securing a loan would satisfy a borrower's obligation in the event of non-payment of scheduled interest or principal payments, or that such collateral could be readily liquidated. In the event of bankruptcy of a borrower, the fund could experience delays or limitations with respect to its ability to realize the benefits of the collateral securing a loan. Although a loan may be senior to equity and other debt securities in an issuer's capital structure, such obligations may be structurally subordinated to obligations of the issuer's subsidiaries. For example, if a holding company were to issue a loan, even if that issuer pledges the capital stock of its subsidiaries to secure the obligations under the loan, the assets of the operating companies are available to the direct creditors of an operating company before they would be available to the holders of the loan issued by the holding company.

In order to borrow money pursuant to a loan, a borrower will frequently, for the term of the loan, pledge collateral, including but not limited to, (i) working capital assets, such as accounts receivable and inventory; (ii) tangible fixed assets, such as real property, buildings and equipment; (iii) intangible assets, such as trademarks and patent rights (but excluding goodwill); and (iv) security interests in shares of stock of subsidiaries or affiliates. In the case of loans made to non-public companies, the company's shareholders or owners may provide collateral in the form of secured guarantees and/or security interests in assets that they own. In many instances, a loan may be secured only by stock in the borrower or its subsidiaries. Collateral may consist of assets that may not be readily liquidated, and there is no assurance that the liquidation of such assets would satisfy fully a borrower's obligations under a loan.

In the process of buying, selling and holding loans, the fund may receive and/or pay certain fees. Any fees received are in addition to interest payments received and may include facility fees, commitment fees, commissions and prepayment penalty fees. When the fund buys a loan it may receive a facility fee and when it sells a loan it may pay a facility fee. On an ongoing basis, the fund may receive a commitment fee based on the undrawn portion of the

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underlying line of credit portion of a loan. In certain circumstances, the fund may receive a prepayment penalty fee upon the prepayment of a loan by a borrower. Other fees received by the fund may include covenant waiver fees and covenant modification fees.

A borrower must comply with various restrictive covenants contained in a loan agreement or note purchase agreement between the borrower and the holders of the loan. Such covenants, in addition to requiring the scheduled payment of interest and principal, may include restrictions on dividend payments and other distributions to stockholders, provisions requiring the borrower to maintain specific minimum financial ratios, and limits on total debt.

In a typical loan, the agent administers the terms of the loan agreement. In such cases, the agent is normally responsible for the collection of principal and interest payments from the borrower and the apportionment of these payments to the credit of all institutions that are parties to the loan agreement. The fund will generally rely upon the agent or an intermediate participant to receive and forward to the fund its portion of the principal and interest payments on the loan. Furthermore, unless the fund has direct recourse against the borrower, the fund will rely on the agent and the other investors to use appropriate credit remedies against the borrower.

The fund may acquire interests in loans that are designed to provide temporary or "bridge" financing to a borrower pending the sale of identified assets or the arrangement of longer-term loans or the issuance and sale of debt obligations. Bridge loans often are unrated. The fund may also invest in loans of borrowers that have obtained bridge loans from other parties. A borrower's use of bridge loans involves a risk that the borrower may be unable to locate permanent financing to replace the bridge loan, which may impair the borrower's perceived creditworthiness.

From time to time, Amundi US and its affiliates may borrow money from various banks in connection with their business activities. Such banks may also sell interests in loans to or acquire them from the fund or may be intermediate participants with respect to loans in which the fund owns interests. Such banks may also act as agents for loans held by the fund.

**Reorganizational financings.** The fund may invest in restructurings and similar financings, including debtor-in-possession financings (commonly called "DIP financings"). In such transactions, the borrower may be assuming large amounts of debt in order to have the financial resources to attempt to achieve its business objectives. Such business objectives may include but are not limited to: management's taking over control of a company (leveraged buy-out); reorganizing the assets and liabilities of a company (leveraged recapitalization); or acquiring another company. Loans or securities that are part of highly leveraged transactions involve a greater risk (including default and bankruptcy) than other investments. DIP financings are arranged when an entity seeks the protections of the bankruptcy court under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. These financings allow the entity to continue its business operations while reorganizing under Chapter 11. Such financings provide senior liens on unencumbered security (i.e., security not subject to other creditors' claims). There is a risk that the entity will not emerge from Chapter 11 and be forced to liquidate its assets under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. In such event, the fund's only recourse will be against the property securing the DIP financing.

**Inverse floating rate securities** 

The fund may invest in inverse floating rate obligations. The interest on an inverse floater resets in the opposite direction from the market rate of interest to which the inverse floater is indexed. An inverse floater may be considered to be leveraged to the extent that its interest rate varies by a magnitude that exceeds the magnitude of the change in the index rate of interest. The higher degree of leverage inherent in inverse floaters is associated with greater volatility in their market values.

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**Debt securities rating information** 

Investment grade debt securities are those rated "BBB" or higher by Standard & Poor's Ratings Group ("Standard & Poor's") or the equivalent rating of other nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. Debt securities rated BBB are considered medium grade obligations with speculative characteristics, and adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances may weaken the issuer's ability to pay interest and repay principal.

Below investment grade debt securities are those rated "BB" and below by Standard & Poor's or the equivalent rating of other nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. See "Appendix A" for a description of rating categories. The fund may invest in debt securities rated "D" or better, or comparable unrated securities as determined by Amundi US.

Below investment grade debt securities or comparable unrated securities are commonly referred to as high yield bonds or "junk bonds" and are considered predominantly speculative and may be questionable as to principal and interest payments. Changes in economic conditions are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to make principal payments and interest payments. The issuers of high yield securities also may be more adversely affected than issuers of higher rated securities by specific corporate or governmental developments. Such securities may also be impacted by the issuers' inability to meet specific projected business forecasts. The amount of high yield securities outstanding has proliferated as an increasing number of issuers have used high yield securities for corporate financing. Factors having an adverse impact on the market value of lower quality securities will have an adverse effect on the fund's net asset value to the extent that it invests in such securities. In addition, the fund may incur additional expenses to the extent it is required to seek recovery upon a default in payment of principal or interest on its portfolio holdings or to take other steps to protect its investment in an issuer.

The secondary market for high yield securities is not usually as liquid as the secondary market for more highly rated securities, a factor which may have an adverse effect on the fund's ability to dispose of a particular security when necessary to meet its liquidity needs. Under adverse market or economic conditions, such as those recently prevailing, the secondary market for high yield securities could contract further, independent of any specific adverse changes in the condition of a particular issuer. As a result, the fund could find it more difficult to sell these securities or may be able to sell the securities only at prices lower than if such securities were widely traded. Prices realized upon the sale of such lower rated or unrated securities, under these and other circumstances, may be less than the prices used in calculating the fund's net asset value.

Since investors generally perceive that there are greater risks associated with high yield debt securities of the type in which the fund may invest, the yields and prices of such securities may tend to fluctuate more than those for higher rated securities. In the lower quality segments of the debt securities market, changes in perceptions of issuers' creditworthiness tend to occur more frequently and in a more pronounced manner than do changes in higher quality segments of the debt securities market, resulting in greater yield and price volatility.

High yield and comparable unrated debt securities tend to offer higher yields than higher rated securities with the same maturities because the historical financial condition of the issuers of such securities may not have been as strong as that of other issuers. However, high yield securities generally involve greater risks of loss of income and principal than higher rated securities.

For purposes of the fund's credit quality policies, if a security receives different ratings from nationally recognized statistical rating organizations, the fund will use the rating chosen by the portfolio manager as most representative of the security's credit quality. The ratings of nationally recognized statistical rating organizations represent their opinions as to the quality of the securities that they undertake to rate and may not accurately describe the risk of the security. If a rating organization changes the quality rating assigned to one or more of the fund's portfolio securities, Amundi US will consider if any action is appropriate in light of the fund's investment objective and policies. These ratings are used as criteria for the selection of portfolio securities, in addition to Amundi US's own assessment of the credit quality of potential investments.

**U.S. government securities** 

U.S. government securities in which the fund invests include debt obligations of varying maturities issued by the U.S. Treasury or issued or guaranteed by an agency, authority or instrumentality of the U.S. government, including the Federal Housing Administration, Federal Financing Bank, Farm Service Agency, Export-Import Bank of the U.S., Small Business Administration, Government National Mortgage Association ("GNMA"), General Services Administration,

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National Bank for Cooperatives, Federal Farm Credit Banks, Federal Home Loan Banks ("FHLBs"), Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC"), Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), Maritime Administration, Tennessee Valley Authority and various institutions that previously were or currently are part of the Farm Credit System (which has been undergoing reorganization since 1987). Some U.S. government securities, such as U.S. Treasury bills, Treasury notes and Treasury bonds, which differ only in their interest rates, maturities and times of issuance, are supported by the full faith and credit of the United States. Others are supported by: (i) the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury, such as securities of the FHLBs; (ii) the discretionary authority of the U.S. government to purchase the agency's obligations, such as securities of FNMA; or (iii) only the credit of the issuer. Such debt securities are subject to the risk of default on the payment of interest and/or principal, similar to debt of private issuers. The maximum potential liability of some U.S. government securities may greatly exceed their current resources, including any legal right to support from the U.S. government. Although the U.S. government provided financial support to FNMA and FHLMC in the past, no assurance can be given that the U.S. government will provide financial support in the future to these or other U.S. government agencies, authorities or instrumentalities that are not supported by the full faith and credit of the United States. Securities guaranteed as to principal and interest by the U.S. government, its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities include: (i) securities for which the payment of principal and interest is backed by an irrevocable letter of credit issued by the U.S. government or any of its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities; and (ii) participations in loans made to non-U.S. governments or other entities that are so guaranteed. The secondary market for certain loan participations described above is limited and, therefore, the participations may be regarded as illiquid.

U.S. government securities may include zero coupon securities that may be purchased when yields are attractive and/or to enhance portfolio liquidity. Zero coupon U.S. government securities are debt obligations that are issued or purchased at a significant discount from face value. The discount approximates the total amount of interest the security will accrue and compound over the period until maturity or the particular interest payment date at a rate of interest reflecting the market rate of the security at the time of issuance. Zero coupon U.S. government securities do not require the periodic payment of interest. These investments may experience greater volatility in market value than U.S. government securities that make regular payments of interest. The fund accrues income on these investments for tax and accounting purposes, which is distributable to shareholders and which, because no cash is received at the time of accrual, may require the liquidation of other portfolio securities to satisfy the fund's distribution obligations, in which case the fund will forgo the purchase of additional income producing assets with these funds. Zero coupon U.S. government securities include STRIPS and CUBES, which are issued by the U.S. Treasury as component parts of U.S. Treasury bonds and represent scheduled interest and principal payments on the bonds.

**Convertible debt securities** 

The fund may invest in convertible debt securities which are debt obligations convertible at a stated exchange rate or formula into common stock or other equity securities. Convertible securities rank senior to common stocks in an issuer's capital structure and consequently may be of higher quality and entail less risk than the issuer's common stock. As with all debt securities, the market values of convertible securities tend to increase when interest rates decline and, conversely, tend to decline when interest rates increase. Depending on the relationship of the conversion price to the market value of the underlying securities, convertible securities may trade more like equity securities than debt securities.

A convertible security entitles the holder to receive interest that is generally paid or accrued until the convertible security matures, or is redeemed, converted, or exchanged. Convertible securities have unique investment characteristics, in that they generally (i) have higher yields than common stocks, but lower yields than comparable non-convertible securities, (ii) are less subject to fluctuation in value than the underlying common stock due to their fixed-income characteristics and (iii) provide the potential for capital appreciation if the market price of the underlying common stock increases. A convertible security may be subject to redemption at the option of the issuer at a price established in the convertible security's governing instruments. If a convertible security held by the fund is called for redemption, the fund will be required to permit the issuer to redeem the security, convert it into the underlying common stock or sell it to a third party. Any of these actions could result in losses to the fund.

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**Fixed-income securities** 

In addition to corporate debt securities, which include corporate bonds, debentures and notes, fixed-income securities also include preferred, preference and convertible securities, equipment lease certificates, equipment trust certificates and conditional sales contracts. Preference stocks are stocks that have many characteristics of preferred stocks, but are typically junior to an existing class of preferred stocks. Equipment lease certificates are debt obligations secured by leases on equipment (such as railroad cars, airplanes or office equipment), with the issuer of the certificate being the owner and lessor of the equipment. Equipment trust certificates are debt obligations secured by an interest in property (such as railroad cars or airplanes), the title of which is held by a trustee while the property is being used by the borrower.

Conditional sales contracts are agreements under which the seller of property continues to hold title to the property until the purchase price is fully paid or other conditions are met by the buyer.

Fixed-rate bonds may have a demand feature allowing the holder to redeem the bonds at specified times. These bonds are more defensive than conventional long-term bonds (protecting to some degree against a rise in interest rates) while providing greater opportunity than comparable intermediate term bonds, since they may be retained if interest rates decline. Acquiring these kinds of bonds provides the contractual right to require the issuer of the bonds to purchase the security at an agreed upon price, which right is contained in the obligation itself rather than in a separate agreement or instrument. Since this right is assignable only with the bond, it will not be assigned any separate value. Floating or variable rate obligations may be acquired as short-term investments pending longer-term investment of funds.

Certain securities may permit the issuer at its option to "call," or redeem, the securities. If an issuer were to redeem securities during a time of declining interest rates, the fund may not be able to reinvest the proceeds in securities providing the same investment return as the securities redeemed.

The rate of interest on a corporate debt security may be fixed, floating or variable, and may vary inversely with respect to a reference rate. The rate of return or return of principal on some debt obligations may be linked or indexed to the level of exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and a foreign currency or currencies.

**Subordinated securities** 

The fund may also invest in other types of fixed income securities which are subordinated or "junior" to more senior securities of the issuer, or which represent interests in pools of such subordinated or junior securities. Such securities may include so-called "high yield" or "junk" bonds (i.e., bonds that are rated below investment grade by a rating agency or that are of equivalent quality) and preferred stock. Under the terms of subordinated securities, payments that would otherwise be made to their holders may be required to be made to the holders of more senior securities, and/or the subordinated or junior securities may have junior liens, if they have any rights at all, in any collateral (meaning proceeds of the collateral are required to be paid first to the holders of more senior securities). As a result, subordinated or junior securities will be disproportionately adversely affected by a default or even a perceived decline in creditworthiness of the issuer.

**Structured securities** 

The fund may invest in structured securities. The value of the principal and/or interest on such securities is determined by reference to changes in the value of specific currencies, interest rates, commodities, indices or other financial indicators (the "Reference") or the relative change in two or more References. The interest rate or the principal amount payable upon maturity or redemption may be increased or decreased depending upon changes in the Reference. The terms of the structured securities may provide in certain circumstances that no principal is due at maturity and therefore may result in a loss of the fund's investment. Changes in the interest rate or principal payable at maturity may be a multiple of the changes in the value of the Reference. Structured securities are a type of derivative instrument and the payment and credit qualities from these securities derive from the assets embedded in the structure from which they are issued. Structured securities may entail a greater degree of risk than other types of fixed income securities.

**Zero coupon, pay-in-kind, deferred and contingent payment securities** 

The fund may invest in zero coupon securities, which are securities that are sold at a discount to par value and on which interest payments are not made during the life of the security. Upon maturity, the holder is entitled to receive the par value of the security. Pay-in-kind securities are securities that have interest payable by delivery of additional

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securities. Upon maturity, the holder is entitled to receive the aggregate par value of the securities. A fund accrues income with respect to zero coupon and pay-in-kind securities prior to the receipt of cash payments. Deferred payment securities are securities that remain zero coupon securities until a predetermined date, at which time the stated coupon rate becomes effective and interest becomes payable at regular intervals. The interest rate on contingent payment securities is determined by the outcome of an event, such as the performance of a financial index. If the financial index does not increase by a prescribed amount, the fund may receive no interest.

**Non-U.S. investments** 

**Equity securities of non-U.S. issuers** 

The fund may invest in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers, including American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs"), European Depositary Receipts ("EDRs"), Global Depositary Receipts ("GDRs") and other similar instruments.

**Debt obligations of non-U.S. governments** 

The fund may invest in all types of debt obligations of non-U.S. governments. An investment in debt obligations of non-U.S. governments and their political subdivisions (sovereign debt) involves special risks that are not present in corporate debt obligations. The non-U.S. issuer of the sovereign debt or the non-U.S. governmental authorities that control the repayment of the debt may be unable or unwilling to repay principal or interest when due, and the fund may have limited recourse in the event of a default. As a sovereign entity, the issuing government may be immune from lawsuits in the event of its failure or refusal to pay the obligations when due. During periods of economic uncertainty, the values of sovereign debt and of securities of issuers that purchase sovereign debt may be more volatile than prices of debt obligations of U.S. issuers. In the past, certain non-U.S. countries have encountered difficulties in servicing their debt obligations, withheld payments of principal and interest, declared moratoria on the payment of principal and interest on their sovereign debt, or restructured their debt to effectively eliminate portions of it, and similar occurrences may happen in the future. There is no bankruptcy proceeding by which sovereign debt on which governmental entities have defaulted may be collected in whole or in part.

A sovereign debtor's willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by, among other factors, its cash flow situation, the extent of its foreign currency reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign exchange, the relative size of the debt service burden, the sovereign debtor's policy toward its principal international lenders and local political constraints. Sovereign debtors may also be dependent on disbursements or assistance from non-U.S. governments, multinational agencies and other entities to reduce principal and interest arrearages on their debt. Assistance may be dependent on a country's implementation of austerity measures and reforms, which measures may limit or be perceived to limit economic growth and recovery. The failure of a sovereign debtor to implement economic reforms, achieve specified levels of economic performance or repay principal or interest when due may result in the cancellation of third-party commitments to lend funds to the sovereign debtor, which may further impair such debtor's ability or willingness to service its debts.

**Eurodollar instruments and Samurai and Yankee bonds.** The fund may invest in Eurodollar instruments and Samurai and Yankee bonds. Eurodollar instruments are bonds of corporate and government issuers that pay interest and principal in U.S. dollars but are issued in markets outside the United States, primarily in Europe. Samurai bonds are yen-denominated bonds sold in Japan by non-Japanese issuers. Yankee bonds are U.S. dollar denominated bonds typically issued in the U.S. by non-U.S. governments and their agencies and non-U.S. banks and corporations. The fund may also invest in Eurodollar Certificates of Deposit ("ECDs"), Eurodollar Time Deposits ("ETDs") and Yankee Certificates of Deposit ("Yankee CDs"). ECDs are U.S. dollar-denominated certificates of deposit issued by non-U.S. branches of domestic banks; ETDs are U.S. dollar-denominated deposits in a non-U.S. branch of a U.S. bank or in a non-U.S. bank; and Yankee CDs are U.S. dollar-denominated certificates of deposit issued by a U.S. branch of a non-U.S. bank and held in the U.S. These investments involve risks that are different from investments in securities issued by U.S. issuers, including potential unfavorable political and economic developments, non-U.S. withholding or other taxes, seizure of non-U.S. deposits, currency controls, interest limitations or other governmental restrictions which might affect payment of principal or interest.

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**Investments in emerging markets** 

The fund may invest in securities of issuers in countries with emerging economies or securities markets. The fund considers emerging market issuers to include issuers organized under the laws of an emerging market country, issuers with a principal office in an emerging market country, issuers that derive at least 50% of their gross revenues or profits from goods or services produced in emerging market countries or sales made in emerging market countries, or issuers that have at least 50% of their assets in emerging market countries. Emerging markets will generally include, but not be limited to, countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) Emerging + Frontier Markets Index. The fund will generally focus on emerging markets that do not impose unusual trading requirements which tend to restrict the flow of investments. In addition, the fund may invest in unquoted securities of emerging market issuers.

**Risks of non-U.S. investments**. Investing in securities of non-U.S. issuers involves considerations and risks not typically associated with investing in the securities of issuers in the U.S. These risks are heightened with respect to investments in countries with emerging markets and economies. The risks of investing in securities of non-U.S. issuers generally, or in issuers with significant exposure to non-U.S. markets, may be related, among other things, to (i) differences in size, liquidity and volatility of, and the degree and manner of regulation of, the securities markets of certain non-U.S. markets compared to the securities markets in the U.S.; (ii) economic, political and social factors; and (iii) foreign exchange matters, such as restrictions on the repatriation of capital, fluctuations in exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and the currencies in which the portfolio securities are quoted or denominated, exchange control regulations and costs associated with currency exchange. The political and economic structures in certain countries, particularly emerging markets, may undergo significant evolution and rapid development, and such countries may lack the social, political and economic stability characteristic of more developed countries.

**Non-U.S. securities markets and regulations.** There may be less publicly available information about non-U.S. markets and issuers than is available with respect to U.S. securities and issuers. Non-U.S. companies generally are not subject to accounting, auditing and financial reporting standards, practices and requirements comparable to those applicable to U.S. companies. The trading markets for most non-U.S. securities are generally less liquid and subject to greater price volatility than the markets for comparable securities in the U.S. The markets for securities in certain emerging markets are in the earliest stages of their development. Even the markets for relatively widely traded securities in certain non-U.S. markets, including emerging market countries, may not be able to absorb, without price disruptions, a significant increase in trading volume or trades of a size customarily undertaken by institutional investors in the U.S. Additionally, market making and arbitrage activities are generally less extensive in such markets, which may contribute to increased volatility and reduced liquidity. The less liquid a market, the more difficult it may be for the fund to accurately price its portfolio securities or to dispose of such securities at the times determined by Amundi US to be appropriate. The risks associated with reduced liquidity may be particularly acute in situations in which the fund's operations require cash, such as in order to meet redemptions and to pay its expenses.

**Economic, political and social factors.** Certain countries, including emerging markets, may be subject to a greater degree of economic, political and social instability than in the U.S. and Western European countries. Such instability may result from, among other things: (i) authoritarian governments or military involvement in political and economic decision making; (ii) popular unrest associated with demands for improved economic, political and social conditions; (iii) internal insurgencies; (iv) hostile relations with neighboring countries; and (v) ethnic, religious and racial conflict. Such economic, political and social instability could significantly disrupt the financial markets in such countries and the ability of the issuers in such countries to repay their obligations. In addition, it may be difficult for the fund to pursue claims against a foreign issuer in the courts of a foreign country. Investing in emerging market countries also involves the risk of expropriation, nationalization, confiscation of assets and property or the imposition of restrictions on foreign investments and on repatriation of capital invested. In the event of such expropriation, nationalization or other confiscation in any emerging country, the fund could lose its entire investment in that country.

Sanctions or other government actions against certain countries could negatively impact the fund's investments in securities that have exposure to those countries.

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Certain emerging market countries restrict or control foreign investment in their securities markets to varying degrees. These restrictions may limit the fund's investment in those markets and may increase the expenses of the fund. In addition, the repatriation of both investment income and capital from certain markets is subject to restrictions such as the need for certain governmental consents. Even where there is no outright restriction on repatriation of capital, the mechanics of repatriation may affect certain aspects of the fund's operation.

Economies in individual countries may differ favorably or unfavorably from the U.S. economy in such respects as growth of gross domestic product, rates of inflation, currency valuation, capital reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency and balance of payments positions. Many countries have experienced substantial, and in some cases extremely high, rates of inflation for many years. Inflation and rapid fluctuations in inflation rates have had, and may continue to have, very negative effects on the economies and securities markets of certain emerging countries.

Unanticipated political or social developments may affect the values of the fund's investments and the availability to the fund of additional investments in such countries. In the past, the economies, securities and currency markets of many emerging markets have experienced significant disruption and declines. There can be no assurance that these economic and market disruptions might not occur again.

Economies in emerging market countries generally are dependent heavily upon international trade and, accordingly, have been and may continue to be affected adversely by trade barriers, exchange controls, managed adjustments in relative currency values and other protectionist measures imposed or negotiated by the countries with which they trade. These economies also have been, and may continue to be, affected adversely and significantly by economic conditions in the countries with which they trade.

A number of countries in Europe have experienced severe economic and financial difficulties. Many non-governmental issuers, and even certain governments, have defaulted on, or been forced to restructure, their debts; many other issuers have faced difficulties obtaining credit or refinancing existing obligations; financial institutions have in many cases required government or central bank support, have needed to raise capital, and/or have been impaired in their ability to extend credit; and financial markets in Europe and elsewhere have experienced extreme volatility and declines in asset values and liquidity. These difficulties may continue, worsen or spread within and beyond Europe. Responses to the financial problems by European governments, central banks and others, including austerity measures and reforms, may not work, may result in social unrest and may limit future growth and economic recovery or have other unintended consequences. Further defaults or restructurings by governments and others of their debt could have additional adverse effects on economies, financial markets and asset valuations around the world. On January 31, 2020, the United Kingdom withdrew from the European Union, commonly referred to as "Brexit." Following a transition period, the United Kingdom's post-Brexit trade agreement with the European Union passed into law in December 2020 and went into effect on January 1, 2021. There is significant market uncertainty regarding Brexit's ramifications. The range and potential implications of possible political, regulatory, economic, and market outcomes cannot be fully known but could be significant, potentially resulting in increased volatility and illiquidity and lower economic growth for companies that rely significantly on Europe for their business activities and revenues. The United Kingdom has one of the largest economies in Europe and is a major trading partner with the other European Union countries and the United States. Brexit may create additional and substantial economic stresses for the United Kingdom, including a contraction of the United Kingdom's economy, decreased trade, capital outflows, devaluation of the British pound, as well as a decrease in business and consumer spending and investment. The negative impact on not only the United Kingdom and European economies but also the broader global economy could be significant. Moreover, other countries may seek to withdraw from the European Union and/or abandon the euro, the common currency of the European Union. A number of countries in Europe have suffered terror attacks, and additional attacks may occur in the future. Europe has also been struggling with mass migration from the Middle East and Africa. The ultimate effects of these events and other socio-political or geopolitical issues are not known but could profoundly affect global economies and markets. Whether or not the fund invests in securities of issuers located in Europe or with significant exposure to European issuers or countries, these events could negatively affect the value and liquidity of the fund's investments due to the interconnected nature of the global economy and capital markets.

**Risks related to invasion of Ukraine by Russia.** Russia's military invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 resulted in the United States, other countries and certain international organizations levying broad economic sanctions against Russia. These sanctions froze certain Russian assets and prohibited, among other things, trading in certain Russian

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securities and doing business with specific Russian corporate entities, large financial institutions, officials and oligarchs. The sanctions also included the removal of some Russian banks from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT), the electronic network that connects banks globally, and imposed restrictive measures to prevent the Russian Central Bank from undermining the impact of the sanctions. The United States and other countries have also imposed economic sanctions on Belarus and may impose sanctions on other countries that support Russia's military invasion. A number of large corporations and U.S. states have also announced plans to divest interests or otherwise curtail business dealings with certain Russian businesses. In addition, certain index providers have removed Russian securities from their indices. These actions and any additional sanctions or other intergovernmental actions that may be undertaken against Russia or other countries that support Russia's military invasion in the future may result in the devaluation of Russian or other affected currencies, a downgrade in the sanctioned country's credit rating, and a decline in the value and liquidity of Russian securities and securities of issuers in other countries that support the invasion. In response to sanctions, the Russian Central Bank raised its interest rates and banned sales of local securities by foreigners. Russia may take additional countermeasures or retaliatory actions, which may also impair the value and liquidity of Russian securities and fund investments. The ongoing conflict has resulted in significant market disruptions, including in certain markets, industries and sectors, such as the oil and natural gas markets, and negatively affected global supply chains, food supplies, inflation and global growth. In addition, the ability to price, buy, sell, receive, or deliver such securities is also affected due to these measures. For example, the fund may be prohibited from investing in securities issued by companies subject to such sanctions. In addition, the sanctions and/or countermeasures taken by Russia in response to the sanctions may require the fund to freeze its existing investments in companies operating in or having dealings with Russia or other sanctioned countries, which would prevent the fund from selling these investments, and the value of such investments held by the fund could be significantly impacted, which could lead to such investments being valued at zero. Any exposure that the fund may have to Russian counterparties or counterparties in other sanctioned countries also could negatively impact the fund's portfolio. The extent and duration of Russia's military actions and the repercussions of such actions, including any retaliatory actions or countermeasures that may be taken by Russia or others subject to sanctions (such as cyberattacks on other governments, corporations or individuals, restricting natural gas or other exports to other countries, seizure of U.S. and European residents' assets, or undertaking or provoking other military conflict elsewhere in Europe) are impossible to predict. These and any related events could significantly impact the fund's performance and the value of an investment in the fund even beyond any direct exposure the fund may have to Russian issuers or issuers in other countries affected by the invasion.

**Currency risks.** The value of the securities quoted or denominated in foreign currencies may be adversely affected by fluctuations in the relative currency exchange rates and by exchange control regulations. The fund's investment performance may be negatively affected by a devaluation of a currency in which the fund's investments are quoted or denominated. Further, the fund's investment performance may be significantly affected, either positively or negatively, by currency exchange rates because the U.S. dollar value of securities quoted or denominated in another currency will increase or decrease in response to changes in the value of such currency in relation to the U.S. dollar.

**Custodian services and related investment costs.** Custodial services and other costs relating to investment in international securities markets generally are more expensive than in the U.S. Such markets have settlement and clearance procedures that differ from those in the U.S. In certain markets there have been times when settlements have been unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions, making it difficult to conduct such transactions. The inability of the fund to make intended securities purchases due to settlement problems could cause the fund to miss attractive investment opportunities. Inability to dispose of a portfolio security caused by settlement problems could result either in losses to the fund due to a subsequent decline in value of the portfolio security or could result in possible liability to the fund. In addition, security settlement and clearance procedures in some emerging countries may not fully protect the fund against loss or theft of its assets.

**Withholding and other taxes** 

The fund may be subject to taxes, including withholding taxes, on income (possibly including, in some cases, capital gains) that are or may be imposed by certain countries with respect to the fund's investments in such countries. These taxes may reduce the return achieved by the fund. Treaties between the U.S. and such countries may not be available to reduce the otherwise applicable tax rates.

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**Investments in depositary receipts** 

The fund may hold securities of non-U.S. issuers in the form of ADRs, EDRs, GDRs and other similar instruments. Generally, ADRs in registered form are designed for use in U.S. securities markets, and EDRs and GDRs and other similar global instruments in bearer form are designed for use in non-U.S. securities markets.

ADRs are denominated in U.S. dollars and represent an interest in the right to receive securities of non-U.S. issuers deposited in a U.S. bank or correspondent bank. ADRs do not eliminate all the risk inherent in investing in the securities of non-U.S. issuers. However, by investing in ADRs rather than directly in equity securities of non-U.S. issuers, the fund will avoid currency risks during the settlement period for either purchases or sales. EDRs and GDRs are not necessarily denominated in the same currency as the underlying securities which they represent.

For purposes of the fund's investment policies, investments in ADRs, EDRs, GDRs and similar instruments will be deemed to be investments in the underlying equity securities of non-U.S. issuers. The fund may acquire depositary receipts from banks that do not have a contractual relationship with the issuer of the security underlying the depositary receipt to issue and secure such depositary receipt. To the extent the fund invests in such unsponsored depositary receipts there may be an increased possibility that the fund may not become aware of events affecting the underlying security and thus the value of the related depositary receipt. In addition, voting rights or other shareholder rights or benefits (i.e., rights offerings) which may be associated with the security underlying the depositary receipt may not inure to the benefit of the holder of such depositary receipt. The prices of unsponsored depositary receipts may be more volatile than if such instruments were sponsored by the issuer. Unsponsored depositary receipts may involve higher expenses and may be less liquid.

**Foreign currency transactions** 

The fund may engage in foreign currency transactions. These transactions may be conducted at the prevailing spot rate for purchasing or selling currency in the foreign exchange market. The fund also may enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts, which are contractual agreements to purchase or sell a specified currency at a specified future date and price set at the time of the contract.

The fund may enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts involving currencies of the different countries in which the fund invests as a hedge against possible variations in the foreign exchange rates between these currencies and the U.S. dollar. Transaction hedging is the purchase or sale of forward foreign currency contracts with respect to specific receivables or payables of the fund, accrued in connection with the purchase and sale of its portfolio securities quoted in foreign currencies. Portfolio hedging is the use of forward foreign currency contracts to offset portfolio security positions denominated or quoted in such foreign currencies. There is no guarantee that the fund will be engaged in hedging activities when adverse exchange rate movements occur or that its hedging activities will be successful. The fund will not attempt to hedge all of its foreign portfolio positions and will enter into such transactions only to the extent, if any, deemed appropriate by Amundi US.

Hedging against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the prices of portfolio securities or prevent losses if the prices of such securities decline. Such transactions also limit the opportunity for gain if the value of the hedged currency should rise. Moreover, it may not be possible for the fund to hedge against a devaluation that is so generally anticipated that the fund is not able to contract to sell the currency at a price above the devaluation level it anticipates.

The fund may also engage in cross-hedging by using forward contracts in one currency to hedge against fluctuations in the value of securities denominated in a different currency, if Amundi US determines that there is a pattern of correlation between the two currencies. Cross-hedging may also include entering into a forward transaction involving two foreign currencies, using one foreign currency as a proxy for the U.S. dollar to hedge against variations in the other foreign currency.

The fund may use forward currency exchange contracts to reduce or gain exposure to a currency. To the extent the fund gains exposure to a currency through these instruments, the resulting exposure may exceed the value of securities denominated in that currency held by the fund. For example, where the fund's security selection has resulted in an overweight or underweight exposure to a particular currency relative to the fund's benchmark, the fund may seek to adjust currency exposure using forward currency exchange contracts.

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The cost to the fund of engaging in foreign currency transactions varies with such factors as the currency involved, the size of the contract, the length of the contract period, differences in interest rates between the two currencies and the market conditions then prevailing. Since transactions in foreign currency and forward contracts are usually conducted on a principal basis, no fees or commissions are involved. The fund may close out a forward position in a currency by selling the forward contract or by entering into an offsetting forward contract.

The precise matching of the forward contract amounts and the value of the securities involved will not generally be possible because the future value of such securities in foreign currencies will change as a consequence of market movements in the value of those securities between the date on which the contract is entered into and the date it matures. Using forward contracts to protect the value of the portfolio securities against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the underlying prices of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of exchange which the fund can achieve at some future point in time. The precise projection of currency market movements is not possible, and short-term hedging provides a means of fixing the U.S. dollar value of only a portion of the fund's foreign assets.

While the fund may benefit from foreign currency transactions, unanticipated changes in currency prices may result in a poorer overall performance for the fund than if it had not engaged in any such transactions. Moreover, there may be imperfect correlation between the portfolio holdings of securities quoted or denominated in a particular currency and forward contracts entered into by the fund. Such imperfect correlation may cause the fund to sustain losses which will prevent the fund from achieving a complete hedge or expose the fund to risk of foreign exchange loss.

Over-the-counter markets for trading foreign forward currency contracts offer less protection against defaults than is available when trading in currency instruments on an exchange. Since a forward foreign currency exchange contract is not guaranteed by an exchange or clearinghouse, a default on the contract would deprive the fund of unrealized profits or force the fund to cover its commitments for purchase or resale, if any, at the current market price.

**Options on foreign currencies** 

The fund may purchase options on foreign currencies for hedging purposes in a manner similar to that of transactions in forward contracts. For example, a decline in the dollar value of a foreign currency in which portfolio securities are quoted or denominated will reduce the dollar value of such securities, even if their value in the foreign currency remains constant. In an attempt to protect against such decreases in the value of portfolio securities, the fund may purchase put options on the foreign currency. If the value of the currency declines, the fund will have the right to sell such currency for a fixed amount of dollars which exceeds the market value of such currency. This would result in a gain that may offset, in whole or in part, the negative effect of currency depreciation on the value of the fund's securities quoted or denominated in that currency.

Conversely, if a rise in the dollar value of a currency is projected for those securities to be acquired, thereby increasing the cost of such securities, the fund may purchase call options on such currency. If the value of such currency increases, the purchase of such call options would enable the fund to purchase currency for a fixed amount of dollars which is less than the market value of such currency. Such a purchase would result in a gain that may offset, at least partially, the effect of any currency-related increase in the price of securities the fund intends to acquire. As in the case of other types of options transactions, however, the benefit the fund derives from purchasing foreign currency options will be reduced by the amount of the premium and related transaction costs. In addition, if currency exchange rates do not move in the direction or to the extent anticipated, the fund could sustain losses on transactions in foreign currency options which would deprive it of a portion or all of the benefits of advantageous changes in such rates.

The fund may also write options on foreign currencies for hedging purposes. For example, if the fund anticipated a decline in the dollar value of securities quoted or denominated in a foreign currency because of declining exchange rates, it could, instead of purchasing a put option, write a covered call option on the relevant currency. If the expected decline occurs, the option will most likely not be exercised, and the decrease in value of portfolio securities will be partially offset by the amount of the premium received by the fund.

Similarly, the fund could write a put option on the relevant currency, instead of purchasing a call option, to hedge against an anticipated increase in the dollar cost of securities to be acquired. If exchange rates move in the manner projected, the put option will expire unexercised and allow the fund to offset such increased cost up to the amount of the premium. However, as in the case of other types of options transactions, the writing of a foreign currency option

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will constitute only a partial hedge up to the amount of the premium, and only if rates move in the expected direction. If unanticipated exchange rate fluctuations occur, the option may be exercised and the fund would be required to purchase or sell the underlying currency at a loss, which may not be fully offset by the amount of the premium. As a result of writing options on foreign currencies, the fund also may be required to forgo all or a portion of the benefits which might otherwise have been obtained from favorable movements in currency exchange rates.

A call option written on foreign currency by the fund is "covered" if the fund owns the underlying foreign currency subject to the call, or if it has an absolute and immediate right to acquire that foreign currency without additional cash consideration. A call option is also covered if the fund holds a call on the same foreign currency for the same principal amount as the call written where the exercise price of the call held is (a) equal to or less than the exercise price of the call written or (b) greater than the exercise price of the call written if the amount of the difference is maintained by the fund in cash or liquid securities.

The fund may close out its position in a currency option by either selling the option it has purchased or entering into an offsetting option. An exchange-traded options position may be closed out only on an options exchange which provides a secondary market for an option of the same series. Although the fund will generally purchase or write only those options for which there appears to be an active secondary market, there is no assurance that a liquid secondary market on an exchange will exist for any particular option, or at any particular time. For some options no secondary market on an exchange may exist. In such event, it might not be possible to effect closing transactions in particular options, with the result that the fund would have to exercise its options in order to realize any profit and would incur transaction costs upon the sale of underlying currencies pursuant to the exercise of put options. If the fund as a covered call option writer is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction in a secondary market, it will not be able to sell the underlying currency (or security quoted or denominated in that currency) until the option expires or it delivers the underlying currency upon exercise.

The fund may also use options on currencies to cross-hedge, which involves writing or purchasing options on one currency to hedge against changes in exchange rates of a different currency with a pattern of correlation. Cross-hedging may also include using a foreign currency as a proxy for the U.S. dollar, if Amundi US determines that there is a pattern of correlation between that currency and the U.S. dollar.

The fund may purchase and write over-the-counter options. Trading in over-the-counter options is subject to the risk that the other party will be unable or unwilling to close out options purchased or written by the fund.

**Natural disasters** 

Certain areas of the world, including areas within the United States, historically have been prone to natural disasters, such as hurricanes, earthquakes, typhoons, flooding, tidal waves, tsunamis, erupting volcanoes, wildfires or droughts. Such disasters, and the resulting damage, could have a significant adverse impact on the economies of those areas and on the ability of issuers in which the fund invests to conduct their businesses, and thus on the investments made by the fund in such geographic areas and/or issuers. Adverse weather conditions could have a significant adverse impact on issuers in the agricultural sector and on insurance companies that insure against the impact of natural disasters.

**Cybersecurity issues** 

With the increased use of technologies such as the Internet to conduct business, the fund is susceptible to operational, information security and related risks. In general, cyber incidents can result from deliberate attacks or unintentional events. Cyber attacks include, but are not limited to, attempts to gain unauthorized access to digital systems (e.g., through "hacking" or malicious software coding) for purposes of misappropriating assets or sensitive information, corrupting data, denying access, or causing other operational disruption. Cyber attacks may also be carried out in a manner that does not require gaining unauthorized access, such as causing denial-of-service attacks on websites (i.e., efforts to make network services unavailable to intended users). The fund's service providers regularly experience such attempts, and expect they will continue to do so. The fund is unable to predict how any such attempt, if successful, may affect the fund and its shareholders. While the fund's adviser has established business continuity plans in the event of, and risk management systems to prevent, limit or mitigate, such cyber attacks, there are inherent limitations in such plans and systems including the possibility that certain risks have not been identified. Furthermore, the fund cannot control the cybersecurity plans and systems put in place by service providers to the fund such as The Bank of New York Mellon ("BNY Mellon"), the fund's custodian and accounting agent, and BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc., the fund's transfer agent. In addition, many beneficial owners of fund shares hold them through accounts

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at broker-dealers, retirement platforms and other financial market participants over which neither the fund nor Amundi US exercises control. Each of these may in turn rely on service providers to them, which are also subject to the risk of cyber attacks. Cybersecurity failures or breaches at Amundi US or the fund's service providers or intermediaries have the ability to cause disruptions and impact business operations potentially resulting in financial losses, interference with the fund's ability to calculate its NAV, impediments to trading, the inability of fund shareholders to effect share purchases or redemptions or receive distributions, loss of or unauthorized access to private shareholder information and violations of applicable privacy and other laws, regulatory fines, penalties, reputational damage, or additional compliance costs. Such costs and losses may not be covered under any insurance. In addition, maintaining vigilance against cyber attacks may involve substantial costs over time, and system enhancements may themselves be subject to cyber attacks.

**Investment company securities and real estate investment trusts**

**Other investment companies** 

The fund may invest in the securities of other investment companies to the extent that such investments are consistent with the fund's investment objective and policies and permissible under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act") and the rules thereunder. Investing in other investment companies subjects the fund to the risks of investing in the underlying securities held by those investment companies. The fund, as a holder of the securities of other investment companies, will bear its pro rata portion of the other investment companies' expenses, including advisory fees. These expenses are in addition to the direct expenses of the fund's own operations.

**Exchange traded funds** 

The fund may invest in exchange traded funds ("ETFs"). ETFs, such as SPDRs, iShares and various country index funds, are funds whose shares are traded on a national exchange or the National Association of Securities Dealers' Automated Quotation System ("NASDAQ"). ETFs may be based on underlying equity or fixed income securities. SPDRs, for example, seek to provide investment results that generally correspond to the performance of the component common stocks of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index (the "S&P 500"). ETFs do not sell individual shares directly to investors and only issue their shares in large blocks known as "creation units." The investor purchasing a creation unit then sells the individual shares on a secondary market. Therefore, the liquidity of ETFs depends on the adequacy of the secondary market. There can be no assurance that an ETF's investment objective will be achieved. ETFs based on an index may not replicate and maintain exactly the composition and relative weightings of securities in the index. ETFs are subject to the risks of investing in the underlying securities. The fund, as a holder of the securities of the ETF, will bear its pro rata portion of the ETF's expenses, including advisory fees. These expenses are in addition to the direct expenses of the fund's own operations. Many ETFs have received exemptive orders issued by the SEC that would permit the fund to invest in those ETFs beyond the limitations applicable to other investment companies, subject to certain terms and conditions. Some ETFs are not structured as investment companies and thus are not regulated under the 1940 Act.

Certain ETFs, including leveraged ETFs and inverse ETFs, may have embedded leverage. Leveraged ETFs seek to multiply the return of the tracked index (e.g., twice the return) by using various forms of derivative transactions. Inverse ETFs seek to negatively correlate with the performance of a particular index by using various forms of derivative transactions, including by short-selling the underlying index. An investment in an inverse ETF will decrease in value when the value of the underlying index rises. By investing in leveraged ETFs or inverse ETFs, the fund can commit fewer assets to the investment in the securities represented on the index than would otherwise be required.

Leveraged ETFs and inverse ETFs present all of the risks that regular ETFs present. In addition, leveraged ETFs and inverse ETFs determine their return over a specific, pre-set time period, typically daily, and, as a result, there is no guarantee that the ETF's actual long term returns will be equal to the daily return that the fund seeks to achieve. For example, on a long-term basis (e.g., a period of 6 months or a year), the return of a leveraged ETF may in fact be considerably less than two times the long-term return of the tracked index. Furthermore, because leveraged ETFs and inverse ETFs achieve their results by using derivative instruments, they are subject to the risks associated with derivative transactions, including the risk that the value of the derivatives may rise or fall more rapidly than other investments, thereby causing the ETF to lose money and, consequently, the value of the fund's investment to decrease. Investing in derivative instruments also involves the risk that other parties to the derivative contract may fail to meet their obligations, which could cause losses to the ETF. Short sales in particular are subject to the risk that, if the price

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of the security sold short increases, the inverse ETF may have to cover its short position at a higher price than the short sale price, resulting in a loss to the inverse ETF and, indirectly, to the fund. An ETF's use of these techniques will make the fund's investment in the ETF more volatile than if the fund were to invest directly in the securities underlying the tracked index, or in an ETF that does not use leverage or derivative instruments. However, by investing in a leveraged ETF or an inverse ETF rather than directly purchasing and/or selling derivative instruments, the fund will limit its potential loss solely to the amount actually invested in the ETF (that is, the fund will not lose more than the principal amount invested in the ETF).

**Derivative instruments**

**Derivatives** 

The fund may, but is not required to, use futures and options on securities, indices and currencies, forward foreign currency exchange contracts and other derivatives. A derivative is a security or instrument whose value is determined by reference to the value or the change in value of one or more securities, currencies, indices or other financial instruments. The fund may use derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: in an attempt to hedge against adverse changes in the market prices of securities, interest rates or currency exchange rates; as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities; to attempt to increase the fund's return as a non-hedging strategy that may be considered speculative; to manage portfolio characteristics (for example, for funds investing in securities denominated in non-U.S. currencies, a portfolio's currency exposure, or, for funds investing in fixed income securities, a portfolio's duration or credit quality); and as a cash flow management technique. The fund may choose not to make use of derivatives for a variety of reasons, and any use may be limited by applicable law and regulations.

Using derivatives exposes the fund to additional risks and may increase the volatility of the fund's net asset value and may not provide the expected result. Derivatives may have a leveraging effect on the portfolio. Leverage generally magnifies the effect of a change in the value of an asset and creates a risk of loss of value in a larger pool of assets than the fund would otherwise have had. Therefore, using derivatives can disproportionately increase losses and reduce opportunities for gain. If changes in a derivative's value do not correspond to changes in the value of the fund's other investments or do not correlate well with the underlying assets, rate or index, the fund may not fully benefit from, or could lose money on, or could experience unusually high expenses as a result of, the derivative position. Derivatives involve the risk of loss if the counterparty defaults on its obligation. Certain derivatives may be less liquid, which may reduce the returns of the fund if it cannot sell or terminate the derivative at an advantageous time or price. The fund also may have to sell assets at inopportune times to satisfy its obligations. The fund may not be able to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a time that would otherwise be favorable for it to do so, or may have to sell a portfolio security at a disadvantageous time or price. Some derivatives may involve the risk of improper valuation. Suitable derivatives may not be available in all circumstances or at reasonable prices and may not be used by the fund for a variety of reasons.

Certain derivatives transactions, including certain options, swaps, forward contracts, and certain options on foreign currencies, are entered into directly by the counterparties or through financial institutions acting as market makers (OTC derivatives), rather than being traded on exchanges or in markets registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC") or the SEC. Many of the protections afforded to exchange participants will not be available to participants in OTC derivatives transactions. For example, OTC derivatives transactions are not subject to the guarantee of an exchange, and only OTC derivatives that are either required to be cleared or submitted voluntarily for clearing to a clearinghouse will enjoy all of the protections that central clearing provides against default by the original counterparty to the trade. In an OTC derivatives transaction that is not cleared, the fund bears the risk of default by its counterparty. In a cleared derivatives transaction, the fund is instead exposed to the risk of default of the clearinghouse and, to the extent the fund has posted any margin, the risk of default of the broker through which it has entered into the transaction. Information available on counterparty creditworthiness may be incomplete or outdated, thus reducing the ability to anticipate counterparty defaults.

Derivatives involve operational risk. There may be incomplete or erroneous documentation or inadequate collateral or margin, or transactions may fail to settle. For derivatives not guaranteed by an exchange or clearinghouse, the fund may have only contractual remedies in the event of a counterparty default, and there may be delays, costs, or disagreements as to the meaning of contractual terms and litigation in enforcing those remedies.

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Swap contracts that are required to be cleared must be traded on a regulated execution facility or contract market that makes them available for trading. The establishment of a centralized exchange or market for swap transactions may disrupt or limit the swap market and may not result in swaps being easier to trade or value. Market-traded swaps may become more standardized, and the fund may not be able to enter into swaps that meet its investment needs. The fund also may not be able to find a clearinghouse willing to accept the swaps for clearing. The new regulations may make using swaps more costly, may limit their availability, or may otherwise adversely affect their value or performance. Risks associated with the use of derivatives are magnified to the extent that a large portion of the fund's assets are committed to derivatives in general or are invested in just one or a few types of derivatives.

Rule 18f-4 under the Investment Company Act permits the fund to enter into Derivatives Transactions (as defined below) and certain other transactions notwithstanding the restrictions on the issuance of "senior securities" under Section 18 of the 1940 Act. Section 18 of the 1940 Act, among other things, prohibits open-end funds, including the fund, from issuing or selling any "senior security," other than borrowing from a bank (subject to a requirement to maintain 300% "asset coverage").

Under Rule 18f-4, "Derivatives Transactions" include the following: (1) any swap, security-based swap (including a contract for differences), futures contract, forward contract, option (excluding purchased options), any combination of the foregoing, or any similar instrument, under which the fund is or may be required to make any payment or delivery of cash or other assets during the life of the instrument or at maturity or early termination, whether as margin or settlement payment or otherwise; (2) any short sale borrowing; (3) reverse repurchase agreements and similar financing transactions (e.g., recourse and non-recourse tender option bonds, and borrowed bonds), if the fund elects to treat these transactions as Derivatives Transactions under Rule 18f-4; and (4) when-issued or forward-settling securities (e.g., firm and standby commitments, including to-be-announced ("TBA") commitments, and dollar rolls) and non-standard settlement cycle securities, unless the fund intends to physically settle the transaction and the transaction will settle within 35 days of its trade date (the "Delayed-Settlement Securities Provision").

Unless the fund is relying on the Limited Derivatives User Exception (as defined below), the fund must comply with Rule 18f-4 with respect to its Derivatives Transactions. Rule 18f-4, among other things, requires the fund to adopt and implement a comprehensive written derivatives risk management program ("DRMP") and comply with a relative or absolute limit on fund leverage risk calculated based on value-at-risk ("VaR"). The DRMP is administered by a "derivatives risk manager," who is appointed by the fund's Board, including a majority of Independent Trustees, and periodically reviews the DRMP and reports to the Board.

Rule 18f-4 provides an exception from the DRMP, VaR limit and certain other requirements if the fund's "derivatives exposure" (as defined in Rule 18f-4) is limited to 10% of its net assets (as calculated in accordance with Rule 18f-4) and the fund adopts and implements written policies and procedures reasonably designed to manage its derivatives risks (the "Limited Derivatives User Exception").

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the "Dodd-Frank Act") has caused broad changes to the OTC derivatives market and granted significant authority to the SEC and the CFTC to regulate OTC derivatives and market participants. Pursuant to such authority, rules have been enacted that currently require clearing of many OTC derivatives transactions and may require clearing of additional OTC derivatives transactions in the future and that impose minimum margin and capital requirements for uncleared OTC derivatives transactions. Similar regulations are being adopted in other jurisdictions around the world. The implementation of the clearing requirement has increased the costs of derivatives transactions since investors have to pay fees to clearing members and are typically required to post more margin for cleared derivatives than had historically been the case. The costs of derivatives transactions are expected to increase further as clearing members raise their fees to cover the costs of additional capital requirements and other regulatory changes. While the new rules and regulations and central clearing of some derivatives transactions are designed to reduce systemic risk (i.e., the risk that the interdependence of large derivatives dealers could cause them to suffer liquidity, solvency or other challenges simultaneously), there is no assurance that they will achieve that result, and in the meantime, mandatory clearing of derivatives may expose the fund to new kinds of costs and risks.

Additionally, new regulations may result in increased uncertainty about credit/counterparty risk and may limit the flexibility of the fund to protect its interests in the event of an insolvency of a derivatives counterparty. In the event of a counterparty's (or its affiliate's) insolvency, the fund's ability to exercise remedies, such as the termination of

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transactions, netting of obligations and realization on collateral, could be stayed or eliminated under the rules of the applicable exchange or clearing corporation or under new special resolution regimes adopted in the United States, the European Union and various other jurisdictions. Such regimes provide government authorities with broad authority to intervene when a financial institution is experiencing financial difficulty. In particular, with respect to counterparties who are subject to such proceedings in the European Union, the liabilities of such counterparties to the fund could be reduced, eliminated, or converted to equity in such counterparties (sometimes referred to as a "bail in").

The fund's use of derivatives may be affected by other applicable laws and regulations and may be subject to review by the SEC, the CFTC, exchange and market authorities and other regulators in the United States and abroad. The fund's ability to use derivatives may be limited by tax considerations.

**Options on securities and securities indices** 

The fund may purchase and write put and call options on any security in which it may invest or options on any securities index based on securities in which it may invest. The fund may also be able to enter into closing sale transactions in order to realize gains or minimize losses on options it has purchased.

**Writing call and put options on securities.** A call option written by the fund obligates the fund to sell specified securities to the holder of the option at a specified price if the option is exercised at any time before the expiration date. The exercise price may differ from the market price of an underlying security. The fund has the risk of loss that the price of an underlying security may decline during the call period. The risk may be offset to some extent by the premium the fund receives. If the value of the investment does not rise above the call price, it's likely that the call will lapse without being exercised. In that case, the fund would keep the cash premium and the investment. All call options written by the fund are covered, which means that the fund will own the securities subject to the options as long as the options are outstanding, or the fund will use the other methods described below. The fund's purpose in writing covered call options is to realize greater income than would be realized on portfolio securities transactions alone. However, the fund may forgo the opportunity to profit from an increase in the market price of the underlying security.

A put option written by the fund would obligate the fund to purchase specified securities from the option holder at a specified price if the option is exercised at any time before the expiration date. The fund has no control over when it may be required to purchase the underlying securities. All put options written by the fund would be covered, which means that the fund would have segregated assets with a value at least equal to the exercise price of the put option. The purpose of writing such options is to generate additional income for the fund. However, in return for the option premium, the fund accepts the risk that it may be required to purchase the underlying security at a price in excess of its market value at the time of purchase.

Call and put options written by the fund will also be considered to be covered to the extent that the fund's liabilities under such options are wholly or partially offset by its rights under call and put options purchased by the fund. In addition, a written call option or put may be covered by entering into an offsetting forward contract and/or by purchasing an offsetting option or any other option which, by virtue of its exercise price or otherwise, reduces the fund's net exposure on its written option position.

**Writing call and put options on securities indices.** The fund may also write (sell) covered call and put options on any securities index composed of securities in which it may invest. Options on securities indices are similar to options on securities, except that the exercise of securities index options requires cash payments and does not involve the actual purchase or sale of securities. In addition, securities index options are designed to reflect price fluctuations in a group of securities or segments of the securities market rather than price fluctuations in a single security.

The fund may cover call options on a securities index by owning securities whose price changes are expected to be similar to those of the underlying index, or by having an absolute and immediate right to acquire such securities without additional cash consideration (or for additional consideration if cash in such amount is segregated) upon conversion or exchange of other securities in its portfolio. The fund may cover call and put options on a securities index by segregating assets with a value equal to the exercise price.

Index options are subject to the timing risk inherent in writing index options. When an index option is exercised, the amount of cash that the holder is entitled to receive is determined by the difference between the exercise price and the closing index level on the date when the option is exercised. If a fund has purchased an index option and exercises

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it before the closing index value for that day is available, it runs the risk that the level of the underlying index may subsequently change. If such a change causes the exercised option to fall "out-of-the-money," the fund will be required to pay cash in an amount of the difference between the closing index value and the exercise price of the option.

**Purchasing call and put options.** The fund would normally purchase call options in anticipation of an increase in the market value of securities of the type in which it may invest. The purchase of a call option would entitle the fund, in return for the premium paid, to purchase specified securities at a specified price during the option period. The fund would ordinarily realize a gain if, during the option period, the value of such securities exceeded the sum of the exercise price, the premium paid and transaction costs; otherwise the fund would realize either no gain or a loss on the purchase of the call option.

The fund would normally purchase put options in anticipation of a decline in the market value of securities in its portfolio ("protective puts") or in securities in which it may invest. The purchase of a put option would entitle the fund, in exchange for the premium paid, to sell specified securities at a specified price during the option period. The purchase of protective puts is designed to offset or hedge against a decline in the market value of the fund's securities. Put options may also be purchased by the fund for the purpose of affirmatively benefiting from a decline in the price of securities which it does not own. The fund would ordinarily realize a gain if, during the option period, the value of the underlying securities decreased below the exercise price sufficiently to more than cover the premium and transaction costs; otherwise the fund would realize either no gain or a loss on the purchase of the put option. Gains and losses on the purchase of protective put options would tend to be offset by countervailing changes in the value of the underlying portfolio securities.

The fund may terminate its obligations under an exchange-traded call or put option by purchasing an option identical to the one it has written. Obligations under over-the-counter options may be terminated only by entering into an offsetting transaction with the counterparty to such option. Such purchases are referred to as "closing purchase transactions."

**Risks of trading options.** There is no assurance that a liquid secondary market on an options exchange will exist for any particular exchange-traded option, or at any particular time. If the fund is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction with respect to covered options it has written, the fund will not be able to sell the underlying securities until the options expire or are exercised. Similarly, if the fund is unable to effect a closing sale transaction with respect to options it has purchased, it will have to exercise the options in order to realize any profit and will incur transaction costs upon the purchase or sale of underlying securities.

Reasons for the absence of a liquid secondary market on an exchange include the following: (i) there may be insufficient trading interest in certain options; (ii) restrictions may be imposed by an exchange on opening or closing transactions or both; (iii) trading halts, suspensions or other restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular classes or series of options; (iv) unusual or unforeseen circumstances may interrupt normal operations on an exchange; (v) the facilities of an exchange or the Options Clearing Corporation (the "OCC") may not at all times be adequate to handle current trading volume; or (vi) one or more exchanges could, for economic or other reasons, decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading of options (or a particular class or series of options), in which event the secondary market on that exchange (or in that class or series of options) would cease to exist, although it is expected that outstanding options on that exchange, if any, that had been issued by the OCC as a result of trades on that exchange would continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms.

The fund may purchase and sell both options that are traded on U.S. and non-U.S. exchanges and options traded over-the-counter with broker-dealers who make markets in these options. The ability to terminate over-the-counter options is more limited than with exchange-traded options and may involve the risk that broker-dealers participating in such transactions will not fulfill their obligations. Until such time as the staff of the SEC changes its position, the fund will treat purchased over-the-counter options and all assets used to cover written over-the-counter options as illiquid securities, except that with respect to options written with primary dealers in U.S. government securities pursuant to an agreement requiring a closing purchase transaction at a formula price, the amount of illiquid securities may be calculated with reference to the formula.

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Transactions by the fund in options on securities and indices will be subject to limitations established by each of the exchanges, boards of trade or other trading facilities governing the maximum number of options in each class which may be written or purchased by a single investor or group of investors acting in concert. Thus, the number of options which the fund may write or purchase may be affected by options written or purchased by other investment advisory clients of Amundi US. An exchange, board of trade or other trading facility may order the liquidations of positions found to be in excess of these limits, and it may impose certain other sanctions.

The writing and purchase of options is a highly specialized activity which involves investment techniques and risks different from those associated with ordinary portfolio securities transactions. The successful use of protective puts for hedging purposes depends in part on the ability of Amundi US to predict future price fluctuations and the degree of correlation between the options and securities markets.

The hours of trading for options may not conform to the hours during which the underlying securities are traded. To the extent that the options markets close before the markets for the underlying securities, significant price movements can take place in the underlying markets that cannot be reflected in the options markets.

In addition to the risks of imperfect correlation between the portfolio and the index underlying the option, the purchase of securities index options involves the risk that the premium and transaction costs paid by the fund in purchasing an option will be lost. This could occur as a result of unanticipated movements in the price of the securities comprising the securities index on which the option is based.

**Futures contracts and options on futures contracts** 

The fund may purchase and sell various kinds of futures contracts, and purchase and write (sell) call and put options on any of such futures contracts. The fund may enter into closing purchase and sale transactions with respect to any futures contracts and options on futures contracts. The futures contracts may be based on various securities (such as U.S. government securities), securities indices, foreign currencies and other financial instruments and indices. The fund may invest in futures contracts based on the Chicago Board of Exchange Volatility Index ("VIX Futures"). The VIX is an index of market sentiment derived from the S&P 500 option prices, and is designed to reflect investors' consensus view of expected stock market volatility over future periods. The fund may invest in futures and options based on credit derivative contracts on baskets or indices of securities, such as CDX. An interest rate futures contract provides for the future sale by one party and the purchase by the other party of a specified amount of a particular financial instrument (debt security) at a specified price, date, time and place. The fund will engage in futures and related options transactions for bona fide hedging and non-hedging purposes as described below. Futures contracts are traded in the U.S. on exchanges or boards of trade that are licensed and regulated by the CFTC.

**Futures contracts.** A futures contract may generally be described as an agreement between two parties to buy and sell particular financial instruments for an agreed price during a designated month (or to deliver the final cash settlement price, in the case of a contract relating to an index or otherwise not calling for physical delivery at the end of trading in the contract).

When interest rates are rising or securities prices are falling, the fund can seek to offset a decline in the value of its current portfolio securities through the sale of futures contracts. When interest rates are falling or securities prices are rising, the fund, through the purchase of futures contracts, can attempt to secure better rates or prices than might later be available in the market when it effects anticipated purchases. Similarly, the fund can sell futures contracts on a specified currency to protect against a decline in the value of such currency and a decline in the value of its portfolio securities which are denominated in such currency. The fund can purchase futures contracts on a foreign currency to establish the price in U.S. dollars of a security denominated in such currency that the fund has acquired or expects to acquire.

Positions taken in the futures markets are not normally held to maturity but are instead liquidated through offsetting transactions which may result in a profit or a loss. While futures contracts on securities or currency will usually be liquidated in this manner, the fund may instead make, or take, delivery of the underlying securities or currency whenever it appears economically advantageous to do so. A clearing corporation associated with the exchange on which futures on securities or currency are traded guarantees that, if still open, the sale or purchase will be performed on the settlement date.

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**Hedging strategies.** Hedging, by use of futures contracts, seeks to establish with more certainty the effective price, rate of return and currency exchange rate on portfolio securities and securities that the fund owns or proposes to acquire. The fund may, for example, take a "short" position in the futures market by selling futures contracts in order to hedge against an anticipated rise in interest rates or a decline in market prices or foreign currency rates that would adversely affect the value of the fund's securities. Such futures contracts may include contracts for the future delivery of securities held by the fund or securities with characteristics similar to those of the fund's securities. Similarly, the fund may sell futures contracts in a foreign currency in which its portfolio securities are denominated or in one currency to hedge against fluctuations in the value of securities denominated in a different currency if there is an established historical pattern of correlation between the two currencies. If, in the opinion of Amundi US, there is a sufficient degree of correlation between price trends for the fund's securities and futures contracts based on other financial instruments, securities indices or other indices, the fund may also enter into such futures contracts as part of its hedging strategies. Although under some circumstances prices of securities in the portfolio may be more or less volatile than prices of such futures contracts, Amundi US will attempt to estimate the extent of this volatility difference based on historical patterns and compensate for any such differential by having the fund enter into a greater or lesser number of futures contracts or by attempting to achieve only a partial hedge against price changes affecting the fund's securities. When hedging of this character is successful, any depreciation in the value of portfolio securities will be substantially offset by appreciation in the value of the futures position. On the other hand, any unanticipated appreciation in the value of the portfolio securities would be substantially offset by a decline in the value of the futures position.

On other occasions, the fund may take a "long" position by purchasing futures contracts. This may be done, for example, when the fund anticipates the subsequent purchase of particular securities when it has the necessary cash, but expects the prices or currency exchange rates then available in the applicable market to be less favorable than prices or rates that are currently available.

**Options on futures contracts.** The acquisition of put and call options on futures contracts will give the fund the right (but not the obligation) for a specified price to sell or to purchase, respectively, the underlying futures contract at any time during the option period. As the purchaser of an option on a futures contract, the fund obtains the benefit of the futures position if prices move in a favorable direction, but limits its risk of loss in the event of an unfavorable price movement to the loss of the premium and transaction costs.

The writing of a call option on a futures contract generates a premium which may partially offset a decline in the value of the fund's assets. By writing a call option, the fund becomes obligated, in exchange for the premium, to sell a futures contract (if the option is exercised), which may have a value higher than the exercise price. Conversely, the writing of a put option on a futures contract generates a premium which may partially offset an increase in the price of securities that the fund intends to purchase. However, the fund becomes obligated to purchase a futures contract (if the option is exercised) which may have a value lower than the exercise price. Thus, the loss incurred by the fund in writing options on futures is potentially unlimited and may exceed the amount of the premium received. The fund will incur transaction costs in connection with the writing of options on futures.

The holder or writer of an option on a futures contract may terminate its position by selling or purchasing an offsetting option on the same series. There is no guarantee that such closing transactions can be effected. The fund's ability to establish and close out positions on such options will be subject to the development and maintenance of a liquid market.

**Other considerations regarding futures contracts** 

The fund will engage in transactions in futures contracts and related options only to the extent such transactions are consistent with the requirements of the Code for maintaining qualification as a regulated investment company for U.S. federal income tax purposes.

Futures contracts and related options involve brokerage costs and require margin deposits.

While transactions in futures contracts and options on futures may reduce certain risks, such transactions themselves entail certain other risks. Thus, while the fund may benefit from the use of futures and options on futures, unanticipated changes in interest rates, securities prices or currency exchange rates may result in a poorer overall performance for the fund than if it had not entered into any futures contracts or options transactions. When futures contracts and options are used for hedging purposes, perfect correlation between the fund's futures positions and portfolio positions may be impossible to achieve, particularly where futures contracts based on individual securities are currently not

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available. In the event of an imperfect correlation between a futures position and a portfolio position which is intended to be protected, the desired protection may not be obtained and the fund may be exposed to risk of loss. It is not possible to hedge fully or perfectly against the effect of currency fluctuations on the value of non-U.S. securities because currency movements impact the value of different securities in differing degrees.

If the fund were unable to liquidate a futures contract or an option on a futures position due to the absence of a liquid secondary market, the imposition of price limits or otherwise, it could incur substantial losses. The fund would continue to be subject to market risk with respect to the position. In addition, except in the case of purchased options, the fund would continue to be required to make daily variation margin payments and might be required to maintain the position being hedged by the future or option.

**Interest rate swaps, collars, caps and floors** 

In order to hedge the value of the portfolio against interest rate fluctuations or to enhance the fund's income, the fund may, but is not required to, enter into various interest rate transactions such as interest rate swaps and the purchase or sale of interest rate caps and floors. To the extent that the fund enters into these transactions, the fund expects to do so primarily to preserve a return or spread on a particular investment or portion of its portfolio or to protect against any increase in the price of securities the fund anticipates purchasing at a later date. The fund intends to use these transactions primarily as a hedge and not as a speculative investment. However, the fund also may invest in interest rate swaps to enhance income or to increase the fund's yield, for example, during periods of steep interest rate yield curves (i.e., wide differences between short-term and long-term interest rates). The fund is not required to hedge its portfolio and may choose not to do so. The fund cannot guarantee that any hedging strategies it uses will work.

In an interest rate swap, the fund exchanges with another party their respective commitments to pay or receive interest (e.g., an exchange of fixed rate payments for floating rate payments). For example, if the fund holds a debt instrument with an interest rate that is reset only once each year, it may swap the right to receive interest at this fixed rate for the right to receive interest at a rate that is reset every week. This would enable the fund to offset a decline in the value of the debt instrument due to rising interest rates but would also limit its ability to benefit from falling interest rates. Conversely, if the fund holds a debt instrument with an interest rate that is reset every week and it would like to lock in what it believes to be a high interest rate for one year, it may swap the right to receive interest at this variable weekly rate for the right to receive interest at a rate that is fixed for one year. Such a swap would protect the fund from a reduction in yield due to falling interest rates and may permit the fund to enhance its income through the positive differential between one week and one year interest rates, but would preclude it from taking full advantage of rising interest rates.

The fund usually will enter into interest rate swaps on a net basis (i.e., the two payment streams are netted out with the fund receiving or paying, as the case may be, only the net amount of the two payments). The net amount of the excess, if any, of the fund's obligations over its entitlements with respect to each interest rate swap will be accrued on a daily basis.

The fund also may engage in interest rate transactions in the form of purchasing or selling interest rate caps or floors. The fund will not sell interest rate caps or floors that it does not own. The purchase of an interest rate cap entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index exceeds a predetermined interest rate, to receive payments of interest equal to the difference of the index and the predetermined rate on a notional principal amount (i.e., the reference amount with respect to which interest obligations are determined although no actual exchange of principal occurs) from the party selling such interest rate cap. The purchase of an interest rate floor entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index falls below a predetermined interest rate, to receive payments of interest at the difference of the index and the predetermined rate on a notional principal amount from the party selling such interest rate floor. The fund will not enter into caps or floors if, on a net basis, the aggregate notional principal amount with respect to such agreements exceeds the net assets of the fund.

Typically, the parties with which the fund will enter into interest rate transactions will be broker-dealers and other financial institutions. The fund will not enter into any interest rate swap, cap or floor transaction unless the unsecured senior debt or the claims-paying ability of the other party thereto is rated investment grade quality by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization at the time of entering into such transaction or whose creditworthiness is believed by the fund's adviser to be equivalent to such rating. If there is a default by the other party to such a transaction, the fund will have contractual remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction. The swap

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market has grown substantially in recent years with a large number of banks and investment banking firms acting both as principals and as agents utilizing standardized swap documentation. Caps and floors are less liquid than swaps. Certain federal income tax requirements may limit the fund's ability to engage in interest rate swaps.

**Foreign currency swaps** 

Foreign currency swaps involve the exchange by the lenders, including the Fund, with another party (the "counterparty") of the right to receive the currency in which the loans are denominated for the right to receive U.S. dollars. The fund will enter into a foreign currency swap only if the outstanding debt obligations of the counterparty are rated investment grade quality by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization at the time of entering into such transaction or whose creditworthiness is believed by the fund's adviser to be equivalent to such rating. The amounts of U.S. dollar payments to be received by the fund and the foreign currency payments to be received by the counterparty are fixed at the time the swap arrangement is entered into. Accordingly, the swap protects the fund from the fluctuations in exchange rates and locks in the right to receive payments under the loan in a predetermined amount of U.S. dollars. If there is a default by the counterparty, the fund will have contractual remedies pursuant to the swap agreement; however, the U.S. dollar value of the fund's right to receive foreign currency payments under the obligation will be subject to fluctuations in the applicable exchange rate to the extent that a replacement swap arrangement is unavailable or the fund is unable to recover damages from the defaulting counterparty.

**Cross currency interest rate swap agreements** 

Cross currency interest rate swap agreements combine features of currency swap agreements and interest rate swap agreements. The cross currency interest rate swaps in which the fund may enter generally will involve both the exchange of currency and the payment of interest streams with reference to one currency based on a specified index in exchange for receiving interest streams with reference to the other currency. Such swaps may involve initial and final exchanges that correspond to the agreed upon transaction amount. For example, the payment stream on a specified amount of euro based on a European market floating rate might be exchanged for a U.S. oriented floating rate on the same principal amount converted into U.S. dollars.

**Financial futures and options transactions** 

Amundi US has claimed an exclusion from registration as a "commodity pool operator" with respect to the fund under the Commodity Exchange Act (the "CEA"), and, therefore, Amundi US will not, with respect to its management of the fund, be subject to registration or regulation as a commodity pool operator.

Under this exemption, the fund will remain limited in its ability to trade instruments subject to the jurisdiction of the CFTC, including commodity futures (which include futures on broad-based securities indexes and interest rate futures), options on commodity futures and swaps. This limitation also applies with respect to any indirect exposure that the fund may have to these instruments through investments in other funds. Amundi US may have to rely on representations from the underlying fund's manager about the amount (or maximum permitted amount) of investment exposure that the underlying fund has to instruments such as commodity futures, options on commodity futures and swaps.

Under this exemption, the fund must satisfy one of the following two trading limitations at all times: (1) the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish the fund's positions in commodity futures, options on commodity futures, swaps and other CFTC-regulated instruments may not exceed 5% of the liquidation value of the fund's portfolio (after accounting for unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such investments); or (2) the aggregate net notional value of such instruments, determined at the time the most recent position was established, may not exceed 100% of the liquidation value of the fund's portfolio (after accounting for unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such positions). The fund would not be required to consider its exposure to such instruments if they were held for "bona fide hedging" purposes, as such term is defined in the rules of the CFTC. In addition to meeting one of the foregoing trading limitations, the fund may not market itself as a commodity pool or otherwise as a vehicle for trading in the markets for CFTC-regulated instruments.

**Credit default swap agreements** 

The fund may enter into credit default swap agreements. The "buyer" in a credit default contract is obligated to pay the "seller" a periodic stream of payments over the term of the contract provided that no specified events of default, or "credit events," on an underlying reference obligation have occurred. If such a credit event occurs, the seller must

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pay the buyer the "par value" (full notional value) of the reference obligation in exchange for the reference obligation, or must make a cash settlement payment. The fund may be either the buyer or seller in the transaction. If the fund is a buyer and no credit event occurs, the fund will receive no return on the stream of payments made to the seller. However, if a credit event occurs, the fund, as the buyer, receives the full notional value for a reference obligation that may have little or no value. As a seller, the fund receives a fixed rate of income throughout the term of the contract, which typically is between six months and three years, provided that there is no credit event. If a credit event occurs, the fund, as the seller, must pay the buyer the full notional value of the reference obligation. The fund, as the seller, would be entitled to receive the reference obligation. Alternatively, the fund may be required to make a cash settlement payment, where the reference obligation is received by the fund as seller. The value of the reference obligation, coupled with the periodic payments previously received, would likely be less than the full notional value the fund pays to the buyer, resulting in a loss of value to the fund as seller. When the fund acts as a seller of a credit default swap agreement it is exposed to the risks of a leveraged transaction. Credit default swaps may involve greater risks than if the fund had invested in the reference obligation directly. In addition to general market risks, credit default swaps are subject to illiquidity risk, counterparty risk and credit risk. The fund will enter into swap agreements only with counterparties who are rated investment grade quality by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization at the time of entering into such transaction or whose creditworthiness is believed to be equivalent to such rating.

Regulations require most swaps to be executed through a centralized exchange or regulated facility and cleared through a regulated clearinghouse. The swap market could be disrupted or limited as a result of these requirements, which could adversely affect the fund. Moreover, the establishment of a centralized exchange or market for swap transactions may not result in swaps being easier to trade or value.

The fund may also invest in credit derivative contracts on baskets or indices of securities, such as CDX. A CDX can be used to hedge credit risk or to take a position on a basket of credit entities or indices. The individual credits underlying credit default swap indices may be rated investment grade or non-investment grade. These instruments are designed to track representative segments of the credit default swap market such as investment grade, below investment grade and emerging markets. A CDX index tranche provides access to customized risk, exposing each investor to losses at different levels of subordination. The lowest part of the capital structure is called the "equity tranche" as it has exposure to the first losses experienced in the basket. The mezzanine and senior tranches are higher in the capital structure but can also be exposed to loss in value.Investments are subject to liquidity risks as well as other risks associated with investments in credit default swaps.

**Credit-linked notes** 

The fund may invest in credit-linked notes ("CLNs"), which are derivative instruments. A CLN is a synthetic obligation between two or more parties where the payment of principal and/or interest is based on the performance of some obligation (a reference obligation). In addition to credit risk of the reference obligations and interest rate risk, the buyer/seller of the CLN is subject to counterparty risk.

**Total return swaps, caps, floors and collars** 

The fund may enter into total return swaps, caps, floors and collars to hedge assets or liabilities or to seek to increase total return. Total return swaps involve the exchange by a fund with another party of their respective commitments to make or receive payments based on the change in market value of a specified security, basket of securities or benchmark. The fund may invest in swaps based on VIX futures contracts. The VIX is an index of market sentiment derived from S&P 500 Index option prices, and is designed to reflect investors' consensus view of expected stock market volatility over future periods. Total return swaps may be used to obtain exposure to a security or market without owning or taking physical custody of such security or market. The purchase of a cap entitles the purchaser, to the extent that the market value of a specified security or benchmark exceeds a predetermined level, to receive payments of a contractually-based amount from the party selling the cap. The purchase of a floor entitles the purchaser, to the extent that the market value of a specified security or benchmark falls below a predetermined level, to receive payments of a contractually-based amount from the party selling the floor. A collar is a combination of a cap and a floor that preserves a certain return within a predetermined range of values. Investments in swaps, caps, floors and collars are highly specialized activities which involve investment techniques and risks different from those associated with ordinary portfolio transactions. Investments in total return swaps, caps, floors and collars may be considered speculative because they involve significant risk of loss. If Amundi US is incorrect in its forecast of market values,

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these investments could negatively impact the fund's performance. These investments also are subject to default risk of the counterparty and may be less liquid than other portfolio securities. Moreover, investments in swaps, caps, floors and collars may involve greater transaction costs than investments in other securities.

**Exchange traded notes** 

The fund may invest in exchange traded notes ("ETNs"). An ETN is a type of senior, unsecured, unsubordinated debt security issued by financial institutions that combines both aspects of bonds and ETFs. An ETN's returns are based on the performance of a market index or other reference asset minus fees and expenses. Similar to ETFs, ETNs are listed on an exchange and traded in the secondary market. However, unlike an ETF, an ETN can be held until the ETN's maturity, at which time the issuer will pay a return linked to the performance of the market index or other reference asset to which the ETN is linked minus certain fees. Unlike regular bonds, ETNs do not make periodic interest payments and principal is not protected.

An ETN that is tied to a specific index may not be able to replicate and maintain exactly the composition and relative weighting of securities, commodities or other components in the applicable index. ETNs also incur certain expenses not incurred by their applicable index. Additionally, certain components comprising the index tracked by an ETN may, at times, be temporarily unavailable, which may impede an ETN's ability to track its index. Some ETNs that use leverage can, at times, be relatively illiquid and, thus, they may be difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price. Leveraged ETNs are subject to the same risk as other instruments that use leverage in any form. While leverage allows for greater potential return, the potential for loss is also greater. However, the fund's potential loss is limited to the amount actually invested in the ETN.

The market value of an ETN is influenced by supply and demand for the ETN, the current performance of the index or other reference asset, the credit rating of the ETN issuer, volatility and lack of liquidity in the reference asset, changes in the applicable interest rates, and economic, legal, political or geographic events that affect the reference asset. The market value of ETN shares may differ from their net asset value. This difference in price may be due to the fact that the supply and demand in the market for ETN shares at any point in time is not always identical to the supply and demand in the market for the securities underlying the index (or other reference asset) that the ETN seeks to track. The value of an ETN may also change due to a change in the issuer's credit rating. As a result, there may be times when an ETN share trades at a premium or discount to its net asset value. The fund will bear its pro rata portion of any fees and expenses borne by the ETN. These fees and expenses generally reduce the return realized at maturity or upon redemption from an investment in an ETN.

**Other investments and investment techniques**

**Short-term investments** 

For temporary defensive or cash management purposes, the fund may invest in all types of short-term investments including, but not limited to, (a) commercial paper and other short-term commercial obligations; (b) obligations (including certificates of deposit and bankers' acceptances) of banks; (c) obligations issued or guaranteed by a governmental issuer, including governmental agencies or instrumentalities; (d) fixed income securities of non-governmental issuers; and (e) other cash equivalents or cash. Subject to the fund's restrictions regarding investment in non-U.S. securities, these securities may be denominated in any currency. Although these investments generally are rated investment grade or are determined by Amundi US to be of equivalent credit quality, the fund may also invest in these instruments if they are rated below investment grade in accordance with its investment objective, policies and restrictions.

**Repurchase agreements** 

The fund may enter into repurchase agreements with broker-dealers, member banks of the Federal Reserve System and other financial institutions. Repurchase agreements are arrangements under which the fund purchases securities and the seller agrees to repurchase the securities within a specific time and at a specific price. The repurchase price is generally higher than the fund's purchase price, with the difference being income to the fund. A repurchase agreement may be considered a loan by the fund collateralized by securities. Under the direction of the Board of Trustees, Amundi US reviews and monitors the creditworthiness of any institution which enters into a repurchase agreement with the fund. The counterparty's obligations under the repurchase agreement are collateralized with U.S. Treasury and/or agency obligations with a market value of not less than 100% of the obligations, valued daily. Collateral is held by the fund's custodian in a segregated, safekeeping account for the benefit of the fund. Repurchase agreements afford

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the fund an opportunity to earn income on temporarily available cash. In the event of commencement of bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings with respect to the seller of the security before repurchase of the security under a repurchase agreement, the fund may encounter delay and incur costs before being able to sell the security. Such a delay may involve loss of interest or a decline in price of the security. If the court characterizes the transaction as a loan and the fund has not perfected a security interest in the security, the fund may be required to return the security to the seller's estate and be treated as an unsecured creditor of the seller. As an unsecured creditor, the fund would be at risk of losing some or all of the principal and interest involved in the transaction. There is no specific limit on the fund's ability to enter into repurchase agreements. The SEC frequently treats repurchase agreements as loans for purposes of the 1940 Act.

**Reverse repurchase agreements** 

Reverse repurchase agreements involve the sale of securities to a bank or other institution with an agreement that the fund will buy back the securities at a fixed future date at a fixed price plus an agreed amount of "interest" which may be reflected in the repurchase price. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the risk that the market value of securities purchased by the fund with proceeds of the transaction may decline below the repurchase price of the securities sold by the fund that it is obligated to repurchase. The fund will also continue to be subject to the risk of a decline in the market value of the securities sold under the agreements because it will reacquire those securities upon effecting their repurchase. Reverse repurchase agreements may be considered to be a type of borrowing. Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act permits the fund to enter into reverse repurchase agreements and similar financing transactions (e.g., recourse and non-recourse tender option bonds, borrowed bonds) notwithstanding the limitation on the issuance of senior securities in Section 18 of the 1940 Act, provided that the fund either (i) complies with the 300% asset coverage ratio with respect to such transactions and any other borrowings in the aggregate, or (ii) treats such transactions as Derivatives Transactions under Rule 18f-4. See "Derivatives."

**Short sales against the box** 

The fund may sell securities "short against the box." A short sale involves the fund borrowing securities from a broker and selling the borrowed securities. The fund has an obligation to return securities identical to the borrowed securities to the broker. In a short sale against the box, the fund at all times owns an equal amount of the security sold short or securities convertible into or exchangeable for, with or without payment of additional consideration, an equal amount of the security sold short. The fund intends to use short sales against the box to hedge. For example when the fund believes that the price of a current portfolio security may decline, the fund may use a short sale against the box to lock in a sale price for a security rather than selling the security immediately. In such a case, any future losses in the fund's long position should be offset by a gain in the short position and, conversely, any gain in the long position should be reduced by a loss in the short position. The fund may engage in short sales of securities only against the box.

If the fund effects a short sale against the box at a time when it has an unrealized gain on the security, it may be required to recognize that gain as if it had actually sold the security (a "constructive sale") on the date it effects the short sale. However, such constructive sale treatment may not apply if the fund closes out the short sale with securities other than the appreciated securities held at the time of the short sale provided that certain other conditions are satisfied. Uncertainty regarding the tax consequences of effecting short sales may limit the extent to which the fund may make short sales against the box.

The fund must comply with Rule 18f-4 under the Investment Company Act with respect to its short positions "against the box," which are considered Derivatives Transactions under the Rule. See "Derivatives."

**Dollar rolls** 

The fund may enter into mortgage "dollar rolls" in which the fund sells securities for delivery in the current month and simultaneously contracts with the same counterparty to repurchase similar (same type, coupon and maturity), but not identical securities on a specified future date. During the roll period, the fund loses the right to receive principal and interest paid on the securities sold. However, the fund would benefit to the extent of any difference between the price received for the securities sold and the lower forward price for the future purchase (often referred to as the "drop") or fee income plus the interest earned on the cash proceeds of the securities sold until the settlement date of the forward purchase. Unless such benefits exceed the income, capital appreciation and gain or loss due to mortgage prepayments that would have been realized on the securities sold as part of the mortgage dollar roll, the use of this

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technique will diminish the investment performance of the fund compared with what such performance would have been without the use of mortgage dollar rolls. All cash proceeds will be invested in instruments that are permissible investments for the fund.

For financial reporting and tax purposes, the fund treats mortgage dollar rolls as two separate transactions; one involving the purchase of a security and a separate transaction involving a sale.

Dollar rolls involve certain risks including the following: if the broker-dealer to whom the fund sells the security becomes insolvent, the fund's right to purchase or repurchase the securities subject to the dollar roll may be restricted and the instrument which the fund is required to repurchase may be worth less than an instrument which the fund originally held. Successful use of dollar rolls will depend upon Amundi US's ability to manage its interest rate and prepayment exposure. There is no assurance that dollar rolls can be successfully employed.

Rule 18f-4 under the Investment Company Act permits the fund to enter into when-issued or forward-settling securities (e.g., dollar rolls and firm and standby commitments, including TBA commitments) and non-standard settlement cycle securities notwithstanding the limitation on the issuance of senior securities in Section 18 of the Investment Company Act, provided that the fund intends to physically settle the transaction and the transaction will settle within 35 days of its trade date (the "Delayed-Settlement Securities Provision"). If a when-issued, forward-settling or non-standard settlement cycle security does not satisfy the Delayed-Settlement Securities Provision, then it is treated as a Derivatives Transaction under Rule 18f-4. See "Derivatives."

**Portfolio turnover** 

It is the policy of the fund not to engage in trading for short-term profits, although portfolio turnover rate is not considered a limiting factor in the execution of investment decisions for the fund. A high rate of portfolio turnover (100% or more) involves correspondingly greater transaction costs which must be borne by the fund and its shareholders. See "Annual Fee, Expense and Other Information" for the fund's annual portfolio turnover rate.

**Lending of portfolio securities** 

The fund may lend portfolio securities to registered broker-dealers or other institutional investors deemed by Amundi US to be of good standing under agreements which require that the loans be secured continuously by collateral in the form of cash, cash equivalents, U.S. Government securities or irrevocable letters of credit issued by banks approved by the fund. The value of the collateral is monitored on a daily basis and the borrower is required to maintain the collateral at an amount at least equal to the market value of the securities loaned. The fund continues to receive the equivalent of the interest or dividends paid by the issuer on the securities loaned and continues to have all of the other risks associated with owning the securities. Where the collateral received is cash, the cash will be invested and the fund will be entitled to a share of the income earned on the investment, but will also be subject to investment risk on the collateral and will bear the entire amount of any loss in connection with investment of such collateral. The fund may pay administrative and custodial fees in connection with loans of securities and, where the collateral received is cash, the fund may pay a portion of the income earned on the investment of collateral to the borrower, lending agent or other intermediary. Fees and expenses paid by the fund in connection with loans of securities are not reflected in the fee table or expense example in the fund's prospectus. If the income earned on the investment of the cash collateral is insufficient to pay these amounts or if the value of the securities purchased with such cash collateral declines, the fund may take a loss on the loan. Where the fund receives securities as collateral, the fund will earn no income on the collateral, but will earn a fee from the borrower. The fund reserves the right to recall loaned securities so that it may exercise voting rights on loaned securities according to the fund's Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures.

The risk in lending portfolio securities, as with other extensions of credit, consists of the possibility of loss to the fund due to (i) the inability of the borrower to return the securities, (ii) a delay in receiving additional collateral to adequately cover any fluctuations in the value of securities on loan, (iii) a delay in recovery of the securities, or (iv) the loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. In addition, as noted above, the fund continues to have market risk and other risks associated with owning the securities on loan. Where the collateral delivered by the borrower is cash, the fund will also have the risk of loss of principal and interest in connection with its investment of collateral. If a borrower defaults, the value of the collateral may decline before the fund can dispose of it. The fund will lend portfolio securities only to firms that have been approved in advance by Amundi US, which will monitor

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the creditworthiness of any such firms. However, this monitoring may not protect the fund from loss. At no time would the value of the securities loaned exceed 33 <sup>1</sup>∕3% of the value of the fund's total assets. The fund did not engage in securities lending activity during its most recent fiscal year.

**Interfund lending** 

To satisfy redemption requests or to cover unanticipated cash shortfalls, a fund may enter into lending agreements ("Interfund Lending Agreements") under which the fund would lend money and borrow money for temporary purposes directly to and from another Pioneer fund through a credit facility ("Interfund Loan"), subject to meeting the conditions of an SEC exemptive order granted to the funds permitting such interfund lending. All Interfund Loans will consist only of uninvested cash reserves that the fund otherwise would invest in short-term repurchase agreements or other short-term instruments.

If a fund has outstanding borrowings, any Interfund Loans to the fund (a) will be at an interest rate equal to or lower than any outstanding bank loan, (b) will be secured at least on an equal priority basis with at least an equivalent percentage of collateral to loan value as any outstanding bank loan that requires collateral, (c) will have a maturity no longer than any outstanding bank loan (and in any event not over seven days) and (d) will provide that, if an event of default occurs under any agreement evidencing an outstanding bank loan to the fund, the event of default will automatically (without need for action or notice by the lending fund) constitute an immediate event of default under the Interfund Lending Agreement entitling the lending fund to call the Interfund Loan (and exercise all rights with respect to any collateral) and that such call will be made if the lending bank exercises its right to call its loan under its agreement with the borrowing fund.

A fund may make an unsecured borrowing through the credit facility if its outstanding borrowings from all sources immediately after the interfund borrowing total 10% or less of its total assets; provided, that if the fund has a secured loan outstanding from any other lender, including but not limited to another Pioneer fund, the fund's interfund borrowing will be secured on at least an equal priority basis with at least an equivalent percentage of collateral to loan value as any outstanding loan that requires collateral. If a fund's total outstanding borrowings immediately after an interfund borrowing would be greater than 10% of its total assets, the fund may borrow through the credit facility on a secured basis only. A fund may not borrow through the credit facility nor from any other source if its total outstanding borrowings immediately after the interfund borrowing would be more than 33 <sup>1</sup>∕3% of its total assets.

No fund may lend to another fund through the interfund lending credit facility if the loan would cause its aggregate outstanding loans through the credit facility to exceed 15% of the lending fund's net assets at the time of the loan. A fund's Interfund Loans to any one fund shall not exceed 5% of the lending fund's net assets. The duration of Interfund Loans is limited to the time required to receive payment for securities sold, but in no event more than seven days. Loans effected within seven days of each other will be treated as separate loan transactions for purposes of this condition. Each Interfund Loan may be called on one business day's notice by a lending fund and may be repaid on any day by a borrowing fund.

The limitations detailed above and the other conditions of the SEC exemptive order permitting interfund lending are designed to minimize the risks associated with interfund lending for both the lending fund and the borrowing fund. However, no borrowing or lending activity is without risk. When a fund borrows money from another fund, there is a risk that the loan could be called on one day's notice or not renewed, in which case the fund may have to borrow from a bank at higher rates if an Interfund Loan were not available from another fund. A delay in repayment to a lending fund could result in a lost opportunity or additional lending costs.

**When-issued and delayed delivery securities** 

The fund may purchase securities, including U.S. government securities, on a when-issued basis or may purchase or sell securities for delayed delivery. In such transactions, delivery of the securities occurs beyond the normal settlement period, but no payment or delivery is made by the fund prior to the actual delivery or payment by the other party to the transaction. The fund will not earn income on these securities until delivered. The purchase of securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis involves the risk that the value of the securities purchased will decline prior to the settlement date. The sale of securities for delayed delivery involves the risk that the prices available in the market on the delivery date may be greater than those obtained in the sale transaction.

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Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act permits the fund to enter into when-issued or delayed delivery transactions notwithstanding the limitation on the issuance of senior securities in Section 18 of the 1940 Act, provided that the fund either (i) complies with the 300% asset coverage ratio with respect to such transactions and any other borrowings in the aggregate, or (ii) treats such transactions as Derivatives Transactions under Rule 18f-4, unless the fund intends to physically settle the transaction and the transaction will settle within 35 days of its trade date (the "Delayed-Settlement Securities Provision"). See "Derivatives."

**Investment restrictions** 

**Fundamental investment policies** 

The fund has adopted certain fundamental investment policies which may not be changed without the affirmative vote of the holders of a "majority of the outstanding voting securities" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the fund. For this purpose, a majority of the outstanding shares of the fund means the vote of the lesser of:

(1) 67% or more of the shares represented at a meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding shares are present in person or by proxy; or

(2) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the fund.

The fund's fundamental policies are as follows:

(1) The fund may not borrow money except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(2) The fund may not engage in the business of underwriting the securities of other issuers except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(3) The fund may lend money or other assets to the extent permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(4) The fund may not issue senior securities except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(5) The fund may not purchase or sell real estate except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(6) The fund may purchase or sell commodities or contracts related to commodities to the extent permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, or interpretations or modifications by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction.

(7) Except the financial services group of industries or as permitted by exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, the fund may not make any investment if, as a result, the fund's investments will be concentrated in any one industry.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to borrowing money set forth in (1) above, the 1940 Act permits a fund to borrow money in amounts of up to one-third of the fund's total assets from banks for any purpose, and to borrow up to 5% of the fund's total assets from banks or other lenders for temporary purposes (the fund's total assets include the amounts being borrowed). To limit the risks attendant to borrowing, the 1940 Act requires the fund to maintain at all times an "asset coverage" of at least 300% of the amount of its borrowings. Asset coverage means the ratio that the value of the fund's total assets (including amounts borrowed), minus liabilities other than borrowings, bears to the aggregate amount of all borrowings. Borrowing money to increase a fund's investment portfolio is known as "leveraging." Borrowing, especially when used for leverage, may cause the value of a fund's shares to be more

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volatile than if the fund did not borrow. This is because borrowing tends to magnify the effect of any increase or decrease in the value of the fund's portfolio holdings. Borrowed money thus creates an opportunity for greater gains, but also greater losses. To repay borrowings, the fund may have to sell securities at a time and at a price that is unfavorable to the fund. There also are costs associated with borrowing money, and these costs would offset and could eliminate a fund's net investment income in any given period. Currently, the fund does not contemplate borrowing for leverage, but if the fund does so, it will not likely do so to a substantial degree. The policy in (1) above will be interpreted to permit the fund to engage in trading practices and investments that may be considered to be borrowing to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act. Reverse repurchase agreements may be considered to be a type of borrowing. In accordance with Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act, when the fund engages in reverse repurchase agreements and similar financing transactions, the fund may either (i) maintain asset coverage of at least 300% with respect to such transactions and any other borrowings in the aggregate, or (ii) treat such transactions as Derivatives Transactions under Rule 18f-4 and complies with Rule 18f-4 with respect to such transactions. See "Derivatives." Short-term credits necessary for the settlement of securities transactions and arrangements with respect to securities lending will not be considered to be borrowings under the policy. Practices and investments that may involve leverage but are not considered to be borrowings are not subject to the policy. Such trading practices may include futures, options on futures, forward contracts and other derivative investments.

A fund may pledge its assets and guarantee the securities of another company without limitation, subject to the fund's investment policies (including the fund's fundamental policy regarding borrowing) and applicable laws and interpretations. Pledges of assets and guarantees of obligations of others are subject to many of the same risks associated with borrowings and, in addition, are subject to the credit risk of the obligor for the underlying obligations. To the extent that pledging or guaranteeing assets may be considered the issuance of senior securities, the issuance of senior securities is governed by the fund's policies on senior securities. If the fund were to pledge its assets, the fund would take into account any then-applicable legal guidance, including any applicable SEC staff position, would be guided by the judgment of the fund's Board and Amundi US regarding the terms of any credit facility or arrangement, including any collateral required, and would not pledge more collateral than, in their judgment, is necessary for the fund to obtain the credit sought. Shareholders should note that in 1973, the SEC staff took the position in a no-action letter that a mutual fund could not pledge 100% of its assets without a compelling business reason. In more recent no-action letters, including letters that address the same statutory provision of the 1940 Act (Section 17) addressed in the 1973 letter, the SEC staff has not mentioned any limitation on the amount of collateral that may be pledged to support credit obtained. This does not mean that the staff's position on this issue has changed.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to underwriting set forth in (2) above, the 1940 Act does not prohibit a fund from engaging in the underwriting business or from underwriting the securities of other issuers; in fact, the 1940 Act permits a fund to have underwriting commitments of up to 25% of its assets under certain circumstances. Those circumstances currently are that the amount of the fund's underwriting commitments, when added to the value of the fund's investments in issuers where the fund owns more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of those issuers, cannot exceed the 25% cap. A fund engaging in transactions involving the acquisition or disposition of portfolio securities may be considered to be an underwriter under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act"). Under the 1933 Act, an underwriter may be liable for material omissions or misstatements in an issuer's registration statement or prospectus. Securities purchased from an issuer and not registered for sale under the 1933 Act are considered restricted securities. There may be a limited market for these securities. If these securities are registered under the 1933 Act, they may then be eligible for sale but participating in the sale may subject the seller to underwriter liability. These risks could apply to a fund investing in restricted securities. Although it is not believed that the application of the 1933 Act provisions described above would cause a fund to be engaged in the business of underwriting, the policy in (2) above will be interpreted not to prevent the fund from engaging in transactions involving the acquisition or disposition of portfolio securities, regardless of whether the fund may be considered to be an underwriter under the 1933 Act.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to lending set forth in (3) above, the 1940 Act does not prohibit a fund from making loans; however, SEC staff interpretations currently prohibit funds from lending more than one-third of their total assets, except through the purchase of debt obligations or the use of repurchase agreements. (A repurchase agreement is an agreement to purchase a security, coupled with an agreement to sell that security back to the original seller on an agreed-upon date at a price that reflects current interest rates. The SEC frequently treats repurchase

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agreements as loans.) While lending securities may be a source of income to a fund, as with other extensions of credit, there are risks of delay in recovery or even loss of rights in the underlying securities should the borrower fail financially. However, loans would be made only when the fund's manager or a subadviser believes the income justifies the attendant risks. The fund also will be permitted by this policy to make loans of money, including to other funds. The fund has obtained exemptive relief from the SEC to make short-term loans to other Pioneer funds through a credit facility in order to satisfy redemption requests or to cover unanticipated cash shortfalls; as discussed in this Statement of Additional Information under "Interfund Lending". The conditions of the SEC exemptive order permitting interfund lending are designed to minimize the risks associated with interfund lending, however no lending activity is without risk. A delay in repayment to a lending fund could result in a lost opportunity or additional lending costs. The policy in (3) above will be interpreted not to prevent the fund from purchasing or investing in debt obligations and loans. In addition, collateral arrangements with respect to options, forward currency and futures transactions and other derivative instruments, as well as delays in the settlement of securities transactions, will not be considered loans.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to issuing senior securities set forth in (4) above, "senior securities" are defined as fund obligations that have a priority over the fund's shares with respect to the payment of dividends or the distribution of fund assets. The 1940 Act prohibits a fund from issuing senior securities except that the fund may borrow money in amounts of up to one-third of the fund's total assets from banks for any purpose. A fund also may borrow up to 5% of the fund's total assets from banks or other lenders for temporary purposes, and these borrowings are not considered senior securities. The issuance of senior securities by a fund can increase the speculative character of the fund's outstanding shares through leveraging. Leveraging of a fund's portfolio through the issuance of senior securities magnifies the potential for gain or loss on monies, because even though the fund's net assets remain the same, the total risk to investors is increased. Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act permits the fund to enter into swaps, security-based swaps, futures contracts, forward contracts, options and similar instruments, under which the fund is or may be required to make any payment or delivery of cash or other assets during the life of the instrument or at maturity or early termination, whether as margin or settlement payment or otherwise notwithstanding the limitation on the issuance of senior securities in Section 18 of the 1940 Act, provided that the fund either (i) maintain asset coverage of at least 300% with respect to such transactions and any other borrowings in the aggregate, or (ii) treats such transactions as Derivatives Transactions under Rule 18f-4 and complies with Rule 18f-4 with respect to such transactions. See "Derivatives" above. The policy in (4) above will be interpreted not to prevent collateral arrangements with respect to swaps, options, forward or futures contracts or other derivatives, or the posting of initial or variation margin.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to real estate set forth in (5) above, the 1940 Act does not prohibit a fund from owning real estate. Investing in real estate may involve risks, including that real estate is generally considered illiquid and may be difficult to value and sell. Owners of real estate may be subject to various liabilities, including environmental liabilities. The policy in (5) above will be interpreted not to prevent the fund from investing in real estate-related companies, companies whose businesses consist in whole or in part of investing in real estate, instruments (like mortgages) that are secured by real estate or interests therein, or real estate investment trust securities.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to commodities set forth in (6) above, the 1940 Act does not prohibit a fund from owning commodities, whether physical commodities and contracts related to physical commodities (such as oil or grains and related futures contracts), or financial commodities and contracts related to financial commodities (such as currencies and, possibly, currency futures). If a fund were to invest in a physical commodity or a physical commodity-related instrument, the fund would be subject to the additional risks of the particular physical commodity and its related market. The value of commodities and commodity-related instruments may be extremely volatile and may be affected either directly or indirectly by a variety of factors. There also may be storage charges and risks of loss associated with physical commodities. The policy in (6) above will be interpreted to permit investments in exchange traded funds that invest in physical and/or financial commodities.

With respect to the fundamental policy relating to concentration set forth in (7) above, the 1940 Act does not define what constitutes "concentration" in an industry. The SEC staff has taken the position that investment of 25% or more of a fund's total assets in one or more issuers conducting their principal activities in the same industry or group of industries constitutes concentration. It is possible that interpretations of concentration could change in the future. A fund that invests a significant percentage of its total assets in a single industry may be particularly susceptible to adverse events affecting that industry and may be more risky than a fund that does not concentrate in an industry. The policy in (7) above will be interpreted to refer to concentration as that term may be interpreted from time to

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time. The policy also will be interpreted to permit investment without limit in securities of the U.S. government and its agencies or instrumentalities and repurchase agreements collateralized by any such obligations. Accordingly, issuers of the foregoing securities will not be considered to be members of any industry. The policy also will be interpreted to give broad authority to the fund as to how to classify issuers within or among industries. When identifying industries for purposes of its concentration policy, the fund may rely upon available industry classifications. As of the date of the SAI, the fund relies primarily on the Bloomberg L.P. ("Bloomberg") classifications, and, with respect to securities for which no industry classification under Bloomberg is available or for which the Bloomberg classification is determined not to be appropriate, the fund may use industry classifications published by another source, which, as of the date of the SAI, is MSCI Global Industry Classification Standard. As of the date of the SAI, the fund's adviser may assign an industry classification for an exchange-traded fund in which the fund invests based on the constituents of the index on which the exchange-traded fund is based. The fund may change any source used for determining industry classifications without shareholder approval.

Pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act, the fund has also adopted the following fundamental investment policies relating to periodic repurchase offers, which may not be changed without a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities:

(i) the fund will make repurchase offers at periodic intervals pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act, as that Rule may be amended from time to time, and as it is interpreted by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction, and in accordance with any exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction;

(ii) the periodic interval between repurchase request deadlines will be three months;

(iii) the repurchase request deadline (as defined in Rule 23c-3) for each repurchase offer will be no earlier than the 21st day after the issuance of notification of the repurchase offer (or the next business day if the 21st day is not a business day); and

(iv) each repurchase pricing date (as defined in Rule 23c-3) will be not later than the 14th day after the preceding repurchase request deadline (or the next business day if the 14th day is not a business day).

The fund's fundamental policies are written and will be interpreted broadly. For example, the policies will be interpreted to refer to the 1940 Act and the related rules as they are in effect from time to time, and to interpretations and modifications of or relating to the 1940 Act by the SEC, SEC staff or other authority of competent jurisdiction as they are given from time to time. When a policy provides that an investment practice may be conducted as permitted by the 1940 Act, the policy will be interpreted to mean either that the 1940 Act expressly permits the practice or that the 1940 Act does not prohibit the practice.

**Non-fundamental investment policy** 

All other investment policies of the fund are considered non-fundamental and, along with the fund's investment objective, which is also non-fundamental, may be changed by the Board of Trustees without prior approval of the fund's outstanding voting shares at any time.

The fund has not adopted a fundamental policy prohibiting or limiting the fund's use of short sales, purchases on margin and the writing of put and call options. The fund is subject, however, to the limitations on its use of these investments under the 1940 Act and the rules and interpretive positions of the SEC under the 1940 Act. Under current law, the fund may not purchase securities on margin. As discussed above under "Short Sales Against the Box," the fund has adopted a non-fundamental investment policy to engage in short sales of securities against the box. Certain other non-fundamental investment policies are included in the prospectus under "Investment objective and Principal investment strategies" and this statement of additional information under "Investment objective and policies."

**Non-Diversification** 

The fund is currently classified as a non-diversified fund under the 1940 Act. A non-diversified fund can invest a greater portion of its assets in a single issuer or a limited number of issuers than may a diversified fund. As a consequence, a non-diversified fund is subject to greater risk than a diversified fund. A diversified fund may not purchase securities of an issuer (other than obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government, its agencies or instrumentalities and securities of other investment companies), and securities of other investment companies if, with respect to 75%

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of the fund's total assets, (a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of that issuer. Under the 1940 Act, the fund may change its classification from non-diversified to diversified without shareholder approval.

**4. Trustees and officers** 

The fund's Trustees and officers are listed below, together with their principal occupations and other directorships they have held during at least the past five years. Trustees who are interested persons of the fund within the meaning of the 1940 Act are referred to as Interested Trustees. Trustees who are not interested persons of the fund are referred to as Independent Trustees. Each of the Trustees serves as a Trustee of each of the 51 U.S. registered investment portfolios for which Amundi US serves as investment adviser (the "Pioneer Funds"). The address for all Trustees and all officers of the fund is 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name, Age and**<br> **Position Held With the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Term of Office and**<br> **Length of Service**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Principal Occupation(s) During At Least** <br> **The Past Five Years**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Other Directorships**<br> **Held by Trustee During** <br> **At Least The Past Five** <br> **Years**<br>|
| ***Independent Trustees:*** |  |  |  |
| **Thomas J. Perna (72)**<br> Chairman of the Board and <br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2014. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Private investor (2004 – 2008 and 2013 <br> – present); Chairman (2008 – 2013) <br> and Chief Executive Officer (2008 – <br> 2012), Quadriserv, Inc. (technology <br> products for securities lending <br> industry); and Senior Executive Vice <br> President, The Bank of New York <br> (financial and securities services) (1986 <br> – 2004)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director, Broadridge <br> Financial Solutions, <br> Inc. (investor <br> communications and <br> securities processing <br> provider for financial <br> services industry) <br> (2009 – present); <br> Director, Quadriserv, <br> Inc. (2005 – 2013); and <br> Commissioner, New <br> Jersey State Civil <br> Service Commission <br> (2011 – 2015)<br>|
| **John E. Baumgardner, Jr.** <br> **(72)\***<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2019. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Of Counsel (2019 – present), Partner <br> (1983-2018), Sullivan & Cromwell LLP <br> (law firm).<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Chairman, The <br> Lakeville Journal <br> Company, LLC, <br> (privately-held <br> community newspaper <br> group) (2015-present)<br>|
| **Diane Durnin (66)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2019. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Managing Director - Head of Product <br> Strategy and Development, BNY <br> Mellon Investment Management <br> (investment management firm) <br> (2012-2018); Vice Chairman – The <br> Dreyfus Corporation (2005 – 2018): <br> Executive Vice President Head of <br> Product, BNY Mellon Investment <br> Management (2007-2012); Executive <br> Director- Product Strategy, Mellon <br> Asset Management (2005-2007); <br> Executive Vice President Head of <br> Products, Marketing and Client Service, <br> Dreyfus Corporation (investment <br> management firm) (2000-2005); Senior <br> Vice President Strategic Product and <br> Business Development, Dreyfus <br> Corporation (1994-2000)<br>|  |

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name, Age and**<br> **Position Held With the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Term of Office and**<br> **Length of Service**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Principal Occupation(s) During At Least** <br> **The Past Five Years**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Other Directorships**<br> **Held by Trustee During** <br> **At Least The Past Five** <br> **Years**<br>|
| **Benjamin M. Friedman (78)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2014. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; William Joseph Maier Professor of <br> Political Economy, Harvard University <br> (1972 – present)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee, Mellon <br> Institutional Funds <br> Investment Trust and <br> Mellon Institutional <br> Funds Master Portfolio <br> (oversaw 17 portfolios <br> in fund complex) <br> (1989 - 2008)<br>|
| **Craig C. MacKay (60)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2021. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Partner, England & Company, LLC <br> (advisory firm) (2012 – present); Group <br> Head – Leveraged Finance <br> Distribution, Oppenheimer & <br> Company (investment bank) (2006 – <br> 2012); Group Head – Private Finance & <br> High Yield Capital Markets <br> Origination, SunTrust Robinson <br> Humphrey (investment bank) (2003 – <br> 2006); and Founder and Chief <br> Executive Officer, HNY Associates, <br> LLC (investment bank) (1996 – 2003)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director, Equitable <br> Holdings, Inc. <br> (financial services <br> holding company) <br> (2022 – present); <br> Board Member of <br> Carver Bancorp, Inc. <br> (holding company) <br> and Carver Federal <br> Savings Bank, NA <br> (2017 – present); <br> Advisory Council <br> Member, MasterShares <br> ETF (2016 – 2017); <br> Advisory Council <br> Member, The Deal <br> (financial market <br> information publisher) <br> (2015 – 2016); Board <br> Co-Chairman and <br> Chief Executive <br> Officer, Danis <br> Transportation <br> Company <br> (privately-owned <br> commercial carrier) <br> (2000 – 2003); Board <br> Member and Chief <br> Financial Officer, <br> Customer Access <br> Resources <br> (privately-owned <br> teleservices company) <br> (1998 – 2000); Board <br> Member, Federation of <br> Protestant Welfare <br> Agencies (human <br> services agency) (1993 <br> – present); and Board <br> Treasurer, Harlem <br> Dowling Westside <br> Center (foster care <br> agency) (1999 – 2018)<br>|

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name, Age and**<br> **Position Held With the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Term of Office and**<br> **Length of Service**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Principal Occupation(s) During At Least** <br> **The Past Five Years**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Other Directorships**<br> **Held by Trustee During** <br> **At Least The Past Five** <br> **Years**<br>|
| **Lorraine H. Monchak (66)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2017. <br> (Advisory Trustee from <br> 2014 - 2017). Serves until a <br> successor trustee is elected <br> or earlier retirement or <br> removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Chief Investment Officer, 1199 SEIU <br> Funds (healthcare workers union <br> pension funds) (2001 – present); Vice <br> President – International Investments <br> Group, American International Group, <br> Inc. (insurance company) (1993 – <br> 2001); Vice President Corporate <br> Finance and Treasury Group, Citibank, <br> N.A.(1980 – 1986 and 1990 – 1993); <br> Vice President – Asset/Liability <br> Management Group, Federal Farm <br> Funding Corporation <br> (government-sponsored issuer of debt <br> securities) (1988 – 1990); Mortgage <br> Strategies Group, Shearson Lehman <br> Hutton, Inc. (investment bank) (1987 – <br> 1988); Mortgage Strategies Group, <br> Drexel Burnham Lambert, Ltd. <br> (investment bank) (1986 – 1987)<br>|  |
| **Marguerite A. Piret (74)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2014. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Chief Financial Officer, American Ag <br> Energy, Inc. (controlled environment <br> and agriculture company) (2016 – <br> present); President and Chief Executive <br> Officer, Metric Financial Inc. (formerly <br> known as Newbury Piret Company) <br> (investment banking firm) (1981 – <br> 2019)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director of New <br> America High Income <br> Fund, Inc. (closed-end <br> investment company) <br> (2004 – present); and <br> Member, Board of <br> Governors, Investment <br> Company Institute <br> (2000 – 2006)<br>|
| **Fred J. Ricciardi (76)**<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2014. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Private investor (2020 – present); <br> Consultant (investment company <br> services) (2012 – 2020); Executive Vice <br> President, BNY Mellon (financial and <br> investment company services) (1969 – <br> 2012); Director, BNY International <br> Financing Corp. (financial services) <br> (2002 – 2012); Director, Mellon <br> Overseas Investment Corp. (financial <br> services) (2009 – 2012); Director, <br> Financial Models (technology) <br> (2005-2007); Director, BNY Hamilton <br> Funds, Ireland (offshore investment <br> companies) (2004-2007); <br> Chairman/Director, AIB/BNY <br> Securities Services, Ltd., Ireland <br> (financial services) (1999-2006); <br> Chairman, BNY Alternative Investment <br> Services, Inc. (financial services) <br> (2005-2007)<br>|  |

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name, Age and**<br> **Position Held With the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Term of Office and**<br> **Length of Service**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Principal Occupation(s) During At Least** <br> **The Past Five Years**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Other Directorships**<br> **Held by Trustee During** <br> **At Least The Past Five** <br> **Years**<br>|
| ***Interested Trustees:*** |  |  |  |
| **Lisa M. Jones (60)\*\***<br> Trustee, President and Chief <br> Executive Officer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2017. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director, CEO and President of <br> Amundi US, Inc. (investment <br> management firm) (since September <br> 2014); Director, CEO and President of <br> Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. <br> (since September 2014); Director, CEO <br> and President of Amundi Distributor <br> US, Inc. (since September 2014); <br> Director, CEO and President of <br> Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. <br> (since September 2014); Chair, Amundi <br> US, Inc., Amundi Distributor US, Inc. <br> and Amundi Asset Management US, <br> Inc. (September 2014 – 2018); <br> Managing Director, Morgan Stanley <br> Investment Management (investment <br> management firm) (2010 – 2013); <br> Director of Institutional Business, CEO <br> of International, Eaton Vance <br> Management (investment management <br> firm) (2005 – 2010); Director of <br> Amundi Holdings US, Inc. (since 2017)<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director of Clearwater <br> Analytics (provider of <br> web-based investment <br> accounting software <br> for reporting and <br> reconciliation services) <br> (September 2022 – <br> present)<br>|
| **Kenneth J. Taubes (64)\*\***<br> Trustee<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Trustee since 2014. Serves <br> until a successor trustee is <br> elected or earlier <br> retirement or removal<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director and Executive Vice President <br> (since 2008) and Chief Investment <br> Officer, U.S. (since 2010) of Amundi <br> US, Inc. (investment management <br> firm); Director and Executive Vice <br> President and Chief Investment Officer, <br> U.S. of Amundi US (since 2008); <br> Executive Vice President and Chief <br> Investment Officer, U.S. of Amundi <br> Asset Management US, Inc. (since <br> 2009); Portfolio Manager of Amundi <br> US (since 1999); Director of Amundi <br> Holdings US, Inc. (since 2017)<br>|  |
| ***Fund Officers:*** |  |  |  |
| **Christopher J. Kelley (58)**<br> Secretary and Chief Legal <br> Officer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2014. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Vice President and Associate General <br> Counsel of Amundi US since January <br> 2008; Secretary and Chief Legal Officer <br> of all of the Pioneer Funds since June <br> 2010; Assistant Secretary of all of the <br> Pioneer Funds from September 2003 to <br> May 2010; Vice President and Senior <br> Counsel of Amundi US from July 2002 <br> to December 2007<br>|  |
| **Thomas Reyes (60)**<br> Assistant Secretary<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2014. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Assistant General Counsel of Amundi <br> US since May 2013 and Assistant <br> Secretary of all the Pioneer Funds since <br> June 2010; Counsel of Amundi US <br> from June 2007 to May 2013<br>|  |
| **Heather L. Melito-Dezan** <br> **(46)**<br> Assistant Secretary<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2022. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director - Trustee and Board <br> Relationships of Amundi US since <br> September 2019; Private practice from <br> 2017 – 2019.<br>|  |

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name, Age and**<br> **Position Held With the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Term of Office and**<br> **Length of Service**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Principal Occupation(s) During At Least** <br> **The Past Five Years**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Other Directorships**<br> **Held by Trustee During** <br> **At Least The Past Five** <br> **Years**<br>|
| **Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. (59)**<br> Treasurer and Chief Financial <br> and Accounting Officer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2021. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Managing Director, Chief Operations <br> Officer and Fund Treasurer of Amundi <br> US since May 2021; Treasurer of all of <br> the Pioneer Funds since May 2021; <br> Assistant Treasurer of all of the Pioneer <br> Funds from January 2021 to May 2021; <br> and Chief of Staff, US Investment <br> Management of Amundi US from May <br> 2008 to January 2021<br>|  |
| **Luis I. Presutti (57)**<br> Assistant Treasurer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2014. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director – Fund Treasury of Amundi <br> US since 1999; and Assistant Treasurer <br> of all of the Pioneer Funds since 1999<br>|  |
| **Gary Sullivan (64)**<br> Assistant Treasurer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2014. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Senior Manager – Fund Treasury of <br> Amundi US since 2012; and Assistant <br> Treasurer of all of the Pioneer Funds <br> since 2002<br>|  |
| **Antonio Furtado (40)**<br> Assistant Treasurer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2020. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Fund Oversight Manager – Fund <br> Treasury of Amundi US since 2020; <br> Assistant Treasurer of all of the Pioneer <br> Funds since 2020; and Senior Fund <br> Treasury Analyst from 2012 - 2020<br>|  |
| **Michael Melnick (52)**<br> Assistant Treasurer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2021. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Vice President - Deputy Fund <br> Treasurer of Amundi US since May <br> 2021; Assistant Treasurer of all of the <br> Pioneer Funds since July 2021; Director <br> of Regulatory Reporting of Amundi US <br> from 2001 – 2021; and Director of Tax <br> of Amundi US from 2000 - 2001<br>|  |
| **John Malone (52)**<br> Chief Compliance Officer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2018. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Managing Director, Chief Compliance <br> Officer of Amundi US Asset <br> Management; Amundi Asset <br> Management US, Inc.; and the Pioneer <br> Funds since September 2018; Chief <br> Compliance Officer of Amundi <br> Distributor US, Inc. since January 2014.<br>|  |
| **Brandon Austin (51)**<br> Anti-Money Laundering <br> Officer<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Since 2022. Serves at the <br> discretion of the Board<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Director, Financial Security – Amundi <br> Asset Management; Anti-Money <br> Laundering Officer of all the Pioneer <br> Funds since March 2022: Director of <br> Financial Security of Amundi US since <br> July 2021; Vice President, Head of BSA, <br> AML and OFAC, Deputy Compliance <br> Manager, Crédit Agricole Indosuez <br> Wealth Management (investment <br> management firm) (2013 – 2021)<br>|  |

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\*

Mr. Baumgardner is Of Counsel to Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, which acts as counsel to the Independent Trustees of each Pioneer Fund.

\*\*

Ms. Jones and Mr. Taubes are Interested Trustees because they are officers or directors of the fund's investment adviser and certain of its affiliates.

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**Board committees** 

The Board of Trustees is responsible for overseeing the fund's management and operations. The Chairman of the Board is an Independent Trustee. Independent Trustees constitute more than 75% of the Board. During the most recent fiscal year, the Board of Trustees held 6 meetings. Each Trustee attended at least 75% of such meetings.

The Trustees were selected to join the Board based upon the following as to each Board member: such person's character and integrity; such person's judgment, analytical ability, intelligence, and common sense; such person's experience and previous profit and not-for-profit board membership; such person's demonstrated willingness to take an independent and questioning stance toward management; such person's willingness and ability to commit the time necessary to perform the duties of a Trustee; as to each Independent Trustee, his or her status as not being an "interested person" as defined under the 1940 Act; and, as to Ms. Jones and Mr. Taubes, their association with Amundi US. Each Trustee also serves on the Boards of Trustees of other exchange-listed closed-end funds, closed-end interval funds, and open-end funds, all part of the Pioneer Funds complex, and has substantial experience protecting fund shareholders' interests. Each of the Independent Trustees also was selected to join the Board based on the criteria and principles set forth in the Charter of the Trust's Governance and Nominating Committee. In evaluating a Trustee's prospective service on the Board, the Trustee's experience in, and ongoing contributions toward, overseeing the fund's business as a Trustee also are considered.

In addition, the following specific experience, qualifications, attributes and/or skills apply as to each Trustee: Mr. Baumgardner, legal, investment management, business and public company experience as an attorney practicing investment management, corporate and securities law and experience as a board member of other organizations; Ms. Durnin, investment management and investment company experience as an executive officer of an investment adviser; Mr. Friedman, academic leadership, economic and finance experience and investment company board experience; Mr. MacKay, investment, financial and business experience as a partner in an investment banking firm and experience as a board member of other organizations; Ms. Monchak, investment, financial and business experience, including as the chief investment officer of a pension fund; Mr. Perna, accounting, financial, and business experience as an executive officer and experience as a board member of other organizations; Ms. Piret, accounting, financial and entrepreneurial experience as an executive, valuation experience and investment company board experience; Mr. Ricciardi, financial, business and investment company experience as an executive officer of a financial and investment company services organization, and experience as a board member of offshore investment companies and other organizations; Ms. Jones, investment management experience as an executive and leadership roles with Amundi US and its affiliates; and Mr. Taubes, portfolio management experience and leadership roles with Amundi US. However, in its periodic assessment of the effectiveness of the Board, the Board considers the complementary skills and experience of individual Trustees primarily in the broader context of the Board's overall composition so that the Board, as a body, possesses the appropriate (and appropriately diverse) skills and experience to oversee the business of the fund.

The Trust's Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust provides that the appointment, designation (including in any proxy or registration statement or other document) of a Trustee as an expert on any topic or in any area, or as having experience, attributes or skills in any area, or any other appointment, designation or identification, shall not impose on that person any standard of care or liability that is greater than that imposed on that person as a Trustee in the absence of the appointment, designation or identification, and no Trustee who has special attributes, skills, experience or expertise, or is appointed, designated, or identified as aforesaid, shall be held to a higher standard of care by virtue thereof.

The Board of Trustees has five standing committees: the Independent Trustees Committee, the Audit Committee, the Governance and Nominating Committee, the Policy Administration Committee and the Valuation Committee. Each committee is chaired by an Independent Trustee and all members of each committee are Independent Trustees.

The Chairs of the committees work with the Chairman of the Board and fund management in setting the agendas for Board meetings. The Chairs of the committees set the agendas for committee meetings with input from fund management. As noted below, through the committees, the Independent Trustees consider and address important matters involving the fund, including those presenting conflicts or potential conflicts of interest for management. The Independent Trustees also regularly meet without the presence of management and are advised by independent legal counsel. The Board believes that the committee structure, and delegation to the committees of specified oversight responsibilities,

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help the Board more effectively to provide governance and oversight of the fund's affairs. Mr. Perna, Chairman of the Board, is a member of each committee except the Audit Committee and the Valuation Committee, of each of which he is a non-voting, ex-officio member.

During the most recent fiscal year, the Independent Trustees, Audit, Governance and Nominating, Policy Administration, and Valuation Committees held 7, 5, 4, 4 and 4 meetings, respectively.

**Independent Trustees Committee** 

John E. Baumgardner, Jr., Diane Durnin, Benjamin M. Friedman, Craig C. MacKay, Lorraine H. Monchak, Thomas J. Perna (Chair), Marguerite A. Piret and Fred J. Ricciardi.

The Independent Trustees Committee is comprised of all of the Independent Trustees. The Independent Trustees Committee serves as the forum for consideration of a number of issues required to be considered separately by the Independent Trustees under the 1940 Act, including the assessment and review of the fund's advisory agreement and other related party contracts. The Independent Trustees Committee also considers issues that the Independent Trustees believe it is advisable for them to consider separately from the Interested Trustees.

**Audit Committee** 

Benjamin M. Friedman, Craig C. MacKay, Lorraine H. Monchak and Fred J. Ricciardi (Chair).

The Audit Committee, among other things, oversees the accounting and financial reporting policies and practices of the fund, oversees the quality and integrity of the fund's financial statements, approves, and recommends to the Independent Trustees for their ratification, the engagement of the fund's independent registered public accounting firm, reviews and evaluates the accounting firm's qualifications, independence and performance, and approves the compensation of the accounting firm. The Audit Committee also approves all audit and permissible non-audit services provided to the fund by the fund's accounting firm and all permissible non-audit services provided by the fund's accounting firm to Amundi US and any affiliated service providers of the fund if the engagement relates directly to the fund's operations and financial reporting.

**Governance and Nominating Committee** 

John E. Baumgardner, Jr. (Chair), Diane Durnin, and Thomas J. Perna.

The Governance and Nominating Committee considers governance matters affecting the Board and the fund. Among other responsibilities, the Governance and Nominating Committee reviews the performance of the Independent Trustees as a whole, and reviews and recommends to the Independent Trustees Committee any appropriate changes concerning, among other things, the size and composition of the Board, the Board's committee structure and the Independent Trustees' compensation. The Governance and Nominating Committee also makes recommendations to the Independent Trustees Committee or the Board on matters delegated to it.

In addition, the Governance and Nominating Committee screens potential candidates for Independent Trustees. Among other responsibilities, the Governance and Nominating Committee reviews periodically the criteria for Independent Trustees and the spectrum of desirable experience, expertise and characteristics for Independent Trustees as a whole, and reviews periodically the qualifications and requisite skills of persons currently serving as Independent Trustees and being considered for re-nomination. The Governance and Nominating Committee also reviews the qualifications of any person nominated to serve on the Board by a shareholder or recommended by any Trustee, management or another person and makes a recommendation as to the qualifications of such nominated or recommended person to the Independent Trustees and the Board, and reviews periodically the Committee's procedure, if any, regarding candidates submitted by shareholders. The Governance and Nominating Committee also strives to achieve diversity of the Board of Trustees with respect to attributes such as race, ethnicity, gender, cultural background, and professional experience when reviewing candidates for any Board vacancies. The Governance and Nominating Committee does not have specific, minimum qualifications for nominees, nor has it established specific qualities or skills that it regards as necessary for one or more of the Independent Trustees to possess (other than qualities or skills that may be required by applicable law or regulation). However, in evaluating a person as a potential nominee to serve as an Independent Trustee, the Governance and Nominating Committee will consider the following general criteria and principles, among any others that it may deem relevant:

• whether the person has a reputation for integrity, honesty and adherence to high ethical standards;

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

• whether the person has demonstrated business acumen and ability to exercise sound judgments in matters that relate to the current and long-term objectives of the fund and whether the person is willing and able to contribute positively to the decision-making process of the fund;

• whether the person has a commitment and ability to devote the necessary time and energy to be an effective Independent Trustee, to understand the fund and the responsibilities of a trustee of an investment company;

• whether the person has the ability to understand the sometimes conflicting interests of the fund and the management company, and to act in the interests of the fund;

• whether the person has, or appears to have a conflict of interest that would impair his or her ability to represent the interests of all shareholders and to fulfill the responsibilities of a trustee;

• that nominees shall not be discriminated against on the basis of race, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, disability or any other basis proscribed by law;

• that nominees should have, or be willing to acquire, an appreciation and understanding for the oversight of publicly offered investment companies and the management, administration and distribution services provided by service providers to the companies and their shareholders, and the regulatory context within which these activities are carried out;

• that nominees should have a collegial, collaborative approach: people who will work efficiently, effectively and in the spirit of candor and respect for fellow board members and the staffs of the service providers;

• that nominees should have the willingness and ability to serve on appropriate committees, and contribute to and engage meaningfully in the deliberations thereof; and

• that nominees should be committed to diversity and inclusion among Board members.

The Governance and Nominating Committee also will consider whether the nominee has the experience or skills that the Governance and Nominating Committee believes would maintain or enhance the effectiveness of the Independent Trustees' oversight of the fund's affairs, based on the then current composition and skills of the Independent Trustees and experience or skills that may be appropriate in light of changing business conditions and regulatory or other developments. The Governance and Nominating Committee does not necessarily place the same emphasis on each criterion.

The Governance and Nominating Committee does not have a formal policy for considering trustee nominees submitted by the fund's shareholders. Nonetheless, the Nominating Committee may, on an informal basis, consider any shareholder recommendations of nominees that it receives. Shareholders who wish to recommend a nominee should send recommendations to the Trust's Secretary that include all information relating to such persons that is required to be included in solicitations of proxies for the election of trustees.

**Policy Administration Committee** 

Thomas J. Perna (Chair), John E. Baumgardner, Jr., Diane Durnin, and Marguerite A. Piret.

The Policy Administration Committee, among other things, oversees and monitors the fund's compliance with legal and regulatory requirements that are not directly related to financial reporting, internal financial controls, independent audits or the performance of the fund's internal audit function. The Policy Administration Committee also oversees the adoption and implementation of certain of the fund's policies and procedures.

**Valuation Committee** 

Benjamin M. Friedman, Craig C. MacKay, Lorraine H. Monchak, Marguerite A. Piret (Chair), and Fred J. Ricciardi.

The Valuation Committee, among other things, reviews the reports and other information provided to the Committee by Amundi US, as the valuation designee of the fund, and assists the Board in the oversight of Amundi US as the valuation designee of the fund.

**Oversight of risk management** 

Consistent with its responsibility for oversight of the fund in the interests of shareholders, the Board of Trustees has established a framework for the oversight of various risks relating to the fund, including the oversight of the identification of risks and the management of certain identified risks. The Board has delegated certain aspects of its risk oversight

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responsibilities to the committees, but relies primarily on Amundi US and its affiliates for the identification and management or mitigation of risks relating to their management activities on behalf of the fund, as well as to oversee and advise the Board on the risks that may arise relating to the activities of other fund service providers.

The fund faces a number of risks, such as investment risk, counterparty risk, valuation risk, enterprise risk, reputational risk, cybersecurity risk, risk of operational failure or lack of business continuity, and legal, compliance and regulatory risk. The goal of risk management is to identify and address risks, i.e., events or circumstances that could have material adverse effects on the business, operations, shareholder services, investment performance or reputation of the fund.

Most of the fund's investment management and business operations are carried out by or through Amundi US, its affiliates, and other service providers (such as the custodian and fund accounting agent and the transfer agent), each of which has an independent interest in risk management but whose policies and the methods by which one or more risk management functions are carried out may differ from the fund's and each other's in the setting of priorities, the resources available or the effectiveness of relevant controls. Operational or other failures, including cybersecurity failures, at any one or more of the fund's service providers could have a material adverse effect on the fund and its shareholders.

Under the overall supervision of the Board or the applicable committee of the Board, Amundi US and the affiliates of Amundi US, or other service providers to the fund, employ a variety of processes, procedures and controls in an effort to identify, address and mitigate risks. Different processes, procedures and controls are employed with respect to different types of risks. Various personnel, including the fund's and Amundi US's chief compliance officer and Amundi US's chief risk officer and director of internal audit, as well as various personnel of Amundi US and of other service providers, make periodic reports to the applicable committee or to the Board with respect to various aspects of risk management. The reports received by the Trustees related to risks typically are summaries of relevant information.

The Trustees recognize that not all risks that may affect the fund can be identified, that it may not be practical or cost-effective to eliminate or mitigate certain risks, that it may be necessary to bear certain risks (such as investment-related risks) to achieve the fund's goals, that the processes, procedures and controls employed to address certain risks may be limited in their effectiveness, and that some risks are simply beyond the control of the fund or Amundi US and its affiliates or other service providers. Because most of the fund's operations are carried out by various service providers, the Board's oversight of the risk management processes of those service providers, including processes to address cybersecurity and other operational failures, is inherently limited. (See "Cybersecurity issues" above.) As a result of the foregoing and other factors, the fund's ability to manage risk is subject to substantial limitations.

It is important to note that the fund is designed for investors that are prepared to accept investment risk, including the possibility that as yet unforeseen risks may emerge in the future.

**Compensation of officers and trustees** 

The Pioneer Funds, including the fund, compensate their Trustees. The Independent Trustees review and set their compensation annually, taking into consideration the committee and other responsibilities assigned to specific Trustees. The table under "Annual Fees, Expense and Other Information" - Compensation of Officers and Trustees" sets forth the compensation paid to each of the Trustees. The compensation paid to the Trustees is then allocated among the funds as follows:

• each fund with assets less than $250 million pays each Independent Trustee an annual fee of $1,000.

• the remaining compensation of the Independent Trustees is allocated to each fund with assets greater than $250 million based on the fund's net assets.

• the Interested Trustees receive an annual fee of $500 from each fund, except in the case of funds with net assets of $50 million or less, which pay each Interested Trustee an annual fee of $200. Amundi US reimburses these funds for the fees paid to the Interested Trustees.

Except for the chief compliance officer, the fund does not pay any salary or other compensation to its officers. The fund pays a portion of the chief compliance officer's compensation for their services as the fund's chief compliance officer. Amundi US pays the remaining portion of the chief compliance officer's compensation.

See "Compensation of Officers and Trustees" in "Annual Fee, Expense and Other Information."

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**Other information** 

The Agreement and Declaration of Trust provides that no Trustee, officer or employee of the fund shall be liable to the fund or any shareholder for any action, failure to act, error or mistake except in cases of bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duty. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust requires the fund to indemnify each Trustee, director, officer, employee and authorized agent to the fullest extent permitted by law against liability and against all expenses reasonably incurred or paid by him in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding in which he becomes involved as a party or otherwise by virtue of his being or having been such a Trustee, director, officer, employee, or agent and against amounts paid or incurred by him in settlement thereof. The 1940 Act currently provides that no officer or director shall be protected from liability to the fund or shareholders for willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties of office. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust extends to Trustees, officers and employees of the fund the full protection from liability that the law allows.

**Material Relationships of the Independent Trustees** 

Mr. Baumgardner, an Independent Trustee, is Of Counsel to Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, which acts as counsel to the Independent Trustees of all of the Pioneer Funds. The aggregate compensation paid to Sullivan & Cromwell LLP by the Pioneer Funds was approximately $626,073 and $404,966 in each of 2021 and 2022.

**Share ownership** 

See "Annual Fee, Expense and Other Information" for information on the ownership of fund shares by the Trustees, the fund's officers and owners in excess of 5% of any class of shares of the fund and a table indicating the value of shares that each Trustee beneficially owns in the fund and in all the Pioneer Funds.

**Proxy voting policies** 

Information regarding how the fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available to shareowners without charge at https://amundi.com/us and on the SEC's website at https://www.sec.gov. The fund's proxy voting policies and procedures are attached as "Appendix B."

**5. Investment adviser and other fund service providers** 

The fund has entered into a management agreement (hereinafter, the "management contract") with Amundi US pursuant to which Amundi US acts as the fund's investment adviser. Amundi US is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Amundi and Amundi's wholly owned subsidiary, Amundi Holdings US, Inc. Prior to January 1, 2021, Amundi US was known as Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.

Amundi is controlled by Credit Agricole S.A., a French credit institution. Credit Agricole S.A. holds approximately 68% of Amundi's share capital. The remaining shares of Amundi are held by institutional and retail investors.

Certain Trustees or officers of the fund are also directors and/or officers of certain of Amundi's subsidiaries (see management biographies above). Amundi US has entered into participating affiliate agreements with certain of its affiliates, including Amundi and certain subsidiaries of Amundi, pursuant to which these affiliates provide services, including investment management and trading services, to Amundi US.

As the fund's investment adviser, Amundi US provides the fund with investment research, advice and supervision and furnishes an investment program for the fund consistent with the fund's investment objective and policies, subject to the supervision of the fund's Trustees. Amundi US determines what portfolio securities will be purchased or sold, arranges for the placing of orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities, selects brokers or dealers to place those orders, maintains books and records with respect to the fund's securities transactions, and reports to the Trustees on the fund's investments and performance.

The management contract will continue in effect for an initial two year period, and thereafter shall continue in effect from year to year provided such continuance is specifically approved at least annually (i) by the Trustees of the fund or by a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the fund (as defined in the 1940 Act), and (ii) in either event, by a majority of the Independent Trustees of the fund, with such Independent Trustees casting votes in person at a meeting called for such purpose.

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The management contract may be terminated without penalty by the Trustees of the fund or by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the fund on not more than 60 days' nor less than 30 days' written notice to Amundi US, or by Amundi US on not less than 90 days' written notice to the fund, and will automatically terminate in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act) by Amundi US. The management contract is not assignable by the fund except with the consent of Amundi US.

The Trustees' approval of and the terms, continuance and termination of the management contract are governed by the 1940 Act. Pursuant to the management contract, Amundi US assumes no responsibility other than to render the services called for under the management contract, in good faith, and Amundi US will not be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss arising out of any investment or for any act or omission in the execution of securities or other transactions for the fund. Amundi US, however, is not protected against liability by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by reason of its reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the management contract. The management contract requires Amundi US to furnish all necessary services, facilities and personnel in connection with the performance of its services under the management contract, and except as specifically stated therein, Amundi US is not responsible for any of the fund's ordinary and extraordinary expenses.

**Advisory fee** 

As compensation for its management services and expenses incurred, the fund pays Amundi US a fee at the annual rate of 1.75% of the fund's average daily net assets up to $1 billion and 1.70% of the fund's average daily net assets over $1 billion. This fee is computed and accrued daily and paid monthly.

**Administration agreement** 

The fund has entered into an administration agreement with Amundi US pursuant to which Amundi US acts as the fund's administrator, performing certain accounting, administration and legal services for the fund. Amundi US is reimbursed for its cost of providing such services. The cost of providing these services is based on direct costs and costs of overhead, subject to review by the Board of Trustees. See "Annual Fee, Expense and Other Information" for fees the fund paid to Amundi US for administration and related services. In addition, The Bank of New York Mellon ("BNY Mellon") performs certain sub-administration services to the fund pursuant to an agreement with Amundi US and the fund.

Under the terms of the administration agreement with the fund, Amundi US pays or reimburses the fund for expenses relating to its services for the fund, with the exception of the following, which are to be paid by the fund: (a) charges and expenses for fund accounting, pricing and appraisal services and related overhead, including, to the extent such services are performed by personnel of Amundi US, or its affiliates, office space and facilities and personnel compensation, training and benefits; (b) the charges and expenses of auditors; (c) the charges and expenses of any custodian, transfer agent, plan agent, dividend disbursing agent and registrar appointed by the fund; (d) issue and transfer taxes, chargeable to the fund in connection with securities transactions to which the fund is a party; (e) insurance premiums, interest charges, dues and fees for membership in trade associations and all taxes and corporate fees payable by the fund to federal, state or other governmental agencies; (f) fees and expenses involved in registering and maintaining registrations of the fund and/or its shares with federal regulatory agencies, state or blue sky securities agencies and foreign jurisdictions, including the preparation of prospectuses and statements of additional information for filing with such regulatory authorities; (g) all expenses of shareholders' and Trustees' meetings and of preparing, printing and distributing prospectuses, notices, proxy statements and all reports to shareholders and to governmental agencies; (h) charges and expenses of legal counsel to the fund and the Trustees; (i) compensation of those Trustees of the fund who are not affiliated with or interested persons of Amundi US, the fund (other than as Trustees), Amundi US, Inc. or the distributor; (j) the cost of preparing and printing share certificates; (k) interest on borrowed money, if any; (l) fees payable by the fund under management agreements and the administration agreement; and (m) extraordinary expenses. The fund shall also assume and pay any other expense that the fund, Amundi US or any other agent of the fund may incur not listed above that is approved by the Board of Trustees (including a majority of the Independent Trustees) as being an appropriate expense of the fund. The fund shall pay all fees and expenses to be paid by the fund under the sub-administration agreement with BNY Mellon. In addition, the fund shall pay all brokers' and underwriting commissions chargeable to the fund in connection with securities transactions to which the fund is a party.

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**Transfer Agent** 

The fund has contracted with BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc., Attention: 534427, 500 Ross Street 154-0520, Pittsburgh, PA 15262, to provide certain transfer agency services for the fund. Under the transfer agency agreement, the fund will reimburse BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc. for its cost of providing such services to the fund. The transfer agency agreement may be terminated by the fund or BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc. (without penalty) at any time upon not less than six (6) month's written notice to the other party to the agreement.

**Custodian and sub-administrator** 

The Bank of New York Mellon ("BNY Mellon"), 225 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10286, is the custodian of the fund's assets. The custodian's responsibilities include safekeeping and controlling the fund's cash and securities, handling the receipt and delivery of securities, and collecting interest and dividends on the fund's investments.

BNY Mellon also performs certain fund accounting and fund administration services for the Pioneer Fund complex, including the fund. For performing such services, BNY Mellon receives fees based on complex-wide assets.

**Independent registered public accounting firm** 

Ernst & Young LLP, 200 Clarendon Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5072, independent registered public accounting firm, provides audit services, tax return review services, and assistance and consultation with respect to filings with the SEC for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2022.

**Potential conflicts of interest** 

The fund is managed by Amundi US, which also serves as investment adviser to other Pioneer mutual funds and other accounts (including separate accounts and unregistered products) with investment objectives identical or similar to those of the fund. Securities frequently meet the investment objectives of the fund, the other Pioneer mutual funds and such other accounts. In such cases, the decision to recommend a purchase to one fund or account rather than another is based on a number of factors. The determining factors in most cases are the amount of securities of the issuer then outstanding, the value of those securities and the market for them. Other factors considered in the investment recommendations include other investments which each fund or account presently has in a particular industry and the availability of investment funds in each fund or account.

It is possible that at times identical securities will be held by more than one fund and/or account. However, positions in the same issue may vary and the length of time that any fund or account may choose to hold its investment in the same issue may likewise vary. To the extent that more than one of the Pioneer mutual funds or a private account managed by Amundi US seeks to acquire the same security at about the same time, the fund may not be able to acquire as large a position in such security as it desires or it may have to pay a higher price for the security. Similarly, the fund may not be able to obtain as large an execution of an order to sell or as high a price for any particular portfolio security if Amundi US decides to sell on behalf of another account the same portfolio security at the same time. On the other hand, if the same securities are bought or sold at the same time by more than one fund or account, the resulting participation in volume transactions could produce better executions for the fund. In the event more than one account purchases or sells the same security on a given date, the purchases and sales will normally be made as nearly as practicable on a pro rata basis in proportion to the amounts desired to be purchased or sold by each account. Although the other Pioneer mutual funds may have the same or similar investment objectives and policies as the fund, their portfolios do not generally consist of the same investments as the fund or each other, and their performance results are likely to differ from those of the fund.

Amundi US has adopted compliance policies and procedures designed to address these potential conflicts of interest, including policies that govern, among other practices, the aggregation and allocation of trades among clients, brokerage allocations, cross trades and best execution.

**Personal securities transactions** 

The fund, Amundi US, and Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (the "Distributor") have adopted a code of ethics under Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act which is applicable to officers, trustees/directors and designated employees of Amundi US and certain of Amundi US's affiliates. The code permits such persons to engage in personal securities transactions

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for their own accounts, including securities that may be purchased or held by the fund, and is designed to prescribe means reasonably necessary to prevent conflicts of interest from arising in connection with personal securities transactions. The code is on public file with and available from the SEC.

**6. Portfolio management**

**Additional information about the portfolio managers** 

**Other accounts managed by the portfolio managers** 

The table below indicates, for the portfolio managers of the fund, information about the accounts other than the fund over which the portfolio manager has day-to-day investment responsibility. All information on the number of accounts and total assets in the table is as of October 31, 2022. For purposes of the table, "Other Pooled Investment Vehicles" may include investment partnerships, undertakings for collective investments in transferable securities ("UCITS") and other non-U.S. investment funds and group trusts, and "Other Accounts" may include separate accounts for institutions or individuals, insurance company general or separate accounts, pension funds and other similar institutional accounts but generally do not include the portfolio manager's personal investment accounts or those which the manager may be deemed to own beneficially under the code of ethics. Certain funds and other accounts managed by the portfolio manager may have substantially similar investment strategies.

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| | | | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name of**<br> **Portfolio Manager**<br>| **Type of Account** | **Number of**<br> **Accounts**<br> **Managed**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Total Assets**<br> **Managed (000's)**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Number of**<br> **Accounts**<br> **Managed for**<br> **which Advisory**<br> **Fee is**<br> **Performance-**<br> **Based**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Assets**<br> **Managed** <br> **for which**<br> **Advisory**<br> **Fee is**<br> **Performance-**<br> **Based (000's)**<br>|
| Chin Liu | Other Registered Investment Companies | 2 | $137909 | N/A | N/A |
|  | Other Pooled Investment Vehicles | 1 | $12823 | N/A | N/A |
|  | Other Accounts | 0 | $0 | N/A | N/A |
| Campbell Brown | &nbsp;&nbsp; Other Registered<br> Investment Companies<br>| 1 | $100 | N/A | N/A |
|  | Other Pooled Investment Vehicles | 1 | $12823 | N/A | N/A |
|  | Other Accounts | 0 | $0 | N/A | N/A |

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**Potential conflicts of interest** 

When a portfolio manager is responsible for the management of more than one account, the potential arises for the portfolio manager to favor one account over another. The principal types of potential conflicts of interest that may arise are discussed below. For the reasons outlined below, Amundi US does not believe that any material conflicts are likely to arise out of a portfolio manager's responsibility for the management of the fund as well as one or more other accounts. Although Amundi US has adopted procedures that it believes are reasonably designed to detect and prevent violations of the federal securities laws and to mitigate the potential for conflicts of interest to affect its portfolio management decisions, there can be no assurance that all conflicts will be identified or that all procedures will be effective in mitigating the potential for such risks. Generally, the risks of such conflicts of interest are increased to the extent that a portfolio manager has a financial incentive to favor one account over another. Amundi US has structured its compensation arrangements in a manner that is intended to limit such potential for conflicts of interest. See "Compensation of Portfolio Manager" below.

• A portfolio manager could favor one account over another in allocating new investment opportunities that have limited supply, such as initial public offerings and private placements. If, for example, an initial public offering that was expected to appreciate in value significantly shortly after the offering was allocated to a single account, that account may be expected to have better investment performance than other accounts that did not receive an allocation of the initial public offering. Generally, investments for which there is limited availability are allocated based upon a range of factors including available cash and consistency with the accounts' investment objectives and policies. This allocation methodology necessarily involves some subjective elements but is intended over time

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to treat each client in an equitable and fair manner. Generally, the investment opportunity is allocated among participating accounts on a pro rata basis. Although Amundi US believes that its practices are reasonably designed to treat each client in an equitable and fair manner, there may be instances where a fund may not participate, or may participate to a lesser degree than other clients, in the allocation of an investment opportunity.

• A portfolio manager could favor one account over another in the order in which trades for the accounts are placed. If a portfolio manager determines to purchase a security for more than one account in an aggregate amount that may influence the market price of the security, accounts that purchased or sold the security first may receive a more favorable price than accounts that made subsequent transactions. The less liquid the market for the security or the greater the percentage that the proposed aggregate purchases or sales represent of average daily trading volume, the greater the potential for accounts that make subsequent purchases or sales to receive a less favorable price. When a portfolio manager intends to trade the same security on the same day for more than one account, the trades typically are "bunched," which means that the trades for the individual accounts are aggregated and each account receives the same price. There are some types of accounts as to which bunching may not be possible for contractual reasons (such as directed brokerage arrangements). Circumstances may also arise where the trader believes that bunching the orders may not result in the best possible price. Where those accounts or circumstances are involved, Amundi US will place the order in a manner intended to result in as favorable a price as possible for such client.

• A portfolio manager could favor an account if the portfolio manager's compensation is tied to the performance of that account to a greater degree than other accounts managed by the portfolio manager. If, for example, the portfolio manager receives a bonus based upon the performance of certain accounts relative to a benchmark while other accounts are disregarded for this purpose, the portfolio manager will have a financial incentive to seek to have the accounts that determine the portfolio manager's bonus achieve the best possible performance to the possible detriment of other accounts. Similarly, if Amundi US receives a performance-based advisory fee, the portfolio manager may favor that account, whether or not the performance of that account directly determines the portfolio manager's compensation.

• A portfolio manager could favor an account if the portfolio manager has a beneficial interest in the account, in order to benefit a large client or to compensate a client that had poor returns. For example, if the portfolio manager held an interest in an investment partnership that was one of the accounts managed by the portfolio manager, the portfolio manager would have an economic incentive to favor the account in which the portfolio manager held an interest.

• If the different accounts have materially and potentially conflicting investment objectives or strategies, a conflict of interest could arise. For example, if a portfolio manager purchases a security for one account and sells the same security for another account, such trading pattern may disadvantage either the account that is long or short. In making portfolio manager assignments, Amundi US seeks to avoid such potentially conflicting situations. However, where a portfolio manager is responsible for accounts with differing investment objectives and policies, it is possible that the portfolio manager will conclude that it is in the best interest of one account to sell a portfolio security while another account continues to hold or increase the holding in such security.

**Compensation of portfolio managers** 

Amundi US has adopted a system of compensation for portfolio managers that seeks to align the financial interests of the portfolio managers with those of shareholders of the accounts (including Pioneer funds) the portfolio managers manage, as well as with the financial performance of Amundi US. The compensation program for all Amundi US portfolio managers includes a base salary (determined by the rank and tenure of the employee) and an annual bonus program, as well as customary benefits that are offered generally to all full-time employees. Base compensation is fixed and normally reevaluated on an annual basis. Amundi US seeks to set base compensation at market rates, taking into account the experience and responsibilities of the portfolio manager. The bonus plan is intended to provide a competitive level of annual bonus compensation that is tied to the portfolio manager achieving superior investment performance and align the interests of the investment professional with those of shareholders, as well as with the financial performance of Amundi US. Any bonus under the plan is completely discretionary, with a maximum annual bonus that may be in excess of base salary. The annual bonus is based upon a combination of the following factors:

• **Quantitative investment performance.** The quantitative investment performance calculation is based on pre-tax investment performance of all of the accounts managed by the portfolio manager (which includes the fund

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and any other accounts managed by the portfolio manager) over a one-year period (20% weighting) and four-year period (80% weighting), measured for periods ending on December 31. The accounts, which include the fund, are ranked against a group of mutual funds with similar investment objectives and investment focus (60%) and a broad-based securities market index measuring the performance of the same type of securities in which the accounts invest (40%), which, in the case of the fund, is the ICE Bank of America 3-Month U.S. Treasury Bill Index. As a result of these two benchmarks, the performance of the portfolio manager for compensation purposes is measured against the criteria that are relevant to the portfolio manager's competitive universe.

• **Qualitative performance.** The qualitative performance component with respect to all of the accounts managed by the portfolio manager includes objectives, such as effectiveness in the areas of teamwork, leadership, communications and marketing, that are mutually established and evaluated by each portfolio manager and management.

• **Amundi US results and business line results.** Amundi US's financial performance, as well as the investment performance of its investment management group, affect a portfolio manager's actual bonus by a leverage factor of plus or minus (+/–) a predetermined percentage.

The quantitative and qualitative performance components comprise 80% and 20%, respectively, of the overall bonus calculation (on a pre-adjustment basis). A portion of the annual bonus is deferred for a specified period and may be invested in one or more Pioneer funds.

Certain portfolio managers participate in other programs designed to reward and retain key contributors. Portfolio managers also may participate in a deferred compensation program, whereby deferred amounts are invested in one or more Pioneer funds or collective investment trusts or other unregistered funds with similar investment objectives, strategies and policies.

**Share ownership by portfolio managers** 

The following table indicates as of October 31, 2022 the value, within the indicated range, of shares beneficially owned by the portfolio managers of the fund.

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **Name of Portfolio Manager** | &nbsp;&nbsp; **Beneficial Ownership** <br> **of the Fund\***<br>|
| Chin Liu | E |
| Campbell Brown | C |

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Key to Dollar Ranges

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A. None

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;B. $1 – $10,000

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;C. $10,001 – $50,000

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;D. $50,001 – $100,000

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;E. $100,001 – $500,000

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;F. $500,001 – $1,000,000

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;G. Over $1,000,000

**7. Portfolio transactions**

All orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on behalf of the fund by Amundi US pursuant to authority contained in the fund's management contract. Securities purchased and sold on behalf of the fund normally will be traded in the over-the-counter market on a net basis (i.e. without commission) through dealers acting for their own account and not as brokers or otherwise through transactions directly with the issuer of the instrument. The cost of securities purchased from underwriters includes an underwriter's commission or concession, and the prices at which securities are purchased and sold from and to dealers include a dealer's markup or markdown. Amundi US normally seeks to deal directly with the primary market makers unless, in its opinion, better prices are available elsewhere. Amundi US seeks to obtain overall best execution on portfolio trades. The price of securities and any commission rate paid are always factors, but frequently not the only factors, in judging best execution. In selecting brokers or dealers, Amundi US considers various relevant factors, including, but not limited to, the size and type of the transaction; the nature and character of the markets for the security to be purchased or

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sold; the execution efficiency, settlement capability and financial condition of the dealer; the dealer's execution services rendered on a continuing basis; and the reasonableness of any dealer spreads. Transactions in non-U.S. equity securities are executed by broker-dealers in non-U.S. countries in which commission rates may not be negotiable (as such rates are in the U.S.).

Amundi US may select broker-dealers that provide brokerage and/or research services to the fund and/or other investment companies or other accounts managed by Amundi US over which it or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. In addition, consistent with Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, if Amundi US determines in good faith that the amount of commissions charged by a broker-dealer is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by such broker, the fund may pay commissions to such broker-dealer in an amount greater than the amount another firm may charge. Such services may include advice concerning the value of securities; the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities; the availability of securities or the purchasers or sellers of securities; providing stock quotation services, credit rating service information and comparative fund statistics; furnishing analyses, electronic information services, manuals and reports concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy, and performance of accounts and particular investment decisions; and effecting securities transactions and performing functions incidental thereto (such as clearance and settlement). Amundi US maintains a listing of broker-dealers who provide such services on a regular basis. However, because many transactions on behalf of the fund and other investment companies or accounts managed by Amundi US are placed with broker-dealers (including broker-dealers on the listing) without regard to the furnishing of such services, it is not possible to estimate the proportion of such transactions directed to such dealers solely because such services were provided. Amundi US believes that no exact dollar value can be calculated for such services.

The research received from broker-dealers may be useful to Amundi US in rendering investment management services to the fund as well as other investment companies or other accounts managed by Amundi US, although not all such research may be useful to the fund. Conversely, such information provided by brokers or dealers who have executed transaction orders on behalf of such other accounts may be useful to Amundi US in carrying out its obligations to the fund. The receipt of such research enables Amundi US to avoid the additional expenses that might otherwise be incurred if it were to attempt to develop comparable information through its own staff.

The fund may participate in third-party brokerage and/or expense offset arrangements to reduce the fund's total operating expenses. Pursuant to third-party brokerage arrangements, the fund may incur lower expenses by directing brokerage to third-party broker-dealers which have agreed to use part of their commission to pay the fund's fees to service providers unaffiliated with Amundi US or other expenses. Since the commissions paid to the third party brokers reflect a commission cost that the fund would generally expect to incur on its brokerage transactions but not necessarily the lowest possible commission, this arrangement is intended to reduce the fund's operating expenses without increasing the cost of its brokerage commissions. Since use of such directed brokerage is subject to the requirement to achieve best execution in connection with the fund's brokerage transactions, there can be no assurance that such arrangements will be utilized. Pursuant to expense offset arrangements, the fund may incur lower transfer agency expenses due to interest earned on cash held with the transfer agent.

The Board of Trustees periodically reviews Amundi US's performance of its responsibilities in connection with the placement of portfolio transactions on behalf of the fund.

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**8. Purchase of shares; Repurchase of shares** 

**Purchase of shares.** The fund's shares are not listed and the fund does not currently intend to list its shares for trading on any securities exchange, and does not anticipate that a secondary market will develop for its shares. Neither Amundi US, nor the fund's distributor, Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (the "Distributor"), intends to make a market in the fund's shares.

Shares are offered on a continuous basis at their net asset value per share. During any continuous offering, shares may be purchased through the Distributor. The Distributor acts as the distributor of the shares of the fund on a best efforts basis, subject to various conditions, pursuant to the terms of a distributor's contract with the fund. The Distributor is not obligated to sell any specific amount of shares of the fund. The fund has authorized one or more intermediaries (e.g., brokers, investment advisers, etc. (collectively, "Intermediaries")) to receive orders on its behalf. Such Intermediaries are authorized to designate other Intermediaries to receive orders on the fund's behalf. The fund will be deemed to have received an order when an authorized broker or, if applicable, a broker's authorized designee, receives the order. The shares will be offered at the net asset value per share calculated each regular business day.

Any continuous offering may be discontinued at any time. The fund and the Distributor will have the sole right to accept orders to purchase shares and reserve the right to reject any order in whole or in part.

Initial purchases are subject to the minimums stated in the prospectus, except that Amundi US or the Distributor may waive these minimum investment requirements in its sole discretion.

As stated in the prospectus, the fund generally expects to accept orders to purchase shares on a quarterly basis. However, the fund's ability to accept offers to purchase shares after the initial offering period may be limited, including during periods when, in the judgment of Amundi US, appropriate investments for the fund are not available.

**Share Repurchase.** In order to provide some liquidity to shareholders, the fund will make periodic offers to repurchase between 5% and 25% of its outstanding shares at net asset value, pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act. There is no guarantee that the fund will offer to repurchase more than 5% of its outstanding shares in any repurchase offer, and there is no guarantee that you will be able to sell shares in an amount or at the time that you desire. It is also possible that a repurchase offer may be oversubscribed, in which case shareholders may only be able to have a portion of their shares repurchased. In the event a repurchase offer by the fund is oversubscribed, the fund may repurchase, but is not required to repurchase, additional shares up to a maximum amount of 2% of the outstanding shares of the fund. If the fund determines not to repurchase additional shares beyond the repurchase offer amount, or if shareholders submit for repurchase an amount of shares greater than that which the fund is entitled to repurchase, the fund will repurchase the shares submitted for repurchase on a pro rata basis. The fund intends to offer its shares in a continuous offering at net asset value. There can be no assurance that the fund will continue to offer its shares on a continuous basis or if so offered, that it will do so indefinitely.

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**9. Pricing of shares**

The net asset value per share of each class of the fund is determined as of the scheduled close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on each day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading. As of the date of this statement of additional information, the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading every weekday except for the days the following holidays are observed: New Year's Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

Ordinarily, investments in debt securities and certain derivative instruments are valued on the basis of information furnished by independent third party pricing services which utilize primarily a matrix system (which reflects such factors as security prices, yields, maturities and ratings) or other fair value methods or technologies to provide an estimated value of the security or instrument, supplemented by dealer and exchange quotations. Senior loans are valued at the mean between the last available bid and asked prices for one or more brokers or dealers as obtained from an independent third party pricing service. Senior loans for which no reliable prices are available will be valued by an independent third party pricing service through the use of a pricing matrix or other fair value methods or techniques. Event linked bonds are valued at the bid price obtained from an independent third party pricing service. Other insurance-linked securities may be valued at the bid price obtained from an independent third party pricing service, or through a third party using a pricing matrix, insurance industry valuation models, or other fair value methods or techniques to provide an estimated value of the instrument. Other securities are valued at the last sale price on the principal exchange or market where they are traded. Securities which have not traded on the date of valuation or securities for which sales prices are not generally reported are valued at the mean between the current bid and asked prices.

Securities quoted in foreign currencies are converted to U.S. dollars utilizing foreign exchange rates employed by the fund's independent pricing services. Generally, trading in non U.S. securities is substantially completed each day at various times prior to the close of regular trading on the Exchange. The values of such securities used in computing the net asset value of the fund's shares are determined as of such times. Foreign currency exchange rates are also generally determined prior to the close of regular trading on the Exchange. Occasionally, events which affect the values of such securities and such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they are determined and the close of regular trading on the Exchange and will therefore not be reflected in the computation of the fund's net asset value. International securities markets may be open on days when the U.S. markets are closed. For this reason, the value of any international securities owned by the fund could change on a day you cannot buy or sell shares of the fund.

When prices determined using the foregoing methods are not available or are considered by Amundi US to be unreliable, the fund uses fair value methods to value its securities in accordance with procedures approved by the fund's trustees. The fund also may use fair value pricing methods to value its securities, including a non-U.S. security, when Amundi US determines that prices determined using the foregoing methods no longer accurately reflect the value of the security due to factors affecting one or more relevant securities markets or the specific issuer. Valuing securities using fair value methods may cause the net asset value of the fund's shares to differ from the net asset value that would be calculated using closing market prices. In connection with making fair value determinations of the value of fixed income securities, the fund may use a pricing matrix. The prices used for these securities may differ from the amounts received by the fund upon sale of the securities, and these differences may be substantial.

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**10. Description of shares**

The fund currently offers one class of common shares. When issued and paid for in accordance with the terms of the prospectus and statement of additional information, shares of the fund are fully paid and non-assessable. Shares will remain on deposit with the fund's transfer agent and certificates will not normally be issued. The Trust reserves the right to create and issue additional series or classes of shares, in which case the shares of each class of a series would participate equally in the earnings, dividends and assets allocable to that class of the particular series. Upon liquidation of the fund, shareholders of a class of the fund are entitled to share pro rata in the fund's net assets allocable to such class available for distribution to shareholders.

*The Trust.* The fund is a series of Pioneer ILS Interval Fund. The Trust's operations are governed by the Declaration of Trust, dated as of January 12, 2016 (referred to in this section as the declaration). A copy of the Trust's Certificate of Trust dated as of July 15, 2014 is on file with the office of the Secretary of State of Delaware.

Delaware law provides a statutory framework for the powers, duties, rights and obligations of the board (referred to in this section as the trustees) and shareholders of the Delaware statutory trust, while the more specific powers, duties, rights and obligations of the trustees and the shareholders are determined by the trustees as set forth in the declaration. Some of the more significant provisions of the declaration are described below.

*Shareholder voting.* The declaration provides for shareholder voting as required by the 1940 Act or other applicable laws but otherwise permits, consistent with Delaware law, actions by the trustees without seeking the consent of shareholders. The trustees may, without shareholder approval, where approval of shareholders is not otherwise required under the 1940 Act, merge or consolidate the Trust into other entities, reorganize the Trust or any series or class into another trust or entity or a series or class of another entity, sell the assets of the Trust or any series or class to another entity, or a series or class of another entity, or terminate the Trust or any series or class.

The fund is not required to hold an annual meeting of shareholders, but the fund will call special meetings of shareholders whenever required by the 1940 Act or by the terms of the declaration. Each share of the fund is entitled to one vote.

*Election and removal of trustees.* The declaration provides that the trustees may establish the number of trustees and that vacancies on the board may be filled by the remaining trustees, except when election of trustees by the shareholders is required under the 1940 Act. Trustees are then elected by a plurality of votes cast by shareholders at a meeting at which a quorum is present. The declaration also provides that a mandatory retirement age may be set by action of two-thirds of the trustees and that trustees may be removed at any time or for any reason by a majority of the board or by a majority of the outstanding shareholders of the Trust.

*Amendments to the declaration.* The trustees are authorized to amend the declaration without the vote of shareholders, but no amendment may be made that impairs the exemption from personal liability granted in the declaration to persons who are or have been shareholders, trustees, officers or, employees of the trust or that limit the rights to indemnification or insurance provided in the declaration with respect to actions or omissions of persons entitled to indemnification under the declaration prior to the amendment.

*Issuance and redemption of shares.* The fund may issue an unlimited number of shares for such consideration and on such terms as the trustees may determine. Shareholders are not entitled to any appraisal, preemptive, conversion, exchange or similar rights, except as the trustees may determine. The fund may involuntarily redeem a shareholder's shares upon certain conditions as may be determined by the trustees, including, for example, if the shareholder fails to provide the fund with identification required by law, or if the fund is unable to verify the information received from the shareholder. Additionally, as discussed below, shares may be redeemed in connection with the closing of small accounts.

*Disclosure of shareholder holdings.* The declaration specifically requires shareholders, upon demand, to disclose to the fund information with respect to the direct and indirect ownership of shares in order to comply with various laws or regulations, and the fund may disclose such ownership if required by law or regulation.

*Series and classes.* The declaration provides that the trustees may establish series and classes in addition to those currently established and to determine the rights and preferences, limitations and restrictions, including qualifications for ownership, conversion and exchange features, minimum purchase and account size, expenses and charges, and other features of the series and classes. The trustees may change any of those features, terminate any series or class,

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combine series with other series in the trust, combine one or more classes of a series with another class in that series or convert the shares of one class into another class. Each share of the fund, as a series of the Trust, represents an interest in the fund only and not in the assets of any other series of the Trust.

*Shareholder, trustee and officer liability.* The declaration provides that shareholders are not personally liable for the obligations of the fund and requires a fund to indemnify a shareholder against liability arising solely from the shareholder's ownership of shares in the fund. In addition, the fund will assume the defense of any claim against a shareholder for personal liability at the request of the shareholder. The declaration also provides that no trustee, officer or employee of the fund owes any duty to any person (including without limitation any shareholder), other than the fund or any series. The declaration further provides that no trustee, officer or employee of the fund shall be liable to the fund or any shareholder for any action, failure to act, error or mistake except in cases of bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duty. The declaration requires the fund to indemnify each trustee, director, officer, employee and authorized agent to the fullest extent permitted by law against liability and against all expenses reasonably incurred or paid by him in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding in which he becomes involved as a party or otherwise by virtue of his being or having been such a trustee, director, officer, employee, or agent and against amounts paid or incurred by him in settlement thereof. The 1940 Act currently provides that no officer or director shall be protected from liability to the fund or shareholders for willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties of office. The declaration extends to trustees, officers and employees of the fund the full protection from liability that the law allows.

The declaration provides that the appointment, designation or identification of a trustee as chairperson, a member of a committee, an expert, lead independent trustee, or any other special appointment, designation or identification shall not impose any heightened standard of care or liability on such trustee.

*Derivative and direct actions.* The declaration provides a detailed process for the bringing of derivative actions by shareholders in order to permit legitimate inquiries and claims while avoiding the time, expense, distraction, and other harm that can be caused to the fund or its shareholders as a result of spurious shareholder demands and derivative actions. Prior to bringing a derivative action, a demand by three unrelated shareholders must first be made on the fund's trustees. The declaration details various information, certifications, undertakings and acknowledgements that must be included in the demand. Following receipt of the demand, the trustees have a period of 90 days, which may be extended by an additional 60 days, to consider the demand. If a majority of the trustees who are considered independent for the purposes of considering the demand determine that maintaining the suit would not be in the best interests of the fund, the trustees are required to reject the demand and the complaining shareholders may not proceed with the derivative action unless the shareholders are able to sustain the burden of proof to a court that the decision of the trustees not to pursue the requested action was not a good faith exercise of their business judgment on behalf of the fund. The declaration further provides that shareholders owning shares representing at least 10% of the voting power of the affected fund must join in bringing the derivative action. If a demand is rejected, the complaining shareholders will be responsible for the costs and expenses (including attorneys' fees) incurred by the fund in connection with the consideration of the demand, if in the judgment of the independent trustees, the demand was made without reasonable cause or for an improper purpose. If a derivative action is brought in violation of the declaration, the shareholders bringing the action may be responsible for the fund's costs, including attorneys' fees.

The declaration provides that no shareholder may bring a direct action claiming injury as a shareholder of the fund, or any series or class thereof, where the matters alleged (if true) would give rise to a claim by the fund or by the fund on behalf of a series or class, unless the shareholder has suffered an injury distinct from that suffered by the shareholders of the fund, or the series or class, generally. Under the declaration, a shareholder bringing a direct claim must be a shareholder of the series or class with respect to which the direct action is brought at the time of the injury complained of, or have acquired the shares afterwards by operation of law from a person who was a shareholder at that time.

The declaration further provides that the fund shall be responsible for payment of attorneys' fees and legal expenses incurred by a complaining shareholder only if required by law, and any attorneys' fees that the fund is obligated to pay shall be calculated using reasonable hourly rates. The declaration also requires that actions by shareholders against the fund be brought only in federal court in Boston, Massachusetts, or if not permitted to be brought in federal court, then in state court in Boston, Massachusetts, and that shareholders have no right to jury trial for such actions.

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The declaration also provides that shareholders have no rights, privileges, claims or remedies under any contract or agreement entered into by the fund with any service provider or other agent or contract with the fund, including, without limitation, any third party beneficiary rights, except as may be expressly provided in any service contract or agreement.

**11. Tax status**

The following is a summary discussion of certain U.S. federal income tax consequences that may be relevant to a shareholder acquiring, holding or disposing of shares of the fund. This discussion addresses only U.S. federal income tax consequences to U.S. shareholders who hold their shares as capital assets and does not address all of the U.S. federal income tax consequences that may be relevant to particular shareholders in light of their individual circumstances. This discussion also does not address the tax consequences to shareholders who are subject to special rules, including, without limitation, banks and financial institutions, insurance companies, real estate investment trusts, other regulated investment companies, dealers in securities or foreign currencies, foreign shareholders, shareholders who hold their shares as or in a hedge, a constructive sale, or a conversion transaction, S corporations, shareholders who are subject to the alternative minimum tax, shareholders whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar, or governments or their agencies or instrumentalities. In addition, the discussion does not address any state, local, or non-U.S. or non-income tax consequences, and it does not address the effect of any treaty. The discussion reflects applicable tax laws of the United States as of the date of this Prospectus, which tax laws may be changed or subject to new interpretations by the courts or the Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS") retroactively or prospectively. No attempt is made to present a detailed explanation of all U.S. federal income tax concerns affecting the fund and its shareholders. Investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers to determine the specific tax consequences to them of acquiring, holding and disposing of shares in the fund, including the applicable federal, state, local and foreign tax consequences to them and the effect of possible changes in tax laws.

The fund has elected to be treated, and has qualified and intends to continue to qualify each year, as a "regulated investment company" under Subchapter M of the Code, so that it will not pay U.S. federal income tax on income and capital gains distributed to shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Code, the fund must, among other things, (i) derive at least 90% of its gross income for each taxable year from dividends, interest, payments with respect to certain securities loans, gains from the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including gains from options, futures and forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in such stock, securities or currencies, and net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership (as defined in Section 851(h) of the Code) (the "90% income test") and (ii) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter of each taxable year (subject to certain exceptions and special rules): (a) at least 50% of the value of the fund's total assets is represented by (1) cash and cash items, U.S. government securities, securities of other regulated investment companies, and (2) other securities, with such other securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the value of the fund's total assets and to not more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer and (b) not more than 25% of the value of the fund's total assets is invested in (1) the securities (other than U.S. government securities and securities of other regulated investment companies) of any one issuer, (2) the securities (other than securities of other regulated investment companies) of two or more issuers that the fund controls and that are engaged in the same, similar, or related trades or businesses, or (3) the securities of one or more qualified publicly traded partnerships.

For purposes of the 90% income test, the character of income earned by any entities in which the fund may invest that are not treated as corporations for U.S. federal income tax purposes (e.g., partnerships other than certain publicly traded partnerships or trusts that have not elected to be classified as corporations under the "check-the-box" regulations) will generally pass through to the fund. Consequently, in order to qualify as a regulated investment company, the fund may be required to limit its equity investments in such entities that earn fee income, rental income, insurance income or other non-qualifying income.

If the fund qualifies as a regulated investment company and properly distributes to its shareholders each taxable year an amount equal to or exceeding the sum of (i) 90% of its "investment company taxable income" as that term is defined in the Code (which includes, among other things, dividends, taxable interest, and the excess of any net short-term capital gains over net long-term capital losses, as reduced by certain deductible expenses) without regard to the deduction for dividends paid and (ii) 90% of the excess of its gross tax-exempt interest income, if any, over

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certain disallowed deductions, the fund generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on any income of the fund, including "net capital gain" (the excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss), distributed to shareholders. However, if the fund meets such distribution requirements, but chooses to retain some portion of its taxable income or gains, it generally will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at the applicable corporate rate on the amount retained. The fund may designate certain amounts retained as undistributed net capital gain in a notice to its shareholders, who (i) will be required to include in income for U.S. federal income tax purposes, as long-term capital gain, their proportionate shares of the undistributed amount so designated, (ii) will be entitled to credit their proportionate shares of the income tax paid by the fund on that undistributed amount against their federal income tax liabilities and to claim refunds to the extent such credits exceed their liabilities and (iii) will be entitled to increase their tax basis, for federal income tax purposes, in their shares by an amount equal to the excess of the amount of undistributed net capital gain included in their respective income over their respective income tax credits. The fund intends to distribute at least annually all or substantially all of its investment company taxable income (computed without regard to the dividends-paid deduction), net tax-exempt interest income, and net capital gain.

The tax treatment of certain ILS is not entirely clear. Certain of the fund's investments (including, potentially, certain ILS) may generate income that is not qualifying income for purposes of the 90% income test. The fund might generate more non-qualifying income than anticipated, might not be able to generate qualifying income in a particular taxable year at levels sufficient to meet the 90% income test, or might not be able to determine the percentage of qualifying income it has derived for a taxable year until after year-end. The fund may determine not to make an investment that it otherwise would have made, or may dispose of an investment it otherwise would have retained (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), in an effort to meet the 90% income test.

If, for any taxable year, the fund does not qualify as a regulated investment company or does not satisfy the 90% distribution requirement, it will be treated as a U.S. corporation subject to U.S. federal income tax, thereby subjecting any income earned by the fund to tax at the corporate level and to a further tax at the shareholder level when such income is distributed. Under certain circumstances, the fund may be able to cure a failure to qualify as a regulated investment company, but in order to do so, the fund may incur significant fund-level taxes and may be forced to dispose of certain assets.

Under the Code, the fund will be subject to a nondeductible 4% U.S. federal excise tax on a portion of its undistributed ordinary income and capital gain net income if it fails to meet certain distribution requirements with respect to each calendar year and year ending October 31, respectively. The fund intends to make distributions in a timely manner and accordingly does not expect to be subject to the excise tax.

The fund expects to declare and pay dividends of net investment income monthly and net realized capital gains annually. Dividends from income and/or capital gains may also be paid at such other times as may be necessary for the fund to avoid U.S. federal income or excise tax.

Unless a shareholder specifies otherwise, all distributions from the fund to that shareholder will be automatically reinvested in additional shares of the fund. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, all dividends generally are taxable whether a shareholder takes them in cash or they are reinvested in additional shares of the fund.

In general, assuming that the fund has sufficient earnings and profits, dividends from net investment income and net short-term capital gains are taxable either as ordinary income or, if certain conditions are met, as "qualified dividend income," taxable to individual and certain other noncorporate shareholders at reduced U.S. federal income tax rates.

In general, dividends may be reported by the fund as qualified dividend income if they are attributable to qualified dividend income received by the fund. Qualified dividend income generally means dividend income received from the fund's investments, if any, in common and preferred stock of U.S. companies and stock of certain qualified foreign corporations, provided that certain holding period and other requirements are met by both the fund and the shareholders. The fund is permitted to acquire stock of corporations, and it is therefore possible that a portion of the fund's distributions may be eligible for treatment as qualified dividend income.

A foreign corporation is treated as a qualified foreign corporation for this purpose if it is incorporated in a possession of the United States or it is eligible for the benefits of certain income tax treaties with the United States and meets certain additional requirements. Certain foreign corporations that are not otherwise qualified foreign corporations

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will be treated as qualified foreign corporations with respect to dividends paid by them if the stock with respect to which the dividends are paid is readily tradable on an established securities market in the United States. Passive foreign investment companies are not qualified foreign corporations for this purpose. Dividends received by the fund from REITs generally are not expected to qualify for treatment as qualified dividend income.

A dividend that is attributable to qualified dividend income of the fund that is paid by the fund to a shareholder will not be taxable as qualified dividend income to such shareholder (1) if the dividend is received with respect to any share of the fund held for fewer than 61 days during the 121-day period beginning on the date which is 60 days before the date on which such share became ex-dividend with respect to such dividend, (2) to the extent that the shareholder is under an obligation (whether pursuant to a short sale or otherwise) to make related payments with respect to positions in substantially similar or related property, or (3) if the shareholder elects to have the dividend treated as investment income for purposes of the limitation on deductibility of investment interest. The "ex-dividend" date is the date on which the owner of the share at the commencement of such date is entitled to receive the next issued dividend payment for such share even if the share is sold by the owner on that date or thereafter.

Distributions by the fund in excess of the fund's current and accumulated earnings and profits will be treated as a return of capital to the extent of (and in reduction of) the shareholder's tax basis in its shares and any such amount in excess of that basis will be treated as gain from the sale of shares, as discussed below.

Certain dividends received by the fund from U.S. corporations (generally, dividends received by the fund in respect of any share of stock (1) with a tax holding period of at least 46 days during the 91-day period beginning on the date that is 45 days before the date on which the stock becomes ex-dividend as to that dividend and (2) that is held in an unleveraged position) and distributed and appropriately so reported by the fund may be eligible for the 50% dividends-received deduction generally available to corporations under the Code. Certain preferred stock must have a holding period of at least 91 days during the 181-day period beginning on the date that is 90 days before the date on which the stock becomes ex-dividend as to that dividend in order to be eligible. Capital gain dividends distributed to the fund from other regulated investment companies are not eligible for the dividends-received deduction. The fund is permitted to acquire stock of U.S. domestic corporations, and it is therefore possible that a portion of the fund's distributions may qualify for this deduction. In order to qualify for the deduction, corporate shareholders must meet the minimum holding period requirement stated above with respect to their fund shares, taking into account any holding period reductions from certain hedging or other transactions or positions that diminish their risk of loss with respect to their fund shares, and, if they borrow to acquire or otherwise incur debt attributable to fund shares, they may be denied a portion of the dividends-received deduction with respect to those shares. Any corporate shareholder should consult its tax adviser regarding the possibility that its tax basis in its shares may be reduced, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, by reason of "extraordinary dividends" received with respect to the shares and, to the extent such basis would be reduced below zero, current recognition of income may be required.

Distributions from net capital gains, if any, that are reported as capital gain dividends by the fund are taxable as long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes without regard to the length of time the shareholder has held shares of the fund. Capital gain dividends distributed by the fund to individual and certain other noncorporate shareholders will be taxed as long-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to noncorporate taxpayers at reduced U.S. federal income tax rates. A shareholder should also be aware that the benefits of the favorable tax rates applicable to long-term capital gains and qualified dividend income may be affected by the application of the alternative minimum tax.

The U.S. federal income tax status of all distributions will be reported to shareholders annually.

A 3.8% Medicare contribution tax generally applies to all or a portion of the net investment income of a shareholder who is an individual and not a nonresident alien for federal income tax purposes and who has adjusted gross income (subject to certain adjustments) that exceeds a threshold amount ($250,000 if married filing jointly or if considered a "surviving spouse" for federal income tax purposes, $125,000 if married filing separately, and $200,000 in other cases). This 3.8% tax also applies to all or a portion of the undistributed net investment income of certain shareholders that are estates and trusts. For these purposes, interest, dividends and certain capital gains (among other categories of income) are generally taken into account in computing a shareholder's net investment income.

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Certain tax-exempt educational institutions will be subject to a 1.4% tax on net investment income. For these purposes, certain dividends and capital gain distributions, and certain gains from the disposition of fund shares (among other categories of income), are generally taken into account in computing a shareholder's net investment income.

Although dividends generally will be treated as distributed when paid, any dividend declared by the fund in October, November or December and payable to shareholders of record in such a month that is paid during the following January will be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as received by shareholders on December 31 of the calendar year in which it was declared. In addition, certain distributions made after the close of a taxable year of the fund may be "spilled back" and treated for certain purposes as paid by the fund during such taxable year. In such case, shareholders generally will be treated as having received such dividends in the taxable year in which the distributions were actually made. For purposes of calculating the amount of a regulated investment company's undistributed income and gain subject to the 4% excise tax described above, such "spilled back" dividends are treated as paid by the regulated investment company when they are actually paid.

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the fund is permitted to carry forward indefinitely a net capital loss from any taxable year to offset its capital gains, if any, in years following the year of the loss. To the extent subsequent capital gains are offset by such losses, they will not result in U.S. federal income tax liability to the fund and may not be distributed as capital gains to shareholders. See "Annual fee, expense and other information" for the fund's available capital loss carryforwards. Generally, the fund may not carry forward any losses other than net capital losses. Under certain circumstances, the fund may elect to treat certain losses as though they were incurred on the first day of the taxable year immediately following the taxable year in which they were actually incurred.

Under Section 163(j) of the Code, a taxpayer's business interest expense is generally deductible to the extent of its business interest income plus certain other amounts. If the fund earns business interest income, it may report a portion of its dividends as "Section 163(j) interest dividends," which its shareholders may be able to treat as business interest income for purposes of Section 163(j) of the Code. The fund's "Section 163(j) interest dividend" for a tax year will be limited to the excess of its business interest income over the sum of its business interest expense and other deductions properly allocable to its business interest income. In general, the fund's shareholders may treat a distribution reported as a Section 163(j) interest dividend as interest income only to the extent the distribution exceeds the sum of the portions of the distribution reported as other types of tax-favored income. To be eligible to treat a Section 163(j) interest dividend as interest income, a shareholder may need to meet certain holding period requirements in respect of the shares and must not have hedged its position in the shares in certain ways.

At the time of an investor's purchase of fund shares, a portion of the purchase price may be attributable to unrealized appreciation in the fund's portfolio or to undistributed capital gains of the fund. Consequently, subsequent distributions by the fund with respect to these shares from such appreciation or gains may be taxable to such investor even if the net asset value of the investor's shares is, as a result of the distributions, reduced below the investor's cost for such shares and the distributions economically represent a return of a portion of the investment.

A repurchase by the fund of its shares from a shareholder generally is expected to be treated as a sale of the shares by the shareholder. If, however, the shareholder continues to own shares of the fund after the repurchase (including shares owned by attribution), some or all of the amounts received by a shareholder in the repurchase may be recharacterized either as a distribution of net investment income or as a capital gain dividend rather than as a sale of the shares. There is also a risk that shareholders who do not participate in the repurchase may be deemed to have received such a distribution as a result of their proportionate increase in the ownership of the fund. The fund will use its judgment in reporting repurchases as sales or deemed distributions, but the IRS may disagree with the fund's reporting. Shareholders should consult their own tax advisers with reference to their individual circumstances to determine whether any particular transaction in fund shares (including a repurchase) is properly treated as a sale for tax purposes, as the following discussion assumes, and to ascertain the tax treatment of any gains or losses recognized in such transactions.

In general, if fund shares are sold, the shareholder will recognize gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale and the shareholder's adjusted basis in the shares. Such gain or loss generally will be treated as long-term capital gain or loss if the shares were held for more than one year and otherwise generally will be treated as short-term capital gain or loss. Any loss recognized by a shareholder upon the sale or other disposition

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of shares with a tax holding period of six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of any amounts treated as distributions to the shareholder of long-term capital gain with respect to such shares (including any amounts credited to the shareholder as undistributed capital gains).

The fund may report to the IRS the amount of proceeds that a shareholder receives from a repurchase of fund shares. The fund may also report the shareholder's basis in those shares and whether any gain or loss that the shareholder realizes on the repurchase is short-term or long-term gain or loss. If a shareholder has a different basis for different shares of the fund in the same account (e.g., if a shareholder purchased fund shares in the same account at different times for different prices, including as the result of reinvestment of dividends), the fund will calculate the basis of the shares using its default method unless the shareholder has properly elected to use a different method. The fund's default method for calculating basis will be the average basis method, under which the basis per share is reported as the average of the bases of all of the shareholder's fund shares in the account. A shareholder may elect, on an account-by-account basis, to use a method other than average basis by following procedures established by the fund. If such an election is made on or prior to the date of the first repurchase of shares in the account and on or prior to the date that is one year after the shareholder receives notice of the fund's default method, the new election will generally apply as if the average basis method had never been in effect for such account. If such an election is not made on or prior to such dates, the shares in the account at the time of the election will generally retain their averaged bases. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers concerning the tax consequences of applying the average basis method or electing another method of basis calculation.

Losses on repurchases of shares may be disallowed under "wash sale" rules in the event of other investments in the fund (including those made pursuant to reinvestment of distributions) within a period of 61 days beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after a repurchase or other disposition of shares. In such a case, the disallowed portion of any loss generally would be included in the U.S. federal tax basis of the shares acquired in the other investments.

Under Treasury regulations, if a shareholder recognizes a loss with respect to fund shares of $2 million or more for an individual shareholder, or $10 million or more for a corporate shareholder, in any single taxable year (or certain greater amounts over a combination of years), the shareholder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on IRS Form 8886. Shareholders who own portfolio securities directly are in many cases excepted from this reporting requirement but, under current guidance, shareholders of regulated investment companies are not excepted. A shareholder who fails to make the required disclosure to the IRS may be subject to substantial penalties. The fact that a loss is reportable under these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether or not the taxpayer's treatment of the loss is proper. Shareholders should consult with their tax advisers to determine the applicability of these regulations in light of their individual circumstances.

Shareholders that are exempt from U.S. federal income tax, such as retirement plans that are qualified under Section 401 of the Code, generally are not subject to U.S. federal income tax on fund dividends or distributions, or on repurchases of fund shares unless the fund shares are "debt-financed property" within the meaning of the Code. However, in the case of fund shares held through a non-qualified deferred compensation plan, fund dividends and distributions received by the plan and gains from repurchases of fund shares by the plan generally are taxable to the employer sponsoring such plan in accordance with the U.S. federal income tax laws that are generally applicable to shareholders receiving such dividends or distributions from regulated investment companies such as the fund.

A plan participant whose retirement plan invests in the fund, whether such plan is qualified or not, generally is not taxed on fund dividends or distributions received by the plan or on gains from repurchases of fund shares by the plan for U.S. federal income tax purposes. However, distributions to plan participants from a retirement plan account generally are taxable as ordinary income, and different tax treatment, including penalties on certain excess contributions and deferrals, certain pre-retirement and post-retirement distributions and certain prohibited transactions, is accorded to accounts maintained as qualified retirement plans. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers for more information.

Foreign exchange gains and losses realized by the fund in connection with certain transactions involving foreign currency-denominated debt securities, certain options and futures contracts relating to foreign currency, foreign currency forward contracts, foreign currencies, or payables or receivables denominated in a foreign currency are subject to Section 988 of the Code, which generally causes such gains and losses to be treated as ordinary income and losses and may affect the amount, timing and character of distributions to shareholders. Under Treasury regulations

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that may be promulgated in the future, any gains from such transactions that are not directly related to the fund's principal business of investing in stock or securities (or its options contracts or futures contracts with respect to stock or securities) may have to be limited in order to enable the fund to satisfy the 90% income test.

Certain investments made by the fund (including certain ILS) may be treated as equity in passive foreign investment companies ("PFICs") for federal income tax purposes. In general, a PFIC is a foreign corporation (i) that receives at least 75% of its annual gross income from passive sources (such as interest, dividends, certain rents and royalties, or capital gains) or (ii) where at least 50% of its assets (computed based on average fair market value) either produce or are held for the production of passive income. If the fund acquires any equity interest (under Treasury regulations that may be promulgated in the future, generally including not only stock but also an option to acquire stock such as is inherent in a convertible bond) in a PFIC, the fund could be subject to U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on "excess distributions" received from the PFIC or on gain from the sale of stock in the PFIC, even if all income or gain actually received by the fund is timely distributed to its shareholders. The fund would not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or deduction for such a tax. Gains from the sale of stock of PFICs may also be treated as ordinary income.

A "qualified electing fund" election or a "mark to market" election may be available that would ameliorate these adverse tax consequences, but such elections could require the fund to recognize taxable income or gain (which would be subject to the distribution requirements applicable to regulated investment companies, as described above) without the concurrent receipt of cash. In order to satisfy the distribution requirements and avoid a tax on the fund, the fund may be required to liquidate portfolio securities that it might otherwise have continued to hold (potentially resulting in taxable gain or loss to the fund and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances), or the fund may be required to borrow cash. In order for the fund to make a qualified electing fund election with respect to a PFIC, the PFIC would have to agree to provide certain tax information to the fund on an annual basis, which it might not agree to do. If the fund makes a valid qualified electing fund election with respect to a PFIC, the fund will include in its income each year its pro rata share of the PFIC's net capital gains (as long-term capital gain) and other earnings and profits (as ordinary income), whether or not any amounts are distributed from the PFIC to the fund. If the qualified electing fund election is made, actual cash distributions by the PFIC paid out of earnings and profits already included in taxable income will not be taken into account in determining the taxable income of the fund. Any gain or loss recognized by the fund on a disposition of a PFIC for which the fund has made a qualified electing fund election will generally be treated as a capital gain or loss. If the fund makes a mark-to-market election with respect to a PFIC, the fund generally will include as ordinary income each taxable year the excess, if any, of the fair market value of its stock in the PFIC at the end of the year over its adjusted tax basis in that stock, and the fund generally will be allowed to take an ordinary loss in respect of the excess, if any, of its adjusted tax basis in that stock over the fair market value of that stock at the end of the year (but only to the extent of the net amount of income previously included by the fund as a result of the mark-to-market election). If the fund makes a mark-to-market election with respect to a PFIC, then any gain recognized by the fund on a disposition of the PFIC will generally be treated as ordinary income, and any loss so recognized will be treated as an ordinary loss to the extent of the net amount of income previously included by the fund as a result of the mark-to-market election. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in PFICs to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

If a sufficient portion of the interests in a foreign issuer (including certain ILS issuers) are held or deemed held by the fund, independently or together with certain other U.S. persons, that issuer may be treated as a "controlled foreign corporation" (a "CFC") with respect to the fund, in which case the fund will be required to take into account each year, as ordinary income, its share of certain portions of that issuer's income, whether or not such amounts are distributed. The fund may have to dispose of its portfolio securities (potentially resulting in the recognition of taxable gain or loss, and potentially under disadvantageous circumstances) to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to meet its distribution requirements and avoid fund-level taxes. The fund may limit and/or manage its holdings in issuers that could be treated as CFCs in order to limit its tax liability or maximize its after-tax return from these investments.

A different definition of CFC applies to non-U.S. entities treated as corporations for tax purposes that earn "related person insurance income" ("RPII"). RPII is, in general, any insurance income attributable to policies of insurance or reinsurance with respect to which the person (directly or indirectly) insured or reinsured is an RPII Shareholder (as defined in the following paragraph) of the non-U.S. entity or a related person (described below) to such an RPII

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Shareholder. In general, and subject to certain limitations, insurance income is income (including premium and investment income) attributable to the issuing of any insurance or reinsurance contract that would be taxed under subchapter L of the Code if the income were earned by a domestic insurance company.

For purposes only of taking into account RPII, and subject to the exceptions described below, a foreign entity in which the fund invests that is treated as a corporation will be treated as a CFC under the RPII rules (an "RPII CFC") if RPII Shareholders (defined below) collectively own, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities or constructively, 25% or more of the total combined voting power or value of such entity on any day during a taxable year. If an entity is an RPII CFC at any time during any taxable year, then a United States person who owns, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities, an equity interest in such entity on the last day of any such taxable year must include in its gross income for U.S. federal income tax purposes its allocable share of RPII of such entity for the entire taxable year, subject to certain modifications. An RPII Shareholder is a United States person who owns, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities, any amount (rather than 10% or more) of an RPII CFC's equity (an "RPII Shareholder"). Generally, for purposes of the RPII rules, a related person is someone who controls or is controlled by the RPII Shareholder or someone who is controlled by the same person or persons which control the RPII shareholder. For these purposes, control is measured by stock ownership of either more than 50% in value or more than 50% in voting power after applying certain constructive ownership rules.

The special RPII rules do not apply to a non-U.S. insurance company if (i) the direct and indirect insureds and persons related to such insureds, whether or not United States persons, are treated at all times during the taxable year as owning, directly or indirectly, less than 20% of the voting power and less than 20% of the value of the stock of the non-U.S. insurance company; (ii) the RPII of the non-U.S. insurance company, determined on a gross basis, is less than 20% of the company's gross insurance income for such taxable year; (iii) the non-U.S. insurance company elects to be taxed on its RPII as if it were engaged in a trade or business within the United States and waives all treaty benefits to which it would otherwise be entitled; or (iv) the non-U.S. insurance company elects to be treated as a domestic corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes. If no exception applies, each United States person who owns, directly or indirectly through non-U.S. entities, shares of an RPII CFC on the last day of such entity's taxable year will be required to include in gross income for U.S. federal income tax purposes its allocable share of RPII for the entire taxable year, but only to the extent of its share of the RPII CFC's earnings and profits. The amount includible will be determined as if all such RPII were distributed proportionately only to such United States persons at that date. Amounts distributed out of previously taxed RPII would be excluded from the U.S. shareholder's income.

If the fund invests in certain pay-in-kind securities, zero coupon securities, deferred interest securities or, in general, any other securities with original issue discount (or with market discount if the fund elects to include market discount in income currently), the fund generally must accrue income on such investments for each taxable year, which generally will be prior to the receipt of the corresponding cash payments. However, the fund must distribute to its shareholders, at least annually, all or substantially all of its investment company taxable income (determined without regard to the deduction for dividends paid), including such accrued income, to qualify to be treated as a regulated investment company under the Code and avoid U.S. federal income and excise taxes. Therefore, the fund may have to dispose of its portfolio securities, potentially under disadvantageous circumstances, to generate cash, or may have to borrow the cash, to satisfy distribution requirements. Such a disposition of securities may potentially result in additional taxable gain or loss to the fund.

The fund may invest to a significant extent in, or hold, debt obligations that are below investment grade or that are unrated, including debt obligations of issuers not currently paying interest or that are in default. Investments in debt obligations that are at risk of or are in default present special tax issues for the fund. Federal income tax rules are not entirely clear about issues such as when the fund may cease to accrue interest, original issue discount or market discount, when and to what extent deductions may be taken for bad debts or worthless securities, how payments received on obligations in default should be allocated between principal and interest and whether certain exchanges of debt obligations in a workout context are taxable. These and other issues will be addressed by the fund, in the event it invests in or holds such securities, in order to seek to ensure that it distributes sufficient income to preserve its status as a regulated investment company and does not become subject to U.S. federal income or excise tax.

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Options written or purchased and futures contracts entered into by the fund on certain securities, indices and foreign currencies, as well as certain forward foreign currency contracts, may cause the fund to recognize gains or losses from marking-to-market even though such options may not have lapsed or been closed out or exercised, or such futures or forward contracts may not have been performed or closed out. The tax rules applicable to these contracts may affect the characterization of some capital gains and losses realized by the fund as long-term or short-term. Certain options, futures and forward contracts relating to foreign currency may be subject to Section 988 of the Code, as described above, and accordingly may produce ordinary income or loss. Additionally, the fund may be required to recognize gain if an option, futures contract, forward contract, short sale or other transaction that is not subject to the mark-to-market rules is treated as a "constructive sale" of an "appreciated financial position" held by the fund under Section 1259 of the Code. Any net mark-to-market gains and/or gains from constructive sales may also have to be distributed to satisfy the distribution requirements referred to above even though the fund may receive no corresponding cash amounts, possibly requiring the disposition of portfolio securities or borrowing to obtain the necessary cash. Such a disposition of securities may potentially result in additional taxable gain or loss to the fund. Losses on certain options, futures or forward contracts and/or offsetting positions (portfolio securities or other positions with respect to which the fund's risk of loss is substantially diminished by one or more options, futures or forward contracts) may also be deferred under the tax straddle rules of the Code, which may also affect the characterization of capital gains or losses from straddle positions and certain successor positions as long-term or short-term. Certain tax elections may be available that would enable the fund to ameliorate some adverse effects of the tax rules described in this paragraph. The tax rules applicable to options, futures, forward contracts and straddles may affect the amount, timing and character of the fund's income and gains or losses and hence of its distributions to shareholders.

The fund may be subject to withholding and other taxes imposed by foreign countries, including taxes on interest, dividends and capital gains with respect to its investments in those countries. Any such taxes would, if imposed, reduce the yield on or return from those investments. Tax conventions between certain countries and the U.S. may reduce or eliminate such taxes in some cases. If more than 50% of the fund's total assets at the close of any taxable year consist of stock or securities of foreign corporations, the fund may elect to pass through to its shareholders their pro rata shares of qualified foreign taxes paid by the fund for that taxable year. If the fund so elects, shareholders would be required to include such taxes in their gross incomes (in addition to the dividends and distributions they actually receive), would treat such taxes as foreign taxes paid by them, and as described below may be entitled to a tax deduction for such taxes or a tax credit, subject to a holding period requirement and other limitations under the Code.

Qualified foreign taxes generally include taxes that would be treated as income taxes under U.S. tax regulations but do not include most other taxes, such as stamp taxes, securities transaction taxes, and similar taxes. If the fund qualifies to make, and makes, the election described above, shareholders may deduct their pro rata portion of qualified foreign taxes paid by the fund for that taxable year in computing their income subject to U.S. federal income taxation or, alternatively, claim them as credits, subject to applicable limitations under the Code, against their U.S. federal income taxes. Shareholders who do not itemize deductions for U.S. federal income tax purposes will not, however, be able to deduct their pro rata portion of qualified foreign taxes paid by the fund, although such shareholders will be required to include their shares of such taxes in gross income if the fund makes the election described above. No deduction for such taxes will be permitted to individuals in computing their alternative minimum tax liability.

If the fund makes this election and a shareholder chooses to take a credit for the foreign taxes deemed paid by such shareholder, the amount of the credit that may be claimed in any year may not exceed the same proportion of the U.S. tax against which such credit is taken that the shareholder's taxable income from foreign sources (but not in excess of the shareholder's entire taxable income) bears to his entire taxable income. For this purpose, long-term and short-term capital gains the fund realizes and distributes to shareholders will generally not be treated as income from foreign sources in their hands, nor will distributions of certain foreign currency gains subject to Section 988 of the Code or of any other income realized by the fund that is deemed, under the Code, to be U.S.-source income in the hands of the fund. This foreign tax credit limitation may also be applied separately to certain specific categories of foreign-source income and the related foreign taxes. As a result of these rules, which may have different effects depending upon each shareholder's particular tax situation, certain shareholders may not be able to claim a credit for the full amount of their proportionate share of the foreign taxes paid by the fund. Shareholders who are not liable for U.S. federal income taxes, including tax-exempt shareholders, will ordinarily not benefit from this election. If the fund does make the election, it will provide required tax information to shareholders. The fund generally may deduct

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any foreign taxes that are not passed through to its shareholders in computing its income available for distribution to shareholders to satisfy applicable tax distribution requirements. Under certain circumstances, if the fund receives a refund of foreign taxes paid in respect of a prior year the value of the fund's shares could be reduced, or any foreign tax credits or deductions passed through to shareholders in respect of the fund's foreign taxes for the current year could be reduced.

The fund is required to withhold (as "backup withholding") a portion of reportable payments, including dividends, capital gain distributions and the proceeds of repurchases of fund shares, paid to shareholders who have not complied with certain IRS regulations. The backup withholding rate is currently 24%. In order to avoid this withholding requirement, shareholders, other than certain exempt entities, must generally certify that the Social Security Number or other Taxpayer Identification Number they provide is their correct number and that they are not currently subject to backup withholding, or that they are exempt from backup withholding. The fund may nevertheless be required to backup withhold if it receives notice from the IRS or a broker that the number provided is incorrect or backup withholding is applicable as a result of previous underreporting of interest or dividend income.

Investors other than U.S. persons may be subject to different U.S. federal income tax treatment, including a non-resident alien U.S. withholding tax at the rate of 30% or any lower applicable treaty rate on amounts treated as ordinary dividends from the fund (other than certain dividends reported by the fund as (i) interest-related dividends, to the extent such dividends are derived from the fund's "qualified net interest income," or (ii) short-term capital gain dividends, to the extent such dividends are derived from the fund's "qualified short-term gain") or, in certain circumstances, unless an effective IRS Form W-8BEN or other authorized withholding certificate is on file, to backup withholding on certain other payments from the fund. "Qualified net interest income" is the fund's net income derived from U.S.-source interest and original issue discount, subject to certain exceptions and limitations. "Qualified short-term gain" generally means the excess of the net short-term capital gain of the fund for the taxable year over its net long-term capital loss, if any. Backup withholding will not be applied to payments that have been subject to the 30% (or lower applicable treaty rate) withholding tax described in this paragraph.

Unless certain non-U.S. entities that hold fund shares comply with IRS requirements that will generally require them to report information regarding U.S. persons investing in, or holding accounts with, such entities, a 30% withholding tax may apply to fund distributions payable to such entities. A non-U.S. shareholder may be exempt from the withholding described in this paragraph under an applicable intergovernmental agreement between the U.S. and a foreign government, provided that the shareholder and the applicable foreign government comply with the terms of such agreement.

Shareholders should consult their own tax advisers on these matters and on state, local, foreign and other applicable tax laws.

If, as anticipated, the fund qualifies as a regulated investment company under the Code, it will not be required to pay any Massachusetts income, corporate excise or franchise taxes or any Delaware corporation income tax.

A state income (and possibly local income and/or intangible property) tax exemption is generally available to the extent the fund's distributions are derived from interest on (or, in the case of intangible property taxes, to the extent the value of its assets is attributable to) certain U.S. government obligations, provided, in some states, that certain thresholds for holdings of such obligations and/or reporting requirements are satisfied. The fund will not seek to satisfy any threshold or reporting requirements that may apply in particular taxing jurisdictions, although the fund may in its sole discretion provide relevant information to shareholders.

**12. Financial statements** 

The fund's [financial statements](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000182126823000016/pio84860.htm)and financial highlights for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2022 appearing in the fund's annual report, filed with the SEC on January 5, 2023 (Accession No. 0001821268-23-000016) are incorporated by reference into this statement of additional information. Those financial statements and financial highlights have been audited by Ernst & Young LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, as indicated in their report thereon, and are incorporated herein by reference in reliance upon such report, given on the authority of Ernst & Young LLP as experts in accounting and auditing.

The fund's annual report includes the financial statements referenced above and is available without charge upon request by calling the fund at 1-844-391-3034.

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

**13. Additional Information**

A Registration Statement on Form N-2, including amendments thereto, relating to the shares offered hereby, has been filed by the fund with the SEC, Washington, D.C. The prospectus and this statement of additional information do not contain all of the information set forth in the Registration Statement, including any exhibits and schedules thereto. For further information with respect to the fund and the shares offered hereby, reference is made to the Registration Statement. Statements contained in the prospectus and this statement of additional information as to the material terms of any contract or other document referred to are qualified by reference to the copy of such contract or other document filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement. A copy of the Registration Statement may be inspected without charge at the SEC's principal office in Washington, D.C., and copies of all or any part thereof may be obtained from the SEC upon the payment of certain fees prescribed by the SEC.

**14. Annual fee, expense and other information**

**Portfolio turnover** 

The fund's annual portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal years ended October 31

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **2022** | **2021** |
| 45% | 70% |

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**Share ownership** 

As of January 31, 2023, the Trustees and officers of the fund owned beneficially in the aggregate less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the fund. The following is a list of the holders of 5% or more of any class of the fund's outstanding shares as of January 31, 2023:

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Record Holder** | **Share Class** | **Number of Shares** | **% of Class** |
| Charles Schwab & Co Inc<br> Special Custody A/C FBO Customers<br> Attn Mutual Funds<br> 211 Main Street<br> San Francisco CA 94105-1901<br>| Common | 35760302.698 | 39.02% |
| Band & Co<br> C/O US Bank NA<br> 1555 N River Center Dr<br> Milwaukee WI 53212-3981<br>| Common | 27628314.852 | 30.15% |

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**Trustee ownership of shares of the fund and other Pioneer funds** 

The following table indicates the value of shares that each Trustee beneficially owned in the fund and Pioneer Funds in the aggregate as of December 31, 2022. Beneficial ownership is determined in accordance with SEC rules. The share value of any closed-end fund is based on its closing market price on December 31, 2022. The share value of any open-end Pioneer Fund is based on the net asset value of the class of shares on December 31, 2022. The dollar ranges in this table are in accordance with SEC requirements.

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name of Trustee** | &nbsp;&nbsp; **Dollar Range of**<br> **Equity Securities** <br> **in the Trust**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity**<br> **Securities in All Registered**<br> **Investment Companies Overseen by**<br> **Trustee in the Pioneer Family of Funds**<br>|
| **Interested Trustees:** |  |  |
| Lisa M. Jones |  | Over $100,000 |
| Kenneth J. Taubes |  | Over $100,000 |
| **Independent Trustees:** |  |  |
| John E. Baumgardner, Jr. |  | Over $100,000 |
| Diane Durnin |  | Over $100,000 |
| Benjamin M. Friedman |  | Over $100,000 |
| Craig C. MacKay |  | Over $100,000 |
| Lorraine H. Monchak |  | Over $100,000 |
| Thomas J. Perna |  | Over $100,000 |
| Marguerite A. Piret |  | Over $100,000 |
| Fred J. Ricciardi |  | Over $100,000 |

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**Compensation of officers and trustees** 

The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the compensation of each Trustee of the fund.

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name of Trustee** | &nbsp;&nbsp; **Aggregate**<br> **Compensation**<br> **from fund\*\***<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Pension or**<br> **Retirement**<br> **Benefits Accrued**<br> **as Part of Fund**<br> **Expenses**<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; **Total Compensation**<br> **from the Fund and**<br> **Other Pioneer Funds\*\***<br>|
| **Interested Trustees:** |  |  |  |
| Lisa M. Jones\* | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 |
| Kenneth J. Taubes\* | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 |
| **Independent Trustees:** |  |  |  |
| John E. Baumgardner, Jr. | $4730.07 | $0.00 | $292575.00 |
| Diane Durnin | $4610.88 | $0.00 | $284884.00 |
| Benjamin M. Friedman | $5212.87 | $0.00 | $324456.00 |
| Craig C. MacKay | $4657.34 | $0.00 | $287885.00 |
| Lorraine H. Monchak | $5293.62 | $0.00 | $329766.00 |
| Thomas J. Perna | $6292.15 | $0.00 | $395575.00 |
| Marguerite A. Piret | $4915.25 | $0.00 | $304766.00 |
| Fred J. Ricciardi | $5027.70 | $0.00 | $312266.00 |
| TOTAL | $40739.88 | $0.00 | $2532173.00 |

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\*

Under the management contract, Amundi US reimburses the fund for any Interested Trustee fees paid by the fund.

\*\*

For the fiscal year ended October 31, 2022. As of October 31, 2022, there were 50 U.S. registered investment portfolios in the Pioneer Family of Funds.

**Approximate management fees the fund paid or owed Amundi US** 

The following table shows the dollar amount of gross investment management fees incurred by the fund, along with the net amount of fees that were paid after applicable fee waivers or expense reimbursements, if any. The data is for the past three fiscal years.

---

| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **For the Fiscal Years Ended October 31** | **2022** | **2021** | **2020** |
| Gross Fee Incurred | $15487467 | $17123839 | $14364876 |
| Net Fee Paid | $15487467 | $17123839 | $14364876 |

---

------

**Fees the fund paid to Amundi US under the administration agreement** 

---

| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **For the Fiscal Years Ended October 31** | **For the Fiscal Years Ended October 31** | **For the Fiscal Years Ended October 31** |
| **2022** | **2021** | **2020** |
| $241624 | $303959 | $273997 |

---

**Securities of regular broker-dealers** 

As of October 31, 2022, the fund held the following securities of its regular broker-dealers (or affiliates of such broker-dealers):

---

| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **Name** | **Debt \ Equity** | **($000's)** |

---

None

**Capital loss carryforwards as of October 31, 2022** 

At October 31, 2022, the fund had the following net capital loss carryforward:

$10,608,170 of short-term losses and $91,849,113 of long-term losses.

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**15. Appendix A — Description of Ratings** 

The ratings of Moody's Investors Service, Inc., S&P's Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings represent their opinions as to the quality of various debt obligations. It should be emphasized, however, that ratings are not absolute standards of quality. Consequently, debt obligations with the same maturity, coupon and rating may have different yields while debt obligations of the same maturity and coupon with different ratings may have the same yield. As described by the rating agencies, ratings are generally given to securities at the time of issuances. While the rating agencies may from time to time revise such ratings, they undertake no obligation to do so.

**Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Global Rating Scales** 

Ratings assigned on Moody's global long-term and short-term rating scales are forward-looking opinions of the relative credit risks of financial obligations issued by non-financial corporates, financial institutions, structured finance vehicles, project finance vehicles, and public sector entities. Moody's defines credit risk as the risk that an entity may not meet its contractual financial obligations as they come due and any estimated financial loss in the event of default or impairment. The contractual financial obligations<sup>1</sup> addressed by Moody's ratings are those that call for, without regard to enforceability, the payment of an ascertainable amount, which may vary based upon standard sources of variation (e.g., floating interest rates), by an ascertainable date. Moody's rating addresses the issuer's ability to obtain cash sufficient to service the obligation, and its willingness to pay.<sup>2</sup> Moody's ratings do not address non-standard sources of variation in the amount of the principal obligation (e.g., equity indexed), absent an express statement to the contrary in a press release accompanying an initial rating.<sup>3</sup> Long-term ratings are assigned to issuers or obligations with an original maturity of one year or more and reflect both on the likelihood of a default or impairment on contractual financial obligations and the expected financial loss suffered in the event of default or impairment. Short-term ratings are assigned for obligations with an original maturity of thirteen months or less and reflect both on the likelihood of a default or impairment on contractual financial obligations and the expected financial loss suffered in the event of default or impairment.<sup>4</sup><sup>,</sup><sup>5</sup>

Moody's issues ratings at the issuer level and instrument level on both the long-term scale and the short-term scale. Typically, ratings are made publicly available although private and unpublished ratings may also be assigned.<sup>6</sup>

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<sup>1</sup>

In the case of impairments, there can be a financial loss even when contractual obligations are met.

<sup>2</sup>

In some cases the relevant credit risk relates to a third party, in addition to, or instead of the issuer. Examples include credit-linked notes and guaranteed obligations.

<sup>3</sup>

Because the number of possible features or structures is limited only by the creativity of issuers, Moody's cannot comprehensively catalogue all the types of non-standard variation affecting financial obligations, but examples include indexed values, equity values and cash flows, prepayment penalties, and an obligation to pay an amount that is not ascertainable at the inception of the transaction.

<sup>4</sup>

For certain structured finance, preferred stock and hybrid securities in which payment default events are either not defined or do not match investors' expectations for timely payment, long-term and short-term ratings reflect the likelihood of impairment and financial loss in the event of impairment.

<sup>5</sup>

Debts held on the balance sheets of official sector institutions – which include supranational institutions, central banks and certain government-owned or controlled banks – may not always be treated the same as debts held by private investors and lenders. When it is known that an obligation is held by official sector institutions as well as other investors, a rating (short-term or long-term) assigned to that obligation reflects only the credit risks faced by non-official sector investors.

<sup>6</sup>

For information on how to obtain a Moody's credit rating, including private and unpublished credit ratings, please see Moody's Investors Service Products.

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Moody's differentiates structured finance ratings from fundamental ratings (i.e., ratings on nonfinancial corporate, financial institution, and public sector entities) on the global long-term scale by adding (sf) to all structured finance ratings<sup>7</sup>. The addition of (sf) to structured finance ratings should eliminate any presumption that such ratings and fundamental ratings at the same letter grade level will behave the same. The (sf) indicator for structured finance security ratings indicates that otherwise similarly rated structured finance and fundamental securities may have different risk characteristics. Through its current methodologies, however, Moody's aspires to achieve broad expected equivalence in structured finance and fundamental rating performance when measured over a long period of time.

**Description of Moody's Investors Service, Inc.'s Global Long-Term Ratings:** 

**Aaa-**Obligations rated Aaa are judged to be of the highest quality, subject to the lowest level of credit risk.

**Aa-**Obligations rated Aa are judged to be of high quality and are subject to very low credit risk.

**A-**Obligations rated A are judged to be upper-medium grade and are subject to low credit risk.

**Baa-**Obligations rated Baa are judged to be medium-grade and subject to moderate credit risk and as such may possess certain speculative characteristics.

**Ba-**Obligations rated Ba are judged to be speculative and are subject to substantial credit risk.

**B-**Obligations rated B are considered speculative and are subject to high credit risk.

**Caa-**Obligations rated Caa are judged to be speculative of poor standing and are subject to very high credit risk.

**Ca-**Obligations rated Ca are highly speculative and are likely in, or very near, default, with some prospect of recovery of principal and interest.

**C-**Obligations rated C are the lowest rated and are typically in default, with little prospect for recovery of principal or interest.

*Note: Moody's appends numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 to each generic rating classification from Aa through Caa. The modifier 1 indicates that the obligation ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a ranking in the lower end of that generic rating category. Additionally, a "(hyb)" indicator is appended to all ratings of hybrid securities issued by banks, insurers, finance companies, and securities firms.* 

*By their terms, hybrid securities allow for the omission of scheduled dividends, interest, or principal payments, which can potentially result in impairment if such an omission occurs. Hybrid securities may also be subject to contractually allowable write-downs of principal that could result in impairment. Together with the hybrid indicator, the long-term obligation rating assigned to a hybrid security is an expression of the relative credit risk associated with that security.* 

**Description of Moody's Investors Service, Inc.'s Global Short-Term Ratings:** 

**P-1-**Ratings of Prime-1 reflect a superior ability to repay short-term debt obligations.

**P-2-**Ratings of Prime-2 reflect a strong ability to repay short-term debt obligations.

**P-3-**Ratings of Prime-3 reflect an acceptable ability to repay short-term obligations.

**NP-**Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.

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<sup>7</sup>

Like other global scale ratings, (sf) ratings reflect both the likelihood of a default and the expected loss suffered in the event of default. Ratings are assigned based on a rating committee's assessment of a security's expected loss rate (default probability multiplied by expected loss severity), and may be subject to the constraint that the final expected loss rating assigned would not be more than a certain number of notches, typically three to five notches, above the rating that would be assigned based on an assessment of default probability alone. The magnitude of this constraint may vary with the level of the rating, the seasoning of the transaction, and the uncertainty around the assessments of expected loss and probability of default.

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**Description of Moody's Investors Service, Inc.'s US Municipal Ratings:** 

*U.S. Municipal Short-Term Obligation Ratings:* 

Moody's uses the global short-term Prime rating scale for commercial paper issued by US municipalities and nonprofits. These commercial paper programs may be backed by external letters of credit or liquidity facilities, or by an issuer's self-liquidity. For other short-term municipal obligations, Moody's uses one of two other short-term rating scales, the Municipal Investment Grade (MIG) and Variable Municipal Investment Grade (VMIG) scales discussed below.

Moody's uses the MIG scale for US municipal cash flow notes, bond anticipation notes and certain other short-term obligations, which typically mature in three years or less. Under certain circumstances, Moody's uses the MIG scale for bond anticipation notes with maturities of up to five years.

**MIG 1-**This designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is afforded by established cash flows, highly reliable liquidity support, or demonstrated broad-based access to the market for refinancing.

**MIG 2-**This designation denotes strong credit quality. Margins of protection are ample, although not as large as in the preceding group.

**MIG 3-**This designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Liquidity and cash-flow protection may be narrow, and market access for refinancing is likely to be less well-established.

**SG-**This designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Debt instruments in this category may lack sufficient margins of protection.

*Demand Obligation Ratings:* 

In the case of variable rate demand obligations (VRDOs), a two-component rating is assigned. The components are a long-term debt rating and a short-term demand obligation rating. The long-term rating addresses the issuer's ability to meet scheduled principal and interest payments. The short-term demand obligation rating addresses the ability of the issuer or the liquidity provider to make payments associated with the purchase-price-upon-demand feature ("demand feature") of the VRDO. The short-term demand obligation rating uses the VMIG scale. VMIG ratings with l liquidity support use an input the short-term Counterparty Risk Assessment of the support provider, or the long-term rating of the underlying obligor in the absence of third party liquidity support. Transitions of VMIG ratings of demand obligations with conditional liquidity support differ from transitions on the Prime scale to reflect the risk that external liquidity support will terminate if the issuer's long-term rating drops below investment grade.

Moody's typically assigns the VMIG short-term demand obligation rating if the frequency of the demand feature is less than every three years. If the frequency of the demand feature is less than three years but the purchase price is payable only with remarketing proceeds, the short-term demand obligation rating is "NR".

**VMIG 1-**This designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is afforded by the superior short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

**VMIG 2-**This designation denotes strong credit quality. Good protection is afforded by the strong short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

**VMIG 3-**This designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Adequate protection is afforded by the satisfactory short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

**SG-**This designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Demand features rated in this category may be supported by a liquidity provider that does not have an investment grade short-term rating or may lack the structural and/or legal protections necessary to ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

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**Description of Moody's Investors Service, Inc.'s National Scale Long-Term Ratings:** 

Moody's long-term National Scale Ratings (NSRs) are opinions of the relative creditworthiness of issuers and financial obligations within a particular country. NSRs are not designed to be compared among countries; rather, they address relative credit risk within a given country. Moody's assigns national scale ratings in certain local capital markets in which investors have found the global rating scale provides inadequate differentiation among credits or is inconsistent with a rating scale already in common use in the country.

In each specific country, the last two characters of the rating indicate the country in which the issuer is located or the financial obligation was issued (e.g., Aaa.ke for Kenya).

**Long-Term NSR Scale** 

**Aaa.n** Issuers or issues rated Aaa.n demonstrate the strongest creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**Aa.n** Issuers or issues rated Aa.n demonstrate very strong creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**A.n** Issuers or issues rated A.n present above-average creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**Baa.n** Issuers or issues rated Baa.n represent average creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**Ba.n** Issuers or issues rated Ba.n demonstrate below-average creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**B.n** Issuers or issues rated B.n demonstrate weak creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**Caa.n** Issuers or issues rated Caa.n demonstrate very weak creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**Ca.n** Issuers or issues rated Ca.n demonstrate extremely weak creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

**C.n** Issuers or issues rated C.n demonstrate the weakest creditworthiness relative to other domestic issuers and issuances.

*Note: Moody's appends numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 to each generic rating classification from Aa through Caa. The modifier 1 indicates that the obligation ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a ranking in the lower end of that generic rating category.* 

**Description of S&P Global Ratings' Long-Term Issue Credit Ratings:** 

Long-Term Issue Credit Ratings are based, in varying degrees, on S&P Global Ratings' analysis of the following considerations: (1) the likelihood of payment—the capacity and willingness of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on a financial obligation in accordance with the terms of the obligation; (2) the nature and provisions of the financial obligation, and the promise S&P Global Ratings imputes; and (3) the protection afforded by, and relative position of, the financial obligation in the event of a bankruptcy, reorganization, or other arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and other laws affecting creditors' rights.

An issue rating is an assessment of default risk, but may incorporate an assessment of relative seniority or ultimate recovery in the event of default. Junior obligations are typically rated lower than senior obligations, to reflect lower priority in bankruptcy, as noted above. (Such differentiation may apply when an entity has both senior and subordinated obligations, secured and unsecured obligations, or operating company and holding company obligations.)

**AAA-**An obligation rated "AAA" has the highest rating assigned by S&P Global Ratings. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is extremely strong.

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**AA-**An obligation rated "AA" differs from the highest-rated obligations only to a small degree. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is very strong.

**A-**An obligation rated "A" is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher-rated categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is still strong.

**BBB-**An obligation rated "BBB" exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**BB, B, CCC, CC, and C-**Obligations rated "BB", "B", "CCC", "CC", and "C" are regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. "BB" indicates the least degree of speculation and "C" the highest. While such obligations will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major exposure to adverse conditions.

**BB-**An obligation rated "BB" is less vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions that could lead to the obligor's inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**B-**An obligation rated "B" is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated "BB", but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation. Adverse business, financial, or economic conditions will likely impair the obligor's capacity or willingness to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**CCC-**An obligation rated "CCC" is currently vulnerable to nonpayment, and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitments on the obligation. In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic conditions, the obligor is not likely to have the capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**CC-**An obligation rated "CC" is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment. The "CC" rating is used when a default has not yet occurred, but S&P Global Ratings expects default to be a virtual certainty, regardless of the anticipated time to default.

**C-**An obligation rated "C" is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment, and the obligation is expected to have lower relative seniority or lower ultimate recovery compared with obligations that are rated higher.

**D-**An obligation rated "D" is in default or in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the "D" rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P Global Ratings believes that such payments will be made within five business days in the absence of a stated grace period or within the earlier of the stated grace period or 30 calendar days. The "D" rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions. A rating on an obligation is is lowered to "D" if it is subject to a distressed exchange offer.

Ratings from "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by the addition of a plus (+) or minus (-) sign to show relative standing within the rating categories.

**Description of S&P Global Ratings' Short-Term Issue Credit Ratings:** 

A-1-A short-term obligation rated "A-1" is rated in the highest category by S&P Global Ratings. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is strong. Within this category, certain obligations are designated with a plus sign (+). This indicates that the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on these obligations is extremely strong.

**A-2-**A short-term obligation rated "A-2" is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher rating categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation is satisfactory.

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**A-3-**A short-term obligation rated "A-3" exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to weaken an obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**B-**A short-term obligation rated "B" is regarded as vulnerable and has significant speculative characteristics. The obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments; however, it faces major ongoing uncertainties that could lead to the obligor's inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitments.

**C-**A short-term obligation rated "C" is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitments on the obligation.

**D-**A short-term obligation rated "D" is in default or in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the "D" rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P Global Ratings' believes that such payments will be made within any stated grace period. However, any stated grace period longer than five business days will be treated as five business days. The "D" rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions. A rating on an obligation is lowered to "D" if it is subject to a distressed debt restructuring.

**Description of S&P Global Ratings' Municipal Short-Term Note Ratings Definitions:** 

An S&P Global Ratings U.S. municipal note rating reflects S&P Global Ratings opinion about the liquidity factors and market access risks unique to the notes. Notes due in three years or less will likely receive a note rating. Notes with an original maturity of more than three years will most likely receive a long-term debt rating. In determining which type of rating, if any, to assign, S&P Global Ratings' analysis will review the following considerations: (1) amortization schedule—the larger the final maturity relative to other maturities, the more likely it will be treated as a note; and (2) source of payment—the more dependent the issue is on the market for its refinancing, the more likely it will be treated as a note.

**SP-1-**Strong capacity to pay principal and interest. An issue determined to possess a very strong capacity to pay debt service is given a plus (+) designation.

**SP-2-**Satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest, with some vulnerability to adverse financial and economic changes over the term of the notes.

**SP-3-**Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.

**D**—"D" is assigned upon failure to pay the note when due, completion of a distressed debt restructuring, or the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions.

**Long-Term Issuer Credit Ratings** 

**AAA** An obligor rated "AAA" has extremely strong capacity to meet its financial commitments. "AAA" is the highest issuer credit rating assigned by S&P Global Ratings.

**AA** An obligor rated "AA" has very strong capacity to meet its financial commitments. It differs from the highest-rated obligors only to a small degree.

**A** An obligor rated "A" has strong capacity to meet its financial commitments but is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligors in higher-rated categories.

**BBB** An obligor rated "BBB" has adequate capacity to meet its financial commitments. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to weaken the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitments.

**BB, B, CCC, and CC** Obligors rated "BB", "B", "CCC", and "CC" are regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. "BB" indicates the least degree of speculation and "CC" the highest. While such obligors will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major exposure to adverse conditions.

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**BB** An obligor rated "BB" is less vulnerable in the near term than other lower-rated obligors. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties and exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions that could lead to the obligor's inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitments.

**B** An obligor rated "B" is more vulnerable than the obligors rated "BB", but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments. Adverse business, financial, or economic conditions will likely impair the obligor's capacity or willingness to meet its financial commitments.

**CCC** An obligor rated "CCC" is currently vulnerable and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions to meet its financial commitments.

**CC** An obligor rated "CC" is currently highly vulnerable. The "CC" rating is used when a default has not yet occurred but S&P Global Ratings expects default to be a virtual certainty, regardless of the anticipated time to default.

**SD and D** An obligor is rated "SD" (selective default) or "D" if S&P Global Ratings considers there to be a default on one or more of its financial obligations, whether long- or short-term, including rated and unrated obligations but excluding hybrid instruments classified as regulatory capital or in nonpayment according to terms. A "D" rating is assigned when S&P Global Ratings believes that the default will be a general default and that the obligor will fail to pay all or substantially all of its obligations as they come due. An "SD" rating is assigned when S&P Global Ratings believes that the obligor has selectively defaulted on a specific issue or class of obligations but it will continue to meet its payment obligations on other issues or classes of obligations in a timely manner. A rating on an obligor is lowered to "D" or "SD" if it is conducting a distressed debt restructuring. Ratings from "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by the addition of a plus (+) or minus (-) sign to show relative standing within the rating categories.

**Description of S&P Global Ratings' Dual Ratings:** 

Dual ratings may be assigned to debt issues that have a put option or demand feature. The first component of the rating addresses the likelihood of repayment of principal and interest as due, and the second component of the rating addresses only the demand feature. The first component of the rating can relate to either a short-term or long-term transaction and accordingly use either short-term or long-term rating symbols. The second component of the rating relates to the put option and is assigned a short-term rating symbol (for example, "AAA/A-1+" or "A-1+/A-1"). With U.S. municipal short-term demand debt, the U.S. municipal short-term note rating symbols are used for the first component of the rating (for example, "SP-1+/A-1+").

**Description of S&P Global Ratings' Active Qualifiers** 

S&P Global Ratings uses the following qualifiers that limit the scope of a rating. The structure of the transaction can require the use of a qualifier such as a "p" qualifier, which indicates the rating addresses the principal portion of the obligation only. A qualifier appears as a suffix and is part of the rating.

**Federal deposit insurance limit:** "L" qualifier. Ratings qualified with "L" apply only to amounts invested up to federal deposit insurance limits.

**Principal:** "p" qualifier. This suffix is used for issues in which the credit factors, the terms, or both, that determine the likelihood of receipt of payment of principal are different from the credit factors, terms or both that determine the likelihood of receipt of interest on the obligation. The "p" suffix indicates that the rating addresses the principal portion of the obligation only and that the interest is not rated.

**Preliminary ratings:** "prelim" qualifier. Preliminary ratings, with the "prelim" suffix, may be assigned to obligors or obligations, including financial programs, in the circumstances described below. Assignment of a final rating is conditional on the receipt by S&P Global Ratings of appropriate documentation. S&P Global Ratings reserves the right not to issue a final rating. Moreover, if a final rating is issued, it may differ from the preliminary rating.

• Preliminary ratings may be assigned to obligations, most commonly structured and project finance issues, pending receipt of final documentation and legal opinions.

• Preliminary ratings may be assigned to obligations that will likely be issued upon the obligor's emergence from bankruptcy or similar reorganization, based on late-stage reorganization plans, documentation and discussions with the obligor.

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• Preliminary ratings may also be assigned to the obligors. These ratings consider the anticipated general credit quality of the reorganized or post-bankruptcy issuer as well as attributes of the anticipated obligation(s).

• Preliminary ratings may be assigned to entities that are being formed or that are in the process of being independently established when, in S&P Global Ratings' opinion, documentation is close to final. Preliminary ratings may also be assigned to the obligations of these entities.

• Preliminary ratings may be assigned when a previously unrated entity is undergoing a well-formulated restructuring, recapitalization, significant financing or other transformative event, generally at the point that investor or lender commitments are invited. The preliminary rating may be assigned to the entity and to its proposed obligation(s). These preliminary ratings consider the anticipated general credit quality of the obligor, as well as attributes of the anticipated obligation(s), assuming successful completion of the transformative event. Should the transformative event not occur, S&P Global Ratings would likely withdraw these preliminary ratings.

• A preliminary recovery rating may be assigned to an obligation that has a preliminary issue credit rating.

**Termination structures:** "t" qualifier. This symbol indicates termination structures that are designed to honor their contracts to full maturity or, should certain events occur, to terminate and cash settle all their contracts before their final maturity date.

**Counterparty instrument rating:** "cir" qualifier. This symbol indicates a Counterparty Instrument Rating (CIR), which is a forward-looking opinion about the creditworthiness of an issuer in a securitization structure with respect to a specific financial obligation to a counterparty (including interest rate swaps, currency swaps, and liquidity facilities). The CIR is determined on an ultimate payment basis; these opinions do not take into account timeliness of payment.

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Corporate Finance Obligation Ratings:** 

Ratings of individual securities or financial obligations of a corporate issuer address relative vulnerability to default on an ordinal scale. In addition, for financial obligations in corporate finance, a measure of recovery given default on that liability is also included in the rating assessment. This notably applies to covered bonds ratings, which incorporate both an indication of the probability of default and of the recovery given a default of this debt instrument. On the contrary, ratings of debtor-in-possession (DIP) obligations incorporate the expectation of full repayment.

The relationship between the issuer scale and obligation scale assumes a generic historical average recovery. Individual obligations can be assigned ratings, higher, lower, or the same as that entity's issuer rating or Issuer Default Rating (IDR), based on their relative ranking, relative vulnerability to default or based on explicit Recovery Ratings.

As a result, individual obligations of entities, such as corporations, are assigned ratings higher, lower, or the same as that entity's issuer rating or IDR, except DIP obligation ratings that are not based off an IDR. At the lower end of the ratings scale, Fitch publishes explicit Recovery Ratings in many cases to complement issuer and obligation ratings.

**AAA:** Highest credit quality. "AAA" ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.

**AA:** Very high credit quality. "AA" ratings denote expectations of very low credit risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.

**A:** High credit quality. "A" ratings denote expectations of low credit risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

**BBB:** Good credit quality. "BBB" ratings indicate that expectations of credit risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.

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**BB:** Speculative. "BB" ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to credit risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time; however, business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial commitments to be met.

**B:** Highly speculative. "B" ratings indicate that material credit risk is present.

**CCC:** Substantial credit risk. "CCC" ratings indicate that substantial credit risk is present.

**CC:** Very high levels of credit risk. "CC" ratings indicate very high levels of credit risk.

**C:** Exceptionally high levels of credit risk. "C" indicates exceptionally high levels of credit risk.

The ratings of corporate finance obligations are linked to Issuer Default Ratings (or sometimes Viability Ratings for banks) by i) recovery expectations, including as often indicated by Recovery Ratings assigned in the case of low speculative grade issuers and ii) for banks an assessment of non-performance risk relative to the risk captured in the Issuer Default Rating or Viability Rating (e.g. in respect of certain hybrid securities).

For performing obligations, the obligation rating represents the risk of default and takes into account the effect of expected recoveries on the credit risk should a default occur.

If the obligation rating is higher than the rating of the issuer, this indicates above average recovery expectations in the event of default. If the obligations rating is lower than the rating of the issuer, this indicates low expected recoveries should default occur.

Ratings in the categories of "CCC", "CC" and "C" can also relate to obligations or issuers that are in default. In this case, the rating does not opine on default risk but reflects the recovery expectation only.

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Issuer Default Ratings:** 

Rated entities in a number of sectors, including financial and non-financial corporations, sovereigns, insurance companies and certain sectors within public finance, are generally assigned Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs). IDRs are also assigned to certain entities or enterprises in global infrastructure, project finance and public finance. IDRs opine on an entity's relative vulnerability to default (including by way of a distressed debt exchange) on financial obligations. The threshold default risk addressed by the IDR is generally that of the financial obligations whose non-payment would best reflect the uncured failure of that entity. As such, IDRs also address relative vulnerability to bankruptcy, administrative receivership or similar concepts.

In aggregate, IDRs provide an ordinal ranking of issuers based on the agency's view of their relative vulnerability to default, rather than a prediction of a specific percentage likelihood of default.

**AAA:** Highest credit quality. "AAA" ratings denote the lowest expectation of default risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.

AA: Very high credit quality. "AA" ratings denote expectations of very low default risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.

**A:** High credit quality. "A" ratings denote expectations of low default risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

**BBB:** Good credit quality. "BBB" ratings indicate that expectations of default risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.

BB: Speculative. "BB" ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to default risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time; however, business or financial flexibility exists that supports the servicing of financial commitments.

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**B:** Highly speculative. "B" ratings indicate that material default risk is present, but a limited margin of safety remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however, capacity for continued payment is vulnerable to deterioration in the business and economic environment.

**CCC:** Substantial credit risk. Default is a real possibility.

**CC:** Very high levels of credit risk. Default of some kind appears probable.

**C:** Near default. A default or default-like process has begun, or the issuer is in standstill, or for a closed funding vehicle, payment capacity is irrevocably impaired. Conditions that are indicative of a "C" category rating for an issuer include:

• the issuer has entered into a grace or cure period following non-payment of a material financial obligation;

• the issuer has entered into a temporary negotiated waiver or standstill agreement following a payment default on a material financial obligation;

• the formal announcement by the issuer or their agent of a distressed debt exchange;

• a closed financing vehicle where payment capacity is irrevocably impaired such that it is not expected to pay interest and/or principal in full during the life of the transaction, but where no payment default is imminent

**RD:** Restricted default. "RD" ratings indicate an issuer that in Fitch's opinion has experienced:

• an uncured payment default or distressed debt exchange on a bond, loan or other material financial obligation, but

• has not entered into bankruptcy filings, administration, receivership, liquidation, or other formal winding-up procedure, and has not otherwise ceased operating. This would include:

• the selective payment default on a specific class or currency of debt;

• the uncured expiry of any applicable grace period, cure period or default forbearance period following a payment default on a bank loan, capital markets security or other material financial obligation;

• the extension of multiple waivers or forbearance periods upon a payment default on one or more material financial obligations, either in series or in parallel; ordinary execution of a distressed debt exchange on one or more material financial obligations.

**D:** Default. "D" ratings indicate an issuer that in Fitch's opinion has entered into bankruptcy filings, administration, receivership, liquidation or other formal winding-up procedure or that has otherwise ceased business.

Default ratings are not assigned prospectively to entities or their obligations; within this context, non-payment on an instrument that contains a deferral feature or grace period will generally not be considered a default until after the expiration of the deferral or grace period, unless a default is otherwise driven by bankruptcy or other similar circumstance, or by a distressed debt exchange.

In all cases, the assignment of a default rating reflects the agency's opinion as to the most appropriate rating category consistent with the rest of its universe of ratings and may differ from the definition of default under the terms of an issuer's financial obligations or local commercial practice.

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Structured Finance Long-Term Obligation Ratings:** 

Ratings of structured finance obligations on the long-term scale consider the obligations' relative vulnerability to default. These ratings are typically assigned to an individual security or tranche in a transaction and not to an issuer.

**AAA: Highest credit quality.** 

"AAA" ratings denote the lowest expectation of default risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.

**AA: Very high credit quality.** 

"AA" ratings denote expectations of very low default risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.

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**A: High credit quality.** 

"A" ratings denote expectations of low default risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

**BBB: Good credit quality.** 

"BBB" ratings indicate that expectations of default risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate, but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.

**BB: Speculative.** 

"BB" ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to default risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time.

**B: Highly speculative.** 

"B" ratings indicate that material default risk is present, but a limited margin of safety remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however, capacity for continued payment is vulnerable to deterioration in the business and economic environment.

**CCC: Substantial credit risk.** 

Default is a real possibility.

**CC: Very high levels of credit risk.** 

Default of some kind appears probable.

**C: Exceptionally high levels of credit risk.** 

Default appears imminent or inevitable.

**D: Default.** 

Indicates a default. Default generally is defined as one of the following:

• Failure to make payment of principal and/or interest under the contractual terms of the rated obligation;

• bankruptcy filings, administration, receivership, liquidation or other winding-up or cessation of the business of an issuer/obligor; or

• distressed exchange of an obligation, where creditors were offered securities with diminished structural or economic terms compared with the existing obligation to avoid a probable payment default.

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Country Ceilings Ratings:** 

Country Ceilings are expressed using the symbols of the long-term issuer primary credit rating scale and relate to sovereign jurisdictions also rated by Fitch on the Issuer Default Rating (IDR) scale. They reflect the agency's judgment regarding the risk of capital and exchange controls being imposed by the sovereign authorities that would prevent or materially impede the private sector's ability to convert local currency into foreign currency and transfer to non-resident creditors — transfer and convertibility (T&C) risk. They are not ratings but expressions of a cap for the foreign currency issuer ratings of most, but not all, issuers in a given country. Given the close correlation between sovereign credit and T&C risks, the Country Ceiling may exhibit a greater degree of volatility than would normally be expected when it lies above the sovereign Foreign Currency Rating.

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Public Finance and Global Infrastructure Obligation Ratings:** 

Ratings of public finance obligations and ratings of infrastructure and project finance obligations on the long-term scale, including the financial obligations of sovereigns, consider the obligations' relative vulnerability to default. These ratings are assigned to an individual security, instrument or tranche in a transaction. In some cases, considerations of recoveries canhave an influence on obligation ratings in infrastructure and project finance. In limited cases in U.S. public finance, where Chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy Code provides reliably superior prospects for ultimate recovery to local government obligations that benefit from a statutory lien on revenues, Fitch reflects this in

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a security rating with limited notching above the IDR. Recovery expectations can also be reflected in a security rating in the U.S. during the pendency of a bankruptcy proceeding under the Code if there is sufficient visibility on potential recovery prospects.

**AAA:** Highest credit quality. "AAA" ratings denote the lowest expectation of default risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.

**AA:** Very high credit quality. "AA" ratings denote expectations of very low default risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.

**A:** High credit quality. "A" ratings denote expectations of low default risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

**BBB:** Good credit quality. "BBB" ratings indicate that expectations of default risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.

**BB:** Speculative. "BB" ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to default risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time..

**B:** Highly speculative. "B" ratings indicate that material default risk is present, but a limited margin of safety remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however, capacity for continued payment is vulnerable to deterioration in the business and economic environment.

**CCC:** Substantial credit risk. Default is a real possibility.

**CC:** Very high levels of credit risk. Default of some kind appears probable.

**C:** Exceptionally high levels of credit risk. Default appears imminent or inevitable.

**D:** Default. Indicates a default. Default generally is defined as one of the following:

• Failure to make payment of principal and/or interest under the contractual terms of the rated obligation;

• bankruptcy filings, administration, receivership, liquidation or other winding-up or cessation of the business of an issuer/obligor where payment default on an obligation is a virtual certainty; or

• distressed exchange of an obligation, where creditors were offered securities with diminished structural or economic terms compared with the existing obligation to avoid a probable payment default.

*Notes: In U.S. public finance, obligations may be pre-refunded, where funds sufficient to meet the requirements of the respective obligations are placed in an escrow account. When obligation ratings are maintained based on the escrowed funds and their structural elements, the ratings carry the suffix "pre" (e.g. "AAApre", "AA+pre").* 

**Structured Finance Defaults** 

"Imminent" default, categorized under "C", typically refers to the occasion where a payment default has been intimated by the issuer, and is all but inevitable. This may, for example, be where an issuer has missed a scheduled payment, but (as is typical) has a grace period during which it may cure the payment default. Another alternative would be where an issuer has formally announced a distressed debt exchange, but the date of the exchange still lies several days or weeks in the immediate future.

Additionally, in structured finance transactions, where analysis indicates that an instrument is irrevocably impaired such that it is not expected to pay interest and/or principal in full in accordance with the terms of the obligation's documentation during the life of the transaction, but where no payment default in accordance with the terms of the documentation is imminent, the obligation will typically be rated in the "C" category.

**Structured Finance Write-downs** 

Where an instrument has experienced an involuntary and, in the agency's opinion, irreversible "write-down" of principal (i.e. other than through amortization, and resulting in a loss to the investor), a credit rating of "D" will be assigned to the instrument. Where the agency believes the "write-down" may prove to be temporary (and the loss

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may be "written up" again in future if and when performance improves), then a credit rating of "C" will typically be assigned. Should the "write-down" then later be reversed, the credit rating will be raised to an appropriate level for that instrument. Should the "write-down" later be deemed as irreversible, the credit rating will be lowered to "D".

*Notes: In the case of structured and project finance, while the ratings do not address the loss severity given default of the rated liability, loss severity assumptions on the underlying assets are nonetheless typically included as part of the analysis. Loss severity assumptions are used to derive pool cash flows available to service the rated liability.* 

*The suffix "sf" denotes an issue that is a structured finance transaction.* 

*Enhanced Equipment Trust Certificates (EETCs) are corporate-structured hybrid debt securities that airlines typically use to finance aircraft equipment. Due to the hybrid characteristics of these bonds, Fitch's rating approach incorporates elements of both the structured finance and corporate rating methodologies. Although rated as asset-backed securities, unlike other structured finance ratings, EETC ratings involve a measure of recovery given default akin to ratings of financial obligations in corporate finance, as described above.* 

**Description of Fitch Ratings' Short-Term Ratings Assigned to Issuers and Obligations:** 

A short-term issuer or obligation rating is based in all cases on the short-term vulnerability to default of the rated entity or security stream and relates to the capacity to meet financial obligations in accordance with the documentation governing the relevant obligation. Short-term deposit ratings may be adjusted for loss severity. Short-Term Ratings are assigned to obligations whose initial maturity is viewed as "short term" based on market convention.<sup>8</sup> Typically, this means up to 13 months for corporate, sovereign, and structured obligations, and up to 36 months for obligations in U.S. public finance markets.

**F1:** Highest short-term credit quality. Indicates the strongest intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments; may have an added "+" to denote any exceptionally strong credit feature.

**F2:** Good short-term credit quality. Good intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments.

**F3:** Fair short-term credit quality. The intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is adequate.

**B:** Speculative short-term credit quality. Minimal capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, plus heightened vulnerability to near term adverse changes in financial and economic conditions.

**C:** High short-term default risk. Default is a real possibility.

**RD:** Restricted default. Indicates an entity that has defaulted on one or more of its financial commitments, although it continues to meet other financial obligations. Typically applicable to entity ratings only.

**D:** Default. Indicates a broad-based default event for an entity, or the default of a short-term obligation.

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<sup>8</sup>

A long-term rating can also be used to rate an issuer with short maturity.

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**16. Appendix B — Proxy voting policies and procedures** 

**Policy** 

Each of the Pioneer Funds and certain other clients of Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("Amundi US") have delegated responsibility to vote proxies related to portfolio holdings to Amundi US. Amundi US is a fiduciary that owes each of its clients the duties of care and loyalty with respect to all services undertaken on the client's behalf, including voting proxies for securities held by the client. When Amundi US has been delegated proxy-voting authority for a client, the duty of care requires Amundi US to monitor corporate events and to vote the proxies. To satisfy its duty of loyalty, Amundi US must place the client's interests ahead of its own and must cast proxy votes in a manner consistent with the best interest of the client. It is Amundi US's policy to vote proxies presented to Amundi US in a timely manner in accordance with these principles.

Amundi US's fundamental concern in voting proxies is the economic effect of the proposal on the value of portfolio holdings, considering both the short- and long-term impact. In many instances, Amundi US believes that supporting the company's strategy and voting "for" management's proposals builds portfolio value. In other cases, however, proposals set forth by management may have a negative effect on that value, while some shareholder proposals may hold the best prospects for enhancing it. Amundi US monitors developments in the proxy voting arena and will revise this policy as needed.

Amundi US believes that environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors can affect companies' long-term prospects for success and the sustainability of their business models. Since ESG factors that may affect corporate performance and economic value are considered by our investment professionals as part of the investment management process, Amundi US also considers these factors when reviewing proxy proposals. This approach is consistent with the stated investment objectives and policies of funds and investment strategies.

It should be noted that the proxy voting guidelines below are guidelines, not rules, and Amundi US reserves the right in all cases to vote contrary to guidelines where doing so is determined to represent the best economic interests of our clients. Further, the Pioneer Funds or other clients of Amundi US may direct Amundi US to vote contrary to guidelines.

Amundi US's clients may request copies of their proxy voting records and of Amundi US's proxy voting policies and procedures by either sending a written request to Amundi US's Proxy Coordinator, or clients may review Amundi US's proxy voting policies and procedures on-line at amundi.com/usinvestors. Amundi US may describe to clients its proxy voting policies and procedures by delivering a copy of Amundi US's Form ADV (Part II), by separate notice to the client or by other means.

**Applicability** 

This Proxy Voting policy and the procedures set forth below are designed to complement Amundi US's investment policies and procedures regarding its general responsibility to monitor the performance and/or corporate events of companies that are issuers of securities held in accounts managed by Amundi US. This policy sets forth Amundi US's position on a number of issues for which proxies may be solicited but it does not include all potential voting scenarios or proxy events. Furthermore, because of the special issues associated with proxy solicitations by closed-end Funds, Amundi US will vote shares of closed-end Funds on a case-by-case basis.

**Purpose** 

The purpose of this policy is to ensure that proxies for United States ("US") and non-US companies that are received in a timely manner will be voted in accordance with the principles stated above. Unless the Proxy Voting Oversight Group (as described below) specifically determines otherwise, all shares in a company held by Amundi US-managed accounts for which Amundi US has proxy-voting authority will be voted alike, unless a client has given specific voting instructions on an issue.

Amundi US does not delegate the authority to vote proxies relating to securities held by its clients to any of its affiliates. Any questions about this policy should be directed to Amundi US's Chief of Staff, US Investment Management (the "Proxy Coordinator").

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**Procedures** 

**Proxy Voting Service** 

Amundi US has engaged an independent proxy voting service to assist in the voting of proxies. The proxy voting service works with custodians to ensure that all proxy materials are received by the custodians and are processed in a timely fashion. The proxy voting service votes all proxies in accordance with the proxy voting guidelines established by Amundi US and set forth herein, to the extent applicable. The proxy voting service will refer proxy questions to the Proxy Coordinator (described below) for instructions under circumstances where: (1) the application of the proxy voting guidelines is unclear; (2) a particular proxy question is not covered by the guidelines; or (3) the guidelines call for specific instructions on a case-by-case basis. The proxy voting service is also requested to call to the Proxy Coordinator's attention specific proxy questions that, while governed by a guideline, appear to involve unusual or controversial issues. Amundi US reserves the right to attend a meeting in person and may do so when it determines that the company or the matters to be voted on at the meeting are strategically important to its clients.

To supplement its own research and analysis in determining how to vote on a particular proxy proposal, Amundi US may utilize research, analysis or recommendations provided by the proxy voting service on a case-by-case basis. Amundi US does not, as a policy, follow the assessments or recommendations provided by the proxy voting service without its own analysis and determination.

**Proxy Coordinator** 

The Proxy Coordinator coordinates the voting, procedures and reporting of proxies on behalf of Amundi US's clients. The Proxy Coordinator will deal directly with the proxy voting service and, in the case of proxy questions referred by the proxy voting service, will solicit voting recommendations and instructions from the Portfolio Management Group, or, to the extent applicable, investment sub-advisers. The Proxy Coordinator is responsible for ensuring that these questions and referrals are responded to in a timely fashion and for transmitting appropriate voting instructions to the proxy voting service. The Proxy Coordinator is responsible for verifying with the General Counsel or his or her designee whether Amundi US's voting power is subject to any limitations or guidelines issued by the client (or in the case of an employee benefit plan, the plan's trustee or other fiduciaries).

**Referral Items** 

The proxy voting service will refer proxy questions to the Proxy Coordinator or his or her designee that are described by Amundi US's proxy voting guidelines as to be voted on a case-by-case basis, that are not covered by Amundi US's guidelines or where Amundi US's guidelines may be unclear with respect to the matter to be voted on. Under such circumstances, the Proxy Coordinator will seek a written voting recommendation from the Chief Investment Officer, U.S. or his or her designated equity portfolio-management representative. Any such recommendation will include: (i) the manner in which the proxies should be voted; (ii) the rationale underlying any such decision; and (iii) the disclosure of any contacts or communications made between Amundi US and any outside parties concerning the proxy proposal prior to the time that the voting instructions are provided.

**Securities Lending** 

In accordance with industry standards, proxies are not available to be voted when the shares are out on loan through either Amundi US's lending program or a client's managed security lending program. However, Amundi US will reserve the right to recall lent securities so that they may be voted according to Amundi US's instructions. If a portfolio manager would like to vote a block of previously lent shares, the Proxy Coordinator will work with the portfolio manager and Investment Operations to recall the security, to the extent possible, to facilitate the vote on the entire block of shares. Certain clients participate in securities lending programs. Although such programs allow for the recall of securities for any reason, Amundi US may determine not to vote securities on loan and it may not always be possible for securities on loan to be recalled in time to be voted.

**Share-Blocking** 

"Share-blocking" is a market practice whereby shares are sent to a custodian (which may be different than the account custodian) for record keeping and voting at the general meeting. The shares are unavailable for sale or delivery until the end of the blocking period (typically the day after general meeting date).

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Amundi US will vote in those countries with "share-blocking." In the event a manager would like to sell a security with "share-blocking", the Proxy Coordinator will work with the Portfolio Manager and Investment Operations Department to recall the shares (as allowable within the market time-frame and practices) and/or communicate with executing brokerage firm. A list of countries with "share-blocking" is available from the Investment Operations Department upon request.

**Proxy Voting Oversight Group** 

The members of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group include Amundi US's Chief Investment Officer, U.S. or his or her designated equity portfolio management representative, the Chief of Staff, U.S., and the Chief Compliance Officer of the Adviser and Funds. Other members of Amundi US will be invited to attend meetings and otherwise participate as necessary. The Chief of Staff, U.S. will chair the Proxy Voting Oversight Group.

The Proxy Voting Oversight Group is responsible for developing, evaluating, and changing (when necessary) Amundi US's proxy voting policies and procedures. The Group meets at least annually to evaluate and review this policy and the services of its third-party proxy voting service. In addition, the Proxy Voting Oversight Group will meet as necessary to vote on referral items and address other business as necessary.

**Amendments** 

Amundi US may not amend this policy without the prior approval of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group. Amendments to this policy with respect to votes to be cast on behalf of any of the Pioneer Funds also shall be presented to the Board of the Pioneer Funds for its review and advance approval.

**Form N-PX** 

The Proxy Coordinator and the Director of Regulatory Reporting are responsible for ensuring that Form N-PX documents receive the proper review by a member of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group prior to a Fund officer signing the forms.

The Proxy Coordinator will provide the Compliance department with a copy of each Form N-PX filing prepared by the proxy voting service.

Compliance files N-PX. The Compliance department will ensure that a corresponding Form N-PX exists for each Amundi US registered investment company.

Following this review, each Form N-PX is formatted for public dissemination via the EDGAR system.

Prior to submission, each Form N-PX is to be presented to the Fund officer for a final review and signature.

Copies of the Form N-PX filings and their submission receipts are maintained according to Amundi US record keeping policies.

**Proxy Voting Guidelines** 

**Administrative** 

While administrative items appear infrequently in U.S. issuer proxies, they are quite common in non-U.S. proxies.

We will generally support these and similar management proposals:

• Corporate name change.

• A change of corporate headquarters.

• Stock exchange listing.

• Establishment of time and place of annual meeting.

• Adjournment or postponement of annual meeting.

• Acceptance/approval of financial statements.

• Approval of dividend payments, dividend reinvestment plans and other dividend-related proposals.

• Approval of minutes and other formalities.

• Authorization of the transferring of reserves and allocation of income.

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• Amendments to authorized signatories.

• Approval of accounting method changes or change in fiscal year-end.

• Acceptance of labor agreements.

• Appointment of internal auditors.

Amundi US will vote on a case-by-case basis on other routine administrative items; however, Amundi US will oppose any routine proposal if insufficient information is presented in advance to allow Amundi US to judge the merit of the proposal. Amundi US has also instructed its proxy voting service to inform Amundi US of its analysis of any administrative items that may be inconsistent, in its view, with Amundi US's goal of supporting the value of its clients' portfolio holdings so that Amundi US may consider and vote on those items on a case-by-case basis in its discretion.

**Auditors** 

We normally vote for proposals to:

Ratify the auditors. We will consider a vote against if we are concerned about the auditors' independence or their past work for the company. Specifically, we will oppose the ratification of auditors and withhold votes for audit committee members if non-audit fees paid by the company to the auditing firm exceed the sum of audit fees plus audit-related fees plus permissible tax fees according to the disclosure categories proposed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

• Restore shareholder rights to ratify the auditors.

We will normally oppose proposals that require companies to:

• Seek bids from other auditors.

• Rotate auditing firms, except where the rotation is statutorily required or where rotation would demonstrably strengthen financial disclosure.

• Indemnify auditors.

• Prohibit auditors from engaging in non-audit services for the company.

**Board of Directors** 

On issues related to the board of directors, Amundi US normally supports management. We will, however, consider a vote against management in instances where corporate performance has been poor or where the board appears to lack independence. We also believe that a well-balanced board with diverse perspectives is conducive to sound corporate governance. In our view, diversity of expertise, skills, gender, ethnicity and race may contribute to the overall quality of decision-making and risk management.

**General Board Issues** 

Amundi US will vote for:

• Audit, compensation and nominating committees composed of independent directors exclusively.

• Indemnification for directors for actions taken in good faith in accordance with the business judgment rule. We will vote against proposals for broader indemnification.

• Changes in board size that appear to have a legitimate business purpose and are not primarily for anti-takeover reasons.

• Election of an honorary director.

We will vote against:

• Minimum stock ownership by directors.

• Term limits for directors. Companies benefit from experienced directors, and shareholder control is better achieved through annual votes.

• Requirements for union or special interest representation on the board.

• Requirements to provide two candidates for each board seat.

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We will vote on a case-by case basis on these issues:

• Separate chairman and CEO positions. We will consider voting with shareholders on these issues in cases of poor corporate performance.

**Elections of Directors** 

In uncontested elections of directors we will vote against:

• Individual directors with absenteeism above 25% without valid reason. We support proposals that require disclosure of director attendance.

• Insider directors and affiliated outsiders who sit on the audit, compensation, stock option or nominating committees. For the purposes of our policy, we use the definition of affiliated directors provided by our proxy voting service.

We will also vote against:

• Directors who have failed to act on a takeover offer where the majority of shareholders have tendered their shares.

• Directors who appear to lack independence or are associated with poor corporate or governance performance.

We will vote on a case-by case basis on these issues:

Re-election of directors who have implemented or renewed a dead hand or modified dead-hand poison pill (a "dead-hand poison pill" is a shareholder rights plan that may be altered only by incumbent or "dead" directors. These plans prevent a potential acquirer from disabling a poison pill by obtaining control of the board through a proxy vote).

• Contested election of directors.

• Election of a greater number of independent directors (in order to move closer to a majority of independent directors) in cases of poor performance.

• Mandatory retirement policies.

• Directors who have ignored a shareholder proposal that has been approved by shareholders for two consecutive years.

We will vote for:

• Precatory and binding resolutions requesting that the board changes the company's bylaws to stipulate that directors need to be elected with affirmative majority of votes cast, provided that the resolutions allow for plurality voting in cases of contested elections.

**Takeover-Related Measures** 

Amundi US is generally opposed to proposals that may discourage takeover attempts. We believe that the potential for a takeover helps ensure that corporate performance remains high.

Amundi US will vote for:

• Cumulative voting.

• Increasing the ability for shareholders to call special meetings.

• Increasing the ability for shareholders to act by written consent.

• Restrictions on the ability to make greenmail payments.

• Submitting rights plans to shareholder vote.

• Rescinding shareholder rights plans ("poison pills").

• Opting out of the following state takeover statutes:

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Control share acquisition statutes, which deny large holders voting rights on holdings over a specified threshold.

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Control share cash-out provisions, which require large holders to acquire shares from other holders.

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Freeze-out provisions, which impose a waiting period on large holders before they can attempt to gain control.

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Stakeholder laws, which permit directors to consider interests of non-shareholder constituencies.

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Disgorgement provisions, which require acquirers to disgorge profits on purchases made before gaining control.

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Fair price provisions.

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Authorization of shareholder rights plans.

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Labor protection provisions.

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Mandatory classified boards.

We will vote on a case-by-case basis on the following issues:

• Fair price provisions. We will vote against provisions requiring supermajority votes to approve takeovers. We will also consider voting against proposals that require a supermajority vote to repeal or amend the provision. Finally, we will consider the mechanism used to determine the fair price; we are generally opposed to complicated formulas or requirements to pay a premium.

• Opting out of state takeover statutes regarding fair price provisions. We will use the criteria used for fair price provisions in general to determine our vote on this issue.

• Proposals that allow shareholders to nominate directors.

We will vote against:

• Classified boards, except in the case of closed-end funds, where we shall vote on a case-by-case basis.

• Limiting shareholder ability to remove or appoint directors. We will support proposals to restore shareholder authority in this area. We will review on case-by-case basis proposals that authorize the board to make interim appointments.

• Classes of shares with unequal voting rights.

• Supermajority vote requirements.

• Severance packages ("golden" and "tin" parachutes). We will support proposals to put these packages to shareholder vote.

• Reimbursement of dissident proxy solicitation expenses. While we ordinarily support measures that encourage takeover bids, we believe that management should have full control over corporate funds.

• Extension of advance notice requirements for shareholder proposals.

• Granting board authority normally retained by shareholders, particularly the right to amend the corporate charter.

• Shareholder rights plans ("poison pills"). These plans generally allow shareholders to buy additional shares at a below-market price in the event of a change in control and may deter some bids.

**Capital Structure** 

Managements need considerable flexibility in determining the company's financial structure, and Amundi US normally supports managements' proposals in this area. We will, however, reject proposals that impose high barriers to potential takeovers.

Amundi US will vote for:

• Changes in par value.

• Reverse splits, if accompanied by a reduction in number of shares.

• Shares repurchase programs, if all shareholders may participate on equal terms.

• Bond issuance.

• Increases in "ordinary" preferred stock.

• Proposals to have blank-check common stock placements (other than shares issued in the normal course of business) submitted for shareholder approval.

• Cancellation of company treasury shares.

We will vote on a case-by-case basis on the following issues:

• Reverse splits not accompanied by a reduction in number of shares, considering the risk of delisting.

• Increase in authorized common stock. We will make a determination considering, among other factors:

-

Number of shares currently available for issuance;

------

-

Size of requested increase (we would normally approve increases of up to 100% of current authorization);

-

Proposed use of the proceeds from the issuance of additional shares; and

-

Potential consequences of a failure to increase the number of shares outstanding (e.g., delisting or bankruptcy).

• Blank-check preferred. We will normally oppose issuance of a new class of blank-check preferred, but may approve an increase in a class already outstanding if the company has demonstrated that it uses this flexibility appropriately.

• Proposals to submit private placements to shareholder vote.

• Other financing plans.

We will vote against preemptive rights that we believe limit a company's financing flexibility.

**Compensation** 

Amundi US supports compensation plans that link pay to shareholder returns and believes that management has the best understanding of the level of compensation needed to attract and retain qualified people. At the same time, stock-related compensation plans have a significant economic impact and a direct effect on the balance sheet. Therefore, while we do not want to micromanage a company's compensation programs, we place limits on the potential dilution these plans may impose.

Amundi US will vote for:

• 401(k) benefit plans.

• Employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs), as long as shares allocated to ESOPs are less than 5% of outstanding shares. Larger blocks of stock in ESOPs can serve as a takeover defense. We will support proposals to submit ESOPs to shareholder vote.

• Various issues related to the Omnibus Budget and Reconciliation Act of 1993 (OBRA), including:

-

Amendments to performance plans to conform with OBRA;

-

Caps on annual grants or amendments of administrative features;

-

Adding performance goals; and

-

Cash or cash-and-stock bonus plans.

• Establish a process to link pay, including stock-option grants, to performance, leaving specifics of implementation to the company.

• Require that option repricing be submitted to shareholders.

• Require the expensing of stock-option awards.

• Require reporting of executive retirement benefits (deferred compensation, split-dollar life insurance, SERPs, and pension benefits).

• Employee stock purchase plans where the purchase price is equal to at least 85% of the market price, where the offering period is no greater than 27 months and where potential dilution (as defined below) is no greater than 10%.

We will vote on a case-by-case basis on the following issues:

• Shareholder proposals seeking additional disclosure of executive and director pay information.

• Executive and director stock-related compensation plans. We will consider the following factors when reviewing these plans:

-

The program must be of a reasonable size. We will approve plans where the combined employee and director plans together would generate less than 15% dilution. We will reject plans with 15% or more potential dilution.

-

Dilution = (A + B + C) / (A + B + C + D), where

-

A = Shares reserved for plan/amendment,

-

B = Shares available under continuing plans,

-

C = Shares granted but unexercised and

-

D = Shares outstanding.

------

-

The plan must not:

-

Explicitly permit unlimited option repricing authority or have allowed option repricing in the past without shareholder approval.

-

Be a self-replenishing "evergreen" plan or a plan that grants discount options and tax offset payments.

-

We are generally in favor of proposals that increase participation beyond executives.

-

We generally support proposals asking companies to adopt rigorous vesting provisions for stock option plans such as those that vest incrementally over, at least, a three- or four-year period with a pro rata portion of the shares becoming exercisable on an annual basis following grant date.

-

We generally support proposals asking companies to disclose their window period policies for stock transactions. Window period policies ensure that employees do not exercise options based on insider information contemporaneous with quarterly earnings releases and other material corporate announcements.

-

We generally support proposals asking companies to adopt stock holding periods for their executives.

• All other employee stock purchase plans.

• All other compensation-related proposals, including deferred compensation plans, employment agreements, loan guarantee programs and retirement plans.

• All other proposals regarding stock compensation plans, including extending the life of a plan, changing vesting restrictions, repricing options, lengthening exercise periods or accelerating distribution of awards and pyramiding and cashless exercise programs.

We will vote against:

• Pensions for non-employee directors. We believe these retirement plans reduce director objectivity.

• Elimination of stock option plans.

We will vote on a case-by case basis on these issues:

• Limits on executive and director pay.

• Stock in lieu of cash compensation for directors.

**Corporate Governance** 

Amundi US will vote for:

• Confidential voting.

• Equal access provisions, which allow shareholders to contribute their opinions to proxy materials.

• Proposals requiring directors to disclose their ownership of shares in the company.

We will vote on a case-by-case basis on the following issues:

• Change in the state of incorporation. We will support reincorporations supported by valid business reasons. We will oppose those that appear to be solely for the purpose of strengthening takeover defenses.

• Bundled proposals. We will evaluate the overall impact of the proposal.

• Adopting or amending the charter, bylaws or articles of association.

• Shareholder appraisal rights, which allow shareholders to demand judicial review of an acquisition price.

We will vote against:

• Shareholder advisory committees. While management should solicit shareholder input, we prefer to leave the method of doing so to management's discretion.

• Limitations on stock ownership or voting rights.

• Reduction in share ownership disclosure guidelines.

**Mergers and Restructurings** 

Amundi US will vote on the following and similar issues on a case-by-case basis:

• Mergers and acquisitions.

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

• Corporate restructurings, including spin-offs, liquidations, asset sales, joint ventures, conversions to holding company and conversions to self-managed REIT structure.

• Debt restructurings.

• Conversion of securities.

• Issuance of shares to facilitate a merger.

• Private placements, warrants, convertible debentures.

• Proposals requiring management to inform shareholders of merger opportunities.

We will normally vote against shareholder proposals requiring that the company be put up for sale.

**Investment Companies** 

Many of our portfolios may invest in shares of closed-end funds or open-end funds (including exchange-traded funds). The non-corporate structure of these investments raises several unique proxy voting issues.

Amundi US will vote for:

• Establishment of new classes or series of shares.

• Establishment of a master-feeder structure.

Amundi US will vote on a case-by-case basis on:

• Changes in investment policy. We will normally support changes that do not affect the investment objective or overall risk level of the fund. We will examine more fundamental changes on a case-by-case basis.

• Approval of new or amended advisory contracts.

• Changes from closed-end to open-end format.

• Election of a greater number of independent directors.

• Authorization for, or increase in, preferred shares.

• Disposition of assets, termination, liquidation, or mergers.

• Classified boards of closed-end funds, but will typically support such proposals.

In general, business development companies (BDCs) are not considered investment companies for these purposes but are treated as corporate issuers.

**Environmental and Social Issues** 

Amundi US believes that environmental and social issues may influence corporate performance and economic return. Indeed, by analyzing all of a company's risks and opportunities, Amundi US can better assess its intrinsic value and long-term economic prospects.

When evaluating proxy proposals relating to environmental or social issues, decisions are made on a case-by-case basis. We consider each of these proposals based on the impact to the company's shareholders and economic return, the specific circumstances at each individual company, any potentially adverse economic concerns, and the current policies and practices of the company.

For example, shareholder proposals relating to environmental and social issues, and on which we will vote on a base-by-case basis, may include those seeking that a company:

• Conduct studies regarding certain environmental or social issues;

• Study the feasibility of the company taking certain actions with regard to such issues; or

• Take specific action, including adopting or ceasing certain behavior and adopting company standards and principles, in relation to such issues.

In general, Amundi US believes these issues are important and should receive management attention.

------

Amundi US will support proposals where we believe the proposal, if implemented, would improve the prospects for the long-term success of the business and would provide value to the company and its shareholders. Amundi US may abstain on shareholder proposals with regard to environmental and social issues in cases where we believe the proposal, if implemented, would not be in the economic interests of the company, or where implementing the proposal would constrain management flexibility or would be unduly difficult, burdensome or costly.

When evaluating proxy proposals relating to environmental or social issues, Amundi US may consider the following factors or other factors deemed relevant, given such weight as deemed appropriate:

• approval of the proposal helps improve the company's practices;

• approval of the proposal can improve shareholder value;

• the company's current stance on the topic is likely to have negative effects on its business position or reputation in the short, medium, or long term;

• the company has already put appropriate action in place to respond to the issue contained in the proposal;

• the company's reasoning against approving the proposal responds appropriately to the various points mentioned by the shareholder when the proposal was presented;

• the solutions recommended in the proposal are relevant and appropriate, and if the topic of the proposal would not be better addressed through another means.

In the event of failures in risk management relating to environmental and social issues, Amundi US may vote against the election of directors responsible for overseeing those areas. Issues of special concern to Amundi US include corporate commitments to mitigating climate effects; achieving a diverse board of directors and employee base; and maintaining safe and sound working conditions, equitable compensation practices, and opportunities for career advancement. Amundi US will vote against proposals calling for substantial changes in the company's business or activities. We will also normally vote against proposals with regard to contributions, believing that management should control the routine disbursement of funds. In each case, the fundamental consideration governing votes cast on behalf of any of the Pioneer Funds in these areas is Amundi US's assessment of the potential impact on shareholder value.

**Conflicts of interest** 

Amundi US recognizes that in certain circumstances a conflict of interest may arise when Amundi US votes a proxy.

A conflict of interest occurs when Amundi US's interests interfere, or appear to interfere, with the interests of Amundi US's clients.

A conflict may be actual or perceived and may exist, for example, when the matter to be voted on concerns:

• An affiliate of Amundi US, such as another company belonging to the Credit Agricole banking group ("Credit Agricole Affiliate");

• An issuer of a security for which Amundi US acts as a sponsor, advisor, manager, custodian, distributor, underwriter, broker, or other similar capacity (including those securities specifically declared by its parent Amundi to present a conflict of interest for Amundi US);

• An issuer of a security for which Amundi has informed Amundi US that a Credit Agricole Affiliate acts as a sponsor, advisor, manager, custodian, distributor, underwriter, broker, or other similar capacity; or

• A person with whom Amundi US (or any of its affiliates) has an existing, material contract or business relationship.

Any member of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group and any other associate involved in the proxy voting process with knowledge of any apparent or actual conflict of interest must disclose such conflict to the Proxy Coordinator and the Chief Compliance Officer of Amundi US and the Funds. If any associate is lobbied or pressured with respect to any voting decision, whether within or outside of Amundi US, he or she should contact a member of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group or Amundi US's Chief Compliance Officer.

------

The Proxy Voting Oversight Group will review each item referred to Amundi US by the proxy voting service to determine whether an actual or potential conflict of interest exists in connection with the proposal(s) to be voted upon. The review will be conducted by comparing the apparent parties affected by the proxy proposal being voted upon against the Controller's and Compliance Department's internal list of interested persons and, for any matches found, evaluating the anticipated magnitude and possible probability of any conflict of interest being present. The Proxy Voting Oversight Group may cause any of the following actions to be taken when a conflict of interest is present:

• Vote the proxy in accordance with the vote indicated under "Voting Guidelines," if a vote is indicated, or

• Direct the independent proxy voting service to vote the proxy in accordance with its independent assessment or that of another independent adviser appointed by Amundi US or the applicable client for this purpose.

If the Proxy Voting Oversight Group perceives a material conflict of interest, the Group may also choose to disclose the conflict to the affected clients and solicit their consent to proceed with the vote or their direction (including through a client's fiduciary or other adviser), or may take such other action in good faith (in consultation with counsel) that would protect the interests of clients.

For each referral item, the determination regarding the presence or absence of any actual or potential conflict of interest will be documented in a Conflicts of Interest Report prepared by the Proxy Coordinator.

The Proxy Voting Oversight Group will review periodically the independence of the proxy voting service. This may include a review of the service's conflict management procedures and other documentation and an evaluation as to whether the service continues to have the competency and capacity to vote proxies.

**Decisions Not to Vote Proxies** 

Although it is Amundi US's general policy to vote all proxies in accordance with the principles set forth in this policy, there may be situations in which the Proxy Voting Oversight Group does not vote a proxy referred to it. For example, because of the potential conflict of interest inherent in voting shares of a Credit Agricole Affiliate, Amundi US will abstain from voting the shares unless otherwise directed by a client. In such a case, the Proxy Coordinator will inform Amundi Compliance before exercising voting rights.

There exist other situations in which the Proxy Voting Oversight Group may refrain from voting a proxy. For example, if the cost of voting a foreign security outweighs the benefit of voting, the Group may not vote the proxy. The Group may not be given enough time to process a vote, perhaps because it receives a meeting notice too late or it cannot obtain a translation of the agenda in the time available. If Amundi US has outstanding "sell" orders, the proxies for shares subject to the order may not be voted to facilitate the sale. Although Amundi US may hold shares on a company's record date, if the shares are sold prior to the meeting date the Group may decide not to vote those shares.

**Supervision** 

**Escalation** 

It is each associate's responsibility to contact his or her business unit head, the Proxy Coordinator, a member of the Proxy Voting Oversight Group or Amundi US's Chief Compliance Officer if he or she becomes aware of any possible noncompliance with this policy.

**Training** 

Amundi US will conduct periodic training regarding proxy voting and this policy. It is the responsibility of the business line policy owner and the applicable Compliance Department to coordinate and conduct such training.

**Related policies and procedures** 

Amundi US's Books and Records Policy and the Books and Records of the Pioneer Funds' Policy.

**Record Keeping** 

The Proxy Coordinator shall ensure that Amundi US's proxy voting service:

• Retains a copy of each proxy statement received (unless the proxy statement is available from the SEC's Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval (EDGAR) system);

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

• Retains a record of the vote cast;

• Prepares Form N-PX for filing on behalf of each client that is a registered investment company; and

• Is able to promptly provide Amundi US with a copy of the voting record upon its request.

The Proxy Coordinator shall ensure that for those votes that may require additional documentation (i.e. conflicts of interest, exception votes and case-by-case votes) the following records are maintained:

• A record memorializing the basis for each referral vote cast;

• A copy of any recommendation or analysis furnished by the proxy voting service; and

• A copy of any conflict notice, conflict consent or any other written communication (including emails or other electronic communications) to or from the client (or in the case of an employee benefit plan, the plan's trustee or other fiduciaries) regarding the subject proxy vote cast by, or the vote recommendation of, Amundi US.

Amundi US shall maintain the above records in the client's file in accordance with applicable regulations.

**Related regulations** 

Form N-1A, Form N-PX, ICA Rule 30b1-4, Rule 31a1-3, Rule 38a-1 and IAA 206(4) -6, Rule 204 -2

**Adopted by the Pioneer Funds' Boards of Trustees** 

October 5, 2004

**Effective Date:** 

October 5, 2004

**Revision Dates:** 

September 2009, December 2015, August 2017, February 2019, January 2021, November 2022, and January 2023

28063-09-0323

------

**PART C - OTHER INFORMATION**

**Item 25. Financial Statements and Exhibits**

**1. Financial Statements.**

Part A: The Registrant's audited Financial Highlights for the per share operating performance of the Registrant from the commencement of the Registrant's investment operations on December 22, 2014 through October 31, 2022 are included in Part A of this Registration Statement in the section entitled "Financial Highlights."

Part B: The Registrant's Financial Statements, including the notes thereto, and the report of Ernst & Young LLP, thereon, as included in the Registrant's annual report for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2022, are incorporated by reference into Part B of this Registration Statement in the section entitled "Financial Statements."

**2. Exhibits** 

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| (a)(1) | [Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust (January 12, 2016)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99a1.htm) (6)  |
| (a)(2) | [Certificate of Trust](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312514298380/d767554dex99a2.htm)(1) |
| (b) | [Amended and Restated By-Laws (May 15, 2020)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312521054501/d108189dex99b.htm) (5) |
| (c) | Not Applicable. |
| (d) | See Declaration of Trust and By-Laws cited under Items 25(a)(1) and 25(b) |
| (e) | Not Applicable |
| (f) | Not Applicable |
| (g) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Management Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi Pioneer Asset](d436461dex99g.htm)<br> [Management, Inc.) (October 1, 2020)](d436461dex99g.htm) (7)<br>|
| (h) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Underwriting Agreement with Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi Pioneer Distributor, Inc.)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000161603718000004/ilsunderwriting070317.txt)<br> [(July 3, 2017)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000161603718000004/ilsunderwriting070317.txt)(3)<br>|
| (i) | Not Applicable |
| (j)(1) | [Custodian Agreement with The Bank of New York Mellon ("BNY Mellon") (November 1, 2021)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99j.htm) (6) |
| (j)(2) | [Amendment to Appendix I to Custodian Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99j2.htm) (7) |
| (k)(1) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement with BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc.](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99k1.htm)<br> [("BNYM") (January 19, 2021)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99k1.htm) (6)<br>|
| (k)(2) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amendment No. 4 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement with BNYM (November 1,](d436461dex99k2.htm)<br> [2022)](d436461dex99k2.htm) (7)<br>|
| (k)(3) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly,](d436461dex99k3.htm)<br> [Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.) (April 1, 2021)](d436461dex99k3.htm) (7)<br>|
| (k)(4) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amendment No. 1 to Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset](d436461dex99k4.htm)<br> [Management US, Inc. (September 20, 2022)](d436461dex99k4.htm) (7)<br>|
| (k)(5) | [Fund Administration and Accounting Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2021)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99k3.htm) (6) |
| (k)(6) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amended Exhibit A to Fund Administration and Accounting Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1,](d436461dex99k6.htm)<br> [2022)](d436461dex99k6.htm) (7)<br>|
| (l) | [Opinion of Counsel](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000161603718000014/ils062218exopin.txt)(4) |
| (m) | Not Applicable |
| (n) | [Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm](d436461dex99n.htm) (7) |
| (o) | Not Applicable |
| (p) | [Initial Share Purchase Agreement](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312514351820/d793306dex99p.htm)(2) |
| (q) | Not applicable |
| (r) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Code of Ethics for Pioneer Funds, Amundi Distributor US, Inc., and Amundi Asset Management US,](d436461dex99r.htm)<br> [Inc. (November, 2022)](d436461dex99r.htm) (7)<br>|
| (s)(1) | [Power of Attorney (October 1, 2020)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1679751/000119312521054511/d45446dex99s.htm) (5) |
| (s)(2) | [Power of Attorney for Craig C. MacKay (March 23, 2021)](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1616037/000119312522054511/d288445dex99s2.htm) (6) |
| (s)(3) | [Power of Attorney for Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. (June 1, 2021)](d436461dex99s3.htm) (7) |

---

(1) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with the Registrant's Initial Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 6, 2014 (SEC Accession No. 0001193125-14-298380).

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

(2) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registrant's Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 25, 2014 (SEC Accession No. 0001193125-14-351820).

(3) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Registrant's Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 28, 2018 (SEC Accession No. 0001616037-18-000004).

(4) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 to the Registrant's Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 22, 2018 (SEC Accession No. 0001616037-18-000014).

(5) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Registrant's Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 24, 2021 (SEC Accession No. 0001193125-21-054501).

(6) Previously filed. Incorporated herein by reference from the exhibits filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 to the Registrant's Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-197909; 811-22987), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 25, 2022 (SEC Accession No. 00001193125-22-054511).

(7) Filed herewith.

**Item 26. Marketing Arrangements**

Reference is made to the Underwriting Agreement between the Fund and Amundi Distributor US, Inc. (prior to January 1, 2021, known as Amundi Pioneer Distributor, Inc.)

**Item 27. Other Expenses and Distribution**

Not applicable.

**Item 28. Persons controlled by or under common control with registrant**

Not applicable.

**Item 29. Number of holders of securities**

As of January 31, 2023, the number of record holders of each class of securities of the Registrant was

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **(1)** | **(2)** |
| **Title of Class** | **Number of Record Holders** |
| Common Shares <br> (no par value)<br>| 4246 |

---

**Item 30. Indemnification**

Except for the Fund's Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust (the "Declaration"), establishing the Fund as a statutory trust under Delaware law, there is no contract, arrangement or statute under which any Trustee, officer, underwriter or affiliated person of the Fund is insured or indemnified. The Declaration provides that every person who is, or has been, a Trustee or an officer, employee or agent of the Fund shall be indemnified by the Fund or the appropriate Fund series to the fullest extent permitted by law against liability and against all expenses reasonably incurred or paid by him in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding in which he becomes involved as a party or otherwise by virtue of his being or having been a Trustee, officer, employee or agent and against amounts paid or incurred by him in the settlement thereof.

Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), may be available to Trustees, officers and controlling persons of the Fund pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Fund has been advised that in the opinion of the SEC such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Fund of expenses incurred or

------

paid by a Trustee, officer or controlling person of the Fund in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such Trustee, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the Fund will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

**Item 31. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser**

Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. ("Amundi US") is a registered investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, and is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Amundi and Amundi's wholly owned subsidiary, Amundi Holdings US, Inc. Amundi US manages investment companies, pension and profit sharing plans, trusts, estates or charitable organizations and other corporations or business entities. Prior to January 1, 2021, Amundi US was known as Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.

To the knowledge of the Fund, none of Amundi US's directors or executive officers is or has been during their employment with Amundi US engaged in any other business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature for the past two fiscal years. Certain directors and officers, however, may hold or may have held various positions with, and engage or have engaged in business for, the investment companies that Amundi US manages and/or other Amundi subsidiaries.

**Item 32. Location of accounts and records**

The accounts and records are maintained at the Registrant's office at 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109; contact the Treasurer.

**Item 33. Management services**

Not applicable.

**Item 34. Undertakings**

1. Not applicable.

2. Not applicable.

3. The Registrant undertakes:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;a. to file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to the registration statement:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(1) to include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2) to reflect in the prospectus any facts or events after the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the registration statement; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(3) to include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or any material change to such information in the registration statement.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;b. that, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of those securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;c. to remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering.

d. that, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act to any purchaser:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(1) not applicable;

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2) if the Registrant is subject to Rule 430C [17 CFR 230.430C]: each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act as part of a registration statement relating to an offering, other than registration statements relying on Rule 430B or prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A under the Securities Act, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness. Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;e. that for the purpose of determining liability of the Registrant under the Securities Act to any purchaser in the initial distribution of securities:

The undersigned Registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities of the undersigned Registrant pursuant to this registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the undersigned Registrant will be a seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to the purchaser:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(1) any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned Registrant relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424 under the Securities Act;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2) free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant or used or referred to by the undersigned Registrant;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(3) the portion of any other free writing prospectus or advertisement pursuant to Rule 482 under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.482] relating to the offering containing material information about the undersigned Registrant or its securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(4) any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the undersigned Registrant to the purchaser.

4. Not applicable.

5. Not applicable.

6. Not applicable.

7. The Registrant undertakes to send by first class mail or other means designed to ensure equally prominent delivery within two business days of receipt of a written or oral request the Registrant's statement of additional information.

------

**SIGNATURES**

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Registrant certifies that this Registration Statement meets all of the requirements for effectiveness under Rule 486(b), and has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Boston, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, on the 24th day of February, 2023.

**PIONEER ILS INTERVAL FUND**

By: /s/ Lisa M. Jones

------

Lisa M. Jones

President

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities indicated below on February 24, 2023:

---

| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **Signature** | **Title** | **Date** |
| /s/ Lisa M. Jones <br>Lisa M. Jones<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; President (Principal Executive Officer)<br> and Trustee<br>|  |
| /s/ Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. <br>Anthony J. Koenig, Jr.<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Treasurer (Principal Financial and<br> Accounting Officer)<br>|  |
| John E. Baumgardner, Jr.\* <br>John E. Baumgardner, Jr.<br>| Trustee |  |
| Diane Durnin\* <br>Diane Durnin<br>| Trustee |  |
| Benjamin M. Friedman\* <br>Benjamin M. Friedman<br>| Trustee |  |
| Craig C. MacKay\* <br>Craig C. MacKay<br>| Trustee |  |
| Lorraine H. Monchak\* <br>Lorraine H. Monchak<br>| Trustee |  |
| Thomas J. Perna\* <br>Thomas J. Perna<br>| &nbsp;&nbsp; Chairman of the Board<br> and Trustee<br>|  |
| Marguerite A. Piret\* <br>Marguerite A. Piret<br>| Trustee |  |
| Fred J. Ricciardi\* <br>Fred J. Ricciardi<br>| Trustee |  |
| Kenneth J. Taubes\* <br>Kenneth J. Taubes<br>| Trustee |  |
| \*By: /s/ Lisa M. Jones <br>Lisa M. Jones<br> Attorney-In-Fact<br>|  | February 24, 2023 |

---

------

**EXHIBIT INDEX** 

---

| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **Exhibit**<br> **Number** | **Exhibit**<br> **Number** | **Document Title** |
| (g) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Management Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi Pioneer Asset](d436461dex99g.htm)<br> [Management, Inc.) (October 1, 2020)](d436461dex99g.htm) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Management Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi Pioneer Asset](d436461dex99g.htm)<br> [Management, Inc.) (October 1, 2020)](d436461dex99g.htm) |
| (j)(2) | [Amendment to Appendix I to Custodian Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99j2.htm) | [Amendment to Appendix I to Custodian Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99j2.htm) |
| (k)(2) | [Amendment No. 4 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement with BNYM (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99k2.htm) | [Amendment No. 4 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement with BNYM (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99k2.htm) |
| (k)(3) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi](d436461dex99k3.htm)<br> [Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.) (April 1, 2021)](d436461dex99k3.htm) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly, Amundi](d436461dex99k3.htm)<br> [Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.) (April 1, 2021)](d436461dex99k3.htm) |
| (k)(4) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amendment No. 1 to Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US,](d436461dex99k4.htm)<br> [Inc. (September 20, 2022)](d436461dex99k4.htm) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Amendment No. 1 to Amended and Restated Administration Agreement with Amundi Asset Management US,](d436461dex99k4.htm)<br> [Inc. (September 20, 2022)](d436461dex99k4.htm) |
| (k)(6) | [Amended Exhibit A to Fund Administration and Accounting Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99k6.htm) | [Amended Exhibit A to Fund Administration and Accounting Agreement with BNY Mellon (November 1, 2022)](d436461dex99k6.htm) |
| (n) | [Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm](d436461dex99n.htm) | [Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm](d436461dex99n.htm) |
| (r) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Code of Ethics for Pioneer Funds, Amundi Distributor US, Inc., and Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.](d436461dex99r.htm)<br> [(November, 2022)](d436461dex99r.htm) | &nbsp;&nbsp; [Code of Ethics for Pioneer Funds, Amundi Distributor US, Inc., and Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.](d436461dex99r.htm)<br> [(November, 2022)](d436461dex99r.htm) |
| (s)(3) | [Power of Attorney for Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. (June 1, 2021)](d436461dex99s3.htm) | [Power of Attorney for Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. (June 1, 2021)](d436461dex99s3.htm) |

---

------

## Ex-99.(G)

**MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT** 

This MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT ("Agreement") is made as of this 3rd day of July, 2017, as amended as of October 1, 2020 to add a breakpoint to the management fee as set forth herein, by and between Pioneer ILS Interval Fund (the "Trust"), a Delaware statutory trust, and Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Manager").

WHEREAS, the Trust is registered as a management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act");

WHEREAS, the Manager is engaged primarily in rendering investment advisory and management services and is registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended;

WHEREAS, the Trust wishes to retain the Manager to provide investment advisory and management services to the Trust; and

WHEREAS, the Manager is willing to furnish such services on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth;

NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the promises and mutual covenants herein contained, it is agreed as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. The Trust hereby appoints the Manager to act as investment adviser of the Trust for the period and on the terms set forth in this Agreement. The Manager accepts such appointment and agrees to render the services herein set forth, for the compensation herein provided.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. (a) Subject to the supervision of the Trust's Board of Trustees (the "Board"), the Manager shall regularly provide the Trust with investment research, advice, management and supervision and shall furnish a continuous investment program for the Trust's portfolio of securities and other investments consistent with the Trust's investment objectives, policies and restrictions, as each shall be from time to time in effect. The Manager shall determine from time to time what securities and other investments (including, without limitation, repurchase agreements, swap agreements, options, futures and other instruments) will be purchased, retained, sold or exchanged by the Trust and what portion of the assets of the Trust's portfolio will be held in the various securities and other investments in which the Trust invests, and what portion will be held uninvested in cash, and shall implement those decisions (including the execution of investment documentation), all subject to the provisions of the Trust's Declaration of Trust and By-Laws (collectively, the "Governing Documents") and the 1940 Act, as well as the investment objectives, policies and restrictions of the Trust referred to above, and any other specific policies adopted by the Board and disclosed to the Manager. The Manager is authorized as the agent of the Trust to give instructions to the custodian of the Trust as to deliveries of securities and other investments and payments of cash for the account of the Trust. Subject to applicable provisions of the 1940 Act and direction from the Board, the investment program to be provided hereunder may entail the investment of all or substantially all of the assets of the Trust in one or more investment companies. The Manager will place orders pursuant to its investment determinations for the Trust either directly with the issuer or with any broker or dealer, foreign currency dealer, futures commission merchant or others selected by it. Except as described herein, the Manager shall seek overall the best execution available in the selection of brokers or dealers and the placing of orders for the Trust. In assessing the best execution available for any transaction, the Manager may consider factors it deems relevant, including the size and type of the transaction, the nature and character of the markets for the security to be purchased or sold, the execution capabilities and financial condition of the broker or dealer, and the reasonableness of the

------

commission or dealer spread, if any (whether for a specific transaction or on a continuing basis). In connection with the selection of such brokers or dealers and the placing of such orders, subject to applicable law, brokers or dealers may be selected who also provide brokerage and research services (as those terms are defined in Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act")) to the Trust and/or the other accounts over which the Manager or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. The Manager is authorized to pay a broker or dealer who provides such brokerage and research services a commission for executing a portfolio transaction for the Trust which is in excess of the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting that transaction if the Manager determines in good faith that such amount of commission is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by such broker or dealer, viewed in terms of either that particular transaction or in terms of all of the accounts over which the Manager or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. The Manager shall also provide advice and recommendations with respect to other aspects of the business and affairs of the Trust, shall exercise voting rights, rights to consent to corporate action and any other rights pertaining to the Trust's portfolio securities subject to such direction as the Board may provide, and shall perform such other functions of investment management and supervision as may be directed by the Board. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Manager shall not be deemed to have assumed any duties with respect to, and shall not be responsible for, the distribution of the shares of the Trust, nor shall the Manager be deemed to have assumed or have any responsibility with respect to functions specifically assumed by any administrator, transfer agent, fund accounting agent, custodian, shareholder servicing agent or other agent, in each case employed by the Trust to perform such functions. The Manager may execute on behalf of the Trust certain agreements, instruments and documents in connection with the services performed by it under this Agreement. These may include, without limitation, brokerage agreements, clearing agreements, account documentation, futures and options agreements, swap agreements, other investment related agreements, and any other agreements, documents or instruments the Manager believes are appropriate or desirable in performing its duties under this Agreement.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) The Trust hereby authorizes any entity or person associated with the Manager which is a member of a national securities exchange to effect any transaction on the exchange for the account of the Trust which is permitted by Section 11(a) of the Exchange Act and Rule 11a2-2(T) thereunder, and the Trust hereby consents to the retention of compensation for such transactions in accordance with Rule 11a2-2(T)(a)(2)(iv).

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. Subject to the Board's approval, the Manager or the Trust may enter into contracts with one or more investment subadvisers, including without limitation, affiliates of the Manager, in which the Manager delegates to such investment subadvisers any or all its duties specified hereunder, on such terms as the Manager determines to be necessary, desirable or appropriate, provided that in each case such contracts are entered into in accordance with and meet all applicable requirements of the 1940 Act. The Trust agrees that the Manager shall not be accountable to the Trust or the Trust's shareholders for any loss or other liability relating to specific investments selected by any such subadviser.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4. The Trust shall at all times keep the Manager fully informed with regard to the securities and other investments owned by the Trust, its funds available, or to become available, for investment, and generally as to the condition of its affairs. The Trust shall furnish the Manager with such other documents and information with regard to its affairs as the Manager may from time to time reasonably request. The Manager shall supply the Board and officers of the Trust with such information and reports reasonably required by them and reasonably available to the Manager.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5. (a) Unless maintained by another party on the Trust's behalf, the Manager shall maintain the books and records with respect to the Trust's securities and other transactions and keep the Trust's books of account in accordance with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations. In compliance with the requirements of Rule 31a-3 under the 1940 Act, the Manager hereby agrees that any records that it maintains for the Trust are the property of the Trust, and further agrees to surrender promptly to the Trust any of such records upon the Trust's request. The Manager further agrees to arrange for the preservation of the records required to be maintained by Rule 31a-1 under the 1940 Act for the periods prescribed by Rule 31a-2 under the 1940 Act.

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) The Manager shall furnish, at its expense, all necessary services, facilities, equipment and personnel for performing the Manager's services under this Agreement. Other than as herein specifically indicated, the Manager shall not be responsible for the Trust's ordinary and extraordinary expenses, and the Trust shall pay the Trust's ordinary and extraordinary expenses. The Manager may agree to provide to the Trust services other than the services that are provided under this Agreement, on such terms as the Manager and the Trust may agree from time to time, and nothing herein shall preclude payment by the Trust of compensation to the Manager for any such services rendered pursuant to a written agreement or agreements approved by the Board.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6. From time to time, the Manager shall authorize and permit certain of its directors, officers and employees, who may be elected as Board members or officers of the Trust, to serve in the capacities in which they are elected. The Manager will pay directly or reimburse the Trust for the compensation (if any) of the Trustees who are affiliated persons of the Manager and all officers of the Trust as such, except as the Board may decide.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7. As compensation for the services performed and the facilities furnished and expenses assumed by the Manager, the Trust shall pay the Manager, as promptly as possible after the last day of each month, a fee, computed daily at an annual rate equal to 1.75% of the Trust's average daily net assets up to $1 billion, and 1.70% of the Trust's average daily net assets over $1 billion. If this Agreement is terminated as of any date not the last day of a month, the fee payable by the Trust shall be paid as promptly as possible after such date of termination and shall be computed on the basis of the period ending on the last business day on which this Agreement is in effect subject to a *pro rata* adjustment based on the number of days elapsed in the current month as a percentage of the total number of days in the month.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8. The Manager assumes no responsibility under this Agreement other than to render the services called for hereunder, in good faith, and shall not be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law, or for any loss arising out of any investment or for any act or omission in the execution of securities or other transactions for the Trust, provided that nothing in this Agreement shall protect the Manager against any liability to the Trust to which the Manager would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by reason of its reckless disregard of its obligations and duties hereunder. As used in this paragraph 8, the term "Manager" shall include any affiliates of the Manager performing services for the Trust pursuant to this Agreement and the partners, shareholders, directors, officers and employees of the Manager and such affiliates.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9. Nothing in this Agreement shall limit or restrict the right of any director, officer, or employee of the Manager who may also be a Trustee, officer, or employee of the Trust, to engage in any other business or to devote his time and attention in part to the management or other aspects of any other business, whether of a similar nature or a dissimilar nature, nor to limit or restrict the right of the Manager to engage in any other business or to render services of any kind, including investment advisory and management services, to any other fund, firm, individual or association. If the purchase or sale of securities or other investments consistent with the investment policies of the Trust or one or more other accounts of the Manager is considered at or about the same time, transactions in such securities or other investments will be allocated among the accounts in a manner deemed equitable by the Manager. Such transactions may be combined, in accordance with applicable laws and regulations, and consistent with the Manager's policies and procedures as presented to the Board from time to time.

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10. For the purposes of this Agreement, the Trust's "net assets" equal the value of the Trust's securities plus any other assets minus its accrued operating expenses and other liabilities, and the terms "assignment," "interested person," and "majority of the outstanding voting securities" shall have the meanings given to them by Section 2(a) of the 1940 Act, and references to the "1940 Act" shall include any rule, regulation or applicable exemptive order of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") thereunder and interpretive guidance with respect to the 1940 Act by the Commission or its staff.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11. This Agreement will become effective on the date first above written, provided that it shall have been approved by the Trust's Board and by the shareholders of the Trust in accordance with the requirements of the 1940 Act and, unless sooner terminated as provided herein, will continue in effect for an initial two year period. Thereafter, if not terminated, this Agreement shall continue in effect, so long as such continuance is specifically approved at least annually (i) by the Board or (ii) by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Trust, provided that in either event the continuance is also approved by a majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of any party to this Agreement, by vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12. This Agreement is terminable without penalty by the Board or by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Trust, in each case on not more than 60 days' nor less than 30 days' written notice to the Manager, or by the Manager upon not less than 60 days' written notice to the Trust, and will be terminated upon the mutual written consent of the Manager and the Trust. This Agreement shall terminate automatically in the event of its assignment.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13. The Manager agrees that for services rendered to the Trust, or for any claim by it in connection with services rendered to the Trust, it shall look only to assets of the Trust for satisfaction and that it shall have no claim against the assets of any other portfolios of the Trust. The undersigned officer of the Trust has executed this Agreement not individually, but as an officer under the Trust's Declaration of Trust and the obligations of this Agreement are not binding upon any of the Trustees, officers or shareholders of the Trust individually.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14. The Trust agrees that in the event that none of the Manager or any of its affiliates acts as an investment adviser to the Trust, the name of the Trust will be changed to one that does not contain the name "Pioneer" or otherwise suggest an affiliation with the Manager.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15. No provision of this Agreement may be changed, waived, discharged or terminated orally, but only by an instrument in writing signed by the party against which enforcement of the change, waiver, discharge or termination is sought, and no material amendment of the Agreement shall be effective until approved, if so required by the 1940 Act, by vote of the holders of a majority of the Trust's outstanding voting securities.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16. This Agreement embodies the entire agreement and understanding between the parties hereto and supersedes all prior agreements and understandings relating to the subject matter hereof. Should any part of this Agreement be held or made invalid by a court decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of this Agreement shall not be affected thereby. This Agreement shall be binding on and shall inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective successors.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17. This Agreement shall be construed and the provisions hereof interpreted under and in accordance with the laws of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18. This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, but all of which together shall constitute one and the same instrument.

------

[signature page to follow]

------

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be executed by their officers thereunto duly authorized.

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| PIONEER ILS INTERVAL FUND | PIONEER ILS INTERVAL FUND |
| By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: Lisa M. Jones | Name: Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: President | Title: President |
| AMUNDI PIONEER ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC. | AMUNDI PIONEER ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC. |
| By: | /s/ Gregg M. Dooling |
| Name: Gregg M. Dooling | Name: Gregg M. Dooling |
| Title: Chief Financial Officer | Title: Chief Financial Officer |

---

## Ex-99.(J)(2)

EXECUTION

**AMENDMENT TO APPENDIX I** 

**(Dated November 1, 2022)** 

Appendix I to Custody Agreement by and between **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** and **EACH INVESTMENT COMPANY LISTED ON APPENDIX I**, dated January 19, 2021, as amended (the "Agreement") is hereby amended effective November 1, 2022 to read follows:

**LIST OF CUSTOMERS/SERIES** 

---

| |
|:---|
|  **Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Solutions - Balanced Fund |
|  **Pioneer Bond Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Core Trust I:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Portfolio |
|  **Pioneer Diversified High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Diversified High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Equity Income Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Floating Rate Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Floating Rate Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Fund** |
|  **Pioneer High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer High Yield Fund** |
|  **Pioneer ILS Interval Fund** |
|  **Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Money Market Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Municipal High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Opportunities Fund, Inc.** |
|  **Pioneer Real Estate Shares** |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust II:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust III:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust IV:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Amundi Climate Transition Core Bond Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Securitized Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust V:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Equity Fund\* (formerly Pioneer Global Equity Fund) \*Effective 2/15/22 |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VI:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Floating Rate Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Flexible Opportunities Commodity Fund Ltd. |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VII:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer CAT Bond Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global High Yield Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VIII:** |

---

------

EXECUTION

---

| |
|:---|
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer International Equity Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust X:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XI:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Core Equity Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XII:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer MAP - High Income Municipal Fund |
|  **Pioneer Short Term Income Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XIV:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Intrinsic Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Yield VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Mid Cap Value VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio |

---

**IN WITNESS WHEREOF**, the parties hereto have caused this Amendment to Appendix I to be executed by their officers designated below effective as of the date and year first above written.

---

| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** | **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** | **EACH INVESTMENT COMPANY LISTED ON APPENDIX I** | **EACH INVESTMENT COMPANY LISTED ON APPENDIX I** |
| By: | /s/ Gerard Connors | By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: | Gerard Connors | Name: | Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: | Vice President | Title: | President and Chief Executive Officer |
| Date: | November 1, 2022 | Date: | November 1, 2022 |

---

## Ex-99.(K)(2)

EXECUTION

**AMENDMENT NO. 4** 

**TO** 

**TRANSFER AGENCY AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICES AGREEMENT** 

This Amendment No. 4 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement ("**Amendment No. 4**") is made as of the 1st day of November, 2022 (the "**Effective Date**"), is being entered into by and between BNY Mellon Investment Services (US) Inc. ("**BNYM**") and each Pioneer Investment Company, as defined and listed on the signature page to this Agreement and to the extent applicable each Portfolio of each such Pioneer Investment Company as listed on Schedule B to the Current Agreement (as defined below).

**BACKGROUND:** 

A. BNYM and the Pioneer Investment Companies and their respective series previously entered into the Transfer
Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement, dated January 19, 2021, Amendment No. 1 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement, dated as of October 12, 2021, and Amendment No. 2 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services
Agreement, dated as of October 28, 2021, and Amendment No. 3 to Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement, dated as of November 19, 2021 (collectively, the "**Current Agreement** ").

**TERMS:** 

**NOW, THEREFORE**, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties, intending to be legally bound, agree to the statements set forth above and as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. <u>Amendment of the Current Agreement</u>. The Current Agreement is hereby amended as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. Schedule B to the Agreement is hereby deleted in its entirety and replaced with Schedule B attached hereto.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. <u>Remainder of Current Agreement</u>. Except as specifically modified by this Amendment No. 4, all terms
and conditions of the Current Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4. <u>Governing Law</u>. The governing law provision of the Current Agreement shall be the governing law provision
of this Amendment No. 4.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5. <u>Entire Agreement</u>. This Amendment No. 4 constitutes the final, complete, exclusive and fully
integrated record of the agreement of the parties with respect to the subject matter herein and the amendment of the Current Agreement with respect to such subject matter, and supersedes all prior and contemporaneous proposals, agreements,
contracts, representations and understandings, whether written, oral or electric, between the parties with respect to the same subject matter.

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<u>Signatures; Counterparts</u>. The parties expressly agree that this Amendment No. 4 may be executed in one or more counterparts and expressly agree that such execution may occur by manual signature on a physically delivered copy of this Amendment No. 4, by a manual signature on a copy of this Amendment No. 4 transmitted by facsimile transmission, by a manual signature on a copy of this Amendment No. 4 transmitted as an imaged document attached to an email, or by "**Electronic Signature**", which is hereby defined to mean inserting an image, representation or symbol of a signature into an electronic copy of this Amendment by electronic, digital or other technological methods. Each counterpart executed in accordance with the foregoing shall be deemed an original, with all such counterparts together constituting one and the same instrument. The exchange of executed counterparts of this Amendment No. 4 or of executed signature pages to counterparts of this Amendment, No. 4 in either case by facsimile transmission or as an imaged document attached to an email transmission, shall constitute effective execution and delivery of this Amendment No. 4 and may be used for all purposes in lieu of a manually executed and physically delivered copy of this Amendment No. 4.

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**IN WITNESS WHEREOF**, each of the parties hereto has caused this Amendment No. 4 to Transfer Agency and Services Agreement to be executed as of the Effective Date by its duly authorized representative indicated below. An authorized representative, if executing this Amendment by Electronic Signature, affirms authorization to execute this Amendment No. 4 by Electronic Signature and that the Electronic Signature represents an intent to enter into this Amendment and an agreement with its terms.

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **EACH OF THE FUNDS OR SERIES IDENTIFIED ON SCHEDULE B** | **EACH OF THE FUNDS OR SERIES IDENTIFIED ON SCHEDULE B** |
| By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: Lisa M. Jones | Name: Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: President and Chief Executive Officer | Title: President and Chief Executive Officer |
| **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** | **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** |
| By: | /s/ Gerard Connors |
| Name: Gerard Connors | Name: Gerard Connors |
| Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President |

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**SCHEDULE B** 

**(Amended and Restated as of November 1, 2022)** 

This SCHEDULE B is Schedule B to that certain Transfer Agency and Shareholder Services Agreement, dated as of January 19, 2021, between BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc. and the Investment Companies and Portfolios listed below.

**<u>Investment Company & Portfolios</u>**

**OPEN-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES** 

<u>Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust</u>

Pioneer Solutions – Balanced Fund

<u>Pioneer Bond Fund</u>

Pioneer Bond Fund

<u>Pioneer Core Trust I</u>

Pioneer high Income Municipal Portfolio

<u>Pioneer Equity Income Fund</u>

Pioneer Equity Income Fund

<u>Pioneer Fund</u>

Pioneer Fund

<u>Pioneer High Yield Fund</u>

Pioneer High Yield Fund

<u>Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund</u>

Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund

<u>Pioneer Money Market Trust</u>

Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund

<u>Pioneer Real Estate Shares</u>

Pioneer Real Estate Shares

<u>Pioneer Series Trust II</u>

Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund

Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund

<u>Pioneer Series</u> <u>Trust III</u>

Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund

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<u>Pioneer Series Trust IV</u>

Amundi Climate Transition Core Bond Fund

Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund

Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund

Pioneer Securitized Income Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust V</u>

Pioneer Global Sustainable Equity Fund (formerly Pioneer Global Equity Fund – Eff. Date 2/15/22)

Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust VI</u>

Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund

Pioneer Floating Rate Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust VII</u>

Pioneer CAT Bond Fund

Pioneer Global High Yield Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust VIII</u>

Pioneer International Equity Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust X</u>

Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund

Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund

Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust XI</u>

Pioneer Core Equity Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust XII</u>

Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund

Pioneer MAP – High Income Municipal Fund

<u>Pioneer Series Trust XIV</u>

Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund

Pioneer Global Sustainable Growth Fund

Pioneer Global Sustainable Value Fund

Pioneer Intrinsic Value Fund

Pioneer Strategic Income Fund

<u>Pioneer Short Term Income Fund</u>

Pioneer Short Term Income Fund

<u>Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust</u>

Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio

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Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio

Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio Pioneer

High Yield VCT Portfolio Pioneer Mid

Cap Value VCT Portfolio

Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio

Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio

Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio

**<u>INTERVAL FUNDS</u>** 

Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund

Pioneer ILS Interval Fund

## Ex-99.(K)(3)

**AMENDED AND RESTATED** 

**ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT** 

This AMENDED AND RESTATED ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT ("Agreement") is made as of July 1, 2008, amended and restated as of November 1, 2009, and further amended and restated as of August 1, 2014, November 9, 2015 and February 1, 2017, by and between each Trust listed on Appendix A annexed hereto (each, a "Trust"), each a Delaware statutory trust, and Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly known as Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.), a Delaware corporation (the "Administrator").

WHEREAS, each Trust is a registered management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act");

WHEREAS, the Trust wishes to engage the Administrator to provide certain administrative services listed in Appendix B annexed hereto to each Trust with respect to the series of the Trust designated in Appendix A annexed hereto from time to time (the "Funds"); and the Administrator is willing to furnish such services on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth; and

WHEREAS, the Administrator has entered into an agreement with Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. ("BBH") pursuant to which BBH will act as a sub-administrator to the Administrator (as amended from time to time, the "BBH Agreement") and to which each Trust has joined as a party solely for the purposes specified therein;

NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the promises and mutual covenants herein contained, it is agreed as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. Each Trust hereby engages the Administrator to provide and perform the administrative services listed on Appendix B annexed hereto (as such Appendix may be revised from time to time by agreement of the parties) with respect to each Fund, except that it is understood that the Administrator has entered into the BBH Agreement, with the approval of the Trusts' Boards of Trustees (the "Board"), to perform certain accounting an other services listed in Appendix B and, for the closed-end Funds, certain additional services specified in the BBH Agreement, for the period and on the terms set forth in this Agreement. The Administrator accepts such engagement and agrees to render the services herein set forth, for the compensation herein provided.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. Subject to the direction and control of the Board, the Administrator shall perform the administrative services listed on Appendix B, except as otherwise provided in the BBH Agreement with respect to the performance of accounting and other services to be provided by BBH. In no event shall the Administrator be deemed to have assumed any duties with respect to, or be responsible for, the distribution of the shares of any Fund, nor shall the Administrator be deemed to have assumed, or have any responsibility with respect to, functions specifically assumed by any investment adviser, transfer agent, fund accounting agent, custodian, shareholder servicing agent or other agent, in each case directly employed by a Trust or a Fund to perform such functions. With respect to the legal services listed in Appendix B, it is recognized that such legal services are provided for the benefit of the Funds in conjunction with legal services separately provided to the Funds by their counsel, and nothing in this Agreement shall cause the Administrator to be responsible for bearing the fees and disbursements of counsel to the Funds.

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. With the Board's approval, BBH has been employed by the Administrator to provide sub-administrative services to the Trust as provided in the BBH Agreement. Subject to the Board's approval, the Administrator may employ one or more other service providers, including affiliates of the Administrator, to provide certain of the services to be provided by the Administrator under this Agreement, by entering into a written agreement with each such entity on such terms as the Administrator determines to be necessary, desirable or appropriate, provided that in each case such contracts are entered into in accordance with all applicable requirements of the 1940 Act. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph 9, each Trust agrees that the Administrator shall not be accountable to the Trust or any Fund or any Fund's shareholders for any loss or other liability arising out of any error or omission by BBH or any such other service provider. The Administrator will cooperate with any Fund or Funds in the event that such Fund or Funds seek to assert against BBH claims arising from the performance by BBH of its services under the BBH Agreement, and acknowledges the Funds' status as named beneficiaries under the BBH Agreement. Similarly, the Administrator will cooperate with any Fund or Funds in the event that such Fund or Funds seek to assert against a transfer agent claims arising from the performance by such transfer agent of its services.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4. Each Trust shall furnish to the Administrator such documents and information as may be necessary or appropriate to enable the Administrator to perform its duties hereunder and with such other documents and information with regard to each Fund's affairs as the Administrator may from time to time reasonably request.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5. In compliance with the requirements of Rule 31a-3 under the 1940 Act, the Administrator hereby agrees that any records that it maintains hereunder for any Fund are the property of the Fund, and further agrees to surrender promptly to the Fund any of such records upon the Fund's request. The Administrator further agrees to arrange for the preservation of any of such records required to be maintained by Rule 31a-1 under the 1940 Act for the periods prescribed by Rule 31a-2 under the 1940 Act.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6. The Administrator shall supply the Board and the officers of each Trust with all information and reports reasonably required by them and reasonably available to the Administrator relating to the services provided by the Administrator hereunder.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7. (a)(i) As compensation for the services performed by the Administrator under this Agreement, each Fund shall reimburse the Administrator its pro rata share, based on the Fund's average daily net assets (or the Fund's average daily managed assets if so set forth on <u>Appendix A</u> hereto), of the Administrator's costs of providing the services hereunder (or such alternative allocation methodology based on the nature of the services), provided that the costs attributed to services being provided by BBH or any other third party shall be reduced accordingly. In determining the Administrator's costs of providing services hereunder, personnel-related costs associated with the Administrator's legal, compliance, fund treasury ("Fund Treasury") and investor-related services shall be allocated in accordance with prescribed allocation percentages reviewed by the Board from time to time. On a quarterly basis, the Administrator will provide the Board with information comparing the Administrator's actual costs of providing services hereunder and the budgeted amount of such costs to the Funds.

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(ii) The Administrator and each Fund agree that the Administrator and the Board will review at least annually a budget as to the costs relating to the provision of services by the Administrator hereunder, which budget shall include the allocation percentages applicable to personnel-related costs associated with the Administrator's legal, compliance, Fund Treasury and investor-related services. Such budgeted costs and/or such allocation percentages also will be reviewed at other times should the budgeted costs or the circumstances affecting the allocation percentages, as the case may be, change materially. In connection with each review, the Administrator will provide the Board with such information as the Board may reasonably request.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(iii) Each Fund shall pay amounts due from it hereunder as promptly as possible after the last day of each month. If this Agreement is terminated with respect to any Fund as of any date not the last day of the month, such Fund shall pay amounts due from it hereunder as promptly as possible after such date of termination.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) The Administrator shall furnish all facilities and personnel necessary for performing the Administrator's services hereunder and shall furnish to each Trust office space in the offices of the Administrator or in such other place as may be agreed upon from time to time. The Administrator shall pay directly or reimburse each Trust for all expenses not hereinafter specifically assumed by the Trust where such expenses are incurred by the Administrator or by the Trust in connection with the management of the affairs of, and the investment and reinvestment of the assets of, the Trust. Each Trust, on behalf of each Fund that is a series of the Trust, shall assume and shall pay (i) charges and expenses for fund accounting, pricing and appraisal services and related overhead, including, to the extent such services are performed by personnel of a Fund's investment adviser (the "Manager") or its affiliates, office space and facilities, and personnel compensation, training and benefits; (ii) the charges and expenses of auditors; (iii) the charges and expenses of any investment adviser, administrator, custodian, transfer agent, plan agent, dividend disbursing agent, registrar or any other agent appointed by the Trust; (iv) issue and transfer taxes chargeable to the Trust in connection with securities transactions to which the Trust is a party; (v) insurance premiums, interest charges, any expenses in connection with any preferred shares or other form of leverage, dues and fees for membership in trade associations and all taxes and corporate fees payable by the Trust to federal, state or other governmental agencies; (vi) fees and expenses involved in registering and maintaining registrations of the Trust and/or its shares with federal regulatory agencies, state or blue sky securities agencies and foreign jurisdictions, including the preparation of prospectuses and statements of additional information for filing with such regulatory authorities; (vii) all expenses of shareholders' and Board of Trustees' (the "Board", and each Board member, a "Trustee") meetings and of preparing, printing and distributing prospectuses, notices, proxy statements and all reports to shareholders and to governmental agencies; (viii) charges and expenses of legal counsel to the Trust and the Trustees; (ix) any fees paid by the Trust in accordance with Rule 12b-1 promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") pursuant to the 1940 Act; (x) compensation of those Trustees of the Trust who are not affiliated with, or "interested persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of, the Manager, the Trust (other than as Trustees), Pioneer Investment Management USA Inc. or Pioneer Funds Distributor, Inc.; (xi) the cost of preparing and printing share certificates; (xii) any fees and other expenses of listing the Trust's shares on the New York Stock Exchange,

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American Stock Exchange or any other national stock exchange, (xiii) interest on borrowed money, if any; (xiv) fees payable by the Trust under management agreements and under this Agreement; and (xv) extraordinary expenses. Each Trust shall also assume and pay any other expense that the Trust, the Manager or any other agent of the Trust may incur not listed above that is approved by the Board (including a majority of the independent Trustees) as being an appropriate expense of the Trust. Each Trust shall pay all fees and expenses to be paid by the Trust under the BBH Agreement. In addition, each Trust, on behalf of each Fund that is a series of the Trust, agrees to pay all brokers' and underwriting commissions chargeable to the Trust in connection with securities transactions to which the Fund is a party.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8. The Administrator assumes no responsibility under this Agreement other than to render the services called for hereunder, in good faith, and shall not be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law, or for any act or omission in the performance of the services, provided that nothing in this Agreement shall protect the Administrator against any liability to a Fund to which the Administrator otherwise would be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by reason of its reckless disregard of its obligations and duties hereunder. As used in paragraph 9 and paragraph 10, the term "Administrator" shall include any affiliates of the Administrator performing services for a Trust or any Fund pursuant to this Agreement and the partners, shareholders, directors, officers and employees of the Administrator and such affiliates.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9. Each Fund separately shall indemnify and hold the Administrator harmless from all loss, cost, damage and expense, including reasonable fees and expenses for counsel, incurred by the Administrator resulting from or arising out of the provision of the Administrator's services, provided that this indemnification shall not apply to actions or omissions of the Administrator, its officers or employees resulting from or arising out of its or their own willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence. The Administrator shall indemnify and hold each Fund harmless from all loss, cost, damage and expense, including reasonable fees and expenses for counsel, incurred by a Fund resulting from or arising out of the Administrator's, or its officers' or employees' own willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10. Nothing in this Agreement shall limit or restrict the right of any director, officer, or employee of the Administrator who may also be a Trustee, officer, or employee of a Trust or any Fund to engage in any other business or to devote his time and attention in part to the management or other aspects of any other business, whether of a similar nature or a dissimilar nature, nor to limit or restrict the right of the Administrator to engage in any other business or to render services of any kind, including investment advisory and management services, to any other fund, firm, individual or association.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11. For purposes of this Agreement, a Fund's "net assets" shall be determined as provided in the Fund's then-current Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, and references to the "1940 Act" shall include any rule, regulation or applicable exemptive order of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") thereunder and the interpretive guidance with respect to the 1940 Act by the SEC or its staff. "Managed assets" means (a) the total assets of a Trust, including any form of investment leverage, minus (b) all accrued liabilities incurred in the normal course of operations, which shall not include any liabilities or obligations attributable to investment leverage obtained through (i) indebtedness of any type (including, without

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limitation, borrowing through a credit facility or the issuance of debt securities), (ii) the issuance of preferred stock or other similar preference securities, and/or (iii) any other means. The liquidation preference on any preferred shares is not a liability.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12. This Agreement will become effective with respect to each Fund on the date first above written or such later date set forth opposite the Fund's name on Appendix A annexed hereto, provided that it shall have been approved by the applicable Trust's Board, and, unless sooner terminated as provided herein, will continue in effect for each Fund designated on Appendix A on the date hereof until December 31, 2012, and for each Fund added to Appendix A hereafter, until the date specified in Appendix A. Thereafter, if not terminated, this Agreement shall continue in effect with respect to each Fund for successive one-year terms, so long as each such term is approved by the Board.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13. This Agreement is terminable with respect to any Fund (i) without penalty, by the Board or (ii) by the Administrator upon not less than 90 days' written notice to the applicable Trust. This Agreement may be terminated with respect to one or more Funds without affecting the validity of this Agreement with respect to any other Fund designated on Appendix A.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14. The Administrator agrees that for services rendered to each Fund, or for any claim by it in connection with the services rendered to the Fund under this Agreement, it shall look only to assets of the Fund for satisfaction and that it shall have no claim against the assets of any other portfolios of any Trust. The undersigned officer of the Trusts has executed this Agreement not individually, but as an officer under each Trust's Declaration of Trust and the obligations of this Agreement are not binding upon any of the Trustees, officers or shareholders of the Trusts individually.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15. No provision of this Agreement may be changed, waived, discharged or terminated orally, but only by an instrument in writing signed by the party against which enforcement of the change, waiver, discharge or termination is sought.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16. This Agreement embodies the entire agreement and understanding between the parties hereto and supersedes all prior agreements and understandings relating to the subject matter hereof. Should any part of this Agreement be held or made invalid by a court decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of this Agreement shall not be affected thereby. This Agreement shall be binding on and shall inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective successors.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17. This Agreement shall be construed and the provisions hereof interpreted under and in accordance with the laws of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18. This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, but all of which together shall constitute one and the same instrument.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19. This Agreement amends and restates in its entirety the prior administration agreement in effect for each Trust and Fund.

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties thereto have caused this Agreement to be executed by their officers thereunto duly authorized.

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| THE PIONEER TRUSTS LISTED ON APPENDIX A | THE PIONEER TRUSTS LISTED ON APPENDIX A |
| On behalf of the Funds named therein | On behalf of the Funds named therein |
| By: | /s/ Anthony J. Koenig |
| Name: | Anthony J. Koenig |
| Title: | Assistant Treasurer |
| AMUNDI ASSET MANAGEMENT US, INC. (formerly known as AMUNDI PIONEER ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC.) | AMUNDI ASSET MANAGEMENT US, INC. (formerly known as AMUNDI PIONEER ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC.) |
| By: | /s/ Gregg M. Dooling |
| Name: | Gregg M. Dooling |
| Title: | Chief Financial Officer |

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**Appendix A** 

**(April 1, 2021)** 

**Open-End Funds** 

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| **Trust** | **Fund** | **Effective Date/Initial Term Date** |
| Pioneer Bond Fund | Pioneer Bond Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Core Trust I | Pioneer High Income Municipal Portfolio | Effective Date: November 1, 2020<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2020 –December 31, 2021 |
| Pioneer Equity Income Fund | Pioneer Equity Income Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Fund | Pioneer Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer High Yield Fund | Pioneer High Yield Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust | Pioneer Solutions - Balanced Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008 |
| Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund | Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Money Market Trust | Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Real Estate Shares | Pioneer Real Estate Shares | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| Pioneer Series Trust II | Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust II | <br> Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust III | Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust IV | Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust IV | <br> Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund | <br> Effective Date: December 1, 2011<br>Initial Term: December 1, 2011-December 31, 2012 |
| Pioneer Series Trust V | Pioneer Global Equity Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust V | <br> Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust VI | Pioneer Floating Rate Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust VI | <br> Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund | <br> Effective Date: March 5, 2010<br>Initial Term: March 5, 2010-December 31, 2011 |

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| Pioneer Series Trust VII | Pioneer Global High Yield Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust VIII | Pioneer International Equity Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust X | Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund | Effective Date: March 8, 2011<br>Initial Term: March 8, 2011- December 31, 2012 |
| Pioneer Series Trust X | <br> Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008 - December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust X | <br> Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund | <br> Effective Date: March 8, 2011<br>Initial Term: March 8, 2011- December 31, 2012 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XI | Pioneer Core Equity Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XII | Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XII | <br> Pioneer MAP - High Income Municipal Fund | <br> Effective Date: November 1, 2020 –December 31, 2021 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XIV | Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund | Effective Date: March 26, 2019<br>Initial Term: March 26, 2019 - December 31, 2020 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XIV | <br> Pioneer Global Sustainable Growth Fund | <br> Effective Date: April 1, 2021<br>Initial Term: April 1, 2021 – December 31, 2022 |
| Pioneer Series Trust XIV | <br> Pioneer Global Sustainable Value Fund | <br> Effective Date: April 1, 2021<br>Initial Term: April 1, 2021 – December 31, 2022 |

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
|  | Pioneer Intrinsic Value Fund | Effective Date: April 1, 2021<br>Initial Term: April 1, 2021 – December 31, 2022 |
| Pioneer Short Term Income Fund | Pioneer Short Term Income Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |

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| | | |
|:---|:---|:---|
| Pioneer Strategic Income Fund | Pioneer Strategic Income Fund | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust | Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust | <br> Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust | <br> Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust | <br> Pioneer High Yield VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust | <br> Pioneer Mid Cap Value VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
|  | <br> Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
|  | <br> Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio | <br> Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |
|  | Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio | Effective Date: July 1, 2008<br>Initial Term: July 1, 2008-December 31, 2009 |

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**Closed-End Funds** 

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **Trust** | **Effective Date/Initial Term Date** |
| Pioneer Diversified High Income Trust | Effective Date: November 1, 2009<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2009-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Floating Rate Trust | Effective Date: November 1, 2009<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2009-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer High Income Trust | Effective Date: November 1, 2009<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2009-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer ILS Interval Fund | Effective Date: December 10, 2014<br>Initial Term: December 10, 2014 - November 30, 2015 |
| Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund | Effective Date: June 1, 2018<br>Initial Term: June 1, 2018 – December 31, 2019 |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Trust | Effective Date: November 1, 2009<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2009-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Trust | Effective Date: November 1, 2009<br>Initial Term: November 1, 2009-December 31, 2009 |
| Pioneer Securitized Income Fund | Effective Date: September 17, 2019<br>Initial Term: September 17, 2019 – December 31, 2020 |

---

------

**Appendix B** 

ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

Accounting Services

Fund Accounting

Maintain all accounting records for Funds

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Calculate and report daily net asset values per share and yields

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Recommend income and capital gains distribution rates

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare Funds' financial statements and assist in Fund audits

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide bank loan administration services, including reconciling and validating positions, cash, paydowns and
interest accruals, supporting other accounting processes, and managing related systems

Shareholder Reporting and Audit Liaison

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file (via EDGAR) shareholder reports required by Rule 30e-1 under the 1940 Act and reports on Forms N-CSR, N-Q and N-SAR as required by Rules 30d-1 and 30b-1 under the 1940 Act

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Manage the Funds' audit processes to ensure timely completion of financial statements and shareholder
reports

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare reports related to advisory contract renewals for the Trustees' review, as well as other materials
that any Board may request from time to time

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide financial information for prospectus updates and other regulatory filings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and furnish the Funds with performance information (including yield and total return information)
calculated in accordance with applicable U.S. securities laws and report to external entities such information

Pricing and Corporate Actions

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Ensure accuracy and timeliness of prices supplied by external sources to be used in daily valuations of all
security positions held by each Fund

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Support corporate actions and bankruptcy proof of claim analyses

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Validate and communicate class action and bankruptcy proof of claim information

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Present periodic valuation reports to Funds' Boards

Systems and Administration

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide direction, supervision and administrative support to all Fund Treasury teams providing Accounting
Services hereunder

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide systems support to users of fund accounting and portfolio pricing software, and manage relationships with
applicable software and hardware vendors

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Develop and maintain applications and systems interfaces for Fund Treasury teams

Controllership Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Manage Fund expense payment cycles (e.g., timeliness and accuracy of payments, allocation of costs among Funds)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordinate and standardize Fund expense accruals and budgeting

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide expense reports as required

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Compile daily reports of shareholder transactions from all sources for entry into Fund books

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide daily reconciliation of receivable, payable and share accounts between Funds' records and sources of
shareholder transactions

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Manage the daily process to minimize "as of" gains and losses to Funds

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Communicate daily Fund prices

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide information and consultation on financial matters relating to the Funds including, without limitation,
dividend distributions, expense pro formas, expense accruals and other matters

Tax Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Manage the Funds' federal, state and applicable local tax preparation and reporting

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare fiscal and excise tax distribution calculations

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file federal, state and any local income tax returns, including tax return extension requests

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare shareholder year-end reporting statements

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide the appropriate amounts and characterization of distributions declared during the calendar year for Forms
1099 and similar reporting

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Periodically review and determine distributions to be paid to shareholders pursuant to Sub Chapter M requirements

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Consult with the Funds' Treasurer on various tax issues as they arise and with the Funds' auditors when
appropriate

------

ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

Legal Services

Registration Statements, Proxy Statements and Related Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") Filings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain SEC filing calendar for the Funds' Registration Statement filings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file (via EDGAR) amendments to the Funds' Registration Statements, including preparing
prospectuses and statements of additional information (SAIs)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file (via EDGAR) supplements to the Funds' prospectuses and registration statements

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file (via EDGAR) Fund proxy statements; provide consultation on proxy solicitation matters (i.e.,
with regard to the solicitation and tabulation of proxies in connection with shareholder meetings; the coordination of the printing and distribution of proxy materials, etc.)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Review comments from the SEC on Fund registration statements and proxy statement filings and contribute to the
preparation of responses to such comments

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Conduct and manage use of software utilized to aid in maintaining content of disclosure in Fund prospectuses and
SAIs, including related language database

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and file (via EDGAR) Rule 24f-2 Notices

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• SEC Electronic Filing (EDGAR) Responsibilities

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain and develop enhancements to Pioneer's EDGAR-relatedsystems and procedures, including contingency
planning

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain EDGAR related databases and document archives

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Liaise with third party EDGAR agents when necessary

Shareholder Report Review and Support

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Review annual and semi-annual shareholder reports, including review of text of footnotes, as well as
management's discussion of Fund performance, Trustee and officer background information and other non-financial statement aspects of reports

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide consulting to Fund Treasury in meeting regulatory requirements applicable to financial statements

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• With Fund counsel and Fund Treasury, review comments from the SEC on Fund financial statement filings and assist
in the preparation of responses to such comments

Corporate Secretarial and Governance Matters

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain general calendar for Trustee meetings (including meetings of committees of Boards); track items that
require annual or other periodic review and/or approval by Trustees; coordinate meeting presentations

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain awareness of regulatory changes and track compliance dates with respect thereto

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare agenda and background materials for Trustee and Board committee meetings (i.e., memoranda, proposed
resolutions), attend meetings, prepare minutes and follow up on matters raised at meetings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Review draft materials and coordinate review by Trustees and external personnel (i.e., Fund counsel and auditors)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Produce and distribute materials to Trustees and other meeting attendees

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Oversee vendors and technology that facilitate assembly, production and distribution of Trustee materials

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Attend and assist in coordination of shareholder meetings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Monitor fidelity bond and directors' and officers' errors and omissions policies and make required
filings with the SEC; act as principal liaison with Funds' insurance carriers and agents; coordinate amendments to and annual renewals of policies and coverage, including completion of materials for Board consideration

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain Fund records required by Section 31 of the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder, except those records
that are either the responsibility of the Fund's Manager under the management agreements with the Funds or otherwise are maintained by the Funds' other service providers (e.g., subadviser, custodian, transfer agent)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintain corporate records on behalf of the Funds, including, but not limited to, copies of minutes, contracts
and Trustee meeting materials

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Review and administer the payment of invoices from legal counsel to the Trusts and counsel to the independent
Trustees

Miscellaneous Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Preparation and filing of the Funds' Form N-SAR, Form N-CSR, Form N-Q and Form N-PX filings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Prepare and make Section 16 filings on behalf of the officers and Trustees of the closed-end Funds

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Meet regulatory requirements applicable to the status of certain Funds as exempt from treatment as commodity
pools under Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Rule 4.5, including related regulatory filings

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ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

Compliance Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Assist the Funds in responding to routine and non-routine regulatory
inquiries, examinations and investigations

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide consultation on regulatory matters relating to Fund operations and any potential changes in the
Funds' investment policies, operations or structure

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Develop or assist in developing guidelines and procedures to improve overall compliance by the Funds and their
various agents

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Oversee implementation and testing of the Funds' compliance-related policies and procedures

------

ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

Investor Services Group (ISG) Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordinate and monitor services of the Funds' transfer agents, including with regard to:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Service level quality

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Compliance with applicable regulations and Fund procedures

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Training as to Fund policies, strategies and initiatives

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Shareholder mailings and other communications

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Planning and implementing Fund initiatives and projects

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordination of systems upgrades and other significant projects of transfer agents that relate to Fund policies

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordinate shareholder proxy solicitation activities, including planning of proxy-related projects and the use of
proxy tabulation and solicitation firms

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide analysis and historical information to assist with shareholder inquiries and reports, as well as
inquiries from other Fund service providers

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide oversight of the Funds' anti-money laundering program, including monitoring related activities
delegated by the Funds to transfer agents or other entities

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordinate program designed to limit frequent and/or excessive trading in Fund shares, including implementation
of shareholder information agreements under Rule 22c-2 under the 1940 Act and associated monitoring systems and procedures

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Perform activities and and provide reporting in support of the Funds' compliance program

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Enter into investor servicing relationships on behalf of the Funds with omnibus account administrators,
retirement plan administrators and other investor service organizations

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Provide oversight of investor service organizations under a vendor management program, including service and
compensation review

Blue Sky Administration (State Registration)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Principal liaison with Blue Sky vendor (the fees and expenses of which are charged separately to the applicable
Funds)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Coordinate SEC filing schedule and Fund documentation with Blue Sky vendor

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Monitor status of state filings with Blue Sky vendor

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transfer agent coordination

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Review Blue Sky vendor statements and invoices

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Conduct Blue Sky vendor due diligence, as appropriate

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Hiring oversight

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• In-person meetings

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Independent audit of services

## Ex-99.(K)(4)

**Amendment No. 1** 

**to** 

**Amended and Restated Administration Agreement** 

This Amendment No. 1 to the Amended and Restated Administration Agreement (the "**Amendment**"), dated as of September 20, 2022 ("**Effective Date**"), is being entered into by and between each registered investment company listed on Appendix A annexed hereto (each, a **"Company"**), on behalf of itself and each of its series, if any, designated opposite its name on Appendix A annexed hereto from time to time, and Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. (formerly Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc.) (the **"Administrator"**).

**<u>Background</u>**

Pursuant to the Amended and Restated Administration Agreement, dated as of July 1, 2008, amended and restated as of November 1, 2009, and further amended and restated as of August 1, 2014, November 9, 2015 and February 1, 2017, as amended (as so amended, the **"Administration Agreement"**), by and between each Company and the Administrator, each Company has engaged the Administrator to provide certain administrative services to the Company and, if applicable, each of its series.

Each Company and the Administrator hereby agrees to amend the Administration Agreement as set forth in this Amendment.

**<u>Terms</u>**

**NOW, THEREFORE**, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties, intending to be legally bound, agree to the statements set forth above and as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1.<u>Amendment of the Administration Agreement</u>. The Administration Agreement is hereby amended as follows:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) the phrase ", each a Delaware statutory trust," where it appears in the preamble of the Administration Agreement is deleted;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) (i) each reference to a "Trust" or "Trusts" in the Administration Agreement is replaced by a reference to a "Company" or "Companies", respectively and (ii) each reference to a "Trustee" or "Trustees" in the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to a "Trustee/Director" or "Trustees/Directors";

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) (i) the reference to "Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, Inc." in the preamble of the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to "Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.", (ii) the reference to "Pioneer Investment Management USA Inc." in Section 7(b) of the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to "Amundi US, Inc." and (iii) the reference to Pioneer Funds Distributor, Inc. in Section 7(b) of the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to "Amundi Distributor US, Inc.";

------

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) (i) the reference to "Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. ("BBH")" in the preamble of the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to "The Bank of New York Mellon ("BNYM")", (ii) each reference to "BBH" where it appears in the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to "BNYM" and (iii) each reference to the "BBH Agreement" where it appears in the Administration Agreement is replaced with a reference to the "BNYM Agreement";

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) The phrase "under each Trust's Declaration of Trust" where it appears in the last sentence of Section 14 of the Administration Agreement is deleted and replaced with the phrase "of each Company".

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(f) Appendix A to the Administration Agreement is hereby amended by deleting such Appendix in its entirety, and replacing it with the Appendix A annexed hereto.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. <u>Remainder of Administration Agreement</u>. Except as specifically modified by this Amendment, all terms and conditions of the Administration Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. <u>Governing Law</u>. This Amendment shall be construed and the provisions hereof interpreted under and in accordance with the laws of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4. <u>Entire Agreement</u>. This Amendment constitutes the entire agreement and understanding of the parties with respect to the subject matter herein, and supersedes all prior and contemporaneous proposals, agreements, contracts, representations and understandings, whether written, oral or electronic, between the parties with respect to the same subject matter.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5. <u>Signatures; Counterparts</u>. The parties expressly agree that this Amendment may be executed in one or more counterparts and expressly agree that such execution may occur by manual signature on a physically delivered copy of this Amendment, by a manual signature on a copy of this Amendment transmitted by facsimile transmission, by a manual signature on a copy of this Amendment transmitted as an imaged document attached to an email, or by "**Electronic Signature**", which is hereby defined to mean inserting an image, representation or symbol of a signature into an electronic copy of this Amendment by electronic, digital or other technological methods. Each counterpart executed in accordance with the foregoing shall be deemed an original, with all such counterparts together constituting one and the same instrument. The exchange of executed counterparts of this Amendment or of executed signature pages to counterparts of this Amendment, in either case by facsimile transmission or as an imaged document attached to an email transmission, shall constitute effective execution and delivery of this Amendment and may be used for all purposes in lieu of a manually executed and physically delivered copy of this Amendment.

------

The undersigned officer of the Companies has executed this Amendment not individually, but as an officer of each Company. The obligations under this Amendment are not binding on the Trustees, officers or shareholders of a Company individually.

***[Remainder Of Page Intentionally Blank - Signatures Appear On Following Page]***

------

**IN WITNESS WHEREOF**, each of the parties hereto has caused this Amendment to the Amended and Restated Administration Agreement to be executed as of the Effective Date by its duly authorized representative indicated below.

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| **The Pioneer Funds Listed on Appendix A, on behalf of the series named therein** | **The Pioneer Funds Listed on Appendix A, on behalf of the series named therein** |
| By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: | Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: | President |
| **Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.** | **Amundi Asset Management US, Inc.** |
| By: | /s/ Gregg M. Dooling |
| Name: | Gregg M. Dooling |
| Title: | Chief Financial Officer |

---

------

**Appendix A** 

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust: | Pioneer Series Trust VI: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Solutions – Balanced Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Floating Rate Fund |
| Pioneer Bond Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund |
| Pioneer Core Trust I: | Pioneer Series Trust VII: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Portfolio | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global High Yield Fund |
| Pioneer Diversified High Income Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer CAT Bond Fund |
| Pioneer Equity Income Fund | Pioneer Series Trust VIII: |
| Pioneer Floating Rate Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer International Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Fund | Pioneer Series Trust X: |
| Pioneer High Income Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund |
| Pioneer High Yield Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund |
| Pioneer ILS Interval Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund |
| Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund | Pioneer Series Trust XI: |
| Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Core Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Money Market Trust: | Pioneer Series Trust XII: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund |
| Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Trust | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer MAP – High Income Municipal Fund |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Fund, Inc. | Pioneer Short Term Income Fund |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Fund, Inc. | Pioneer Series Trust XIV: |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Opportunities Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Real Estate Shares | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Growth Fund |
| Pioneer Series Trust II: | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Intrinsic Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income Fund |
| Pioneer Series Trust III: | Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust: |

---

------

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund | Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio |
| Pioneer Series Trust IV: | Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Amundi Climate Transition Core Bond Fund | Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund | Pioneer High Yield VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund | Pioneer Mid Cap Value VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Securitized Income Fund | Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio |
| Pioneer Series Trust V: | Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Equity Fund | Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund |  |

---

## Ex-99.(K)(6)

EXECUTION

**<u>AMENDED AND RESTATED EXHIBIT A</u>** 

THIS AMENDED AND RESTATED EXHIBIT A, effective as of November 1, 2022, is Exhibit A to that certain Administration and Accounting Services Agreement dated as of January 19, 2021, by and between Amundi Asset Management US, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Investment Adviser"), solely for those provisions of the Agreement referenced in Section 20(c), each investment company referenced on Exhibit A hereto (each a "Fund", collectively the "Funds") on behalf of itself or its respective portfolios as listed on Exhibit A hereto (each, a "Series"), and The Bank of New York Mellon.

<u>List of Funds/Series</u> 

---

| |
|:---|
|  **Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Solutions - Balanced Fund |
|  **Pioneer Bond Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Core Trust I:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Portfolio |
|  **Pioneer Diversified High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Diversified High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Equity Income Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Floating Rate Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Floating Rate Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Fund** |
|  **Pioneer High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer High Yield Fund** |
|  **Pioneer ILS Interval Fund** |
|  **Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Money Market Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Municipal High Income Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Fund, Inc. (formerly Pioneer Municipal High Income**<br> **Advantage Trust)** |
|  **Pioneer Municipal High Income Opportunities Fund, Inc.** |
|  **Pioneer Real Estate Shares** |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust II:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust III:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust IV:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Amundi Climate Transition Core Bond Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Securitized Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust V:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Equity Fund (formerly Pioneer Global Equity Fund) Eff. Date 2/15/22 |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VI:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Floating Rate Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Flexible Opportunities Commodity Fund Ltd. |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VII:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer CAT Bond Fund |

---

------

EXECUTION

---

| |
|:---|
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global High Yield Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust VIII:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer International Equity Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust X:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XI:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Core Equity Fund |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XII:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer MAP - High Income Municipal Fund |
|  **Pioneer Short Term Income Fund** |
|  **Pioneer Series Trust XIV:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Sustainable Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Intrinsic Value Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income Fund |
|  **Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust:** |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Yield VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Mid Cap Value VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio |

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[Remainder of page intentionally left blank.]

------

EXECUTION

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Amended and Restated Exhibit A to be executed by their officers designated below effective as of the date and year first above written.

---

| | |
|:---|:---|
| **AMUNDI ASSET MANAGEMENT US, INC.** | **AMUNDI ASSET MANAGEMENT US, INC.** |
| By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: Lisa M. Jones | Name: Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: President and Chief Executive Officer | Title: President and Chief Executive Officer |
| **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** | **THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON** |
| By: | /s/ Gerard Connors |
| Name: Gerard Connors | Name: Gerard Connors |
| Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President |

---

Solely for purposes of Sections 3(a), 5, 6, 9(c), 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 20 and 21 of the Agreement:

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **Each Fund listed on Exhibit A hereto, on behalf of the Series named therein** | **Each Fund listed on Exhibit A hereto, on behalf of the Series named therein** |
| By: | /s/ Lisa M. Jones |
| Name: Lisa M. Jones | Name: Lisa M. Jones |
| Title: President and Chief Executive Officer | Title: President and Chief Executive Officer |

---

## Ex-99.(N)

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

We consent to the references to our firm under the captions "Financial Highlights" in the Prospectus and "Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm" and "Financial Statements" in the Statement of Additional Information, each dated March 1, 2023, and each included in this Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 on the Registration Statement (Form N-2, File No. 333-225814) of Pioneer ILS Interval Fund (the "Registration Statement").

We also consent to the incorporation by reference of our report dated December 30, 2022, with respect to Pioneer ILS Interval Fund in the Annual Report to Shareholders (Form N-CSR) for the year ended October 31, 2022, into this Registration Statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

February 24, 2023

## Ex-99.(R)

**CODE OF ETHICS** 

**OF THE** 

**PIONEER FUNDS,** 

**AMUNDI DISTRIBUTOR US, INC.,** 

**AMUNDI ASSET MANAGEMENT US, INC.,** 

**AND LYXOR ASSET MANAGEMENT INC.** 

**<u>POLICY</u>**

The Pioneer Funds, Amundi Distributor US, Inc. ("AD"), Amundi Asset Management US, Inc., and Lyxor Asset Management Inc. (collectively, "Amundi US"), have adopted this Code of Ethics ("Code") in compliance with Rule 17j-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Investment Company Act of 1940"), Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended ("Advisers Act"), or FINRA Rule 3210, as applicable.

This Code establishes standards of conduct expected of all Employees and addresses conflicts that may arise from Employees' personal trading and other activities. Every Employee is expected to fully understand and adhere to the policies and procedures set forth in this Code. Amundi US operates in a highly regulated industry and is governed by a complex body of federal, state and international laws, rules and regulations, which, if not observed, can subject Amundi US and/or its Employees to civil and/or criminal penalties.

Although this Code is intended to provide each Employee with guidance as to whether certain actions or practices are permissible, it does not cover every issue an Employee may face. Amundi US maintains other policies and procedures that are applicable to an Employee's responsibilities and duties.

Because no set of guidelines, policies and procedures can anticipate every possible situation, it is essential that each Employee follow this Code both in letter and in spirit. Technical compliance with the procedures, prohibitions and limitations of this Code will not insulate an Employee from scrutiny of or, if called for, sanctions for his or her securities transactions. Any activity that compromises Amundi US' integrity, even if it does not expressly violate guidelines, may result in scrutiny or action by the Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee or the Compliance Department. You are encouraged to contact the Compliance Department with any questions you may have about this Code or about your legal and ethical responsibilities. Employees should contact the Compliance Department at <u>US.Code.of.Ethics@amundi.com</u> or at +1 617-422-4600.

Please note that standard defined terms can be found on pages 3 through 8 in the "Definitions" section.

Only certain parts of this Code apply to the Independent Trustees of the Pioneer Funds, specifically Part I and Part VI.

All persons covered by this Code are expected to read this Code carefully and observe and adhere to it at all times.

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022

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All Employees have an obligation to notify his or her Chief Compliance Officer on a timely basis if there is a change to their duties, responsibilities or title, which affects their reporting status under this Code.

Amundi US retains the discretion to determine the applicability and interpretation of the Code to specific situations.

**<u>STATEMENT OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES</u>**

Each Employee must observe the following fiduciary principles with respect to his or her personal investment activities:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• At all times, each Employee must place the interests of Advisory Clients first;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Personal securities transactions of Employees must be conducted in a manner designed to avoid actual or potential
conflicts of interest with the interests of any Advisory Client or any abuse of the Employee's position of trust and responsibility; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Each Employee must avoid actions or activities that would allow him or her to inappropriately profit or benefit
from his or her position at Amundi US, or that otherwise brings into question the Employee's independence or judgment.

**<u>STANDARDS OF CONDUCT</u>**

All Employees are prohibited from using information concerning the investment intentions of Advisory Clients or confidential information regarding Advisory clients for personal gain or in a manner detrimental to the interests of any Advisory Client. Each Employee also should refer to the separate Code of Business Conduct that governs certain activities of Employees. In addition to this Code and the separate Code of Business Conduct, all Employees must comply with all federal, state and local laws, rules and regulations applicable to the business or operations of Amundi US, including, but not limited to, the federal securities laws.1

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<sup>1</sup> For purposes of this Code, "federal securities laws" means the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the Investment Company Act of 1940 Act, the Advisers Act, Title V of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (privacy), any rules adopted by the Commission under any of these statutes, the Bank Secrecy Act as it applies to funds and investment advisers, and any rules adopted thereunder by the Commission or the Department of the Treasury (anti-money laundering and Office of Foreign Assets Control ("OFAC"). 

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 <br> Last Reviewed November 2022 PAGE 2

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **DEFINITIONS** |  |
| As used herein: |  |
| **Term** | **Definition** |
| **Advisory Client** | Means each Pioneer Fund and each other investment company or other client for which Amundi US acts as an adviser or sub-adviser. |
| **Access Person** | Means any person included in the definition of "access person" under Rule 17j-1(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 or Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. |
|  | The definition of Access Persons includes: |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(i) each officer, director, trustee, general partner of a Pioneer Fund, or Amundi US entity, except that an Independent Trustee shall not be an Access Person under this Code solely by reason of being a trustee of a Pioneer Fund; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(ii) any natural person in a control (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940) relationship to Amundi US who obtains information concerning recommendations made to Advisory Clients with regard to the purchase or sale of securities by an Advisory Client; and |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(iii) an Employee if: |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(A) in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, the Employee makes, participates in or obtains information regarding the purchase or sale of a Reportable Security by an Advisory Client, or whose functions relate to the making of any recommendations with respect to such purchases or sales. |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(B) the Employee has access to timely (i.e., nonpublic) information relating to investment management activities, research and/or client portfolio holdings and those who in the course of their employment regularly receive access to trading activity of Advisory Clients; or |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(C) the Employee has been notified in writing by the Compliance Department that the Employee has been designated as an Access Person by the Compliance Department by virtue of the nature of the Employee's duties and functions. |
|  | Examples of "access to information" include access to trading systems (such as Alto), research databases or settlement information. All Employees are generally deemed to be Access Persons. |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 3

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **DEFINITIONS** |  |
| As used herein: |  |
| **Term** | **Definition** |
|  | The Compliance Department following a review of each Employee's role, responsibilities and other relevant information, may make a determination that such Employee is not an Access Person. |
| **Amundi US Employee Account** | Means any account held directly through Amundi US' employee savings, retirement, or deferred compensation accounts, including but not limited to: |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Savings and Investment Plan |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Retirement Benefit Plan, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Mandatory Bonus Deferral Plan, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US' Health Savings Account, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Intermediate Deferred Compensation Award Plan, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Mandatory Bonus Plan for Certain Employees, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US, Inc. Voluntary Deferred Compensation Plan for Certain Employees, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Pioneer Group Inc. Executive Supplemental Retirement Benefit Plan A, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Amundi SA Employee Share Ownership Plan, |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Credit Agricole Employee Share Ownership Plan, and |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Amundi SA Long Term Incentive Plan. |
|  | This definition does not include Investor Services Group accounts at Amundi US. |
| **AD Employees** | Means registered persons of AD and employees of AD who are not registered persons, including AD officers and directors. |
| **Automatic Investment Plan** | Means a program in which regular periodic purchases (or withdrawals) are made automatically in (or from) investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation. An automatic investment plan includes a dividend reinvestment plan. |
| **Beneficial Interest** | Means any economic interest, such as the right to share in gains or losses, in a Reportable Security; or where a direct or indirect monetary benefit from the purchase, sale or ownership of a Reportable Security exists. This includes any economic interest in a Reportable Security of: |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• a person subject to this Code or their spouse; |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 4

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **DEFINITIONS**<br>As used herein:<br>**Term** | <br>**Definition** |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A child of the person subject to this Code or their spouse, provided the child is financially dependent upon the person subject to this Code;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• any Family Member living in the same household as the person subject to the Code;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• any person, if the person subject to the Code has control over the person's account.<br>The ultimate determination of whether you have a Beneficial Interest depends on the facts of each particular case. If you have any questions, contact the Compliance Department for assistance with determining if you have a Beneficial Interest in a Reportable Security. |
| **CCO** | Means with respect to an Employee of Amundi US, the Chief Compliance Officer of Amundi US, respectively.<br>CCO means the CCO of the Pioneer Funds when the context so requires. |
| **Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee** | Means the Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee, which is comprised of senior management representatives from Amundi US' Sales, Legal, Compliance, Investment Management, Finance and Human Resources. The Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee has oversight responsibility for administrating this Code. |
| **Employee** | Means any person included in the definition of "supervised person" as defined in Section 202(a)(25) of the Advisers Act.<br>The definition of Employee includes each officer, director, trustee, partner (or other person occupying a similar status or performing similar functions) or employee (including temporary employees and independent contractors) of a Pioneer Fund or Amundi US, and any other person who provides investment advice on behalf of Amundi US and is subject to the supervision and control of Amundi US, except that the definition of Employee does not include an Independent Trustee of a Pioneer Fund. |
| **Family Member** | Means any related individual, including but not limited to grandparent, parent, mother-in-law or father-in-law; husband, wife or domestic partner (whether registered or unregistered under applicable law); brother, sister, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, son-in-law or daughter-in-law; children (including step and adoptive relationships); and grandchildren. |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 5

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **DEFINITIONS**<br>As used herein:<br>**Term** | <br>**Definition** |
| **Independent Trustee** | Means any trustee or director of a Pioneer Fund who is not an "interested person" (as that term is defined by Section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940) of the Fund. |
| **Initial Public Offering** | Means any offering of securities registered under the Securities Act of 1933 the issuer of which immediately before the offering was not subject to the reporting requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Act of 1934. |
| **Investment Person** | Means an Access Person who is (1) a Portfolio Manager, (2) a securities analyst or trader who provides information and advice to a Portfolio Manager or who helps execute a Portfolio Manager's decisions, (3) any Employee who works directly with a Portfolio Manager or in the same department as a Portfolio Manager, (4) an associate in the Investment Risk Group, (5) any other person who, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes or participates in making recommendations regarding an Advisory Client's purchase or sale of securities, or (6) any natural person in a control relationship to a Pioneer Fund or Amundi US who obtains information concerning recommendations made to the Pioneer Fund with regard to the purchase or sale of securities by the Pioneer Fund.<br>In addition to the above definitions, an Employee is an "Investment Person" if the Employee has been notified in writing by the Compliance Department that the Employee has been designated as an "Investment Person" by the Compliance Department by virtue of the nature of the Employee's duties and functions. |
| **Managed Accounts** | Means Personal Accounts, pursuant to rule 204A-1(b)(3)(i), whereby a person subject to this Code has no direct or indirect influence or control towards directing purchases, sales, or retention of investments; or towards consulting the third-party manager or trustee as to the particular allocation of investments within the account. This definition includes an account managed on a discretionary basis by someone else, such as a trustee or third-party manager.<br>All such accounts must be approved by the Compliance Department. For the purpose of this section, the person claiming to have no direct or indirect influence or control over such a Personal Account must first provide a written explanation to the Compliance Department describing the circumstances of the Personal Account and reasons why such person believes he or she does not have direct or indirect influence or control (i.e., no investment discretion) over that Personal Account and that he or she does not provide any investment advice or |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 6

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **DEFINITIONS**<br>As used herein:<br>**Term** | <br>**Definition** |
|  | suggestions with respect to the Personal Account. In addition, the Access Person may be required to arrange for his or her broker or adviser to provide to the Compliance Department documentation to evidence such Personal Account arrangement. Compliance may collect information about a trustee or third-party manager's relationship to the Access Person. Periodic certifications may be issued to Access Persons and their trustees or discretionary third-party managers regarding the Access Person's influence or control over their Managed Accounts. Compliance may request reports on holdings and/or transactions made in Managed Accounts. |
| **Personal Account** | Means any account in which a Beneficial Interest is held by a person subject to this Code, or any account in which a person subject to this Code has any direct or indirect Beneficial Interest. |
| **Pioneer Fund** | Means any investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 for which Amundi US serves as the investment adviser (but not as a sub-adviser) or for which AD serves as the principal underwriter. |
| **Portfolio Manager** | Means an individual who has direct responsibility and authority to make investment decisions affecting an Advisory Client. |
| **Private Placement** | Means an offering that is exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(2) or Section 4(6) or pursuant to Rules 504, 505 or 506 under the Securities Act of 1933 and other similar non-U.S. securities. Private placements include, but are not limited to, private equity partnerships, hedge funds, limited partnerships and venture capital funds. |
| **Reportable Fund** | Means each Pioneer Fund plus each investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 sub-advised by Amundi US or for which AD serves as the principal underwriter.<br> A list of Reportable Funds is available on the PTA system under the Documents section. |
| **Reportable Security** | Means a security as defined by Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, except for the securities and instruments excepted below. The term "Reportable Security" is very broad and includes stocks, bonds, including convertible and preferred securities, ADRs and GDRs, warrants and rights, such as:<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Limited partnership interests;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Limited liability company ("LLC") interests; excluding personal LLCs formed for the purposes of holding real estate and other private wholly-owned LLCs which are not issuing securities |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 7

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**DEFINITIONS** 

As used herein:

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| **Term** | **Definition** |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Interests in private investment funds, hedge funds and investment clubs; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Futures on securities; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Options on securities; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Shares in closed-end funds; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Shares of Reportable Funds; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Shares of exchange-traded funds; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Securities issued by agencies or instrumentalities of the U.S. government (e.g., GNMA obligations), municipal obligations; and |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Securities issued by foreign governments. |
|  | Reportable Securities do not include: |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Direct obligations of the government of the United States; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Bankers' acceptances; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Bank certificates of deposit; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Commercial paper; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Money market funds, including money market funds where AMUNDI US serves as the investment adviser or sub-adviser that comply with Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company Act of 1940; |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• High quality short-term debt instruments, including repurchase agreements; and |
|  | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Shares of open-end investment companies registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, other than Reportable Funds. |
| **Secondary Public Offering** | Means a registered offering of a Reportable Security, which previously had been issued to the public. |

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 8

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**APPLICABILITY** 

The procedures and restrictions outlined in the Code apply differently based on your position, role and responsibilities within Amundi US. The Compliance Department will confirm which category applies to you. To assist you in determining which provisions of this Code apply to you, this Code is divided into the following parts:

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| | | | |
|:---|:---|:---|:---|
| **PARTS** | **DESCRIPTION** | **APPLIES TO** | **KEY PROVISIONS** |
| **PART I** | Transactions in Open-End and Closed-End Pioneer Funds, and Amundi SA or Crédit Agricole Securities | All Employees<br>Independent Trustees | Transactions In Closed-End Pioneer Funds<br>Transactions In Open-End Pioneer Funds |
| **PART II** | Personal Account Provisions Applicable to AD Employees and Access Persons | Access Persons<br>AD Employees | Permitted Brokerage Firms |
| **PART III** | Personal Trading Provisions Applicable to Access Persons | Access Persons including<br> Investment Persons | Pre-clearance Of Transactions<br>Pre-clearance Procedures |
|  |  |  | Trading Restrictions |
|  |  |  | Access Persons-Prohibited Transactions |
|  |  |  | Investment Persons-Special Provisions |
| **PART IV** | Personal Trading Provisions Applicable to AD Employees and Management Committee Members | AD Employees and<br> members of Amundi US, Inc. Management Committee | Initial Public Offerings and Secondary Offerings<br>Private Placements<br>Holdings Reports |
| **PART V** | Reporting and Certifications Requirements | Reporting and Certifications Requirements | Reporting and Certifications Requirements |
| **PART VI** | Independent Trustees | Independent Trustees | Independent Trustees |
| **PART VII** | Administration and Enforcement of the Code | Administration and Enforcement of the Code | Administration and Enforcement of the Code |

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Engagement by Amundi US, or any other US affiliate, of any person as a consultant, temporary employee, intern or independent contractor shall be communicated to the respective Compliance Department. The Compliance Department will review the person's role, responsibilities and other relevant information, and make a determination as to whether this Code applies to that person. Employees scheduled for termination and who no longer have access to the Amundi US network are not deemed subject to this Code.

It is your responsibility to familiarize yourself with this Code initially and periodically thereafter, including each time you change positions within Amundi US.

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 9

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;**I.** **TRANSACTIONS IN CLOSED -END AND OPEN -END PIONEER FUNDS , AND AMUNDI SA OR CRÉDIT AGRICOLE SECURITIES** 

**<u>TRANSACTIONS IN CLOSED-END PIONEER FUNDS</u>**

Each Employee and Independent Trustee must obtain pre-clearance of all purchases and sales of shares of closed-end Pioneer Funds. Shares of a closed-end Pioneer Fund may be sold or purchased only in the 10 calendar-day period following the announcement of the Pioneer Fund's dividend (generally during the first week of each month). Dividend announcements are available on the Pioneer Funds' website. Transactions in a closed-end Pioneer Fund cannot be executed without receiving approval in advance.

**<u>TRANSACTIONS IN OPEN-END PIONEER FUNDS</u>**

Amundi US' policy is to endeavor to prevent disruptive short-term trading in open-end Pioneer Funds. Accordingly, when purchasing, exchanging or redeeming shares of open-end Pioneer Funds, all Employees and Independent Trustees must comply in all respects with the policies and standards set forth in the Funds' prospectuses, including specifically the restrictions on market timing activities, exchanges and redemption policies, as monitored by each Fund's transfer agent.

**<u>TRANSACTIONS IN AMUNDI SA OR CRÉDIT AGRICOLE SHARES</u>**

Amundi US' parent holding companies, Amundi and Crédit Agricole, are public issuers. Accordingly, Amundi's global Compliance Department maintains policies and procedures relating to the trading of Amundi or Crédit Agricole securities by personnel of the Amundi group. As such, any Employee wishing to trade in Amundi or Crédit Agricole securities must contact Amundi US' Compliance Department for additional guidance prior to engaging in such trades. In addition, from time to time, Amundi may designate certain employees of Amundi US as "permanent insiders" or "temporary insiders" of Amundi. Any such designated employee will be subject to additional global compliance procedures. Please contact the Amundi US Compliance Department if you are designated as a permanent insider or temporary insider of the Amundi group.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;**II.** **PERSONAL ACCOUNT PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO AD EMPLOYEES AND ACCESS PERSONS** 

**<u>PREFERRED BROKERS</u>**

All AD Employees and Access Persons who began their employment or otherwise became an AD Employee or an Access Person with Amundi US after March 1, 2005, may only open Personal Accounts with one of the preferred brokerage firms listed in Appendix A of this policy.

New AD Employees and Access Persons must transfer all Personal Accounts to one of the preferred firms listed in Appendix A within 90 days of becoming an AD Employee or Access Person.

The preferred broker restriction on employee related brokerage accounts described above does not apply to Managed Accounts or accounts that are not capable of holding Reportable Securities or accounts reported by temporary employees of Amundi US such as consultants, temps or interns.

Additional exemptions from the foregoing requirements may be granted only by the Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee and the Compliance Department, acting together. Requests for exemptions may be denied. Exemptions that are granted may be revoked if transactions in the accounts are not reported in accordance with the above requirements.

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 10

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**<u>PERSONAL ACCOUNT REPORTING</u>**

Each new Access Person and AD Employee (whether or not an Access Person) must submit all Personal Account and Reportable Securities holdings information to the Compliance Department (such information to be current as of a date no more than 45 calendar days before the report is submitted) within 10 calendar days of hire or the date on which an individual becomes an Access Person or AD Employee. If an AD Employee or an Access Person or Family Member, living in the same household, of such persons opens a new Personal Account or becomes associated with a pre-existing account, details of the account and Reportable Securities must be sent to the Compliance Department immediately. The account should be reported on PTA. The AD Employee or Access Person must agree to allow the brokerage firm to provide the Compliance Department with reports of transactions executed in the new account.

**<u>ACCOUNTS AT OTHER BROKER-DEALERS AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS - FINRA RULE 3210</u>**

All AD Employees and Access Persons must receive prior written consent from Amundi US' Compliance Department before opening any Personal Accounts including Managed Accounts, but excluding 529 plans, employer sponsored plans, or accounts that are not capable of holding Reportable Securities. Personal Accounts opened or otherwise established by persons prior to being defined as an AD Employee or Access Person must, within 30 calendar days of being so defined, receive written consent by Amundi US to maintain such accounts.

Pursuant to FINRA Rule 3210, this Code serves as prior written consent from Amundi US to all AD Employees and Access Persons to open Personal Accounts at a Preferred Broker.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;**III.** **PERSONAL TRADING PROVISIONS APPLICABLETO ACCESS PERSONS** 

**<u>PRE-CLEARANCE OF TRANSACTIONS</u>**

One of key objectives of this Code is to prevent personal trades being made on the basis of information about securities transactions made for Advisory Clients. Each Access Person must obtain pre-clearance of all Reportable Securities transactions in his or her Personal Accounts, except:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases or sales of Reportable Funds (including any such transactions in an Amundi US Employee Account);

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases or sales of securities in a Managed Account;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Involuntary purchases or sales of Reportable Securities made in a Personal Account, such as Reportable Securities
received pursuant to an Automatic Investment Plan (including systematic investment plans and dividend reinvestment plans), a stock split or other similar corporate action, an in-the-money option that is exercised automatically by a broker or the issuer of the shares; a security that is called away as a result of an exercise of an option; a
security that is sold by a broker without prior consultation to meet a margin call, or through a gift or bequest;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases of Reportable Securities made in a Personal Account that result from the exercise of rights acquired
from an issuer as part of a pro rata distribution to all holders of a class of securities of such issuer, and the sale of such rights;

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Involuntary tender offers of Reportable Securities;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases or sales of non-U.S. funds similar in structure to U.S. open-end mutual funds;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transactions in futures in broad based indices;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases or sales in securities that are not Reportable Securities;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases or sales of sovereign debt of foreign governments; or

Other exceptions that may be approved by the Compliance Department based on a review of the facts and circumstances. Such exceptions will be documented.

**<u>PRE-CLEARANCE PROCEDURES</u>**

Requests for pre-clearance of securities transactions other than Private Placements and Initial Public Offerings and Secondary Public Offerings must be made using the Personal Trading Assistant ("PTA") personal trading monitoring application. If the PTA system is not available, pre-clearance requests may be made by electronic mail. All pre-clearance requests must include the name of the security, a definitive security identifier (e.g., CUSIP, ticker, or SEDOL or ISIN), the number of shares or amount of bonds involved, the nature of the transaction, (whether the transaction is a purchase or sale), the Personal Account details, security price, estimated total value and trade currency. Responses to all requests will be made through the PTA system or by written confirmation by the Compliance Department. The Compliance Department maintains a record of all approvals and denials.

Requests normally will be processed on the same day they are made, but in some cases additional time may be required to pre-clear a particular transaction.

By seeking pre-clearance, you will be deemed to be certifying to Amundi US that:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Except in connection with transactions involving securities of entities that are not publically traded, you do
not possess any material nonpublic information relating to the Reportable Security or issuer of the Reportable Security;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• You are not using knowledge of any proposed trade, recommendation or investment program relating to an Advisory
Client for personal benefit;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• You believe the proposed trade is available to any relevant market participant on the same terms;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• You will provide any other relevant information requested by the Compliance Department; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• All Personal Accounts opened and all transactions executed during the calendar quarter have been reported and are
properly reflected in the PTA system.

Generally, in reviewing a pre-clearance request, the Compliance Department will consider, among other factors, whether the proposed trade might present a conflict or the appearance of a conflict with an Advisory Client's transaction(s), whether the transaction might influence the market in a material respect and whether the transaction has the potential to take advantage or hinder trading for an Advisory Client. Factors to be considered in determining whether a proposed transaction is in conflict with an Advisory Client transaction(s) shall be determined, reviewed and monitored by the Compliance Department and the Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee.

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Pre-clearance requests must be submitted within the designated pre-clearance timeframe established by Amundi US' Compliance Department. A pre-cleared transaction must be submitted and executed between the hours of 8:30 a.m and 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the day the approval is granted unless approval is granted for a longer period by the Compliance Department. If some or all of a pre-cleared transaction is not executed during the period, pre-clearance must be requested again in order to complete or execute the trade.

**<u>EXCESSIVE TRADING</u>**

Access Persons are discouraged from trading excessively. Amundi US strongly discourages high levels of personal trading activity and monitors such activity. Excessive or inappropriate trading that interferes with job performance will not be permitted. If it is determined that an Access Person has engaged in an unusually high level of personal trading or a pattern of excessive trading, Amundi US may place restrictions on such person's personal trading or take other disciplinary action.

**<u>INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS, SECONDARY PUBLIC OFFERINGS, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND OTHER PRIVATE OFFERINGS</u>**

Access Persons may not purchase any security in an Initial Public Offering, Secondary Public Offering, or Private Placement except with the prior written approval of the Compliance Department and the Head of Portfolio Management US (or his or her designee). Sales of such securities by Access Persons also must be approved in advance.

  <u>Registered Persons of AD, AD Employees, and members of the Management Committee of Amundi US, Inc. are not permitted to purchase any security in an Initial Public Offering of an equity security except as permitted by FINRA Rule 5130.</u>

If an Access Person seeks pre-approval for the acquisition of a Reportable Security in a Private Placement or an Initial Public Offering or a Secondary Public Offering, the Access Person shall set forth in detail the rationale for the transaction using the form provided by the Compliance Department. Any approval will be granted only after consideration is given to whether the investment opportunity should be reserved for an Advisory Client and whether the opportunity is being offered to the Access Person by virtue of his or her position with or relationship to an Advisory Client.

Access Persons may not purchase or sell any interest in a collective investment vehicle that is exempt from registration under the 1933 Act, including, but not limited to, hedge funds, private funds or similar investment limited partnerships, without pre-approval from the Compliance Department.

**<u>BLACK-OUT PERIOD</u>**

Access Persons may not buy or sell a Reportable Security on the same day an Advisory Client trades in that security except in a pre-cleared transaction or a transaction exempt from the pre-clearance requirements.

**<u>DE MINIMIS EXCEPTION</u>**

Pre-clearance requests by Access Persons in Reportable Securities with a principal value of US$50,000 or less (or equivalent non-US currency) of an issuer with a market capitalization of US$3 billion or greater will not be subject to the Blackout Period ("De Minimis Exception") provided the Access Person has no prior knowledge of activity in such security by any client.

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Multiple transactions in a single day of a single security will be aggregated for purposes of this exemption.

<u>ACCESS PERSONS—PROHIBITED TRANSACTIONS</u> 

Access Persons may not:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Engage in a Reportable Securities transaction in a Personal Account unless the transaction has been pre-cleared or is excluded from the pre-clearance requirements of this Code.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Participate in investment clubs.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Engage in intraday trading.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Sell a security short.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Use derivatives, such as futures, options on futures, or options or warrants on a Reportable Security, to evade
the restrictions set forth in this Code. A convertible bond is not a derivative for the purposes of this Code.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchase or sell in a Personal Account options (including naked options), other than options on broad-based
indices.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transact in any single stock exchange traded funds.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Engage in speculative strategies such as spreads and straddles.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchase and sell, or conversely sell and purchase, in Personal Accounts any Reportable Security within any
period of sixty (60) calendar days, except:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(i) Reportable Securities purchased or sold in transactions excluded from the pre-clearance requirements of this Code; or

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(ii) Exchange traded index funds; or

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(iii) A Reportable Security sold at a loss, if the trade has been approved by the Compliance Department.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Place any "good until canceled" or "limit" or equivalent order with any broker other than a
limit order that is good for that day only.

<u>INVESTMENT PERSONS—SPECIAL PROVISIONS</u> 

*(Note: Every Investment Person also is an Access Person and remains subject to the provisions in the previous sections.)* 

Investment Persons are subject to the following additional provisions:

<u>BLACK-OUT PERIOD:</u> No Investment Person may purchase or sell any Reportable Security for a Personal Account within seven (7) calendar days before or seven (7) calendar days after the same Reportable Security is purchased or sold by an Advisory Client. An Investment Person will not be deemed to have violated this restriction if his or her trade occurs in the seven (7) calendar day period prior to the trade by an Advisory Client if the Investment Person did not know and had no reason to know that a trade for an Advisory Client was being considered, the trade was pre-cleared or it is a transaction exempt from the pre-clearance requirements.

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<u>INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS, SECONDARY PUBLIC OFFERINGS, PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND</u> <u>OTHER PRIVATE OFFERINGS:</u> No Investment Person may purchase any security in an Initial Public Offering, Secondary Public Offering, Private Placement or other private offering, except with the prior written approval of the Compliance Department and the Head of Portfolio Management US (or his or her designee). Sales of such securities also must be approved in advance. If an Investment Person seeks pre-approval for the purchase of a Private Placement, an Initial Public Offering, a Secondary Public Offering or any other private offering, the Investment Person shall set forth in detail the rationale for the transaction using the form provided by the Compliance Department.

<u>DUTY TO MAKE UNBIASED RECOMMENDATIONS:</u> Investment Persons have an affirmative duty to make unbiased and timely recommendations to Advisory Clients. Investment Persons may not recommend any Reportable Security to an Advisory Client in which the Investment Person has an interest without first reporting that interest to the Compliance Department.

<u>CLIENT OPPORTUNITIES:</u> Investment Persons may not use his or her knowledge of Advisory Client transactions to purchase or sell a Reportable Security, when he or she knew or should have known that the security was being considered as an appropriate investment for any Advisory Client unless the transaction is approved in accordance with Amundi US' standard procedures. Investment Persons may not delay making a timely recommendation of securities in order to trade personally.

<u>ACCOUNTS OF OTHERS:</u> An Investment Person may not manage accounts of persons other than those of Advisory Clients or of his or her Family Members unless a waiver has been granted by the Compliance Department to permit an Investment Person to manage such accounts.

**IV.** **PERSONAL TRADING PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO AD EMPLOYEES AND MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE MEMBERS** 

<u>PUBLIC OFFERINGS:</u> Registered Persons of AD, AD Employees, and members of the Management Committee of Amundi US, Inc. may not purchase equity securities in an Initial Public Offering except as permitted by FINRA Rule 5130.

<u>PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND OTHER PRIVATE OFFERINGS:</u> No AD Employee may purchase any security in a Private Placement or any other private offering, except with the prior written approval of the Compliance Department and the Head of Portfolio Management US (or his or her designee). If an AD Employee seeks pre-approval for the purchase of a Private Placement, the Employee shall set forth in detail the rationale for the transaction using the form provided by the Compliance Department. Any approval will be granted only after consideration is given to whether the investment opportunity should be reserved for an Advisory Client and whether the opportunity is being offered to the Employee by virtue of his or her position with or relationship to an Advisory Client.

<u>PRECLEARANCE REQUIREMENTS:</u> AD Employees who are Access Persons are subject to the pre-clearance requirements described in Part III above. AD Employees who are not Access Persons are not subject to any of the above pre-clearance requirements.

<u>REPORTING:</u> AD Employees must complete initial and annual holdings Personal Account reports and transaction reports and must attempt to arrange for duplicate copies of confirmations of all transactions and/or periodic account statements of all Personal Accounts to be sent to the Compliance Department in accordance with Part V below.

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**V.** **REPORTING AND CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS** 

**<u>REPORTING REQUIREMENTS</u>** (refer to Section II for additional details)

<u>INITIAL AND ANNUAL HOLDINGS REPORTS:</u> Each Access Person and each AD Employee (whether or not an Access Person) initially and on an annual basis thereafter shall report to the Compliance Department all holdings in Reportable Securities (including holdings in any Reportable Fund) occurring in his or her Personal Accounts (such information to be current as of a date no more than 45 calendar days before the report is submitted). Initial reports must be filed within 10 calendar days of the date on which an individual becomes an Access Person or AD Employee. The Compliance Department will determine the form or system on which the required information is to be reported.

<u>DUPLICATE STATEMENTS:</u> Each Access Person and AD Employee must attempt to arrange for duplicate copies of confirmations of all transactions and/or periodic account statements of all Personal Accounts, other than those transactions and holdings held in the Amundi US Employee Accounts, to be sent to Amundi US' Compliance Department.

Such instructions must be made promptly upon becoming an Access Person or AD Employee and as new accounts are established but no later than 30 days after the end of a calendar quarter. Contact the Compliance Department at <u>US.Code.of.Ethics@amundi.com</u> for instructions on how to arrange delivery of duplicate statements.

If duplicate copies of confirmations and periodic account statements cannot be arranged to be sent to Amundi US in a timely manner, the Compliance Department must be notified immediately.

Access Persons and AD Employees are responsible for following up with the broker to ensure that such instructions are being followed.

<u>QUARTERLY REPORTS</u>:

PREFERRED BROKER ACCOUNTS – ELECTRONIC REPORTING

A quarterly transaction report is not required for Access Persons and AD Employees who hold Personal Accounts with preferred brokers that provide transaction information via electronic form to the Compliance Department for the time period that would be covered by the quarterly report.

PREFERRED BROKER ACCOUNTS – NON-ELECTRONIC REPORTING

Each Access Person and each AD Employee must report, within 30 calendar days after the end of each calendar quarter, all transactions in Reportable Securities occurring in the quarter in a Personal Account held with a preferred broker that does not provide electronic reporting on the Personal Account to the Compliance Department. Quarterly transaction reports must be submitted even if there was no transaction during the quarter.

NON-PREFERRED BROKER ACCOUNTS

Each Access Person and each AD Employee must report, within 30 calendar days after the end of each calendar quarter, all transactions in Reportable Securities occurring in the quarter in a Personal Account held with a non-preferred broker. Quarterly transaction reports must be submitted even if there was no transaction during the quarter.

<u>AMUNDI US EMPLOYEE ACCOUNTS</u>: Transactions and holdings of securities held in Amundi US Employee Accounts, as defined, are not required to be included in quarterly or annual reports except:

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US' Health Savings Accounts,

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Self-Directed Brokerage sleeves of Amundi US Employee Accounts,

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi SA Employee Share Ownership Plan accounts,

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Credit Agricole Employee Share Ownership Plan accounts, and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi SA Long Term Incentive Plan accounts.

<u>ANNUAL AND QUARTERLY REPORTING EXCEPTIONS</u>: The following types of Reportable Securities transactions do not have to be included in the quarterly reports to the Compliance Department. (Please note, however, that holdings of such Reportable Securities are required to be included in the annual holdings report):

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Purchases of Reportable Securities made pursuant to an Automatic Investment Plan;

The following transactions and holdings are not required to be reported on a quarterly or annual basis:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transactions and holdings in securities or instruments that are not Reportable Securities;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transactions and holdings in non-U.S. funds similar in structure to U.S. open-end mutual funds, such as UCITs, that are not advised by Amundi US or its affiliates;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Transactions and holdings in securities in Managed Accounts; and

**<u>CERTIFICATIONS</u>**

*(Note: The Compliance Department will determine the form or system on which the required information is to be reported).* 

<u>INITIAL CERTIFICATION AND UPDATES</u>: Upon request all Employees shall acknowledge that they have received, read and understand this Code, and any material amendment, and recognize that they are subject to its requirements.

<u>ANNUAL CERTIFICATIONS:</u> All Employees shall certify at least annually that they have read and understand this Code, recognize that they are subject to its requirements and have complied with the requirements of this Code. All Employees shall also certify annually that they have reported all holdings of Reportable Securities in Personal Accounts required to be reported pursuant to this Code.

**VI. INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES** 

<u>QUARTERLY REPORTING:</u> An Independent Trustee is required to make a quarterly report with respect to any transaction during the applicable quarter in a Reportable Security in which the Independent Trustee had any direct or indirect Beneficial Interest (excluding, for purposes of this subparagraph, transactions in open-end Pioneer Funds) if such Independent Trustee knew or, in the ordinary course of fulfilling his or her duties as an Independent Trustee should have known, that during the 15-day period immediately before or after the transaction in such Reportable Security, an Advisory Client purchased or sold such Reportable Security, or an Advisory Client or AMUNDI US considered purchasing or selling such Reportable Security. Each such report shall be made within 30 calendar days after the end of the applicable calendar quarter in the form provided by the Compliance Department. The quarterly reporting exceptions set forth in Part V above shall apply to any quarterly reports required to be made by an Independent Trustee under this Part VI.

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No report will be required for any quarter in which an Independent Trustee only has exempt transactions to report. Sanctions for any violation of this Code of Ethics by an Independent Trustee of a Pioneer Fund will be determined by a majority vote of other Independent Trustees of such Fund.

**VII.** **ADMINISTRATION AND ENFORCEMENT** 

Acknowledgement of, and compliance with, this Code is a condition of employment with Amundi US. This Code does not create any obligations to any person or entity other than Amundi US. This Code is not a promise or a contract, and it may be modified at any time.

**<u>REPORTING VIOLATIONS OF THE CODE</u>**

<u>DUTY OF EACH EMPLOYEE TO REPORT:</u> Amundi US relies on each Employee to report promptly any conduct you believe to be a violation of this Code. You must report violations or suspected violations of this Code to the Compliance Department or an Amundi US lawyer. All such reports will be investigated.

<u>RETALIATION PROHIBITED:</u> Amundi US will not tolerate any form of retaliation against any person who lodges a good faith report of a violation or suspected violation or cooperates in an investigation. Where retaliation is found to have occurred, the offending party will be subject to disciplinary action, up to and including termination of employment. Amundi US also reserves the right to take corrective action against a person if, upon investigation, it determines that the person was dishonest or malicious in making a report or providing information to investigators.

<u>CONFIDENTIALITY:</u> In conducting an investigation, Amundi US will attempt to keep the identities of the person reporting the suspected violation and of witnesses confidential. Where this is not possible, information will be disclosed only as necessary to conduct the investigation and to permit members of management to ensure the efficiency and security of Amundi US' business activities. Where a report involves a violation of a law or regulation, Amundi US may also be obligated to make certain information available to clients or former clients, the Securities and Exchange Commission, FINRA or other authorities.

<u>PENALTIES AND SANCTIONS</u>

<u>SANCTIONS:</u> Compliance with this Code is expected and violations of its provisions are taken seriously. Any violation of this Code (other than by an Independent Trustee) shall be subject to the imposition of such sanctions by the Compliance Department as the Compliance Department deems appropriate under the circumstances to achieve the purposes of this Code. Please refer to the Code of Ethics Violation and Sanctions Guidelines for further details.

These sanctions may include, but are not limited to: terminating or suspending employment; suspending personal trading privileges; issuing a letter of censure or warning; requiring mandatory Code retraining; requiring the compensation of an affected Advisory Client for an amount equal to the advantage gained by reason of such violation; or requiring the reversal of the trade(s) at issue and forfeit of any profit or absorption of any loss from the trade.

In deciding whether to impose sanctions, Amundi US may take into account any factors that it determines to be appropriate in imposing sanctions, which may include, but are not limited to, an Employee's history of compliance, the nature of the violation, whether the violation was intentional or inadvertent and any harm suffered by a client. Violations of this Code also may result in criminal prosecution or civil action. Violations will generally be removed from an Employee's personnel record for cumulating sanction purposes after a period of 24 months from the date of the violation's issuance.

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Amundi US reserves the right to take any legal action it deems appropriate against any Employee who violates any provision of this Code and to hold Employees liable for any and all damages (including, but not limited to, all costs and attorney fees) that Amundi US may incur as a direct or indirect result of any such Employee's violation of this Code or related law or regulation.

Sanctions for any violation of this Code of Ethics by an Independent Trustee of a Pioneer Fund will be determined by a majority vote of other Independent Trustees of such Fund.

<u>HARDSHIP AND OTHER EXEMPTIONS:</u> The CCO or his or her designee may from time to time grant hardship or other exemptions from the trading restrictions, pre-clearance requirements or other provisions of this Code. The decision will be based on a review of the relevant facts and circumstance and a determination will be made depending on the facts whether a hardship or other valid reason exists that would permit an exemption to be granted. The transaction for which an exemption is requested should not result in a conflict with Amundi US' Advisory Clients' interests or violate any other policy embodied in this Code. Other factors that may be considered include: the size and holding period of a position in the security, the market capitalization of the issuer, the liquidity of the security, the amount and timing of client trading in the same or a related security, and other relevant factors. The CCO or his or her designee may seek additional approval from the Head of US Portfolio Management or his or her designee.

Exemption requests should be submitted in writing to the Compliance Department setting forth the reason for the request along with any pertinent facts and reasons why the exemption should be granted. Exemptions are intended to be exceptions, and repetitive requests for exemptions are not likely to be granted.

Records of the approval of exemptions and the reasons for granting exemptions will be maintained by the Compliance Department.

<u>REVIEW PROCESS</u>: An Employee may request review by the Compliance Department of a decision or determination made by the Compliance Department pursuant to this Code. The request must be submitted within 30 days of the Compliance Department's decision or determination. The Compliance Department, in its sole discretion, may elect to consider or reject the request for review. If appropriate in reaching a decision, the Compliance Department will arrange for a review of the matter by senior management of Amundi US and/or the Conflicts of Interest and Code of Ethics Oversight Committee.

**<u>DUTIES OF THE COMPLIANCE DEPARTMENT</u>**

The Compliance Department is responsible for the oversight, interpretation and administration of this Code, and the preparation for review and approval of any amendments to the Code.

The Compliance Department will inform you if you are subject to this Code.

A copy of this Code is available on Amundi US' intranet site and the PTA Home Page. Likewise, amendments to the Code will be posted on Amundi US' intranet site and PTA promptly after they become effective. Employees will be given notice of all changes to, or restatements of, the Code.

**<u>DUTIES OF THE CCO</u>**

The CCO (or his or her designee) shall have the following responsibilities:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Furnishing all Employees with copies of this Code and initially and periodically informing them of their duties
and obligations hereunder;

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Designating, as desired, appropriate personnel to review transaction and holdings reports submitted pursuant to
the Code;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Reviewing and approving pre-clearance requests;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Maintaining or supervising the maintenance of all records required by this Code;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Issuing any interpretation of this Code that, in the CCO's judgment, is consistent with the objectives of
this Code;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Conducting such investigations as shall reasonably be required to detect and report any apparent violations of
this Code to the Compliance Department and to the Trustees of the affected Pioneer Funds;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Submitting a quarterly report to the Boards of Trustees of the Pioneer Funds of any violations of this Code and
the sanctions imposed as a result; and

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Submitting a written report at least annually to the Board of Trustees of each Pioneer Fund, Board of Directors
of AD and the Management Committee of AMUNDI US and its affiliates that:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Describes any issues arising under this Code since the last report, including, but not limited to, information
about material violations of this Code or procedures and sanctions imposed in response to the material violations;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Summarizes existing procedures concerning personal investing and any changes in the procedures made during the
previous year;

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Identifies any recommended changes in existing restrictions or procedures based upon experience under this Code,
evolving industry practices or developments in applicable laws or regulations.

**<u>RECORDKEEPING</u>**

The Compliance Department shall maintain or cause to be maintained in an easily accessible place, the following records:

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A copy of any Code adopted pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 or Rule 204A-1 under the Advisers Act, which has been in effect during the most recent five (5) year period.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A record of any violation of any such Code, and of any action taken as a result of such violation, within three
(3) years from the end of the calendar year in which such violation occurred.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A copy of all written acknowledgements by Access Persons during the most recent five (5) year period.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A copy of each report made by an Access Person or an Independent Trustee, as well as trade confirmations and/or
account statements that contain information not duplicated in such reports, within five (5) years from the end of the fiscal year of Amundi US in which such report is made or information is provided, the first two (2) years in an easily
accessible place.

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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A copy of each report made by the CCO (or his or her designee) within five (5) years from the end of the
fiscal year of Amundi US in which such report is made or issued, the first two (2) years in an easily accessible place.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A list, in an easily accessible place, of all persons who are, or within the most recent five (5) year
period have been, Access Persons or were required to make reports pursuant to Rules 17j-1 and 204A-1 and this Code or who are or were responsible for reviewing these
reports.

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A record of any decision, and the reasons supporting the decision, to permit an Access Person or Investment
Person to acquire a Private Placement or Initial Public Offering security, for at least five (5) years after the end of the fiscal year in which permission was granted.

**<u>AMENDMENTS</u>**

Amundi US may amend this Code as necessary or appropriate to achieve the purposes of Rules 17j-1 and 204A-1. Any material changes to this Code must be approved by the Board of Trustees of each Pioneer Fund, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, within six months after the change has been adopted by Amundi US.

**<u>INTERPRETATION</u>**

Amundi US may, from time to time, adopt such interpretations of this Code, as Amundi US deems appropriate.

**<u>EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS</u>**

The Compliance Department may from time to time circulate educational materials or bulletins designed to assist you in understanding and carrying out your duties under this Code.

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 21

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**<u>APPENDIX A:</u>**

**<u>PREFERRED BROKER LIST:</u>**

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Acorns (Robo-Advisor Accounts Only)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Ameriprise

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Amundi US Employee Accounts

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Bank of America Merrill Lynch

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Betterment (Robo-Advisor Accounts Only)

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Charles Schwab

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Credit Suisse

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Edward Jones

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• E\*Trade Financial

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Fidelity Brokerage Services

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Interactive Brokers

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Investor Services Group accounts at Amundi US

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• JP Morgan Chase / JP Morgan Securities / JP Morgan Private Bank

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Raymond James

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• TD Ameritrade

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• UBS Financial

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• USAA

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Vanguard

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Wells Fargo

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Wealthfront (Robo-Advisor Accounts Only)

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 <br> Last Revised November 2022 PAGE 22

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## Ex-99.(S)(3)

**POWER OF ATTORNEY** 

I, the undersigned trustee or officer of the investment companies listed on Annex A for which Amundi Asset Management US, Inc. or one of its affiliates acts as investment adviser (each, a "Trust" and collectively, the "Trusts"), hereby constitute and appoint Lisa M. Jones, Christopher J. Kelley and Michael D. Melnick, and each of them acting singly, to be my true, sufficient and lawful attorneys, with full power to each of them to sign for me, in my name, (i) any Registration Statement on Form N-1A, N-2 or any other applicable registration form under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and/or under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and any and all amendments thereto filed by each Trust, of which I am now, or am on the date of such filing, a Trustee or officer of the Trust, (ii) any application, notice or other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and (iii) any and all other documents and papers relating thereto, and generally to do all such things in my name and on behalf of me to enable each Trust to comply with the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be signed by said attorneys, or each of them, to any and all Registration Statements and amendments to said Registration Statements, including any amendments to establish a new series of a Trust, and any other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission on behalf of each Trust.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunder set my hand as of this 1st day of June, 2021.

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| |
|:---|
| /s/ Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. |
| Anthony J. Koenig, Jr. |

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**POWER OF ATTORNEY** 

**ANNEX A** 

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| | |
|:---|:---|
| Pioneer Asset Allocation Trust: | Pioneer Series Trust VI: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Solutions – Balanced Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Floating Rate Fund |
| Pioneer Bond Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Flexible Opportunities Fund |
| Pioneer Core Trust I | Pioneer Series Trust VII: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Master Portfolio | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global High Yield Fund |
| Pioneer Diversified High Income Fund, Inc. |  |
| Pioneer Equity Income Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Series Trust VIII: |
| Pioneer Floating Rate Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer International Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Fund | Pioneer Series Trust X: |
| Pioneer High Income Fund, Inc. |  |
| Pioneer High Yield Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fundamental Growth Fund |
| Pioneer ILS Interval Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Ultrashort Income Fund |
| Pioneer ILS Bridge Fund | Pioneer Series Trust XI: |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Opportunities Fund, Inc. | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Core Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Mid Cap Value Fund | Pioneer Series Trust XII: |
| Pioneer Money Market Trust: | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Growth Fund |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer U.S. Government Money Market Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer MAP – High Income Municipal Fund |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Fund, Inc. | Pioneer Short Term Income Fund |
| Pioneer Municipal High Income Advantage Fund, Inc. | Pioneer Series Trust XIV: |
| Pioneer Real Estate Shares | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Emerging Markets Equity Fund |
| Pioneer Securitized Income Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income Fund |
| Pioneer Series Trust II: | Pioneer Variable Contracts Trust: |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer AMT-Free Municipal Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Bond VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Equity Income VCT Portfolio |
| Pioneer Series Trust III: | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Fund VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Disciplined Value Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Yield VCT Portfolio |
| Pioneer Series Trust IV: | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Mid Cap Value VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Balanced ESG Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Real Estate Shares VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Multi-Asset Income Fund | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Select Mid Cap Growth VCT Portfolio |
| Pioneer Series Trust V: | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Strategic Income VCT Portfolio |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Global Equity Fund |  |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer High Income Municipal Fund |  |
| &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pioneer Corporate High Yield Fund |  |

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